scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessPosted Content

Reforming the global architecture of financial regulation: the G20, the IMF and the FSB

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this paper, the authors present an analysis of how cooperation takes place among these actors to implement the fundamental reforms needed to ensure that the global financial system is better able to withstand shocks than it was in 2007-2008.
Abstract
The global financial crisis that began in 2007 and deepened in 2008 exposed major weaknesses in financial and macroeconomic policy coordination, and profound flaws in financial risk management and regulation in a number of advanced countries. The severity of the crisis led global leaders to recognize that they must find a way to reform the global regulatory architecture to ensure that the financial system can absorb shocks while continuing to function efficiently. In response to the crisis, the Group of Twenty (G20) met in November 2008, for the first time at the leaders level, to agree on a comprehensive strategy to restore trust in the financial system and to limit the fallout from the crisis on global output and employment. Currently, there is a complicated governance structure for the program to reform the global architecture of financial regulation that consists of three entities — one ad hoc and self-selected (G20), one treaty-based and systemic (International Monetary Fund [IMF]) and one a creation of the G20 (Financial Stability Board [FSB]). This paper undertakes an analysis of how cooperation takes place among these actors to implement the fundamental reforms needed to ensure that the global financial system is better able to withstand shocks than it was in 2007-2008. The analysis suggests a number of actions that the IMF and FSB should take to strengthen their cooperation and effectiveness, and highlights some of the problems created when no single agency has overall responsibility for the regulatory oversight of the international financial system. More broadly, it concludes that an appropriate framework for the governance of macroeconomic and financial policy cooperation in an interconnected world is a bimodal structure which includes both a restricted executive group of leaders who can implement major changes in the strategic policy direction to meet unforeseen developments and a universal, treaty-based official international financial institution that provides regular, consistent policy advice to its members. A more effective structure of governance over international economic policy cooperation would be possible if the countries and jurisdictions whose leaders made up the restricted executive group were to be selected by a more systematic and widely accepted process than at present. This raises the question, addressed at the conclusion of this paper, of what the appropriate relationship should be between the IMF’s key governing body — the International Monetary and Financial Committee — and an executive group such as the G20. This paper was originally published by the Centre for International Governance Innovation (CIGI) as Malcolm D. Knight (2014) “Reforming the Global Architecture of Financial Regulation: The G20, the IMF and the FSB.” CIGI Paper No. 42. September.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Global Financial Regulation: Shortcomings and Reform Options

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that the exclusive focus on financial stability can operate to the detriment of other important policy objectives, including financial inclusion, and propose a new standard-setting body for the regulation of fintech that models a more inclusive and holistic approach.
Journal ArticleDOI

The G20's Reform of Bank Regulation and the Changing Structure of the Global Financial System

TL;DR: In this paper, the role of the banking sector within the broader market-based financial system is discussed and the dynamics of a crisis in such a system, and the measures that the G20 has agreed thus far to strengthen the SIBs are summarized in Section 3.

Is there a future for international monetary cooperation

TL;DR: The currency wars of the twenty-first century as discussed by the authors have been a major concern throughout the past century and will continue to threaten progress for the foreseeable future, and a central recurring question is whether policy makers can cooperate and try to coordinate their policies in an effort to alleviate conflicts and improve outcomes.
Related Papers (5)