The global economy is in a holding pattern and vulnerable to more upheaval,
the head of the IMF said on Monday, adding a lasting recovery will depend on
policymakers taking the proper steps in the coming months.
Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the International Monetary Fund's managing
director, said the top priority in rich countries should be making plans to
clean up the fiscal mess left by more than a year of crisis-fighting efforts,
although he thought it was still too early to remove such emergency supports.
"We recommend erring on the side of caution, as exiting too early is
costlier than exiting too late," Strauss-Kahn said in remarks prepared for
delivery to the Confederation of British Industry's annual conference in
London.
Since the financial crisis intensified following the messy collapse of
Lehman Brothers in September 2008, governments and central banks have committed
trillions of dollars in stimulus money and financial sector guarantees as well
as interest rate cuts to record lows in most advanced economies.
Those efforts helped to stem the crisis, he said.
"So, we stand at a critical juncture," Strauss-Kahn said.
"The sustainability of this recovery will depend on the decisions taken by
policymakers in the months to come."
He cautioned that the sense of global policy unity forged during the
darkest days of the financial crisis might dissolve going forward, and urged
close cooperation even though exit strategies differ from country to country.
For advanced economies, where debt burdens have grown sharply over the past
year, the IMF wants governments to design and communicate plans to get their
respective finances back in order.
That means ensuring stimulus measures are temporary and putting entitlement
programs on a sustainable path.
Eventually, more drastic measures will be necessary, Strauss-Kahn said,
including spending cuts and -- in some cases -- tax hikes.
"I see fewer problems with monetary policy," he said, adding that
central banks had the proper tools to unwind the trillions of dollars worth of
emergency lending programs they cobbled together in the midst of the financial
panic.
"Especially in many advanced economies, monetary policy can afford to
stay accommodative for some time, given little sign of inflation on the
horizon," he said.
"But some emerging economies face different challenges and monetary
policy might need to move sooner." Since emerging economies recovered more
quickly from the global recession than industrialized economies did, capital
flows have swelled, posing a threat to stability in some markets.
Strauss-Kahn said capital controls can be part of a package of measures
that countries use to limit inflows, but cautioned that "all tools have
their limitations."
'Mardi Gras Effect'
With unemployment high and rising in many countries, growth will probably
be subdued for some time, and the crisis "might remain etched in the
collective memory," Strauss-Kahn said.
U.S. consumers, who were the driving force behind the last economic boom,
will not return to their free-spending ways any time soon, so the world economy
will need a new growth engine.
He said surplus countries, particularly China and other emerging Asian
economies, were the leading candidates and had already begun shifting away from
export-led growth.
Still, he said they had "some way to go," and urged China to
allow its yuan currency to appreciate more rapidly.
"By reducing global imbalances, the world will be a safer place, less
prone to crises," he said. "It will also be in China's long-term
interest."
On financial reform, he said it was essential to put tougher rules in place
to avoid a repeat of the crisis, but policymakers must take care not to clamp
down too hard or too quickly because that could derail the recovery.
He suggested laying out future requirements and the timetable for
implementation to reduce regulatory uncertainty, which might be inadvertently
encouraging more risk-taking.
Strauss-Kahn described that as a "Mardi Gras effect whereby financial
institutions party now in expectation of lean times to come."
"Clearly, this is dangerous, not least for emerging markets. And we
may run out of time -- if we wait too long to implement these reforms, it might
be too late," he said.
Source: Reuters
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