The
International Monetary Fund (IMF), has warned that increasing debts in global
economies, especially in emerging markets and low income economies like Nigeria
are at higher risks to any adverse developments in global financial condition.
The warning
came yesterday, as the IMF released its Global Financial Stability Report
(GFSR), April 2018, which assesses key risks facing the global financial
system, and envisaged that the road in the short term, three years from now,
could be bumpy if central banks do not take active steps to normalise monetary
policy.
The report
noted that, "Monetary policy normalisation in advanced economies could
result in a tightening of global financial conditions, and a reduction in
capital flows, (thereby) increasing rollover risks and adversely affecting
productive investment."
Harping on,
Vulnerabilities in Emerging Markets, Low Income Countries, and China, the GFSR
said: "A number of emerging market economies have taken advantage of
benign external financial conditions to address imbalances and build buffers;
in others, however, vulnerabilities have continued to build."
It added that "... a
considerably number of low income countries and other small
non-investment-grade issuers have experienced a sharp deterioration in debt
sustainability."
Addressing a press
conference on the findings of the report, the IMF Financial Counselor and
Director, Monetary and Capital Markets, Tobias Adrian, said since the last
report, "short-term risks to financial stability have increased, and
medium-term risks remain elevated."
Adrian reiterated that
"Vulnerabilities may make the road ahead bumpy, and could put growth at
risk," adding that "our 'Growth at Risk' analysis - which links
financial conditions to the distribution of future global growth - indicates
that, under a severely adverse scenario, growth could be negative three years
from now."
He maintained that
"Debt sustainability in low-income countries has deteriorated, and a more
complex creditor composition poses challenges for any future debt
restructuring," while countries that are building up higher debt levels
are exposed more to currency mix-matches and liquidity transformation stand at
higher risks.
Adrian therefore urged
policymakers to take urgent actions in a number of areas, and in particular,
charged central banks to normalise monetary policy gradually, and communicate
their decisions clearly, while "regulators should address financial
vulnerabilities by deploying and developing prudential policy tools."
He further charged emerging
markets and low-income countries to "strengthen fundamentals and build
buffers," just as "policymakers should ensure that the post-crisis
regulatory reform agenda is implemented - and they should resist calls for
rolling back reforms."
Meanwhile, the Division
Chief, Monetary and Capital Markets, IMF, Anna Ilyina, noted that many emerging
countries have benefited from very favourable economic climate, which created
room for them to strengthen their positions.
However, policy instability
heightens uncertainty and volatility. "There is an improvement in public
debts in the past few years.
In fact, the median
debt-to-GDP ratio in the past few years in low income countries rose by over 13
per cent to about 47 per cent of GDP, which is quite dramatic over a short
period of time," she said.
But she warned that
"this leads to difficulties in some countries in managing and servicing
these debts. In fact, over 40 per cent of these debts are at high risk of
distress.
From our reports, we do
track the debt issuance by the low-income countries, and we have seen that
there is a strong rebound in international bond issuance in frontier
markets."
To this end, she said the
IMF is working with various countries to evaluate and improve fiscal policies.
Be warned
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