Central Banking Lessons From The Crisis PDF
Central Banking Lessons From The Crisis PDF
Central Banking Lessons From The Crisis PDF
Contents Page
I. Overview ................................................................................................................................4
Tables
1. The Role of G20 Central Banks in Financial Stability ........................................................40
Figures
1. Inflation and Macroeconomic Volatility ..............................................................................41
2. Selected Countries: Size of Financial Assets .......................................................................42
Boxes
1. Was Monetary Policy to Blame for the Global Financial Crisis? ..........................................9
2. Effectiveness of Crisis-Response Measures ........................................................................11
3. Changes to Institutional Arrangements for Financial Stability............................................19
4. Financial Intermediation in Central Bank Models ...............................................................22
5. Collateral and Counterparty Arrangements .........................................................................28
1
Prepared by an MCM team comprising Kenji Fujita, Karl Habermeier, Erlend Nier, Scott Roger, Noel Sacasa,
Mark Stone, and Jan Vlcek with research assistance from Simon Townsend.
2
Glossary
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The crisis brought the financial system to the verge of systemic collapse and raised the
prospect of depression and deflation. Central banks helped defuse these threats, including
through exceptional measures. Considerable efforts are now under way to draw policy
lessons from the crisis. For central banks, the crisis seems to provide three important lessons
for policy frameworks—mainly concerning systemic financial stability.
First, financial stability should be addressed mainly using macroprudential policies. They can
mitigate the procyclicality of systemic risk and the build-up of structural vulnerabilities.
Macroprudential tools include capital requirements and buffers, forward-looking loss
provisioning, liquidity ratios, and prudent collateral valuation. All potentially systemic
institutions and markets should be within the macroprudential regulatory perimeter. Central
banks should play a key role, whether or not they serve as the main regulator. However,
much work remains to be done to develop full-fledged macroprudential frameworks,
including operational tools and governance and institutional arrangements.
Second, price stability should remain the primary objective of monetary policy. Central
banks have maintained the price stability credibility they gained before the crisis and this
public good must be preserved. The monitoring and analysis of financial system
developments and risks can be better integrated into the formulation and implementation of
monetary policy.
Third, the crisis showed that changes to central bank liquidity operations and broad crisis
management frameworks are needed, including to address moral hazard. Changes to enhance
the flexibility of central bank operational frameworks will improve the resilience of the
system. Institutions and markets that are potential recipients of liquidity support in times of
stress should be monitored and regulated. A continued and sustained effort to improve
payment and settlement systems and crisis management coordination is also warranted.
Preserving price stability and central banks’ hard-won monetary policy independence should
be a key focus of reform efforts. Institutional arrangements should ensure that the role of
central banks in the design and application of macroprudential measures does not impinge on
their ability to deliver price stability. The policy roles of the central bank, the government,
and other entities need to be clearly delineated in the wake of the broadening of the scope of
their interventions during the crisis.
Central banks and other public sector entities are enhancing the role of systemic financial
stability in their policy frameworks. The Fund will continue to work closely with them in
these efforts, including by helping develop the needed analytical tools, filling key data gaps,
and disseminating information and lessons.
4
I. OVERVIEW
2. The crisis raises three key forward-looking questions for central banks. First,
what lessons should be drawn from the crisis—which is not yet over—for the design and
operational implementation of policies focused on macro financial stability? Second, how
should monetary policy strategic frameworks be modified to better prevent or ameliorate the
effects of financial crises? And third, how should central bank operational and crisis
management frameworks be adjusted to cope with future potential crises? These and similar
questions have been tackled in earlier episodes of financial turmoil, but limited progress was
made. Advanced economies are the focus of this paper because they were hit hardest by the
crisis. However, this paper should be relevant for a wider range of economies.
3. The paper draws the following broad conclusions from a review of the available
evidence. First, it suggests that financial stability should be addressed mainly using
macroprudential tools, on the grounds that financial and price stability are distinct and
imperfectly aligned objectives and thus need to be addressed separately. Second, price
stability should remain the primary objective of monetary policy, although the monitoring
and analysis of financial system developments and risks can be better integrated into policy
formulation and implementation. Third, changes to liquidity and crisis management
arrangements are needed to make them more flexible. Changes in these three areas should be
done in a way that preserves central bank independence. The Fund will continue to work
closely with central banks and others to improve the effectiveness of financial stability
policies.
4. The structure of the paper is as follows. Section II looks back at the pre-crisis
policy frameworks. Section III discusses macroprudential policies with a focus on the role of
central banks. Section IV reexamines monetary policy frameworks in light of what has come
before. Section V looks at complementary changes in liquidity and crisis management
arrangements. Section VI briefly lays out the work agenda to improve systemic financial
stability, discusses the role of the Fund and lists issues for discussion.
5
5. Central banks have long aimed at monetary stability whereas their financial
stability roles have varied. Monetary policy frameworks evolved as price stability was
established as the main policy objective and as independence in the pursuit of this objective
became enshrined in law. Central banks also played a role in safeguarding financial stability:
almost all play a role in the oversight of payment systems and many are also closely involved
in the supervision and regulation of the financial sector (Table 1).
What were the main tenets of monetary policy frameworks before the crisis?
6. Over the past twenty years, almost all advanced economies and many emerging
market economies central banks adopted monetary policy frameworks with price
stability as the primary objective.2 These monetary policy frameworks often have the
following features: (i) central bank independence to achieve price stability together with
strong policy accountability; (ii) policy formulation based on a strategy that makes use of all
available information; and (iii) an operating framework based on a single policy interest rate
target implemented with market operations.
7. The widespread adoption of this general policy framework reflects its success in
contributing to a marked improvement in macroeconomic performance compared with
the 1970s and 1980s. Indeed, the period up until the financial crisis has been described as the
“golden age” of central banking.3 In addition to bringing inflation back down to levels not
seen since the 1950s and early 1960s, monetary policies were also credited with contributing
to an exceptionally long period of stable growth (Figure 1).
8. Maintaining low and stable inflation was thought to be the main contribution
monetary policy could make to financial stability. Although it was not claimed that
keeping inflation low would ensure financial stability, price stability and monetary policy
predictability were seen as likely to reduce financial instability that might otherwise arise
from monetary policy shocks.
9. At the same time, monetary policy tended to focus less on financial system
developments and vulnerabilities. Policy objectives other than price stability—notably
2
See Mishkin (2000), Roger and Stone (2005) and Stone and Bhundia (2004).
3
See Gerlach and others (2009).
6
output or exchange rate stability—were taken into account in policy, but financial stability
was often not a major consideration.4 This reflected a number of factors:
There was a broadly accepted view that different policy instruments are needed to
successfully attain different policy objectives. Interest rate policy should be used
primarily to achieve the price stability objective while other instruments, notably
regulation and supervision, should be used to promote financial stability.5 Regulation
and supervision were conducted almost exclusively from a micro-prudential
perspective, focusing on the stability of individual institutions rather than on macro-
financial linkages in the system as a whole.
10. Despite central bank concerns with asset price movements, they have been
reluctant to target them. The appropriate response of monetary policy to asset prices was a
subject of vigorous debate for several years prior to the crisis.6 While central banks
recognized potential risks associated with asset price bubbles, these were not seen, in general,
as justifying monetary policy responses. It was argued that central banks did not have reliable
means of identifying asset bubbles, and that, even if they could, using interest rate policy to
“prick” bubbles was likely to involve high costs in terms of output foregone. A bias towards
inaction was reinforced by the view that monetary policy could cushion the impact on the
economy when bubbles burst. Policymakers paid little attention to the potential moral hazard
4
On occasion, central banks (e.g., ECB and Swedish Riksbank) did take financial system developments,
especially asset prices or credit growth, into account in setting interest rates, but this tended to be the exception
rather than the rule.
5
Similarly, structural reforms have been seen as the key tool for achieving full employment and higher long-run
economic growth.
6
See Cecchetti and others (2000); Bernanke and Gertler (2001); Borio and Lowe (2002); Richards and
Robinson (2003); and papers presented at the 2007 Jackson Hole Symposium on Housing, Housing Finance,
and Monetary Policy.
7
that such a strategy might entail—markets came to believe in a “Greenspan put”—and little
thought was given to policies that could address this problem.
What did the financial stability framework look like before the crisis?
12. Considerable efforts were put into further developing international capital
standards. However, these were aimed at harmonizing the banks’ own assessment of capital
needs (economic capital) and regulatory requirements, rather than to mitigate systemic risks
from insufficient capital. Indeed, reforms were meant to keep the level of capital in the
system unchanged, and the procyclical impact of new regulations was not adequately
addressed. In the meantime, international liquidity standards were lacking, and supervisors
placed little emphasis on liquidity risks that could arise through more complex interactions
between institutions and markets—such as risks from increased use of wholesale funding. In
some jurisdictions, the effectiveness of regulation and supervision was further undermined by
a rapid expansion of the non-bank financial sector and the lack of an appropriate regulatory
perimeter that could have taken in the so-called “shadow banking system.”9 Central banks’
role in financial stability was being reduced. In a number of countries, central banks retreated
from their traditional roles in prudential regulation and supervision, as separate financial
supervisory agencies were created. Instead, central banks were meant to fulfill their role in
financial stability by providing an overview of risks to the financial system, often using stress
tests to gauge solvency risks in recession scenarios, and promulgating results in financial
7
See Shiller (1981).
8
See Brunnermeier and others (2009); Nier (2005); and Nier and Baumann (2006) for these elements.
9
See Global Financial Stability Reports (http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/gfsr/index.htm) and “On
Monetary and Financial Stability—Past, Present and Future,” remarks by José Viñals, Robert Marjolin Lecture
at the Utrecht University School of Economics, The Netherlands, September 4, 2009
(http://www.imf.org/external/np/speeches/2009/090409a.htm).
8
stability reports. However, the techniques used were not sufficiently advanced to take
account of the endogenous interaction between solvency and liquidity pressures, while data
gaps hampered the analysis of interlinkages. Moreover, published financial stability reports
often stopped short of mapping vulnerabilities to concrete policy actions.
13. Central banks were mindful of their role as lender of last resort (LOLR). Central
banks were increasingly aware that they were ill-prepared to deal with any difficulties posed
by ever larger and more interconnected financial institutions, in particular those operating
across national borders. While crisis preparation was stepped up in some respects, a lack of
clarity on burden sharing remained, and legal shortcomings in resolution frameworks were
left unaddressed. 10
What roles did monetary and regulatory policies play in the run-up to the crisis?
14. Market excesses, reflecting a number of factors, and not dealt with by regulatory
measures, played a major role in setting the stage for the crisis. With inflation
expectations well-anchored and inflation subdued by virtue of global supply factors, many
advanced economy central banks kept policy rates low during the early 2000s in support of
price stability. Low global interest rates and expectations of continued macroeconomic
stability may have led market participants to underestimate risks in many asset classes.11 At
the same time, a compression of yield curve spreads, associated with the global savings glut
and widening current account imbalances encouraged financial institutions to increase
leverage and investors to take on greater risks. Crucially, these risks were not well-
understood or forcefully addressed by regulators. In addition, monetary policymakers and
regulators did not always work together closely or take a shared macroprudential view.
10
On crisis preparations, see Manning and others (2009), pages 125–6.
11
See Gerlach and others (2009). However, the empirical evidence on the role of low policy interest rates is
mixed (Box 1).
9
Box 1. Was Monetary Policy to Blame for the Global Financial Crisis?
Almost three years since the onset of the global financial crisis there is still no full agreement
among policymakers and researchers on what caused the global financial crisis. In particular,
while supervision and regulation were clearly lacking with hindsight, disagreement persists on
whether it was overly accommodative monetary policy between 2002 and 2006 that fueled the build-
up (Taylor, 2007) or whether the widening trade imbalances and associated capital flows were the
root cause (e.g., Bernanke, 2010, King, 2010).
The evidence on the stance of monetary policy and the housing price bubble is mixed. Taylor
(2007) argued that in the United States, the demand for housing is sensitive to money-market interest
rates and that accommodative policy from 2002 was likely therefore to have contributed to the build-
up in housing demand and asset prices. Against this, Greenspan (2010) pointed out that U.S. house
prices are more closely related to long-term rates, and the relationship between short and long rates
had been weak over the period. Looking across countries, IMF (2009a) found that while in many
economies, rates had been low by historical standards, there was virtually no association between
measures of the monetary policy stance and house price increases across advanced economies. For
example, whereas Ireland and Spain had low real short-term rates and large house price rises,
Australia, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom had relatively high real rates and large house price
rises.
Nonetheless, accommodative monetary policy has been argued to induce banks to take greater
funding and credit risks. Adrian and Shin (2008) show that a low federal funds rate causes balance
sheets of U.S investment banks to grow, as low rates reduce the cost of funding in wholesale
markets.1 And a growing number of single-country studies have analyzed whether banks take more
credit risks and loosen lending standards when policy rates are low.2 Looking across advanced
countries, a forthcoming study by Merrouche and Nier (2010) finds only weak evidence that the
monetary policy stances in individual countries—measured by deviations from a standard Taylor
rule—affected banking sector risk-taking, as measured by the ratio of credit to deposits. There is
stronger evidence though that the global monetary policy stance ahead of the crisis had an effect.
Moreover, the study finds that widening trade imbalances and a compression of spreads—reductions
in long-term rates relative to short rates—are likely to have contributed to the build-up of financial
imbalances globally.
__________________________
1
Adrian and Shin do not find this effect to be at work for U.S. commercial banks.
2
See Jiménez and others (2007).
10
15. The crisis made it necessary for central banks to move decisively, and take a
wide range of exceptional policy actions. Their policy role was extended by the
extraordinary degree of financial stress at the height of the crisis, other official institutions’
lack (at least initially) of adequate crisis management tools, and the magnitude of the
economic downturn.
16. Most advanced economy central banks cut policy interest rates to historical lows
and several committed, at least conditionally, to maintaining them at these levels for
prolonged periods. Further, major central banks took coordinated actions to loosen policy.
However, financial stress continued to impede monetary policy and central banks shifted
their policy focus to unconventional measures to head off the economic downturn and
counter the threat of deflation.
17. Advanced economy central banks greatly expanded systemic liquidity. This
reflected the need for them to substitute for wholesale bank and shadow bank funding
markets when they dried up. All advanced economy central banks provided large amounts of
liquidity and many extended the duration of fund-supplying operations and eased access to
liquidity by increasing the number of counterparties and expanding eligible collateral. New
facilities were established to alleviate liquidity shortfalls in specific markets that were
spreading to the system as a whole and cutting off credit flows. In a few cases, liquidity
provision was constrained by gaps in legal and regulatory frameworks and insufficient
information. These measures seem to have been generally effective in reducing stress in
funding markets (Box 2).12
12
Many systemic liquidity providing measures have been rolled back (IMF, 2010b).
11
Central bank measures to lower liquidity premia in interbank markets are generally seen to
have been successful. Taylor and Williams (2008) argued that the Federal Reserve System’s Term
Auction Facility (TAF) was not effective since premia reflected credit rather than liquidity risk. In
contrast, McAndrews and others (2008) found that the TAF decreased premiums during end-2007 to
mid-2008. Reserve Bank of Australia (2009) concluded that their easing measures helped decrease
the spreads of money market rates over overnight index swap rates during mid-2007 to early 2009.
International Monetary Fund (2009b) also found that liquidity supports by central banks since the
summer of 2007 contributed to stabilizing interbank markets in various advanced economies.
Central bank support for foreign exchange funding markets has been found to have been
effective (Goldberg and others, 2010). According to market participants, central bank swap facilities
improved term funding conditions in major off-shore funding markets (BIS, 2010). Baba and Packer
(2009) and Stone and others (2009) provide empirical evidence that U.S. dollar term funding
provision by the major non-U.S. central banks as well as the Federal Reserve (Fed) commitment to
provide U.S. dollar swap lines reduced foreign exchange market stress.
Several studies also suggest that central bank measures to shore up segments of money markets
eased stress. Fleming and others (2010) found that the Fed operations to provide treasury securities
against less liquid assets such as agency and mortgage-backed securities reduced repo rates against
these securities in comparison with repo rates against treasury securities. Hirose and Ohyama (2009)
concluded that market operations by the Bank of Japan stabilized commercial paper markets.
Studies of measures to reduce long-term yield curves have found some evidence for success, but
the analysis is especially challenging. Oda and Kazuo (2005) reject the existence of the portfolio
balance effect by the Bank of Japan’s purchases of JGB during 2001-2006. Several recent empirical
analyses of large-scale purchase of long-term securities found statistically significant effects of the
central banks’ announcement to begin or expand the purchases (Gagnon and others, 2010; Dale,
2010). However, these results must be deemed as preliminary owing to the confluence of factors
influencing yields and the lack of a structural framework.
Empirical evidence on central bank commitments to keep the policy interest rate low for a long
period is mixed. Evidence suggests that these were effective in Japan, (Ugai, 2006; Bernanke and
others, 2004), but there is as yet little evidence with respect to the recent crisis. The work of Gagnon
and others (2010) suggests that low interest rate commitments of the Fed during the recent crisis may
not have been effective.
18. A considerable amount of foreign exchange (FX) liquidity was injected into local
markets. As tensions in global funding markets surged after the collapse of Lehman,
advanced economy central banks took prompt action to provide FX liquidity—mostly U.S.
12
dollars, but also euro, yen and Swiss franc—across borders. Foreign exchange liquidity
provision was facilitated by a number of central bank swap facilities.13 FX liquidity provision
by foreign central banks had been largely wound down by end-2009 and most of swap
facilities expired in the first quarter of 2010. However, as strains in U.S. dollar short-term
funding markets re-emerged in Europe, five central banks reactivated the swap facilities with
the Fed in May 2010.
19. Several advanced economy central banks purchased private and public long-
term securities and took other measures to shore up stressed financial markets. The Fed
purchased a large amount of private securities to support targeted credit markets, mainly
commercial paper, but the amount outstanding has been decreased. Credit risks on central
bank balance sheets have generally been mitigated by loss-sharing arrangements with
governments. The Fed and BoE purchased large amounts of public sector securities after
their policy interest rates hit the lower bound.14 These purchases were mainly intended to
lower long-term interest rates, primarily for the purchased securities, but also were aimed at
improving overall credit conditions. The Fed and BoE have stopped new purchases of public
securities. In May 2010, the European Central Bank (ECB) announced its intention to
intervene in euro area public and private debt securities markets to address tensions in these
markets. Based on this decision, euro area national central banks started purchasing
government securities of selected European countries.
20. Finally, central banks not only provided LOLR but were also intimately
involved in the resolution of large systemically important institutions. LOLR support to
banks was extended by the Bank of England (BoE), while the Fed provided liquidity to
systemically important non-bank financial institutions—which normally do not have access
to LOLR. Further, coordination and information sharing issues, as well as the absence or
inadequate scope of more formal powers to resolve individual systemically important
institutions, led to a de facto extension of the traditional role of central banks in managing the
failure of individual institutions.
21. The crisis is compelling hard and critical thinking about central bank policy
frameworks. On the positive side, there is a broad consensus that central banks have played
13
These are bilateral (or in a few cases multilateral) agreements between central banks that in essence involve
the provision of liquidity from a central bank whose currency was in demand to another central bank for
distribution by the latter to local institutions.
14
Purchases by the Fed of mortgage-backed securities guaranteed by government sponsored agencies are
counted here as public sector securities, even though they are formally claims of the Fed on the private sector
13
a key role during the crisis in helping stabilize financial systems and supporting economic
recovery, although more time is required for a definitive assessment. Also, to a very
significant extent, central banks have maintained the credibility they earned prior to the crisis
in achieving price stability, as evidenced by current indicators of inflation expectations. This
is no small feat and may be especially important because central bank credibility will be
needed as fiscal burdens continue to rise.
22. But the crisis also exposed important gaps in central bank and related policy
frameworks. The frameworks for financial stability (which includes institutions other than
central banks) and provision of liquidity were incomplete and in many respects not
systemically oriented. In addition, the relationship between price and financial stability was
not given due attention. The rest of this paper addresses the three key forward-looking
questions for central bank policy frameworks noted at the outset.
23. Primary responsibility for financial stability needs to rest with macroprudential
policies. Macroprudential tools will need to be developed and a greater emphasis given to
systemic financial risks. These need to build on prudential tools that apply to individual
institutions (such as capital and liquidity requirements) and contracts (e.g. loan-to-value
ratios). Macroprudential tools also need to work with and be complemented by other policies,
such as resolution frameworks, oversight of payment systems and security markets, and
possibly monetary policy, as discussed in the next section.
15
Crockett (2000).
16
IMF/BIS/FSB (2009).
14
risks. One possible corrective is to redesign existing prudential tools to make them more
automatically countercyclical.
26. Macroprudential policies also seek to address the build-up of more structural
vulnerabilities that contribute to systemic risk and are rooted in agency and collective
action problems.17 One example was weaknesses in the securitization process, where
misaligned incentives had contributed to a slippage in lending standards and a lack of
transparency of the derivative securities. A second was insufficiently robust arrangements for
the clearing and settlement of derivatives transactions as market volumes grew. A third was
inadequate arrangements for the resolution of those financial institutions (Lehman, American
International Group (AIG) and the government sponsored enterprises) that in the process of
the build-up of financial imbalances had become too important to fail. Finally, there was a
major increase in the complexity and interconnectedness of the financial system, which made
the distribution of risks opaque and increased the potential for system-wide transmission of
shocks.18
What tools can be used to counter procyclicality and how should they be applied?
27. The procyclical build-up of financial imbalances ensues mainly from credit,
liquidity, and market risks.19 These can build up in good times and ultimately trigger
system-wide instability and losses. Prudential tools can be used to counter an excessive
build-up of these risks for the economy as a whole. They can also be used to increase the
resilience of the financial system should these risks crystallize, so as to maintain the
provision of key financial services to the economy.20 This can be achieved in three main
ways:
Preventing the excessive build-up of leverage.21 This can involve: (i) higher
minimum capital requirements at all times; (ii) additional capital buffers above the
17
Moral hazard and adverse selection are agency problems that are endemic in financial markets. Moral hazard
leads financial institutions to take too much risk, especially when there are implicit guarantees. Both moral
hazard and adverse selection created weaknesses in the originate-and-distribute banking model. Insufficiently
robust payment and settlement systems and lack of transparency in financial markets are rooted in collective
action problems. See also Bank of England (2009).
18
Caruana (2010).
19
Market risk can be defined as the risk of losses on (real or financial) assets or liabilities arising from changes
in market prices and covers interest-rate, foreign exchange, equity price and commodity price risk.
20
Nier (2009), Bank of England (2009).
21
In December 2009 the Basel Committee issued a consultation paper on a set of reform proposals to strengthen
the resilience of the banking system, including through a higher quality of capital
(http://www.bis.org/publ/bcbs164.htm).
15
Limiting the build-up of liquidity risk. This can be achieved through quantitative
liquidity standards that limit reliance on volatile non-core (wholesale) funding and
prevent an excessive build-up of maturity mismatches in economic upswings.23 Such
policies can also provide an additional check on excessive balance sheet expansion.24
28. These policies limit macro-financial feedback, both in good and bad times. First,
they can reduce the build-up of imbalances in upswings and reduce the chance that aggregate
levels of credit become unsustainable. Second, loss-absorbing buffers accumulated in good
times can be drawn down in the downturn without impairing lending capacity. Finally, by
limiting the scope for vulnerabilities to build up in the first place, these policies also reduce
the likelihood that systemic feedbacks materialize in the downturn.
22
Saurina (2009) and Banco de España (2009) describe dynamic provisioning in Spain. The European
Commission has in 2009 started a consultation with a view to adopt dynamic provisioning across the EU.
23
As proposed by the Basel Committee in December 2009 (http://www.bis.org/publ/bcbs165.htm.
24
Well designed fiscal tools, such as a tax on uninsured (wholesale) liabilities, can provide additional incentives
in this regard. See IMF, 2010e.
25
See Nier (2009).
16
takers (banks). In others, it may also involve application to other intermediaries, such as
leasing companies, credit unions, money market funds, and investment banks.26
26
Bank-sponsored conduits and special purpose vehicles that take on credit off-balance sheet may also need to
be included but could more appropriately be consolidated on the sponsoring bank’s balance sheet.
17
ability to design a fully robust rule.27 Therefore, rules may need to be complemented
by a framework of regulatory and supervisory judgment. Such a framework needs to
provide room for maneuver, so that tools can be adjusted on the basis of accumulated
experience and used flexibly and in a more granular way, for example, to address
specific risks that may build up in particular sectors.28 Discretionary supervisory
action needs to be based on a clear communication of these risks. Ensuring
policymakers have the “will to act” is the main challenge for the effectiveness of any
type of discretionary overlay, and in some countries will require substantial changes
in the institutional and legal framework of supervision.
32. Macroprudential policy needs to flow from a clear mandate with strong
governance and accountability. Policy actions need to be grounded in a mandate that sets
out both the objective and the degree of discretion afforded to policymakers in the clearest
possible terms. The policy framework needs to be further buttressed by strong governance
and independent accountability, so as to ensure that policymakers do not shy away from
“taking away the punch bowl” when this is necessary. Strong governance can also enhance
transparency and predictability of actions taken.
33. Central banks can bring expertise and information as well as strong incentives to
increase the effectiveness of macroprudential policies.29 Central bank expertise in the
analysis of systemic risk and macro-financial linkages is useful in calibrating
macroprudential policies. Central banks are likely also to take a strong interest in the design
and effective application of macroprudential tools, whether or not they are directly
responsible for them. This is so for a number of reasons:
Ineffective macroprudential tools also increase the likelihood that central banks have
to provide emergency liquidity to deal with systemic stresses, which can potentially
impair their balance sheet and complicate the conduct of monetary policy.
27
See Viñals and Fiechter (2010).
28
Bank of England (2009).
29
Nier (2009).
18
Where both monetary policy and prudential policies are conducted by the central
bank, separate governance arrangements are needed to ensure monetary policy
independence. Macroprudential policies could be overseen by a dedicated and
independent committee. For example, current U.S. reform proposals envisage the
creation of a “Financial Services Oversight Committee” to provide governance for
actions taken by the Fed and other regulators in pursuit of financial stability. A
strengthening of the governance arrangements for monetary policy—e.g., introducing
greater formal independence or delegating policy to a monetary policy committee—
can also safeguard against a loss of monetary policy independence.
30
Trichet (2010).
31
The proposed arrangements in the European Union, where central bank officials are given a strong voice on
the European Systemic Risk Board, is an example. Alternatively, the central bank could be given the role of
writing regular “letters” to the supervisory authority, setting out its recommendations for macroprudential
policies (as suggested by Turner, 2009).
19
National financial stability frameworks and the place of central banks within these are
heterogeneous (Table 1). In part, this reflects differences in traditions and the state of the financial
system. But this also reflects policy decisions to roll back the role of central banks in regulation and
supervision in favor of the establishment of single integrated regulators (such as the UK’s Financial
Service Authority)1 that combined all supervision and regulation across sectors (banking, insurance
and securities) outside of the central bank. In these cases, the framework typically assigns to the
central bank three financial stability functions: (i) overview of financial stability risks; (ii) lender of
last resort lending; and (iii) oversight of payment and settlement systems.2 In a number of other
countries (Argentina, Brazil, France, Italy, South Africa) the central bank regulates and supervises
banks, or shares this role with a number of other sectoral regulators (e.g., United States) or the
integrated regulator (e.g., Germany).
The crisis is leading to a review of financial stability frameworks including the role of the
central bank. The impetus for reform appears strongest in those advanced countries most hit by the
crisis and where existing structures appeared fragmented (e.g., in the United States and European
Union), contributing to uneven levels of supervision and complicating crisis management. At the
margin, there appears to be some momentum to strengthen the role of central banks, by entrusting
them with a greater role in prudential regulation and supervision (Germany, France, United
Kingdom), a formal role in resolution (United Kingdom) and a role in issuing macroprudential risk
warnings (EU, through the European Systemic Risk Board). A number of countries also plan or have
already introduced new systemic risk “councils” (e.g., France, Germany, Italy, Mexico, United States)
to strengthen interagency coordination and governance, so as to more effectively identify and address
emerging systemic risks across the financial system. Precursors to such councils include the Council
of Financial Regulators of Australia and the United Kingdom’s Tripartite Standing Committee.
________________________
1
The single integrated regulator model was adopted mainly by more advanced economies, including Norway
(1985); Canada (1987); Denmark (1988); Sweden (1991); Switzerland (1993); U.K. (1997); Luxembourg
(1999); Korea (1999); Mexico (1999); Iceland (1999); Japan (2000); Hungary (2000); Latvia (2001); Austria
(2002); Estonia (2002); Germany (2002); Finland (2003); UAE (2003); Belgium (2004); and Poland (2008). In
some of these economies the integrated regulator only covers two out of the three sectors (banking, insurance,
and securities).
2
Nier (2009) provides further analysis of the single-integrated regulator and twin-peaks models.
35. Technical cooperation between prudential and monetary policy functions needs
to be ensured, regardless of the precise institutional arrangements, which will differ
20
across countries and may shift with time.32 The design and monitoring of macroprudential
policies will benefit from the use of both micro- and system-level data, such as indicators of
developments in aggregate credit and capital flows. Supervisory data may also provide useful
information for the conduct of monetary policy and should be made accessible for this
purpose. Looking ahead, both monetary and macro-prudential policies stand to benefit from
advances in macroeconomic models that improve our understanding of macro-financial
linkages, including the interaction between monetary and prudential policies, as discussed in
the next section.
36. Globally and regionally coordinated approaches have clear benefits. While
macroprudential tools can be introduced and calibrated unilaterally, such action may lead to
arbitrage and distort the flow of capital across borders, in turn reducing the effectiveness of
prudential measures. On the other hand, negotiations in international fora may not always
progress at a speed sufficient to allow a continued reappraisal of macroprudential policies.
The need to negotiate standards that satisfy all countries may also lead to policy outcomes
that are less effective than would be desirable. In some cases, the solution may be for global
standards to provide general guidance, leaving room for differences in policy implementation
at the regional and national level.
37. Today, authorities are still in the early stages of articulating a policy framework
for financial stability.33 A prerequisite for progress is agreement on systemic financial
stability as the key policy objective. Intermediate policy “targets,” such as the appropriate
degree of resilience to credit, liquidity and market risks will also need to be agreed upon. The
monitoring and analysis of financial stability indicators and macro-financial linkages will
need to be broadened and deepened and communication of risks refined. Much work remains
to be done to develop and operationalize tools. Accountability mechanisms—such as
systemic risk councils and financial stability committees—will have to be established. The
globalization of the provision of financial services requires a high degree of international
coordination and cooperation.
38. Monetary policy should continue to focus on price stability as its primary
responsibility. The crisis has not overturned the widely accepted assessments that underpin
32
Arrangements are often deeply rooted in tradition, but may need to be adjusted to reflect developments in the
financial sector. Nier (2009) provides further discussion of the appropriate place of central banks in the overall
institutional framework, including not only banking supervision but also securities market regulation.
33
Development of a more complete financial stability framework may parallel in some respects the
development of the monetary policy frameworks employed by advanced economy central banks today
(Madigan, 1994 and Roger and Stone, 2005).
21
standard monetary policy frameworks. These are that inflation has high costs; that there is no
exploitable long-run tradeoff between inflation and growth; and that a strong track record,
strengthened by central bank independence and policy accountability, increases the
effectiveness of monetary policy.34 Moreover, price stability and monetary policy help ensure
financial stability, especially when supported by effective financial stability policies.
39. In practice, price stability has typically meant an average inflation rate of about
two percent, although definitions vary across countries. In normal economic times, price
stability provides sufficient room for interest rate policy to react to short-run variations in
economic activity. On rare occasions, a severe crisis may cause policy interest rates to reach
the zero lower bound. However, such severe crises usually stem from conditions that also
make interest rates relatively ineffective in stimulating aggregate demand, while increases in
risk aversion may well override the stimulus to consumption and investment of low real
interest rates.35 In such circumstances, unconventional measures, such as those used in the
recent crisis, will be more effective (Box 2).
40. There is scope for monetary policy to pay greater attention to financial
developments and risks. At times, monetary policy may need to take account of financial
stability, for example when macroprudential policies are not fully effective, or to facilitate
monetary transmission. However, the policy interest rate is a very blunt instrument, best
geared to influencing the overall state of economic activity, and unsuited to addressing
particular vulnerabilities in the financial sector. Thus, vigorous use of monetary policy to
pursue financial stability would almost certainly conflict with the primary objective of
maintaining price stability, and could result in greater volatility in real activity.
41. Even with price stability as the primary objective of monetary policy, financial
system developments and vulnerabilities need to be more fully taken into account. A key
priority is to strengthen central banks’ monitoring and analysis of financial imbalances and
risks. Kohn (2009) and many others have noted that standard macroeconomic models used
for monetary policy largely ignore financial balance sheets, financial intermediation, and
asset prices. Incorporating such features into coherent macroeconomic models, however, is a
non-trivial task, and currently only a few central banks have built models with explicit
financial sectors (Box 4). Nonetheless, movement in this direction is essential for monetary
34
See Mishkin (2007).
35
IMF (2009a).
22
policy makers to assess the consistency of financial sector developments with price and
output stability.
Most models used by central banks for forecasting and policy analysis do not include explicit
representations of key channels in the financial intermediation process. Financial intermediation
is ignored in models that assume perfect and complete financial markets.2 The core forecasting
models of central banks typically include only a very limited set of assets (usually government bonds
and productive capital) and no explicit representation of borrowing and lending between private
agents. Most advanced economy central banks, including the Fed, ECB, Bank of Canada (BoC), and
Reserve Bank of New Zealand did not include credit channels in their models prior to the recent
crisis. However, some, including the ECB and Bank of Canada, were developing models including
financial frictions and explicit financial sectors. Others, including the Bank of England and the Bank
of Japan, have included financial wealth effects in their models providing a channel for asset values to
affect spending. Recently, many central banks, including the ECB and the Fed, have begun to focus a
considerable part of their research efforts on macro-financial linkages.
Balance sheet and credit channels linking the availability of loans to households or firms to
their holdings of collateral or net worth are generally missing. These channels, arising from
financial market imperfections, are considered as crucial for capturing procyclicality in financial
intermediation. For example, strong demand boosts housing values, which provides collateral for
higher household borrowing. For firms, a cyclical upswing tends to boost profitability, increasing
creditworthiness. This lowers bank lending spreads, encouraging corporate borrowing and increasing
investment spending.
Central banks are beginning to incorporate such features into macroeconomic models. A few
central banks such as the ECB, Fed, Swedish Riksbank, and Reserve Bank of New Zealand have
introduced these aspects into forecasting models. Others, including the Bank of France, Bank of
Canada, and Bank of Italy have begun to incorporate these features into “satellite” models which are
not yet fully integrated into the main forecasting exercise.
Substantial further work is needed. Even in the relatively advanced models being developed,
important features of financial systems are not fully incorporated, such as endogenous determination
of loan defaults, or interbank markets, and contagion effects. Many models have difficulty replicating
or explaining important empirical regularities of financial data, such as the cyclical properties of
interest rate spreads.
_________________________
1/
This box is based on publicly available papers describing the core forecasting models of central banks.
2/
The financial sector is characterized as perfect when it is frictionless and fully competitive. Completeness
refers to a financial system with instruments to manage all risks.
42. A lengthening of the monetary policy horizon has been proposed to help address
financial stability concerns. The financial and asset price imbalances that tend to magnify
23
risks to financial stability tend to develop gradually, and therefore generally lie beyond the
conventional planning horizon for monetary policy of under about three years. Consequently,
it is argued that central banks may need to adopt longer planning horizons to bring financial
stability concerns into their decision making.36 37 Responding to financial imbalances, at least
if they are not fully consistent with price stability, also implies that deviations of inflation
from target are likely to be larger and more prolonged than otherwise. From this perspective
consideration might also need to be given to widening target ranges. However, careful
attention needs to be paid to the impact on credibility and accountability of bringing financial
stability considerations into the policy framework in these ways. A particular concern in this
context is that tolerating more persistent deviations of inflation would both dilute policy
accountability and fuel uncertainty about the long-term commitment to price stability.
43. An open question is whether monetary policy should go beyond these measures
and add financial stability as a distinct policy objective. Strengthening understanding and
monitoring of macro-financial interactions and lengthening the monetary policy horizon do
not imply adding a financial stability objective to the central bank’s other objectives. What
they do imply is that the central bank could more fully take financial stability developments
into consideration to the extent that they were consistent with the primary policy objective of
price stability.38 A much bigger step would be to add a financial stability objective to the
central bank’s monetary policy mandate. In this case, financial stability considerations would
need to be taken into account in monetary policy whether or not they were consistent with the
price stability objective. Assigning only one policy instrument—the policy interest rate—to
more than one objective would confront monetary policy with sharp trade-offs and could
well lead to a failure to achieve either objective.39
36
See Borio and White (2004), and Gerlach and others (2009).
37
Lengthening policy horizons could add an element of price level targeting to the policy framework [(Walsh
(2009), Carney (2009)]. Price level targeting requires that the cumulative effects on the price level of deviations
from the inflation target eventually be reversed in order to achieve the desired long-run inflation objective. This
approach might help strengthen policy accountability while at the same time facilitating increased policy
flexibility in the short and medium term. However, price level targeting poses a number of practical difficulties
(Kohn, 2009).
38
This is closely analogous to the way that many inflation targeting central banks deal with exchange rate
developments. Although the central bank does not have any exchange rate objective per se, exchange rate
developments are monitored and analyzed carefully in so far as they affect the outlook for inflation and output.
39
See Bini-Smaghi (2010).
24
44. The longstanding debate on whether central banks should “lean against”
emerging financial imbalances or “bubbles” by raising policy interest rates has been
reopened by the crisis.40 A common view has been that leaning mechanistically against
financial imbalances could increase inflation volatility,41 require strong interest rate responses
to be effective and thus impose high output costs,42 and may be counterproductive in small
open economies where high interest rates can attract capital inflows.43 Nevertheless, the high
costs of systemic financial instability shown by the crisis can be seen as strengthening the
case for using monetary policy to lean against asset price bubbles. Until financial
developments are better structurally incorporated in monetary policy decision making,
central banks should best utilize judgment in deciding whether to maintain interest rates
somewhat higher than otherwise in order to avoid imbalances from undermining financial
stability, which would ultimately endanger price stability. For example, the combination of
rising asset prices and rapid credit growth may warrant a higher policy rate.
45. More work is needed on how monetary policy can deal with potential conflicts in
attaining both financial stability and price stability. In crisis times, a monetary easing
helps counter the risk of deflation and at the same time contributes to stabilizing the financial
sector and facilitating monetary transmission. In contrast, monetary tightening to address
emerging financial imbalances may lead to wider output gaps and more volatile inflation,
creating a potential conflict. But when monetary policy does not lean vigorously against the
build-up of financial imbalances, the resulting asymmetry may create moral hazard and
encourage the build-up of financial imbalances. However, formal studies suggest that this
inherent time-inconsistency in monetary policy cannot credibly be addressed by monetary
policy itself, but instead requires a prudential response.44 Rather than trying to reduce
imbalances using interest rate policy, it may therefore be preferable in many cases for central
banks to step up communication and issue risk warnings, that need to be backed up by the
‘threat’ of macroprudential action.
40
See Bernanke and Gertler (2000), and Richards and Robinson (2003).
41
See Gerlach and others (2009).
42
See Bank of England (2009).
43
See Ostry and others (2010).
44
See Farhi and Tirole (2009).
25
What has been learned about the use of unconventional monetary policy tools?45
47. Adherence to these practices would help preserve the high degree of central
bank independence that has proven crucial for maintaining price stability. Quasi-fiscal
roles taken on by central banks in the past undermined their credibility (Fry, 1993 and
Mackenzie and Stella, 1996). Today, any pressures to entrench the expanded policy role that
central banks took on during the crisis and that are normally outside of their mandate should
thus be resisted. Any losses from long-term security holdings that threaten the financial
integrity of central banks should be met by government financing. The expanded post-crisis
balance sheets make even more important effective collaboration between the central bank
and government in macro-policy coordination, cash management, and broader asset and
liquidity management.
48. The crisis exposed weaknesses in central bank liquidity management and in
national and international crisis management frameworks. The greatly expanded
operations of central banks during the crisis blurred operational targets, complicated
communication, and exposed them to new risks. Gaps in crisis management frameworks led
45
These issues are addressed in IMF (2010a).
26
in a few cases to the prolonged involvement of central banks in unfamiliar areas. Further,
these measures contributed to moral hazard by raising market expectations of large liquidity
injections (and other public support) in times of stress. These weaknesses have created an
awareness of the need for more flexible, formal, and better coordinated arrangements.
50. However, more flexible operational frameworks would enhance the resiliency of
the system. Before the crisis, most central banks conducted monetary operations through
narrow channels, with the expectation that funds would be redistributed to the institutions
and markets most in need of funding (Box 5). During the crisis, some aspects of liquidity
provision proved to be too rigid to address problems in specific markets and institutions that
caused systemic stress. Thus, consideration can be given to broadening liquidity management
frameworks to increase the crisis options available to central banks.46
Higher reserve levels—Central banks typically vary their liquidity provision to match
reserve demand and thus stabilize market interest rates. Before the crisis, reserve
levels were in some cases very small in relation to funding volumes. Larger
equilibrium levels of reserves could help to better absorb liquidity shocks and thereby
enhance policy flexibility and systemic resiliency.47 Larger reserve levels could also
be useful in economies with more complicated financial structures, where stresses can
rapidly increase the volatility of reserve demand.48
46
See CGFS (2008) and Chailloux and others (2008) for discussions of changes in operational frameworks
central banks made during the crisis and refinements of liquidity management operations.
47
In principle, higher reserves may interact with more stringent liquidity requirements for banking institutions.
However, they need not conflict when they count towards prudential liquid assets.
48
Reserve levels could be boosted by raising reserve requirements. Alternatively, under a voluntary reserve
targeting scheme such as that adopted by the Bank of England in 2006, institutions can choose to raise their own
targets in response to stresses.
27
Some of these changes, such as expanded collateral and a wider range of counterparties,
might be used only sparingly in normal circumstances, mainly as a means to prepare for a
possible scaling up of operations during periods of turbulence.
28
1/ “Eligible” indicates that the asset class has been eligible since the pre-crisis and no change has been made.
“Added” indicates that the asset class had not been eligible before the crisis but was made eligible during the crisis.
“Expanded” indicates that the asset class has been eligible since the pre-crisis and the eligible type of security was
expanded during the crisis. “Not eligible” indicates that the asset class has continued to be ineligible through the
crisis period.
2/ The term auction facility of the Fed is included in OMOs as its profile is close to OMOs of other central banks such
as the ECB and BoJ.
3/ Public securities are bonds issued or guaranteed by central or local governments or government agencies.
4/ Asset backed commercial paper was made eligible by the BoC.
Changes in counterparty arrangements during the crisis reflected the pre-crisis regime. Central banks
that had conducted OMOs with a small number of primary dealers increased their counterparties. In contrast,
central banks that had conducted OMOs against a broader range of counterparties made limited or no
changes.
1/
Counterparty Pools of Selected Central Banks
OMO Standing facility
Fed Primary dealers Deposit institutions
ECB Credit institutions Credit institutions
BoE Banks, building societies, and securities dealers Banks and building societies
BoJ Financial institutions including banks, securities Financial institutions including banks, securities
dealers, and money brokers dealers, and money brokers
BoC Primary dealers Direct participants of the large-value payment system
RBA Members of the large-value payment system RBA’s Exchange Settlement account holders
1/ Eligibility of each individual institution can be subject to additional standards related to credit quality, status in reserve
requirement systems, and presence in funding markets.
As market conditions have recovered, some but not all of the changes have been unwound. While the
Fed and Bank of Canada have been restoring the pre-crisis arrangements for OMO counterparties and
collateral, the Reserve Bank of Australia maintains the extended collateral framework. The Bank of Japan
also maintains an expanded collateral list for government bonds, though it has been terminating the active use
of private instruments. Meanwhile, the Bank of England has proposed a wider range of collateral to provide
liquidity insurance to the banking system.
29
What are the lessons for the provision of liquidity to markets and institutions in times of
crisis?
51. During the crisis, central banks widened the scope of liquidity support to
address stresses in systemically important markets. While this was needed to help
maintain the flow of credit to the economy and restore market confidence, it also raised
questions about the role of central banks including potential moral hazard. These concerns
could be addressed by ensuring that central banks have the information and tools on an
ongoing basis to be able to identify systemic vulnerabilities, which will require continuous
monitoring and cooperation with regulators and supervisors.49 Central bank intervention
should be undertaken only when other measures are not available and be designed to be
attractive only under exceptional market circumstances. Further, a sustained effort needed to
support a particular market should be handled by the government as this is a fiscal task.
52. The crisis also demonstrated that central banks’ longstanding role in supporting
systemically important institutions was not as clearly articulated as previously thought.
Again, central banks should have all available information immediately at hand to judge
whether a bank or other financial institution is systemically important as well as solvent.
While solvency may be difficult to ascertain in a period of turbulence, the quality of these
judgments can be improved by closer coordination and information sharing with the potential
counterparties themselves, supervisors, and other central banks. Legal frameworks should
provide enough leeway for central banks to provide liquidity to systemically important
counterparties, using a broad range of instruments.
53. Broader changes to the financial stability framework are needed to avoid the
moral hazard arising from the crisis experience. First, all institutions (not just deposit-
takers) and markets that could potentially need liquidity support in a crisis should be
appropriately regulated and supervised, and explicit liquidity standards be applied to, at a
minimum, institutions that maintain reserves at the central bank.50 Second, more formal
frameworks are needed for a rapid resolution of insolvent financial institutions.51 The scope
of such resolution tools again needs to include all potentially systemic institutions and ensure
that shareholders and management have the proper incentives to avoid undue risks.
49
Systemic vulnerability can be addressed by measures to increase the transparency of market and measures to
ensure that market participants have proper incentives. For example, originators and sponsors of asset-backed
securities may need to be required to retain an appropriate amount of “skin in the game.”
50
See IMF/BIS/FSB (2009) for a discussion of this boundary.
51
See Cihak and Nier (2009). Current reform proposals for the United States envisage all systemically important
financial holding companies to be subject to special resolution powers.
30
54. The crisis also underscored the importance of robust payment and settlement
systems. The crisis would have been much more severe had central banks not taken efforts to
introduce robust payment and settlement systems, including for foreign exchange, over the
two decades ahead of the crisis.52 However, stress did emerge in the clearing and settlement
of derivatives transactions, where market volumes had grown rapidly ahead of the crisis. The
systemic impact of failure of a financial institution depends critically on the robustness of the
infrastructure underpinning those markets in which it is active. AIG, for example, would
have posed a much lower systemic concern had the derivatives it offered been centrally
cleared. A continuous and sustained effort is thus needed to ensure that the infrastructure
keeps up with the development of financial markets.53 Central banks, which in many cases
are engaged in oversight of these systems, should play an important role in this regard, in
cooperation with securities regulators and supervisors of individual institutions.54
55. Crisis management coordination could also be stepped up. Ongoing changes in
the financial sector constantly shift risks within the system. Thus, the crisis management
capacity of central banks, together with other entities, must keep pace. Regular crisis
simulation “war games” help to facilitate crisis management. The establishment of more
formal crisis management groups for cross-border institutions—as envisaged by the Financial
Stability Board—will also help increase crisis preparedness, including as regards burden
sharing.
56. Central banks have an important role to play in preventing systemic stress
arising from the disruption of cross-border foreign exchange funding. The crisis showed
that the disruption of cross-border funding linkages can have large and unforeseen
consequences (CGFS, 2010b). The swap arrangements between central banks during the
crisis were effective in countering global shortages of key funding currencies and central
banks should be prepared to use them again if necessary.55 Central banks should be able to
establish these arrangements on a timely basis if and when they are needed. In this
52
Manning and others (2009).
53
Since 2005, there has also been an effort on the part of central banks, led by the Federal Reserve Bank of
New York, and industry participants to reduce counterparty credit risk in bilaterally cleared “over-the-counter”
derivatives markets, most notably markets for credit default swaps.
54
See Manning and others (2009) and IMF (2010c).
55
The efficacy of central bank swap arrangements need to be considered together with other foreign exchange
liquidity providing options such as regional pooling arrangements, cross-border collateralization arrangements,
self-insurance through foreign reserves, and the Fund’s Flexible Credit Line; consideration of these options is
beyond the scope of this paper.
31
connection, a high priority should be given to facilitating information sharing among central
banks on foreign exchange exposure in off-shore markets. Central banks should have access
to information on the liquidity positions of institutions (including off balance sheet) and
markets that could pose systemic risks.
57. Central bank swap arrangements should be designed to avoid moral hazard and
losses for central banks. First, central banks should work closely with regulators to ensure
that market participants are internalizing any systemic risks posed by their foreign exchange
liquidity management, especially with respect to funding as well as currency and duration
mismatches. Monitoring and supervision of local counterparties is needed to avoid credit risk
being taken on by the liquidity receiving central bank.56 Second, moral hazard can be
mitigated with appropriate arrangements such as setting an explicit termination date or
pricing the transactions so that access is attractive only under stressed conditions. Third,
swaps are best suited for alleviating stress in local foreign exchange markets arising from
temporary shortages in global liquidity. Central bank swap arrangements to provide liquidity
to countries with deteriorating balance of payment conditions, or provided over somewhat
longer horizons, should only be undertaken if there is adequate assurance that supporting
macroeconomic and financial sector policies are being implemented.
59. The Fund will continue to work closely with central banks and others to improve
the effectiveness of financial stability policies. The Fund is well placed to engage with
standard setters, the Financial Stability Board, the Bank of International Settlements, and
other institutions, as well as to serve as an interlocutor for views of central banks. The Fund
will also continue to develop and refine FSAPs, where traditionally the central bank has been
56
The liquidity providing central bank is not directly exposed to credit risks of local counterparties of the
liquidity receiving central bank.
32
a main counterpart.57 Efforts here include more modular FSAPs targeted at the relevant
country-specific sources of systemic financial stress. The Fund will continue to provide
technical assistance to develop the institutional and analytical elements of financial stability
frameworks.
60. The Fund is helping to further develop the needed analytical tools and fill data
gaps. A number of projects are underway aimed at better understanding the role of macro-
financial linkages in the macroeconomic models used by central banks. The Fund also has a
number of initiatives in train to help enhance the availability of data needed for central banks
and other policymakers for analysis of systemic risks.
Do Directors agree that macroprudential policies should be the main policy tool to
maintain systemic financial stability, while monetary policy can be formulated to
address systemic financial risks when this is consistent with price stability?
Do Directors agree that price stability should remain the primary goal of monetary
policy, and that any changes to strategic policy frameworks should not undermine
commitment to this goal?
Do Directors agree that a lesson for monetary policy makers is to better integrate the
monitoring and analysis of financial system developments and risks into the
formulation and implementation of policy?
57
See IMF (2010d).
33
Do Directors agree that the policy roles of central bank, government and other entities
need to be clearly delineated and the financial position of central banks protected to
ensure central bank independence and their ability to deliver price stability?
Do Directors concur with the array of challenges to central banks and other public
sector entities posed by formulating and putting into place the post-crisis systemic
stability policy framework? Do Directors agree that the Fund should step up its
efforts to improve the effectiveness of financial stability frameworks?
34
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Argentina √ √ √ √
Australia √
Brazil √ √ √ √
Canada √ √
China √ <√> √
ECB √ √
France √ √ √ √
Germany √ <√> <√> √
India √ √ √
Indonesia √ √ √ √
Italy √ √ √
Japan √ * √
Korea * √
Mexico √ √
Russia √ √ √ √
Saudi Arabia √ √ √
South Africa √ √ √ √
Turkey √ √
United Kingdom √ √
United States √ <√> <√>
Memorandum item:
Number of central banks
17 11 14 14
(out of 20)
Sources: The Dexia Central Bank Directory 2009; and central banks websites.
1/ A √ indicates that there is an explicit reference in the law. In some cases a financial stability
objective may be referred to outside of the law, for example in memoranda of understanding.
Oversight over the payment system is not covered here.
2/ A √ indicates that the central bank has a lead responsibility, while <√> indicates a function is
shared with other agencies, and * indicates that the central bank does not have a responsibility, but
can conduct or participate in supervision activities (such as on-site supervision).
41
Inflation
30%
25%
United States
United Kingdom
20%
Unified Germany
West Germany
15%
10%
5%
0%
-5%
1958 1963 1968 1973 1978 1983 1988 1993 1998 2003 2008
United Kingdom
2.0% Italy
Japan
United States
y
lii
t 1.5%
a
l Canada
o France
V
n
o
it
a
lf 1.0%
In Germany
Italy Canada
0.5% United Kingdom Japan 1970-1989
0.0200483
0.009528
Germany 1990-2007
United States
France
0.0%
0 0.005 0.01 0.015 0.02 0.025
Growth Volatilty
1/ Volatility is gauged as the mean absolute error between annual observations and an HP trend. The HP filter
was run on growth and inflation from the period 1965 to 2012, with a lambda of 100 (for 2008 to 2012, the
average rates from 1990 to 2007 were used).
42
10.0
Others
9.0
Insurance and pension funds
Depository banks
8.0
7.0
6.0
5.0
4.0
3.0
2.0
1.0
0.0
1987 1997 2007 2009 1987 1997 2007 2009 1999 2007 2009
United States United Kingdom Euro area
Sources: U.S. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System; Bank of England; European Central Bank;
and IMF staff estimates.
1/
For the euro area, 2009 data are for the third quarter.