In focus: Mark Carney, Bank of England’s new governor
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In focus: Mark Carney, Bank of England’s new governor

The surprising appointment of Mark Carney, Bank of Canada governor, could have profound consequences for the UK’s monetary framework, financial services industry and global bank reform drive.

Mark Carney’s appointment for a five-year term from July 2013, announced by UK chancellor of the exchequer George Osborne on Monday, shocked global market participants, amid widespread expectation that Paul Tucker, deputy governor, responsible for financial stability, would take the helm of the central bank.


In recent meetings with Euromoney, Carney denied he had been approached by the Bank of England (BoE) and sought to rebut speculation he would consider the job, if offered, amid fears over any fallout in Canada, given the governor’s status as one of the country’s most-celebrated policymakers. At the IMF annual meetings in Tokyo, Carney, who is also chairman of the Financial Stability Board (FSB), jokingly quipped “you should ask Glenn Stevens [Australia’s central bank governor] about it”, underscoring the credit bestowed to developed-world central bank governors, who have overseen stable banking systems. 


Mark Carney, Bank of England’s new governor

Heralding Carney’s appointment, Osborne said "bank bailouts have been avoided" in Canada. Meanwhile, Labour shadow chancellor Ed Balls threw his weight behind the decision, saying: "[Carney] has great financial expertise ... It is a good choice, a good judgement."


Carney’s in-tray includes: overseeing the integration of the BoE’s sweeping supervisory powers, streamlining the BoE’s decision-making process, boosting credit supply, while retaining his role at the Financial Stability Board.

Carney has won acclaim for his monetary zeal and flexible approach to an inflation-targeting regime. Canadian monetary policy is the envy of most G7 central bankers, as 21 years of highly successful inflation-targeting have helped to anchor inflation expectations, a world away from the UK.

What’s more, as the allure of low market rates trumped job insecurity, mortgage-borrowing shot up from 2010 in Canada, underscoring the dangers of the low rates and the clean monetary transmission channel. Amid fears that ultra-low interest rates have fed a bubble in the Canadian housing market, at the end of 2011 the Bank of Canada announced a "flexible" approach in determining the time-horizon when its 2% inflation target will be achieved.

Carney, buttressing his reputation as a vocal hawk, told Euromoney in August: “There is potentially a role for monetary policy to ‘lean against the wind’ and reinforce other measures, and this is part of our framework. We are not part of the caricature of inflation-targeting regimes, which has been described as a mechanistic, dogmatic-based approach to monetary policy."

The comments underscore Carney’s fears over consumer leverage and the possible need for a counter-cyclical monetary policy in Canada – in sharp contrast to the UK’s structural deleveraging drive. Nevertheless, Carney’s monetary activism was laid bare after his decision to cut the policy rate in March 2008 – one month after his appointment in Canada, combined with the non-standard monetary tool to keep the "conditional commitment" in April 2009 to hold the policy rate for at least one year.

Both Carney’s proactive monetary loosening and bid to anchor expectations amid low rates serve for food for thought as the market mulls Carney’s likely resolve to embark on further rounds of quantitative easing in the UK.

Carney is credited with bringing more market-based analysts into the sleepy Toronto headquarters, his pragmatism and beefing up transparency with a more timely publication of monetary policy reports. However, Carney’s challenge will be complicated by his FSB duties, where his reform agenda hangs in the balance. Carney is facing off challenges, fittingly from within the BoE, by executive director for financial stability Andrew Haldane, who favours fewer and less-complex regulations.

Specifically, Haldane, who Carney says he is well-acquainted with, has called for the removal of risk-weighting in the calculation of banks’ risk-weighted assets, triggering Carney’s ire. He told Euromoney: “Is the basic point that one would want institutions to have these measures buttressed by relatively simple checks? Yes – and that will influence shadow-banking reform efforts, especially. Basel I was simple and it drove us off a cliff. Andrew Haldane’s conclusion is not supported by the proper understanding of the facts."

Nevertheless, Carney has astute political skills and is known for his well-timed market instincts, which should serve him in good stead to tout the virtues of his monetary views and bank-reform position. He has established rapport with trade unions in Canada, by lashing out against income inequality and excess corporate savings, while expressing sympathy with the ‘Occupy’ movement. What’s more, it’s a testament to his political capital that rumours abound in Toronto’s financial district that Carney could one day become the Canadian prime minster for the Liberal Party, a fact that perhaps highlights why news of his BoE appointment was a closely-guarded secret.

However, Carney is now swimming in uncomfortable waters given the scale and depth of challenges in the UK and at the FSB. On the latter, the post-Lehman consensus over the Basel III framework is under severe strain, as the US postpones the January 2013 initial start date, while competing regulatory agendas in Europe complicate the Basel push.

The following interviews conducted with Euromoney throw into sharp relief Carney's likely monetary and reform activism in the UK, steely resolve and interventionist instincts.  

Mark Carney: Finance’s new statesman 

In a wide-ranging interview, Carney talks about recent banking scandals, the Volcker Rule, and why fears about Basel III are wide of the mark.

Carney aims to make FSB more than just a talking shop

Central bank governor of the year 2012: Carney connects with charm and credibility

As Bank of Canada's governor, Carney’s monetary zeal and flexible approach to an inflation-targeting regime have earned acclaim. Carney is deploying his charm and credibility to re-tool the global banking industry in the teeth of resistance.

Press release – Carney named Euromoney Central bank governor of the year

Forget the pound’s Carney-val, what about the Canadian dollar?

City places faith in Carney’s pragmatism

Bank of England’s new chief Carney faces potential conflict of interest in shaping global leverage ratio

Central bank governance: Is Carney spoiling for a fight?

Bank of England governor-designate Carney draws battle lines but recognizes uphill struggle


  We could build capital to the moon and we would not have to worry about an institution failing, but the economy would not be there”

Carney understands the conflict inherent in regulating banks while boosting growth (see Finance’s new statesman)

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