Populism threatens the work of international agencies, Bank of England boss says


The governor of the Bank of England has said international institutions need to challenge populism, after he joined global central bank leaders in backing the US Federal Reserve against threats to its independence.

Andrew Bailey said the โ€œrise of so-called populism makes the whole task harderโ€ for agencies and bodies whose job it is to assess imbalances in the global economy.

In a speech given to the Bellagio Group of economists and central bankers he said: โ€œPart of the purpose of international agencies is that from time to time they have to tell us what we donโ€™t want to hear, let alone act upon.

โ€œOf course, they have to be accountable for the accuracy and quality of the assessment. But, accepting that, we have to call out messenger shooting.โ€

He went on to say that populism has a โ€œtendency to attribute unfavourable conditions to outside forces, rather than point to shared challengesโ€.

โ€œAnd, third, encouraging a decline in trust such that institutions โ€“ domestic and international โ€“ are viewed as distant, unresponsive and acting for the benefit of powerful and uncontrollable interests,โ€ he said.

โ€œFor those of us who are institutionalised, the answer is that we have to challenge back, in deeds more than just words.โ€

Mr Bailey did not specify which countries or leaders he was referring to, but his remarks come at a time when Donald Trumpโ€™s administration is escalating its confrontation with the USโ€™s Federal Reserve.

On Tuesday, Mr Bailey put his signature to a statement of support for Fed chairman Jerome Powell, alongside the heads of central banks including in Europe, Sweden, Canada and Australia.

The bankers said they โ€œstand in full solidarityโ€ with the Fed, adding that it was โ€œcriticalโ€ to preserve the independence of central banks.

Its publication came after Mr Powell said the Fed was being threatened with a criminal indictment related to his testimony about renovation projects at the central bankโ€™s office buildings.

The US bank boss had said in a video statement that the โ€œunprecedented action should be seen in the broader context of the administrationโ€™s threats and ongoing pressureโ€.

President Donald Trump has repeatedly criticised Mr Powell and the Fed on its decisions not to cut the countryโ€™s interest rates as quickly as he would prefer.

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