OMFIF Focus Podcast – Financial stability series: ‘Dynamics driving the next financial crisis’. David Lubin, managing director and head of emerging market economics at Citi and author of Dance of the Trillions, and Desmond Lachman, resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and a former deputy director at the International Monetary Fund, talk to Ben Robinson, OMFIF deputy head of research. Topics include the effects of divergent global monetary and fiscal policies, risks of a trade war and reignition of the euro crisis. Emerging market fragilities and the growth of credit in China, exchange rate dynamics and internationalisation of the renminbi are also discussed. Lubin’s book is available here.
Music: https://www.bensound.com/royalty-free-music
How central banks can drive gender equality
How Austria is breaking ground with green T-Bills
QT, asset pricing and financial markets: central banks’ ‘other’ monetary policy tool
The Bank of Japan’s yield target tensions
A solution for stablecoin and CBDC interoperability
What starts with ESG does not end there
Meeting net zero targets with the UNEP
OMFIF outlook: what’s in store for 2023?
EU bonds: towards sovereign status
20 Minutes Coffee with Neil Williams and Antonio Curia
Reflecting on COP27: scaling up climate finance and ensuring a just transition
OMFIF Public investor outlook 2023
Everything FTX
Jana Harvey on the debt outlook for EM sovereigns in 2023
Responsible lending with BNPL
Is this the end of globalisation?
Christian Kopf on liquidity and volatility in the European SSA bond market
Avoiding a debt crisis
Countdown to COP27: More African countries implementing sustainability-focused policies
Tammo Diemer on weak demand for Bunds, the repo market and EU joint debt
Join Podbean Ads Marketplace and connect with engaged listeners.
Advertise Today
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Commercial Edge: Unleash the Power of People
The emPOWERed Half Hour
Aligned Money Show
Dubai Property Podcast
IBKR Podcasts
The Ramsey Show
The Clark Howard Podcast