IMF SEMINAR EVENT
DATE: October 10, 2017
DAY: Tuesday
2:00 PM - 3:15 PM
LOCATION: IMF HQ1 – Meetings Halls A&B
Overview
The global financial crisis has placed the concept of systemic risk at the centerstage for the guardians of financial stability. While efforts by central banks and regulatory authorities since the crisis have led to groundbreaking advances in identification and measurement of systemic risk, less explored is the use of these measurements in implementing policy. In this seminar, a group of senior policymakers will discuss the conceptual and operational progress made in this area, the lessons learned, and the remaining gaps that would benefit from further work at the international level.Join the conversation via #SystemicRisk
Systemic Risk and Macroprudential Stress Testing
Systemic Risk and Macroprudential Stress Testing
Panelists
Moderator: Tobias Adrian
Panelist: Claudia Buch
Professor Claudia M Buch is the Vice-President of the Deutsche Bundesbank. She is responsible for Financial Stability, Statistics and Internal Audit. Professor Buch is the accompanying person of the President of the Bundesbank on the ECB Governing Council and a member of the German Financial Stability Committee (FSC).
Prior to joining the Bundesbank in May 2014, she was the President of the Institute for Economic Research (IWH) in Halle (2013-2014), Professor of Economics at the Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg (2013-2014), and Professor of Economics for “International Finance and Macroeconomics” at the University of Tübingen (2004-2013). From 2012 to 2014, she was a member of the German Council of Economic Experts. She was Scientific Director at the Institute for Applied Economic Research (IAW) in Tübingen (2005-2013), and worked at the Institute for World Economics in Kiel (IfW) from 1992 until 2013.
She habilitated at the University of Kiel (2002) after receiving her doctorate there in 1996. Between 1985 and 1991, she studied Economics at the University of Bonn and she graduated from the University of Wisconsin (Eau Claire) with a Master of Business Administration degree in 1988. Her fields of specialisation are financial stability, international banking, international finance and macroeconomics, and financial integration.
Panelist: Jon Cunliffe
Sir Jon Cunliffe became Deputy Governor of the Bank of England for Financial Stability on 1 November 2013. Jon is a member of the Bank’s Financial Policy and Monetary Policy Committees, the Bank’s Court of Directors and the Prudential Regulatory Committee.
He has specific responsibility within the Bank for the supervision and oversight of Financial Market Infrastructures, for Resolution and for the provision of Emergency Liquidity Assistance. He is a member of the G20 Financial Stability Board Steering Committee, the Bank for International Settlements’ Board of Directors and the European Systemic Risk Board.
Panelist: Hyun Song Shin
Panelist: Daniel Tarullo
Panelist: Carolyn Wilkins
As Senior Deputy Governor, Ms. Wilkins oversees the strategic planning and economic and financial research of the Bank. She also shares responsibility for the conduct of monetary policy with the other members of Governing Council, and she is a member of the Bank’s Board of Directors.
Ms. Wilkins has more than a decade of experience with financial system regulation. As head of the Bank’s Financial Markets Department, she was in the trenches during the 2007–09 global financial crisis. Now, she brings the Canadian perspective to international authorities. She represents the Bank at the Financial Stability Board and chaired the FinTech Issues Group, an international committee that studies key supervisory and regulatory issues related to fintech from a financial stability perspective. She also led the Basel Committee’s working group to develop new liquidity regulations, which will help lower the risk of another financial crisis.
Ms. Wilkins is a global leader on financial technology (fintech) and regulation. She is also a member of the high-level advisory group on fintech of the International Monetary Fund—the only central banker to be asked to join the panel.