Title: Lessons from the Crisis for International Financial Surveillance
1Lessons from the Crisis for International
Financial Surveillance
- Dimitri G Demekas
- Assistant Director
- Monetary Capital Markets Department, IMF
2- Lessons from the crisis
- What have SE European countries learned?
- International financial surveillance
- What has the IMF learned?
3Lessons from the crisis
- Financial regulation
- Macroeconomic policies
- Global financial architecture
Initial Lessons from the Crisis (http//www.imf.o
rg/external/pp/longres.aspx?id4315) Lessons from
the Crisis for Future Regulation (http//www.imf.
org/external/np/pp/eng/2009/020409.pdf) Lessons
of the Crisis for the Global Architecture (http/
/www.imf.org/external/np/pp/eng/2009/021809.pdf) L
essons of the Global Crisis for Macroeconomic
Policy (http//www.imf.org/external/np/pp/eng/200
9/021909.pdf)
4Lessons from the crisis I
- Financial regulation
- Perimeter (regulation, information)
- Procyclicality (accounting, regulation)
- Prudential rules (capital requirements,
liquidity, risk management, macro-prudential
factors) - Corporate governance practices (information
disclosure, executive compensation)
5Lessons from the crisis II
- Macroeconomic policy
- Bubbles
- Leverage
- Countercyclical policies macro only or
macro-and-prudential?
6Lessons from the crisis III
- Global financial architecture
- Cooperation in regulation, bank resolution,
systemic liquidity - Improved surveillance, especially of systemically
important countries - IMF governance and mandate
7What lessons matter for SE Europe?What have we
learned from SE Europe?
- Procyclicality in policy and regulation
- Capital requirements, liquidity rules
- The importance of leverage
- Regional contagion, regional cooperation
8International financial surveillanceWhat has
the IMF learned?
- IMF surveillance instruments
- Multilateral surveillance (WEO, GFSR)
- Bilateral surveillance (Article IV consultation)
- Financial Sector Assessment Program (FSAP)
9Better tools, greater flexibility
- Greater focus on crisis preparedness crisis
management frameworks - Improved stress testing techniques
- Emphasize data gaps/caveats
- Focus on liquidity risks
- Capture cross-market, cross-country exposure
- More flexible FSAPs
- More focused modular stability assessments,
higher frequency
10New forms of IMF engagement
- European Bank Coordination Initiative
- Cooperation with FSB and financial sector
standard-setters (EWE, revisions to standards) - Input to FSB and G-20 peer reviews
- New forms of multilateralism?
11Thank you
12Standard capital inflow surgefinancing an
investment and growth boom
13while macro policies were insufficiently
countercyclical
14 and prudential rules were procyclical.
Higher profitability lower provisioning
Higher growth lower provisioning
15The importance of capital and liquidity buffers
- Croatias unorthodox measures 2003-07
- Marginal reserve requirement on foreign borrowing
by banks at 55 - Reserve requirement at 17
- Fx liquid asset requirement at 32
- Credit controls
- did not help slow credit growth, but provided
buffers when the crisis hit
eliminated
reduced to 14
reduced to 20
16The importance of leverage
17Regional aspects of the crisis
CESE Asset share of foreign-owned banks, in
percent
TSI
TMO
T-Com
18Regional aspects of the crisis
RAIF Raiffeisen ERST Erste UNIC
Unicredit ISP Intesa Sanpaolo SG Societe
Generale
19European Bank Coordination Initiative