April 23, 2015

A world obsessed with Best Practices may calcify its structure and break with any small wind

In reference to Mr. Flash Crash’s supposedly malevolent disruption of the market in 2010, John Plender writes interestingly about globalization, regulations and fragility “Global financial regulation meets a cul-de-sac” April 23.

In this respect I would like to recall a written statement that I delivered as an Executive Director of the World Bank on April 2, 2003, while discussing its Stategic Framework 04-06. In it I wrote:

“Ages ago, when information was less available and moved at a slower pace, the market consisted of a myriad of individual agents acting on limited information basis. Nowadays, when information is just too voluminous and fast to handle, market or authorities have decided to delegate the evaluation of it into the hands of much fewer players such as the credit rating agencies. This will, almost by definition, introduce systemic risks in the market and we are already able to discern some of the victims, although they are just the tip of an iceberg.

A mixture of thousand solutions, many of them inadequate, may lead to a flexible world that can bend with the storms. A world obsessed with Best Practices may calcify its structure and break with any small wind. Who could really defend the value of diversity, if not The World Bank?"


@PerKurowski