WEF to study global financial system

London, January 27

The World Economic Forum (WEF) has created a new task force with Bank of England Governor Mark Carney and his counterpart at the Reserve Bank of India, Raghuram Rajan, to study how rapid changes in technology affect financial stability and growth.

The group, formed partly at the request of Carney, includes Bank of America Chairman and CEO Brian Moynihan and HSBC Chairman Douglas Flint.

“The group will focus on inclusion of emerging market economies in the global financial system, technology-enabled innovation, and the economic cost benefit of post-crisis regulatory reforms,” WEF said.

Michael Corbat, CEO of Citigroup, and BlackRock CEO Laurence Fink are also members, along with Min Zhu, deputy managing director of International Monetary Fund, and Liu Mingkang, a research fellow at Chinese University of Hong Kong.

The task force will look at emerging markets, technology, regulatory and monetary policies, loss of trust in financial services, and financial inclusion.

WEF’s annual meet in Davos last week discussed what it called Fourth Industrial Revolution, or the idea that technological advances will allow greater levels of automation, transforming global economy in profound ways.

WEF Managing Director Giancarlo Bruno said the timing of the task force’s creation was consistent with the WEF’s focus on the Fourth Industrial Revolution. “Its work will look into the implications of innovation on stability of the financial system and its role as growth engine,” he said.

The task force aims to publish a comprehensive suite of recommendations and actions at Davos annual meeting in early 2017.