BIS/Caruana: Redesigning the central bank for financial stability responsibilities

06 June 2014

Jaime Caruana, General Manager of the Bank for International Settlements, argued that since much of the responsibility for financial stability policy is shared, integrating financial stability considerations into monetary policy, and vice versa, presents tough institutional challenges.

Whereas we had come to think of monetary and financial stability as two separate things, we are now realising how damaging it can be to keep them separate. This is for many a new realisation. And it is what I want to talk about today. The main points I want to make are the following:

To summarise, I take heart from the cases of Hong Kong SAR, Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand, among others. These are examples of central banks in charge of both monetary and financial stability policies, within transparent regimes. They are alert to risks of financial instability and are willing to take pre-emptive measures even when dangers are not certain, having carefully considered the side effects. And they seem able to explain those measures to the public.

I take heart from the fact that so many parliaments have been seeking to fill the policy gaps revealed by global financial crisis, even where their countries were not directly involved.

I accept that this is difficult territory. Important powers of state are involved, with important consequences for citizens' lives should policy failures due to inaction or misdirected action occur. And I accept that dealing more effectively with financial stability concerns, and their intersection with prices stability ones, is going to be an evolutionary process.

Making progress will require a deeper understanding of the nature of financial instability, and its connections to monetary policy, such that we can set clearer objectives and make the reasons for action more transparent. And making progress will require the recognition that both price and financial stability are essential ingredients of the monetary systems of well functioning economies, and that they are in fact two aspects of the same public good.

Full speech


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