Sunday 9 June was a good night for the right in Europe. While this shift to the right is more likely to be an evolution rather than a revolution for European policy-making, it is going to become more difficult to find consensus on ambitious pan-European initiatives, including financial integration and capital markets union.
Regardless of which party is selected to form the next UK government, there should be no presumption that the country’s economic policy problems can all be resolved in the first 100 days.
Ahead of the UK general election on 4 July, OMFIF convenes a roundtable to highlight the key economic issues that will shape the outcome. Register →
The departing chief executive of the UK Debt Management Office, joins Burhan Khadbai, head of content at OMFIF’s Sovereign Debt Institute, to recall the highs and lows of more than two decades managing the gilt market.
The 11th edition of OMFIF’s Global Public Investor surveys 73 central banks to uncover how $5.4tn in international reserve assets are likely to be deployed across financial markets.