Multilateral institutions like the IMF need to re-examine "rules of the game" but central banks should not ignore international responsibilities despite their domestic mandates, RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan has said.
Rajan, in his address to the Economic Club of New York here yesterday, made a strong case for the IMF to analyse each new unconventional monetary policy, including sustained unidirectional exchange rate intervention.
Rajan said based on their effects and the agreed rules of the game, the IMF should declare them "in or out-of-bounds."
"We also need better international safety nets. And each one of us has to work hard in our own countries to develop a consensus for free trade, open markets and responsible global citizenry," he said.
"If we can achieve all this even as recent economic events make us more parochial and inward-looking, we will truly have set the stage for the strong sustainable growth we all desperately need," the RBI Governor said.
Rajan stressed that central banks should not ignore international responsibilities despite their domestic mandates.
"The bottom line is that multilateral institutions like the IMF should re-examine the 'rules of the game' for responsible policy and develop a consensus around new ones. No matter what a central bank's domestic mandate, international responsibilities should not be ignored," he said.
Rajan said with authorities in almost every industrial country focused on appeasing populist anti-trade anti-finance and anti-central bank political movements, there is little appetite for taking on further international commitments.
He said a big factor persuading authorities in industrial countries to push for higher growth is the fear of deflation.
Noting that deflation increases the real burden of existing debt, Rajan said if debt is excessive, a targeted restructuring is better than inflating it away across the board.
"...The spectre of deflation haunts central bankers. When coupled with the other political concerns raised by slow and unequal growth...It is no wonder that the authorities in developed countries do not want to settle for low growth, even if that is indeed their economy's potential," he said.
The former IMF chief economist said the central dilemma in industrial economies has been how to reconcile the political imperative for strong growth with the "reality that cyclical stimulus measures have proved ineffective in restoring high growth, debt write-offs are politically unacceptable and structural reforms have the wrong timing, politically speaking, of pain versus gain.
Rajan, in his address to the Economic Club of New York here yesterday, made a strong case for the IMF to analyse each new unconventional monetary policy, including sustained unidirectional exchange rate intervention.
Rajan said based on their effects and the agreed rules of the game, the IMF should declare them "in or out-of-bounds."
"We also need better international safety nets. And each one of us has to work hard in our own countries to develop a consensus for free trade, open markets and responsible global citizenry," he said.
"If we can achieve all this even as recent economic events make us more parochial and inward-looking, we will truly have set the stage for the strong sustainable growth we all desperately need," the RBI Governor said.
Rajan stressed that central banks should not ignore international responsibilities despite their domestic mandates.
"The bottom line is that multilateral institutions like the IMF should re-examine the 'rules of the game' for responsible policy and develop a consensus around new ones. No matter what a central bank's domestic mandate, international responsibilities should not be ignored," he said.
Rajan said with authorities in almost every industrial country focused on appeasing populist anti-trade anti-finance and anti-central bank political movements, there is little appetite for taking on further international commitments.
He said a big factor persuading authorities in industrial countries to push for higher growth is the fear of deflation.
Noting that deflation increases the real burden of existing debt, Rajan said if debt is excessive, a targeted restructuring is better than inflating it away across the board.
"...The spectre of deflation haunts central bankers. When coupled with the other political concerns raised by slow and unequal growth...It is no wonder that the authorities in developed countries do not want to settle for low growth, even if that is indeed their economy's potential," he said.
The former IMF chief economist said the central dilemma in industrial economies has been how to reconcile the political imperative for strong growth with the "reality that cyclical stimulus measures have proved ineffective in restoring high growth, debt write-offs are politically unacceptable and structural reforms have the wrong timing, politically speaking, of pain versus gain.