The international monetary and financial system: its Achilles heel and what to do about it
This essay argues that the Achilles heel of the international monetary and financial system is that it amplifies the “excess financial elasticity” of domestic policy regimes, ie it exacerbates their inability to prevent the build-up of financial imbalances, or outsize financial cycles, that lead to serious financial crises and macroeconomic dislocations. This excess financial elasticity view contrasts sharply with two more popular ones, which stress the failure of the system to prevent disruptive current account imbalances and its tendency to generate a structural shortage of safe assets – the “excess saving” and “excess demand for safe assets” views, respectively. In particular, the excess financial elasticity view highlights financial rather than current account imbalances and a persistent expansionary rather than contractionary bias in the system. The failure to adjust domestic policy regimes and their international interaction raises a number of risks: entrenching instability in the global system; returning to the modern-day equivalent of the divisive competitive devaluations of the interwar years; and, ultimately, triggering an epoch-defining seismic rupture in policy regimes, back to an era of trade and financial protectionism and, possibly, stagnation combined with inflation.
The text is part of a series Globalization and Monetary Policy Institute Working Paper Number 203 27 pages
Classification:
E40 - Money and Interest Rates. General ; E43 - Determination of Interest Rates; Term Structure Interest Rates ; E44 - Financial Markets and the Macroeconomy ; E50 - Monetary Policy, Central Banking and the Supply of Money and Credit. General ; E52 - Monetary Policy (Targets, Instruments, and Effects) ; F30 - International Finance. General ; F40 - Macroeconomic Aspects of International Trade and Finance. General