Claudio Borio
Banks have still not fixed ‘poisonous mix’ of problems – BIS’s Borio
Claudio Borio warns that in some respects, banks have still not solved the problems revealed by the 2008 crisis, which leaves them vulnerable
ECB officials and Borio disagree on falling real rates
Vítor Constâncio and François Villeroy de Galhau emphasise importance of saving-investment mismatch, while Claudio Borio stresses financial cycle, but speakers find some points of agreement
BIS’s Borio: leaning against the wind must be systematic
Claudio Borio says using monetary policy to stabilise the financial cycle is only likely to be effective if done all the time, not just when trouble is brewing
Climbing ‘Mount Economy’
The BIS’s quest for financial stability-oriented monetary policy throws up questions not only about decision-making but also how one should think about economics, as Claudio Borio explains
Helicopters bearing gifts
As QE and negative rates run out of room, helicopter money could be a last resort for overstretched central banks. But its detractors say the cost of its use could be very high
Money illusion may not be irrational – BIS paper
Claudio Borio and Anna Zabai suggest people’s attachment to a unit of account is not simply a failure to think in real terms, with implications for the effectiveness of negative rates
BIS: Central banks playing for 'high stakes' as financial cycles turn
Central banks need to lean against financial cycles but fiscal policy should come to their aid, BIS says; cycles may be turning in opposite directions in advanced and emerging economies
Helicopter money still contentious as Borio enters debate
Article by Claudio Borio and others claims helicopter money means giving up on monetary policy for ever, but economists such as Adair Turner and John Muellbauer question the result
Borio: Pluralism may not be answer to weakness in international system
Claudio Borio sees the “main problem” in the international monetary and financial system as the lack of an effective anchor, and is not sure greater pluralism addresses this
Real impact of credit booms demands policy rethink, say BIS economists
Financial booms and busts feed through to the real economy via labour reallocations, harming productivity growth; results call for wide-ranging rethink of models and policy, authors say
BIS: Artificial calm in markets cannot last
Quarterly review presents latest evidence of fault lines running through financial markets; Claudio Borio says tension between market behaviour and underlying conditions must be resolved eventually
BIS’s Borio challenges monetary orthodoxies
Claudio Borio questions current concepts of equilibrium, monetary neutrality and deflation, calling for a rethink of monetary policy frameworks – and potentially mandate changes
BIS’s Borio says current account obsession obscures important results
Focus on current account imbalances obscures many important – and often counterintuitive – results about global financial flows
BIS calls for new paradigm in economic policy
Annual report argues broken international monetary system and low productivity reflects failure to ‘come to grips’ with how financial and real economies interact, domestically and globally
ECB’s Mersch warns against blindly pinning hopes on macro-prudential policy
Yves Mersch says there is much to learn about how tools work; sees potential for ‘conflicts of competence’ between micro- and macro-prudential authorities
BIS charts ‘boundaries of the unthinkable’ as risks rise
Quarterly review flags growing vulnerabilities and signs of credit booms in some economies; research finds limited impact of deflation on growth, pointing to importance of financial sector
Central Banking awards 2015: photo gallery
Jacques de Larosière was the 'guest of honour' at the Central Banking awards, which saw Raghuram Rajan, Reserve Bank of New Zealand, Sarb, Czech National Bank and Bank of Canada taking top honours
The winners of the Central Banking Awards 2015
Raghuram Rajan wins Governor of the Year while Reserve Bank of New Zealand picks up Central Bank of the Year; Jacques de Larosière honoured with Lifetime Achievement Award; 12 more awards announced
Economics in Central Banking: Claudio Borio
The Bank for International Settlements’ economics head secures win for his work applying the concept of ‘excess financial elasticity’ to the international monetary and financial system
Bank for International Settlements sees danger lurking beneath exuberant markets
Recent rapid 'flip-flopping' by markets from risk-on to risk-off and back reveals fragility hidden beneath buoyant asset prices, and central bank interventions may make the problem worse
BIS warns of risks related to dollar-denominated corporate debt in EMs
Hyun Shin says cross-border bank lending has seen first ‘substantial increase for some time', while Claudio Borio cautions against ‘exceptionally low' volatility in financial markets
New frontiers for central banking
Central banks are embracing macro-prudential policies with the same gusto as they did inflation targeting and independence in the 1990s. But they are in danger of over-relying on such approaches
(Too) great expectations for macro-prudential?
Macro-prudential policies are a welcome response to the financial crisis, but not necessarily in their current incarnation. BIS economics head Claudio Borio highlights their limitations
Macro-prudential policies could ‘become part of the problem’, says BIS’ Borio
Weight of expectation on macro-prudential policies to address financial system stresses may be too great, says BIS economics head Claudio Borio; stress tests ‘woefully deficient’ in predicting crises