Time for alarm over fiscal and financial risk Growing public debt is one concern — another is how it is being financed Martin Wolf Economics martin.wolf@ft.com Settings Print Share Listen Prior to the financial crisis of 2007-09, the Bank for International Settlements made itself unpopular with monetary authorities around the world by pointing to the risks being created by accommodative monetary policies, excessive leverage, high asset prices and a lack of transparency. These warnings were ignored. The result was a calamitous financial crisis, which not only caused a huge recession, but has also bequeathed a legacy of high public debt and populist politics. Once again, the BIS is sounding the alarm. It has expressed concern over fiscal and financial risks for some time. But only last week, its general manager, Pablo Hernández de Cos, former governor of the Bank of Spain, delivered a sobering account of “fiscal threats in a cha...
Posts
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
All Newsletters | View in browser Nikkei Asia Subscribe for $1 Special Edition December 3, 2025 Hello everyone! This weekly South Asia Watch newsletter keeps you up-to-date on new developments and trends from the region, highlighting our recent reporting and insightful analysis on an area that's playing an increasingly important role in global politics, economics and business. "Mad data," an economist texted me after India reported its latest growth numbers last Friday. In the July-to-September quarter, the country's gross domestic product grew 8.2%, up from 7.8% growth in the preceding quarter, which itself had exceeded expectations. In the immediate aftermath, things did feel a little off. A Reuters poll of economists had forecast growth at 7.3%, and almost no one expected it to surpass the preceding quarter's level. That was for good reason: This was the first quarter that the economy had faced the full brunt of 50% tariffs on exports to the U.S., India's...
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
Low-cost China lures European businesses Expansion drive accelerates despite fears of politicians and risks for continent’s economy JOE LEAHY AND RYAN MCMORROW WILLIAM LANGLEY — GUANGZHOU ADRIENNE KLASA — PARIS Additional reporting by Andy Bounds and Alice Hancock in Brussels and contributions from Tina Hu in Beijing Settings Print Share Listen European manufacturers are increasing their investment in Chinese factories, despite growing anxiety among the continent’s political leaders about industrial dependence on the world’s exporting superpower. Emmanuel Macron, France’s president, is expected to be the latest leader to warn about China’s crushing trade surpluses with Europe — which hit €305.8bn last year — during a three-day visit to Beijing starting today. But steady investment by European manufacturers — much of it intended to produce goods for export — is adding to China’s powerful industrial base. European companies say...
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
Hong Kong struggles to improve conditions in tiny, crowded homes Photography and video by Tyrone Siu Reporting by Tyrone Siu and Clare Jim Filed January 6, 2025, 11:00 p.m. GMT Housing is famously cramped in the Asian financial hub of Hong Kong, thanks to sky-high property prices, but a single toilet and kitchen shared by four families would make for a challenging home situation anywhere. “It’s so small here; it’s really inconvenient to live in,” said retired 60-year-old Xiao Bo, as she sat on her bed, eating home-made dumplings off a folding table in a tiny space adorned with pink wallpaper and a rack of colourful tote bags. Single and opting to give only her first name, she said she had nothing but “painful” memories of the partitioned, cluttered walk-up where she has lived for three years, but could not afford a better flat. Xiao Bo poses for a photo at her subdivided flat in Hong Kong, China, July 9, 2024. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu Xiao Bo walks at her subdivided flat, in...
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
«Je ne pense qu’à une chose, comment échapper à tout ça»: confiants en Vladimir Poutine, les Russes sont fatigués de la guerre Il y a 12 heures Écouter cet article 00:00/00:00 À Moscou, fin novembre. Ramil Sitdikov / REUTERS RÉCIT - Après un regain d’espoir suscité au début de l’année par le retour de Trump, la population a été largement regagnée par la lassitude face à la guerre en Ukraine et, au diapason du discours officiel, accuse fréquemment les Européens de faire obstacle à un accord. Dans la grisaille désespérante de l’hiver russe, que n’éclairent même pas quelques arpents de neige, tout au moins à Moscou , le Nouvel An approche - ce sera le quatrième depuis le début de la guerre en Ukraine . Moment principal de fête et de respiration familiale pour une population qui suit sans illusion les palabres en cours, visant à mettre un terme à ce conflit que beaucoup préfèrent ne pas voir, même s’il est dans toutes les têtes et qu’il « mord »...