Euro solution to take time

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Euro solution to take time

The International Monetary Fund, or IMF, said on Tuesday that the euro-area debt crisis has exacerbated global financial instability and an orderly adjustment process is likely to be prolonged and costly.

By (Bloomberg)

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Published: Wed 1 Aug 2012, 11:17 PM

Last updated: Tue 7 Apr 2015, 12:16 PM

The Washington-based IMF’s assessment came in a pilot report intended to make external monitoring more effective. The IMF announced changes to its surveillance of members’ economies to better account for the effects of their domestic and financial policies on other countries. “Unsustainably large intra-euro area imbalances were part of the global boom-bust cycle, and the failure to resolve the euro-area crisis is causing heightened stresses that are spilling over to other countries,” the IMF said.

The IMF, which is participating in bailouts of Greece, Portugal and Ireland, has been criticised for missing signs of fragility that led to the 2008 global financial crisis. A report last year showed it also faced “dissatisfaction” about how it assesses exchange rates, prompting a pledge to include data such as capital flows when reviewing member nations’ external stability. The IMF’s new report discusses the range of spillovers from a country’s policies on global stability and adds guidance on domestic policies. The fund will now focus on both exchange rates and domestic policies when assessing a country’s economy.

“Despite having narrowed through crisis, external imbalances are unlikely to be resolved by themselves but will require decisive policy actions across a wide range of countries,” Tamim Bayoumi, IMF assistant director for surveillance, said in a conference call. “In many evolved countries medium-term fiscal consolidation is needed.” The IMF is allowing six months for the adoption of the new monitoring to allow time for both staff and member countries to become familiar with it. The IMF will be taking public comment on the monitoring addition. —


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