Monetary steps not seen since 1929 Great Depression!
NEW DELHI, India - July 29, 2008 - Facing
threats of a global crash, the central banks have taken
"extraordinary" action on a scale not seen since the Great Depression
of 1929, the Reserve Bank of India said on Tuesday.
"Central bank interventions (to deal with the global financial turmoil)
have been extraordinary and on a scale not seen since the Great Depression,
demonstrating a resolve to act decisively against threats to financial
stability," RBI said.
Recently, the Bank for International Settlements, the organization that fosters
cooperation between central banks, had also warned that the credit crisis could
push world economies into a crash on a scale not seen since the Great
Depression.
The 'Great Depression' started with the collapse of the U.S. stock market in
1929 and was the largest economic depression in world history and is used now
as a benchmark on how far a modern economy could possibly fall.
The RBI said recent developments in the global financial system has heightened
the uncertainty in the outlook.
It added that though the possible crisis in global finances "seems to have
been averted, several vulnerabilities persist in the leading financial
centers."
The Reserve Bank said even "massive" interventions by central banks'
could not defreeze market liquidity. Though, the central bank pointed out, the
ultimate size of losses among the largest financial institutions and their capital
requirements remains opaque, and the balance sheets have become extremely
sensitive to re-pricing and valuation changes.