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Report highlights jobless fears

Diane Coyle
Monday 09 June 1997 18:02 EDT
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A promising outlook for the world economy is clouded by a "grim" unemployment situation, the Bank for International Settlements said in its annual report yesterday. As EU finance ministers meeting in Luxembourg agreed on the urgency of tackling unemployment, the Basle-based BIS, central bank to the world's central banks, recommended countries with high jobless rates follow the path of job market deregulation.

It also warned there was a danger that financial markets had overlooked the risk that inflationary pressures might emerge, especially in the US.

Wim Duisenberg, BIS president, said: "The question is whether the macroeconomic risks have been correctly evaluated and factored into asset prices or whether the materialisation of any of them could trigger some broader form of retrenchment."

The report concluded that economic prospects were the most promising for some time. It welcomed governments' general commitment to price stability and their efforts to cut budget deficits.

But it said these efforts, and especially the race to meet the Maastricht criteria in Europe, could not be blamed for high unemployment. Governments had to face the fundamental question of whether they could continue to honour all the past promises to protect workers, pensioners and those on benefits and making progress towards EMU was only a secondary consideration.

Hamish McRae, page 24

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