Seeks more global funds to boost infrastructure
The
global financial safety
net needs to “truly global" and consist of multiple layers to be effective, Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee, on Saturday, said even as he warned that it is no substitute for “macro-economic adjustment or sound regulation and supervision."<br /><br />“The post-crisis
global financial safety
net needs to be truly “global" and include multiple layers consisting of individual countries, central banks, regional arrangements, and
international financial institutions," Mukherjee said in his intervention at the Plenary Session on the Managing Director"s Action Plan to the International Monetary &Financial Committee.<br /><br />“The IMF needs to catalyse such a
global arrangement, while clearly communicating the criteria for both the inclusion as
well as exclusion of specific countries," he said.<br /><br />Observing that the IMF has overhauled its
lending toolkit and boosted its
resources with a view to strengthen its ability to mitigate the adverse consequences of future shocks, the Finance Minister said its effectiveness in this context will draw on the ability to identify triggers of systemic crises
well before their onset, especially those originating in large or
more integrated economies with high potential of contagion.<br /><br />“It is also
important to ensure that support is specific to genuine bystanders with strong fundamentals and prudent macroeconomic policies. The
financial safety
net should not be used as a substitute for macroeconomic adjustment or sound regulation and supervision," he said. <br /><strong><br />Early detection</strong><br /><br />The
minister said for the early detection and prevention of crises, it is
important to
focus on risk assessment and ensure stronger traction with policymakers.<br /><br />In order to mitigate the systemic effects of crises, especially on emerging economies and
low income countries, the
lending toolkit
should be an integral part of the
global financial safety net, he said.<br /><br />Mukherjee said while near-term liquidity
issues require the use of appropriate fiscal policy, recent
experience shows that sustainability of public
debt is equally
important to ensure solvency. “Debt sustainability exercises
should be reviewed separately for advanced economies, emerging
market economies (EMEs) and
low income countries (LICs) in order to account for the unique and distinct
challenges facing each set of countries," the
finance minister said.<br /><br />“In order to overcome large
infrastructure gaps and attract public
investment in infrastructure, any
debt sustainability analysis
should make allowances for such
infrastructure investment without compromising the viability of public finances," the
finance minister said.<br /><br />There has been a spillover of significant sovereign risks to the
banking sector, transmitted by
extensive cross-border holdings of sovereign debt, he observed. “While there is a pressing
need to address the fiscal
challenges facing governments, it is also critical for
banks to
raise private capital to restore confidence and also for adequate public backstops for their
recapitalisation when needed,"
finance minister Mukherjee said.
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