Follow Us

Follow us on Twitter  Follow us on LinkedIn
 

13 January 2014

IMF broadens financial surveillance


Default: Change to:


The IMF has revamped its methodology to determine which countries are required to go under the financial microscope on a regular basis, and has added four new ones to the list: Poland, Denmark, Finland and Norway.


This brings to 29 the total number of countries to undergo mandatory financial sector assessments. These assessments remain voluntary for the rest of the member countries, undertaken by the IMF at their request.

In September 2010, in response to the global crisis, the IMF’s Executive Board agreed the world’s top 25 financial sectors would undergo a mandatory financial check-up every five years. To date, 24 out of the 25 countries or jurisdictions have undergone or will soon undergo their assessments.

Last December, the IMF Board reviewed the methodology that determines whether a country’s financial sector is systemically important. In light of the experience since the crisis, it agreed to place even more emphasis on the connections between financial sectors and institutions, expand the coverage of cross-border linkages to cover not only banking but also equity and debt exposures, and capture the potential for pure price contagion. Based on these revamped criteria, the IMF added the four countries to the original 25.

“The experience of the global financial crisis and the government debt crisis in Europe has shown that events in relatively small countries that are highly connected to others can have significant spillovers", said Dimitri Demekas, an assistant director in the IMF’s Monetary and Capital Markets Department, which manages the Financial Sector Assessment Programme. “Their impact on the global financial system often far exceeds the size of their financial sector or their economy.”

Of the four new additions to the list, Finland and Poland had financial reviews in 2010 and 2013 respectively. Denmark’s review will take place in 2014 and IMF experts plan to visit Norway in 2015.

Press release



© International Monetary Fund


< Next Previous >
Key
 Hover over the blue highlighted text to view the acronym meaning
Hover over these icons for more information



Add new comment