The new challenges facing central banks Colegio de Ingenieros de Caminos

Similar documents
The Spanish economy: transformation and challenges Spain Investors Day

Developments in the economic situation Asociación Española de Directivos, Santa Cruz de Tenerife

The Spanish banking system: situation and challenges Universidad de Almería, 18 July 2016

Luis M Linde: The Spanish banking system situation and challenges

Opening remarks 2nd Annual Meeting CEBRA International Finance and Macroeconomic Program

Keynote speech Bloomberg Capital Markets Forum Madrid

Financial Stability in a World of Very Low Interest Rates

Macro vulnerabilities, regulatory reforms and financial stability issues IIF Spring Meeting

The challenges to the Spanish banking industry

Lucas Papademos: Financial stability and macro-prudential supervision: objectives, instruments and the role of the ECB

Opening of the 14th banking industry meeting: should we reinvent banks or improve their management? IESE

THE COUNTERCYCLICAL PROVISIONS OF THE BANCO DE ESPAÑA, (**) Pedro Duarte Neves (*)

Monetary, Fiscal, and Financial Stability Policy Tools: Are We Equipped for the Next Recession?

Testimony before the Non-Standing Committee for the Monitoring and Assessment of the Toledo Pact Agreements

Basel III: towards a safer financial system

The Spanish economy: situation and outlook XIV Día de los Economistas 2015/Colegio de Economistas de las Islas Baleares

MONETARY POLICY IN THE EURO AREA: THE EXPERIENCE OF SPAIN

QUARTERLY REPORT ON THE SPANISH ECONOMY OVERVIEW

Madrid, 22 May The regulatory responses to the crisis. Luis M. Linde. Fundación de Estudios Financieros

A Steadier Course for Monetary Policy. John B. Taylor. Economics Working Paper 13107

REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL

Spain: From Recovery to Resilience Banco de España-IMF High-Level Seminar

The U.S. Economy and Monetary Policy. Esther L. George President and Chief Executive Officer Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City

Secular stagnation and growth measurement conference Paris, 16 January 2017

FACTORS INFLUENCING THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM STABILITY ORIENTED POLICIES OF A SMALL COUNTRY SOON TO BECOME AN EU MEMBER ESTONIAN EXPERIENCE 1

Monetary Policy Framework Issues: Toward the 2021 Inflation-Target Renewal

International Monetary and Financial Committee

Is it implementing Basel II or do we need Basell III? BBA Annual Internacional Banking Conference. José María Roldán Director General de Regulación

Banking regulation and supervision after the crisis where are we now, and what lies ahead?

International Monetary and Financial Committee

Jürgen Stark: Financial stability the role of central banks. A new task? A new strategy? New tools?

Implications of Fiscal Austerity for U.S. Monetary Policy

OVERVIEW. The EU recovery is firming. Table 1: Overview - the winter 2014 forecast Real GDP. Unemployment rate. Inflation. Winter 2014 Winter 2014

Canada s Economic Future: What Have We Learned from the 1990s?

The OECD Global Economic Outlook

Lorenzo Bini Smaghi: Reflections on the exit strategy

Gertrude Tumpel-Gugerell: The road less travelled exploring the nexus of macro-prudential and monetary policy

FESE Convention Europe s future in global capital markets. Paris, Thursday 22 nd June Closing remarks by François Villeroy de Galhau,

Minutes of the Monetary Policy Council decision-making meeting held on 2 September 2015

The New Global Economic Order Multilateral Institutions and the New Regionalism

LIGHTS AND SHADOWS IN THE EUROPEAN UNION

Macroprudential Regulation and Economic Growth in Low-Income Countries: Lessons from ESRC-DFID Project ES/L012022/1

Address. Institute of Chartered Accountants ICAJ Accountants Forum. Stability, Interest Rates and Economic Growth

The Conduct of Monetary Policy

Daniel Mminele: Thoughts on South Africa s monetary policy

Bank Flows and Basel III Determinants and Regional Differences in Emerging Markets

Ben S Bernanke: Modern risk management and banking supervision

BANK OF FINLAND ARTICLES ON THE ECONOMY

real B. These developments suggest two tentative conclusions. nominal

Erkki Liikanen: Low interest rate environment and systemic risks current issues

How costly is for Spain to be in the EURO?

Growth and inflation in OECD and Sweden 1999 and 2000 forecast Percentage annual change

ASSESSING THE RISK OF A DOUBLE-DIP RECESSION: KEY INDICATORS TO MONITOR

The ECB hints clearly at further stimuli in December

International Monetary and Financial Committee

Macroeconomic Policy during a Credit Crunch

Financial stability: how to lean against the wind?

ARTICLES THE ECB S MONETARY POLICY STANCE DURING THE FINANCIAL CRISIS

The Role of Foreign Financial Institutions in Japan's Financial System

REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL. Market developments potentially requiring the use of Article 459 CRR

QUARTERLY REPORT ON THE SPANISH ECONOMY 1 OVERVIEW

Money and Banking ECON3303. Lecture 16: The Conduct of Monetary Policy: Strategy and Tactics. William J. Crowder Ph.D.

Developments in inflation and its determinants

Erdem Başçi: Recent economic and financial developments in Turkey

Haruhiko Kuroda: How to overcome deflation

Jean-Claude Trichet: The monetary policy of the ECB during the financial crisis

OPENING STATEMENT BY MARIO DRAGHI CANDIDATE FOR PRESIDENT OF THE ECB TO THE ECONOMIC AND MONETARY AFFAIRS COMMITTEE OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT

MACROECONOMIC PROJECTIONS FOR THE PERIOD

Øystein Olsen: The economic outlook

Financial stability in a European environment a cross policy approach

Remarks of Nout Wellink Chairman, Basel Committee on Banking Supervision President, De Nederlandsche Bank

The title of my speech today is enabling banks to support the economy in the New Normal.

Otmar Issing: The euro - a stable currency for Europe

Rethinking Stabilization Policy An Introduction to the Bank s 2002 Economic Symposium

Spring 2013 forecast: The EU economy slowly recovering from a protracted recession

The Fed at a Crossroads

Spain: Navigating the Storm. María J. Nieto 1

EUROPEAN COMMISSION S CONSULTATION ON HEDGE FUNDS EUROSYSTEM CONTRIBUTION

Oxford Economics: Macromodelling. contagion & downside risks. Keith Church Director of Macroeconomic Modelling.

The financial crisis challenges and new ideas Luxembourg School of Finance 28 January 2010

Monetary Policy and Reform in Practice. Remarks by. Esther L. George President and Chief Executive Officer Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City

STABILITY PROGRAMME:

Post-Financial Crisis Regulatory Reform Proposals -From Global One-Size-Fits-All to Locally-Specific Regulations-

Minutes of the Monetary Policy Council decision-making meeting held on 6 July 2016

Developing Tools for Dynamic Capital Supervision. Remarks by. Daniel K. Tarullo. Member. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.

Mr Bäckström elucidates the economic situation in Sweden and describes the consequences it may have for future monetary policy

International Monetary and Financial Committee

In pursuing a strategy of monetary targeting, the central bank announces that it will

FINANCIAL SECURITY AND STABILITY

International Monetary and Financial Committee

Banking Union: the challenge of going digital and being regulated Presentation of the PwC report

Information Note: The application of the countercyclical capital buffer in Ireland

Remarks given at IADI conference on Designing an Optimal Deposit Insurance System

Introduction and legal basis. EBA/Op/2017/ December 2017

Presented by Norman Mataruka Registrar of Banking Institutions: Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe July 18, /16/2016 1

Concluding remarks i. Pedro Duarte Neves Vice-governor. Lisbon, 10 February 2015

at the Joint Committee of Inquiry into the Banking Crisis 10 June 2005

Peter Praet: Preserving monetary accommodation in times of normalisation

Erkki Liikanen: Reforming the structure of the EU banking sector

The Belgian Mortgage Market: Recent Developments and Prudential Measures

Transcription:

5 March 2018 The new challenges facing central banks Colegio de Ingenieros de Caminos Luis M. Linde Governor

Let me begin by thanking the School of Civil Engineering for inviting me to inaugurate this cycle of meetings with regulatory agencies. Many thanks to the President of the School, its Management Board and all of you for being here today. The international financial crisis that began in 2007 has given rise to various changes and to the emergence of new challenges. Central banks are, today, in a rather different and novel situation compared with where we were before the crisis some 10 years back, and we are affected by a debate about our functions in the economy and the thrust of our policies. In the past decade central banks have increased monetary stimuli manifold and there have been deep-seated changes in the monetary and regulatory policy objectives and instruments implemented. We are now emerging from the crisis and this is raising even more the profile of the debate on the role central banks should play and whether the policies pursued in recent years should be maintained, or progressively abandoned, and at what speed and to what extent either alternative should be taken. The challenges facing central banks can be grouped in three areas: first, what is being labelled as the new normal in the macroeconomy and its implications for monetary policy; second, the challenge for financial regulation policies; and third, the new challenges posed by financial innovation and the new technologies. The impact of the crisis on monetary policy But before addressing these challenges, I think it might be useful to take a short step back to remember where we have come from. We can only understand today s challenges if we bear in mind the changes, often far-reaching, that have come about in central banks in response to the crisis. The global financial crisis came about following a build-up of bubbles in the advanced economies, mainly in the financial and real estate sectors, a process to which easy financing conditions proved conducive in a setting in which risks were not appropriately priced. In any event, what was surprising was the intensity and global nature of the crisis that broke in 2008. Given highly integrated financial markets and complex interconnections, instability spread rapidly, leading to the most serious financial crisis since the Second World War. In the European Union the crisis was, moreover, exacerbated by a double-dip recession, which has prolonged the recovery period and has also revealed the weakness of the euro area s institutional framework. The crisis also left the monetary and regulatory policy manual that central banks had been applying in tatters. Pre-crisis, monetary policy in the advanced economies was essentially defined by inflation targets and a key instrument, the interest rate. In parallel, the goal of financial stability was chiefly addressed with microprudential regulation and supervision. This framework was broadly consistent with the goal of economic growth, given that the control of inflation was 3/7

estimated to be the best means for ensuring the economy drew closer to its potential growth. The crisis showed that this framework was no longer valid. The control of inflation, though it remains a necessary condition, is not sufficient to ensure growth; and microprudential regulation was no longer effective, in or of itself, for guaranteeing financial stability. As a result, central banks have adapted their policies, which are now more complex in terms of objectives and instruments. Monetary policy has had to face up to the problem of what is known as the zero bound on interest rates. Basically, this is the situation that Keynes coined the liquidity trap : interest rates close to zero cease to be an effective monetary policy instrument. This has led to the development of new instruments, so-called unconventional monetary policy, which mainly includes quantitative easing, private and public-sector financial asset purchases, and the explanation and signalling of the monetary policy to be applied in the future, namely forward guidance. The outcome has been a large increase four- or fivefold in the balance sheet of the main economies central banks. In the case of the Eurosystem, the ECB balance sheet accounted for 12% of euro area GDP before the crisis and now stands at approximately 40%, around 4.4 trillion. Supervisory policy, for its part, has had to face the challenge of macrofinancial instability in a context of highly interconnected markets at the global level. In this area, the response has been three-pronged. First, the strengthening of microprudential regulation, with the new Basel III Accord, which includes greater capital requirements and a stricter framework for systemically important financial institutions. Second, the development of a new instrument, macroprudential policy, which addresses systemic risk and the procyclical behaviour of the financial system as a whole. And, third, the greater international coordination of regulation, which is necessary given the reality of globalised financial markets. Notable in terms of coordination has been the creation of the Financial Stability Board and, in the case of the European Union, the activation of the Banking Union, beginning with the SSM and the Single Resolution Mechanism. The new monetary policy I shall now turn to the challenges central banks face. The first is, evidently, identifying what is understood by the new normal. One question on which economic policy discussions are focusing is whether the advanced economies are in a new situation of secular stagnation, a new normal characterised by low growth, low inflation and low interest rates. We are seeing how, despite lower unemployment rates and the closing of the gap between potential and real output, inflation rates remain persistently low. A series of factors can account for this behaviour. Some are transitory, such as the insufficient increase in employment, or the impact of deleveraging processes in some economies. But there are 4/7

also factors of a more structural nature, including the effect of globalisation and technological progress, or demographic factors. In any event, it should be stressed that there are other policies apart from monetary policy. In particular, both fiscal policy and structural reforms have a key role to play in supporting demand, boosting real interest rates and raising productivity and potential growth. Regarding monetary policy, the central question is this: to what extent should the macroeconomy of the new normal lead to a new conventional model for monetary policy? In particular, it is considered whether the management of the central bank s balance sheet will become entrenched as a permanent part of the normal instruments of monetary policy. Estimates, while subject to major uncertainty, suggest that real interest rates and inflation will remain at low levels, meaning that nominal rates will also be low, thereby limiting their effectiveness as a monetary policy instrument. Against this background, central banks are likely to retain the use of unconventional monetary policies. Analysis of these policies is leading to debate, as yet inconclusive, on their effectiveness, the optimal size of central bank balance sheets and on the impact that they might have in terms of financial stability and the medium- and long-term fiscal situation. True, as the recovery gains momentum, and provided this translates into a sustained adjustment by inflation towards its target, the need for monetary policy to support the economy will tend to diminish. The US Federal Reserve has already begun to reduce its balance sheet at a gradual and predictable pace, and the ECB has slowed the pace of increase of its own balance sheet. This reduction in stimuli will extend the monetary policy headroom for acting effectively in the face of possible future crises. The monetary policy normalisation strategy can but be slow and will tend to be applied predictably, with close scrutiny of its impact both on economic growth and inflation and on financial stability. It is worth recalling that, in 2013, the markets rather hastily interpreted some statements by the Federal Reserve, the clarification or correction of which gave rise to a bout of turbulence, owing to the different forecasts as to the speed at which expansionary monetary policy would be abandoned or softened. That episode provided a lesson for all central banks that have applied unconventional policies, in two respects: monetary policy should be corrected very slowly, and the correction should be predictable to the markets. In sum, predictability and a clear communication strategy will be important in preventing adverse market reactions. Financial regulation and supervision The second area I would like to mention concerns the challenges in financial regulation and supervision. As I said, the crisis has led to an overhaul of financial regulation, centred on three main areas: the strengthening of microprudential regulation; the development of macroprudential regulation; and the stepping-up of international coordination. These new regulations provide a scenario of greater security for the financial sector. If we have learned anything in recent years it is that there is always a risk of another crisis. But I believe we are now better prepared. The new regulations impose greater capital 5/7

requirements on financial institutions and stricter supervision, including new instruments for the early identification of financial risks. The main challenge for regulatory policy is now to fully implement the reforms approved and to closely monitor their impact on the financial sector, and, where appropriate, to calibrate the new regulatory framework. Along with this general challenge, I would highlight two elements that will have a bearing on regulatory policy management. Firstly, the interrelatedness of monetary and macroprudential policy. Generally, both policies can be complementary. But, as the years of expansion prior to the financial crisis demonstrated, the economy s cyclical position and the accumulation of financial risks may become decoupled. Financial imbalances thus built up, and yet inflation was contained and the real economy appeared to show no signs of overheating. Central banks will have to have both policies strike a balance in order to achieve the dual objective of economic and financial stability. Here it is important to have an institutional structure that ensures synergies and consistency between monetary and prudential policies. The second conditioning factor is the fact that globalised financial markets are a reality, which requires a permanent international coordination effort in the management of financial policies. Coordination is needed to tackle contagion across different markets in jurisdictions and, also, to prevent regulation being distorted by means of regulatory arbitrage, or the competitive lowering of regulatory standards across jurisdictions. Fora such as the Financial Stability Board, the Basel Committee and the European Single Supervisory and Resolution Mechanisms have gained in importance. A third pillar, the European Deposit Insurance Scheme, has still to be defined and remains the subject of political negotiations. The challenges of financial and technological innovation Finally, I shall refer to the challenges posed by financial and technological innovation. Since the year 2000 we have witnessed a proliferation of technological changes that are reshaping the global economy. This started with the Internet, which was only incipient at the turn of the century, followed by electronic trade, mobile phones, artificial intelligence and big data. Technology is introducing new types of services and products, and is challenging the traditional commercial models in all economic sectors. In the case of the financial system, there is considerable scope for improving the efficiency and quality of services through the application of new technological processes. We are seeing how new technologies are being incorporated into traditional functions, for instance in how payments are made, in the automated management of risk pricing and in financial consultancy. The financial sector is adapting to this new reality. Traditional banks are taking the new technologies on board, occasionally through strategic alliances with new technology firms. New companies are also being incorporated into the sector, ranging from small start-ups to large firms. The new firms must, however, win the confidence of consumers and investors, 6/7

something that traditional financial institutions have secured over a long period of time, anchored by strong regulation and financial supervision. From the standpoint of the regulators, the fintech challenge affects both prudential and consumer protection policies. From the prudential perspective, regulators must strike a balance between catalysing innovation and the efficiency that new technologies can provide, and maintaining a sound regulatory framework. The guiding principle should be to apply the same regulation for the same type of financial services. In this respect, as the presence of fintech increases, it might be useful to put greater emphasis on the regulation of services, instead of placing it on the institutions that provide these services. Turning to consumer protection policies, it is vital that investors and consumers should understand how the new services function and the attendant risks, including, for example, credit, cyber-security and privacy-protection risks. Here we should strengthen our information and financial education policies. We are mindful at the Banco de España of the need to step up our efforts in this area. Indeed, last week we approved a reform whereby, under our Directorate General Operations, Markets and Payment Systems, a new Associate Directorate General Financial Innovation and Market Infrastructures was created to assume the competencies in these areas, centralising in this new structure the functions previously assigned to different units in the Bank. This Associate Directorate General will have to face two families of problems. First, the questions that arise with the emergence of new agents and new operators in the financial markets, providing services that already existed (but in a different way), or services that did not exist, namely new types of financial services. As regards these new market players, two groups of problems are posed: on one hand, those referring to matters of competencies, i.e. all agents and operators should be subject to the same demands or regulations; on the other, investors and consumers should be protected and alerted as to the new risks, just as they are in respect of the former operators and their products. The second family of matters which the new Associate Directorate General of the Banco de España must face concerns new technology and its application in financial markets, something which, in these times of continuous innovation, is obviously of great importance. Thank you for your attention. 7/7