Showing posts with label World Bank chief. Show all posts
Showing posts with label World Bank chief. Show all posts
Monday, June 18, 2012
Developing nations should prepare for 'Lehmans moment', says World Bank chief Robert Zoellick
Developing nations must be ready for a severe global financial crisis should the eurozone fail to cope with its current problems and suffer a "Lehmans moment", outgoing World Bank chief Robert Zoellick has said.
By Reuters
Policymakers and investors are nervously awaiting the outcome of this weekend's Greek election, which could empower radical leftists threatening to tear up the terms of a bailout deal and send shockwaves through financial markets.
Developing countries needed to "prepare for the uncertainty coming out of the eurozone and the wider financial markets", Zoellick told the Observer.
"It will be better if they can avoid piling up short-term debts that can come due in volatile periods and look to the fundamentals of future growth - infrastructure and human capital," he said.
The World Bank had been increasing its lending to support Bulgaria's banking system - one of the most exposed to Greece - and acting to prevent a credit crunch in southeast Europe, the paper reported Zoellick as saying.
The bank was also taking unspecified measures to protect countries in north Africa that were vulnerable to Europe's debt crisis and trade finance facilities were being strengthened for francophone west Africa, the newspaper added.
"Uncertainty in markets is now starting to increase costs for developing countries," Zoellick said. "The ripple effects are making everybody's life harder."
In a reference to tensions in the eurozone over Greece's future, Zoellick said: "Europe may be able to muddle through but the risk is rising. There could be a Lehmans moment if things are not properly handled."
The bankruptcy of US bank Lehman Brothers in September 2008 triggered a global financial slump that indebted Western nations are still struggling to recover from.
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