
By Martin Wolf
“We told you so.” The Bank for International Settlements has long warned of the dangers of unrestrained credit growth and asset price inflation. In this year’s annual report, the last to be prepared under the direction of William White, its long-serving Canadian economic adviser, it felt free to point out how right it had been. But it did so with restraint: “Rather than seeking to apportion blame,” it says, “thoughtful reactions must be the first priority.”
The report provides just such reactions. But it also describes the mess created by those who ignored its earlier warnings. “The current market turmoil in the world’s main financial centres is,” it claims, “without precedent in the postwar period. With a significant risk of recession in the US, compounded by sharply rising inflation in many countries, fears are building that the global economy might be at some kind of tipping point. These fears are not groundless.”
As readers of BIS annual reports would expect, this one gives good answers to four big questions.
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