source: Reuters
The
International Monetary Fund urged European policymakers to deepen the financial
and fiscal ties within the euro area with some urgency to restore sagging
confidence in the global financial system.
In its
semi-annual check on the world's financial health, the Fund said the euro
area's debt crisis was a key threat and the risks to global financial stability
had risen in the last six months leaving confidence "very fragile".
The euro
area's plodding progress means European banks are likely to offload $2.8
trillion in assets over two years to reduce their risk exposure, an increase of
$200 billion from a prediction six months ago, the IMF estimated.
"Despite
many important steps already taken by policymakers, this agenda remains
critically incomplete, exposing the euro area to a downward spiral of capital
flight, breakup fears and economic decline," the IMF said in its Global Financial
Stability Report (GFSR) released on Wednesday.
"Risks
to financial stability have increased since the April 2012 GFSR, as confidence
in the global financial system has become very fragile," the IMF said.
The report
adds to the gloomy backdrop to the IMF's semi-annual meeting to be held in Tokyo later this week. On
Tuesday, it said global economic slowdown the was worsening as it cut its
growth forecasts for the second time since April and warned U.S. and European
policymakers that failure to fix their economic ills would prolong the slump.
Last week, Canada 's Finance Minister Jim Flaherty expressed
his latest sign of frustration over progress in resolving Europe 's
debt crisis by saying it represented a "clear and present danger".
In
September, the European Central Bank agreed to buy the bonds of debt-strained
governments once they have signed up for a euro zone bailout program, restoring
some market confidence and narrowing the spread between core and peripheral
debt in the region.
But private
investors still lack confidence in peripheral European markets and the
difference between the yields on peripheral and core debt from banks and
companies remains high, threatening any recovery, the IMF said.
Under
current policies, the IMF estimated European banks will shed $2.8 trillion in
assets between the third quarter of 2011 and the end of 2013, higher than the
$2.6 trillion it had predicted in April, further squeezing credit availability.
And if
European policymakers do not fulfill promises to establish a common bank
supervisor, and peripheral countries do not follow through with adjustment
programs, the costs could be even higher, with $4.5 trillion in lost assets,
and additional impacts on employment and investment.
Risks from
the euro zone could also spill into emerging markets, where growth is already
slowing. Countries in central and eastern Europe are the most vulnerable to
financial shocks, given their exposure to the euro zone and their own
entrenched external debts, the report said.
And while
the United States and Japan have
benefited from safe-haven flows away from the euro zone, the IMF said both
countries need to do more to reduce their fiscal burdens in the medium
term.
The U.S. faces a
so-called "fiscal cliff" — government spending cuts and tax rises due
to take effect early in 2013. Japan
is carrying the biggest public debt burden among leading industrialized nations
at twice the size of its $5 trillion economy at a time when its social welfare
spending is under constant pressure from a rapidly aging population.
"The
key lesson of the past few years is that imbalances need to be addressed well
before markets start flagging credit concerns," the report said.
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