Disponible en Español

Course on Suptech and Regtech

June 28 to July 2, 2021
Videoconference

 

Monday, June 28

For third occasion, CEMLA with the support of Financial Network Analytics (FNA) organized the Course on Regtech and Suptech. The Course covered topics of upmost interest for central banks, including the current trends and developments of Suptech and Regtech in 2021, the modelling and applications of Central bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) implementations, anti-money laundering (AML) new frameworks and technologies, among others. The sessions were both theoretical and practical, giving to the attendants the foundations and the tools to deepen on these topics.

Day 1

The first day began with an introduction on the Suptech and Regtech landscape. After an overview on the FNA tools it was reviewed the concepts of Fintech, Techfin, Regtech and Suptech. The last two regards to the set of technologies that support the central banks for compliance and regulatory requirements for regulated entities as well as their monitoring. It was underlined that currently all global financial authorities have explicit Suptech strategies in place or under development. This takes places within a landscape where central banks have access to a vast amount of data which is needed to be analyzed in order to make sense out of it for effective macro-prudential and micro-prudential activities. In this session, it was also presented the goals of Suptech, including the reduction of the burden on regulated entities, the improvement of monitoring and risk management, and the implementation of a more effective and better allocation of resources. It was also mentioned the components of a successful Suptech strategy, including access and creation to quality data across organization(s) and the availability of skilled personnel (data science and technologies). The session ended with a broad list of examples of Regtech and Suptech applications.

The next session was devoted to introduce central clearing and payment systems. First it was given an overview on the Financial Market Infrastructures (FMIs) starting with the Central Counterparties (CCPs) which are entities in charge of clearing and settlement of financial assets transactions. CCPs relies on the netting and collateral to conduct risk management. Then it was mentioned the particular case of a derivatives CCP and the risks that such a system could pose. On the payment systems’ side, it was mentioned that they provide clearing and settlement for many goods and services markets rather than financial markets. The focus on payments were made to real-time gross settlement systems and deferred net settlement systems. Next, it was reviewed the bilateral and multilateral netting and the financial stability challenges that a CCP have to address. The session concluded with a presentation of two different methodologies for risk management of a CCP. The first methodology quantifies the amount of residual risk exposures by the participants setting a coverage level. The second proposes a new collateral system CoMargin that enhances the stability and resiliency of CCPs by accounting for the interdependence of market participants.

The last session of the day was devoted to give an introduction on financial networks applications for central banks. First, it was reviewed the basic concepts of network analysis, including the different types of networks (directed, non-directed, weighted, etc.), clustering coefficient, reciprocity, affinity, completeness; also the most important centrality measures as degree, betweenness, closeness, eigenvector centrality, PageRank and DebtRank, were also mentioned. Then, it was presented the main channels of financial contagion to illustrate the relevance of financial networks, going from default cascades to funding liquidity contagion and fire sales externality. It was explained that default cascades shock is transmitted through the asset side, and it could be amplified by bankruptcy cost, fire sales externality and by incorporating default risk in asset values. Concerning funding liquidity contagion shock, it was stressed out that it is transmitted through the liability side, it could be amplified by sales of illiquid assets and by liquidity hoarding. Finally, in the fire sales externality there is a shock in the asset price, causing the asset sale and a consecutive devaluation generating fire sales. A set of different application to measure financial contagion through the implementation of networks-based methodologies was then presented. The first case, motivated by the fact that financial institutions interacts in different markets, develops a multi-layer network methodology that quantifies systemic risk by studying financial exposures on derivatives, securities, foreign exchanges and deposits and loans; it was shown that the combined (multi-layer) systemic impact is always larger than the combination of the layers separately. In the second case was quantified the expected loss due to systemic risk overlapping portfolios (indirect exposures) and it was compared to direct exposures. The second case presented a network study on the dynamics of currencies relationship during normal and crisis periods; through the use of filtering techniques, it was shown that during the global financial crisis of 2008 currency-related transactions were more correlated. The last case analyzes the relation between climate risk and financial stability; it was shown that in a disorderly transition context, financial institutions have incentives to engage earlier, under the same market conditions.


Day 2

The second day began with a presentation about the Bank of Lithuania experience on its implementation on Suptech and data strategies. First it was mentioned the strategy main focus areas which are the business model, policies, processes, human resources capital and technologies. It was also mentioned that implementation has been enabled by blockchain, cryptography, smart contracts, biometrics, cloud computing, AI and ML, APIs, big data analytics and IoT and telematics. The Bank of Lithuania roadmap were made of:

  • i. The creation of suitable IT tools to support workflows, and the digitalization of information and its availability for reporting visualization and monitoring
  • ii. Automatization of repetitive tasks
  • iii. Creation of algorithms to support decision making
  • iv. Continuous learning based on past information

The session continued with the exposition of the principal Suptech strategy drivers, where the enhancing of efficiency and effectiveness were the most relevant. Then it was mentioned the current strategy advances, and finally it was presented the benefits that would be obtained for financial institutions, the industry and the central bank.

The second session was devoted to present applications of network analytics and agent-based modeling for micro and macro-prudential analysis, systemic stress testing and, FMIs design and oversight. First it was introduced the main concepts of the methodologies used which are intended to understand complex systems (large systems with many interactions and non-linearities, such as payment systems), and it was mentioned the pros and cons of its implementation. Next, it was reviewed the data requirements needed for the implementation of such models, which are historical transaction data requiring as minimum information of the date-time, sender, receiver and value, and representative data that has to be based on aggregates/sampling from real data. Once the above was mentioned, it was reviewed a number of use cases. The initial set of use cases was intended to address issues related to micro and macro-prudential analysis. In the first case potential contagion paths in centrally cleared markets were mapped and it was quantified potential liquidity demands. For the second, it was provided intuitive visualization tools based on network analysis and stress testing techniques in order to set scenarios related to market risk. In the third case, it was built knowledge graphs for financial stability surveillance and banking supervision. The fourth case regarded to the development of a simulation model on how a CCP network would rewire itself in case of operational incapacity of any of its members. This was followed by a use case on systemic stress-testing model motivated by the COVID-19 market crash. And, finally, a methodology to simulate various Liquidity Saving Mechanisms to evaluate how much liquidity needs could be reduced without adding undue operational risks.

The second day ended with hands-on exercises on credit risk analytics using loan data, liquidity and solvency monitoring with payments, and FMIs design and oversight.


Day 3

The Course’s third day was devoted to digital money issues.

The first session was intended to provide an overview about fiat-based stablecoins. The presentation began with a summary on the recent CBDCs and stablecoins news which included the exploration of 90 central banks of CBDC issuance projects, the launching of China digital yuan pilot. It was also discussed the case related to Tether, the most actively digital asset worldly traded, for which a bank run experienced by Iron Finance (DeFi) raised important supervisory concerns, among other developments. It was also mentioned that the foreign exchange market is the largest in the world, while the digital asset market is experiencing a rise in its daily trading volume. The session continued with the stablecoins timeline and guidance where authorities as FSB has made an advance on regulation, supervision and oversight arrangements. It was concluded that some stablecoins have been successful, but not at the level of being taken as legal tender, and that CBDCs could represent an alternative of digital legal tender.

The second session of the day had the objective to present a view on CBDCs in the Canadian case. It began with a definition of CDBC which is a digital currency designed to provide the same benefits as cash (safety, universal access, resilience, privacy and competition), but in an electronic format that could be used for online transactions or at a point of sale, using a mobile phone or a special card or device. Then it was reviewed some of the aspects to take into account in the issuance of a CBDC in Canada including the revision of opportunities and risks of new technologies in the payment system, ensuring that all components continue functioning together to provide Canadians with the efficient, providing safe and secure payments, the building of a modern ecosystem capable to adapt to the fast-moving world of payments, and the creation of a contingency plan for a CBDC. The session continued with a discussion on possible costs-risks and benefit that the issuance of a CBDC could pose. For the former it was illustrated situations like the risk of a run toward a CBDC during a crisis, cyber risks, money laundering and illegal activities, that may stifle payment innovations. For the latter it was mentioned the keeping of central bank money competition with private alternatives, enhancement of payment system resilience, maintenance of payments privacy, general public access to risk-free assets, among others. The session concluded with the proofs of concept implemented by the central bank, which included a smartphone app, store value card with offline transfer a self-contained device and digital cash.

The day ended with a hands-on exercise on FNA’s CBDC simulator.


Day 4

The fourth day of the Course was devoted to the use of private and open data to create useful tools for central banks.

In the first session, it was explored the use of Fintech and data science to create new opportunities in economics and statistics analysis within the European Central Bank. It was initially mentioned that the pandemic triggered an increase in the use of digital platforms, thus boosting the generation of digital economy data. Then, it was pointed out that the European data strategy involves the use of cloud services, generation of data services, artificial intelligence, machine readable digital formats, and public, academia and private data exploration knowledge. Then it was discussed how the use of financial technologies for central banking could meet some policy purposes like the creation of near real-time snapshots, early warning indicators, detection of trend and turning points, extraction of information on the impact of policy actions, and the creation of new theories from combining different science fields to finally generate insights. For this, it was pointed out that the development of better predictors, means for simulating debate, adjustment of model-based theories, creation of timely and frequent information would be necessary to better exploit micro data for banking supervision. The session concluded with an application of six seasonal autoregressive models to nowcast car sales utilizing both Google open data and private data to finally compare the results yielded from the two sources.

In the second session, it was presented the platform AIR, which is a security and privacy-first-peer-to-peer infrastructure dedicated to build federal analytics. More precisely, it is a data availability operating system designed to support an ecosystem of third-party and proprietary solutions and tools. The platform work by sitting in the middle of the ecosystem providing trusted mechanisms to safeguard security, privacy, legal and regulatory requirements, all with full auditability. Finally, it was presented three different use cases. The first was developed for Singapore’s Ministry of Law to generate a knowledge management infrastructure in order to support growth, jobs, public services and research useful for society. The second use case was developed for Bank of England with a jointly participation of the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), the six biggest UK banks and academia, the case had the purpose to generate a digital regulatory reporting framework to boost the improvement of supervision. The last case was developed also within the UK for the FCA, University College London and Clyde & Co to automate guidance to firms.

The day ended with three hands-on exercises on the operationalization of COVID-19 statistics, the creation of a mapping for CCPs interconnectedness and the development of tools to monitor supply chain networks.


Day 5

The Course’s last day was dedicated to show new frameworks and technologies for AML, anti-fraud and cyber analytics.

The first session had the purpose to show the Bank of England strategy to build an effective cyber resilience framework. The presentation started by showing the costs generated by cyber-attacks in a global scale. Then, it was pointed out the main attack vectors, which are phishing, supply chain compromise and ransomware. In the case of phishing it has been observed an increase on these attacks due to the global remote force, 95% of them are caused by human error. For supply chain compromise it was mentioned the concrete case of SolarWinds, which has been the largest and most sophisticated attack created up to date. Also, ransomware damage costs have been predicted to exceed 20 billion by the end of 2021. From the central bank perspective, they are targeted for a number of reasons, including nation state espionage, theft of intellectual and proprietary information, due to its role as country’s critical infrastructure and for reputational damage and disruption purposes. This continued with a presentation the CREST framework to deliver intelligence-led cybersecurity testing, which mimics cyber-attacks in order to evaluate and better understand weaknesses and vulnerabilities and take action. It was shown that this framework is a highly effective regulatory assessment tool. Finally it was presented the process to mimic an attack and how the different teams works in order to counteract it.

The second session of the day was devoted to dive into the anomaly detection topic and some possible applications. The presentation began with an overview of cyber-crime and fraud activities focused on central banks. Then, it was reviewed key aspects of the CPMI-IOSCO guidance on cyber resilience for FMIs, underlining that after the publication of the Guidance (within a time window of 12 months), central banks started to develop concrete plans to improve their capabilities in order to meet the two-hour recovery time objective, and that testing is an integral component of any cyber-resilience framework. The session continued with the use cases implemented by FNA to detect anomalies. In the first use case, it was presented a methodology based on network analysis and machine learning (neural networks) to detect anomalies in Large Value Payment Systems. It was shown that this issue was tackled as a classification problem where the model is intended to predict if a payment is anomalous or not, the data comprised payments information and network features, having that the network distance between the payee and the payer was the most useful at the moment of the development of the model. In the second case, it was developed a methodology to further investigate anomalies among related parties linked to a particular institution-entity of interest; in the results presented it was studied firms (but it can be applied to a different type of dataset that contains the same type of information), and it was shown that the algorithm has the capacity to build network around the company of interest automatically showing the network most relevant information.

The last day concluded with hand-on exercises that tackled issues of anomaly detection and simulation of impacts and implications of cyber-attacks.

Monday, June 28

 

Welcome remarks
MDr. Serafín Martínez Jaramillo, Adviser to CEMLA’s Director General

Regtech & Suptech - Technological Foundations and the State of the Art

Session I. Overview of Regtech & Suptech trends and developments in 2021. Key technologies and data sources behind Suptech applications.

Introduction to G20 Monitor.
Kimmo Soramäki, Founder and CEO, FNA

Session II. Introduction to Central Clearing and Payment Systems

Introduction to Central Clearing and Payment Systems.
Jorge Cruz Lopez, Assistant Professor, Western University and Director of Financial Engineering and Research, FNA

Session III. Introduction to Financial Networks Applications for Central Banks

Serafín Martínez Jaramillo, Adviser to Director General, CEMLA


Tuesday, June 29

 

Granular Supervisory & Payments Data in Focus


Session IV. Taxonomy of granular supervisory data and its applications.

Building blocks of effective Suptech Strategies.
Ramunas Baravykas, Director of Statistics, Bank of Lithuania

Session V. Examples of Network Analytics for macro- and micro-prudential analysis, systemic stress-testing, and FMI design & oversight

Ivana Ruffini, Managing Director of Advanced Analytics, FNA

Session VI. Hands-on exercise: Credit Risk Analytics with Loan Data Katerina Rigana, Research Scientist & Data Analyst, FNA

Session VII. Hands-on exercise: Liquidity & Solvency Monitoring with Payments Data.

Katerina Rigana, Research Scientist & Data Analyst, FNA

Session VIII. Hands-on exercise: New Opportunities for FMI Design & Oversight

Ivana Ruffini, Managing Director of Advanced Analytics, FNA


Wednesday, June 30

 

Modelling the Impacts and Implications of CBDCs


Session IX. Regulatory and supervisory implications of digital money

Patrick McCarty, Adjunct Professor, Georgetown University


Session X. CBDC: the state of the art, emerging opportunities and key challenges

Scott Hendry, Special Director - Fintech, Bank of Canada


Session XI. Hands-on exercise: CBDC Simulator

Kimmo Soramäki, Founder and CEO, FNA


Thursday, July 1

 

Making the Most of Alternative and Open Data


Session XII. Case study: Using Google search data for nowcasting macroeconomic indicators

Per Nymand-Andersen, Advisor to Senior Management, European Central Bank


Session XIII. New opportunities for accessing and managing data

PSally Steir-Tait, Founder and CEO, RegulAltion


Session XIV. Hands-on exercise 1: Mapping CCP Interconnectedness

Ivana Ruffini, Managing Director of Advanced Analytics, FNA


Session XV. Hands-on exercise 2: Operationalising COVID-19 Statistics

Katerina Rigana, Research Scientist & Data Analyst, FNA


Session XVI. Hands-on exercise 3: Monitoring Supply Chain Networks

Katerina Rigana, Research Scientist & Data Analyst, FNA


Friday, July 2

 

New Frameworks and Technologies for anti-money laundering (AML), Anti-fraud & Cyber Analytics


Session XVII. Overview of key operational and cyber risks. Tips for identifying and monitoring risk concentrations

Manit Sahib, Head of Penetration Testing, Bank of England


Session XVIII. Session 18. New methods for Financial Crime analysis.

Manit Sahib, Head of Penetration Testing, Bank of England


Session XIX. Session 19. Hands-on exercise: Anomaly Detections and its Applications.

Olivier Kraft, Data Analyst, FNA


Session XX. Hands-on exercise: simulating the impacts and implications of cyber-attacks

Ivana Ruffini, Managing Director of Advanced Analytics, FNA


Session XXI. Course summary.

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Óscar Arce

Óscar Arce is the Director General of Economics, Statistics and Research at Banco de España, where he also has served as Associate Director General of Economics and Research, Director of Monetary and Financial Studies and as the Head of the Macroeconomic Analysis and Forecasting Division. Previously, he was the Director of the Research and Statistics Department at the Spanish Securities Markets Commission (CNMV), Deputy Director General at the Economic Bureau of the Spanish Prime Minister and Senior Economist at the Banco de España.

Mr. Arce holds a PhD in Economics from the London School of Economics and Political Science and a MSc Economics from University College London. He is an alternate member of the European Central Bank’s Governing Council, member of the ECB’s Monetary Policy Committee, and member of the EU’s Economic and Financial Committee. Before, he was involved in the work of several international bodies, including the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA), the European Systemic Risk Board (ESRB), and the International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO).

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Adrián Armas

Adrián Armas has been Chief Economist of the Central Reserve Bank of Peru (BCRP) since 2005, except 2017-2018, when he was the Executive Director for Argentina, Bolivia,Chile, Paraguay, Peru, and Uruguay at the IMF Board. He has spent most of his career (since 1986) at the BCRP, where he was previously Head of the Monetary Policy Division (1997-2005) and Chief of the Financial Programming Section (1995-1997). He contributed to the design and implementation of Peru’s inflation targeting scheme and has written articles on this subject and others on central banking for the IMF, BIS, the LACEA Journal, and several central banks. He participated in IMF technical assistance missions as MCM Advisor in 2007-2017. He has taught Econometrics, International Economics, Macroeconomics, and Monetary Theory at several Peruvian universities. He holds an M.A. degree in Political Economy from Boston University (1992).

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Robin Brooks

Robin Brooks is the Managing Director of Economic Research and the Chief Economist of the Institute of International Finance (IIF). In his role, he oversees the IIF’s macroeconomic analysis and serves as part of the IIF’s senior management team. Previously, he served as Chief FX Strategist at Goldman Sachs based in New York, where he was responsible for the firm’s foreign exchange forecasts and publishing international macro research. Prior to joining Goldman, Mr. Brooks was the FX strategist at Brevan Howard. Before joining the private sector, Mr. Brooks spent eight years as an economist at the International Monetary Fund, where he worked on the IMF’s fair value models for FX, published academic research and participated in missions to IMF program countries. Mr. Brooks earned his PhD in Economics from Yale University in 1998. He earned a BSc in Monetary Economics from the London School of Economics in 1993.

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Daniel Chiquiar

Daniel Chiquiar is currently Director General of Economic Research at Banco de México. As Chief Economist of the Central Bank, he is the Chief Economic Adviser to the Governing Board. Among other responsibilities, he heads the Economic Research Division of Banco de México, leading and channeling the intellectual efforts aimed at contributing to the understanding of policy recommendations on current economic events and various issues such as growth, inflation, international trade, labor market, and monetary policy. Most of the research is used as the basis for recommendations to the Governing Board and is published in top academic journals.

He is an economist from the Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México (ITAM), where he graduated with honors in 1990. He later earned his Ph.D. in Economics from the University of California San Diego in 2003, majoring in international trade and macroeconomics. Most of his research has been published in top peer-reviewed academic journals in economics. He has also been professor at ITAM and Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas (CIDE) at the undergraduate and graduate levels. During his career, he has held professional appointments in both the private and public sectors. At Grupo BIMSA, he was appointed Vice President of Research, and later Director of Economic Policy in Mexico’s Ministry of Finance and Public Credit (SHCP). In 2003, he joined Banco de México as an Economic Researcher, advancing to his current position as Chief Economist.

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Miguel Fuentes

Miguel Fuentes is the Manager of International Analysis at Banco Central de Chile. Previously he was Manager of Macroeconomic Analysis, Head of the Conjunctural Assessment Section of the Macroeconomic Analysis Unit and Senior Economist in the Economic Research Unit at Banco Central de Chile. He has also worked as a visiting researcher in the International Monetary Fund’s Research Department.

He was a Professor at the Economics Institute of the Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile and Editor of the university’s Business Macroeconomic Report (Informe Macroeconómico para la Empresa) (1998–1999). He has also taught courses in macroeconomics, econometrics and international economics completed in the undergraduate and graduate programs at the Universidad Católica de Chile and the Universidad Alberto Hurtado.

Mr. Fuentes graduated as Commercial Engineer with a major in economics (1997). He holds a Master’s Degree in Applied Economics, specializing in applied macroeconomics, from the Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile (PUC), (1998) and a Ph.D. in Economics from the University of California, Berkeley (2004).

He has participated in numerous national and international seminars and published papers in international academic journals and books, on topics including stabilization policy, exchange rate regimes, and international trade.

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Linda Goldberg

Linda Goldberg is a Senior Vice President at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Ms. Goldberg’s main areas of expertise are global banking, international capital flows, and the international roles of currencies. She is the co-chair of the International Banking Research Network, Bank for International Settlements Technical Advisor, CEPR Distinguished Fellow, and an NBER Research Associate. Linda is co-editor of the International Journal of Central Banking and on editorial boards of the Journal of Financial Intermediation and Journal of Financial Services Research. She also is on board of the Central Banking Economic Research Association, advisory board of the Academic Female Finance Committee of the American Finance Association and is the Vice President of the Association of Princeton Graduate Alumni. Linda previously engaged with the World Economic Forum, including as chair and vice chair of the Council on Global Economic Imbalances.

Linda has a Ph.D. in Economics from Princeton University, and a B.A. in Mathematics and Economics from Queens College CUNY, where she graduated Phi Beta Kappa and Summa Cum Laude.

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André Minella

André Minella is the Head of the Research Department (Depep) of the Central Bank of Brazil (BCB). The Department is responsible for i. conducting research in areas such as macroeconomics, banking, and financial stability; ii. developing macroeconomic and financial models, and iii. providing projections and macroeconomic scenarios for the Monetary Policy Committee (Copom). He also makes regular presentations to the Financial Stability Committee (Comef) meetings. André previously worked as the Head of the International Affairs Department of the BCB, where, among other things, he was responsible for providing analysis of the global economy for the Board. He also worked as Deputy Secretary for Economic Policy at the Ministry of Finance of Brazil. André holds a Ph.D. degree in Economics from New York University. André has conducted research on macroeconomic modeling, dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) models, inflation targeting, inflation expectations, real-time data, and capital flows. He has publications in venues such as the NBER Macroeconomics Annual, Journal of International Money and Finance, Economic Modelling, and Empirical Economics. He has also worked as a consultant for the IMF in the areas of inflation targeting and macroeconomic modeling. He was also assistant professor at Pontifical Catholic University Rio Grande do Sul (PUCRS).

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Juan José Ospina

Juan José Ospina joined Banco de la República (Colombia) in 2017. He currently is the Chief Officer for Monetary Policy and Economic Information, where he runs the team that produces the bank's macroeconomic analysis and forecasts, makes the monetary policy recommendation to the Board of Governors, and writes the Monetary Policy Report. He is also in charge of a labor market research team and the production of most of the bank's official statistics.

Prior to this role, he also worked as the head of the Fiscal Analysis Unit and as a researcher at the Macroeconomic Modeling Department. His research interests include monetary policy, business cycle fluctuations, asset pricing, pension systems, and the formation of consumer's expectations.

His research work has been published in academic journals including Econometrica and the Journal of Political Economy. He has taught courses in finance, macroeconomics, and statistics at the University of Chicago, Universidad de los Andes, Universidad del Rosario, Universidad del Norte, and Universidad Externado de Colombia. He holds a PhD in economics and an MBA (with honors) from the University of Chicago and bachelor degrees (with honors) in economics and industrial engineering from Universidad de los Andes.

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Manuel Ramos-Francia

Manuel Ramos-Francia has a B. A. in Economics (with highest honors) from the Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México (ITAM). He was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship for graduate studies in the United States. He holds a Ph.D. in Economics from Yale University, where he graduated in 1993, specializing in Advanced Economic Theory and Financial Economics.

He has been Professor of Economics, having taught Advanced Macroeconomics, Open Economy Macroeconomics, Monetary Theory and Policy, and Financial Economics, and Director of the Center for Analysis and Economic Research at ITAM in Mexico. Dr. Ramos-Francia has held several positions at the Ministry of Finance: Deputy Minister (for Revenues), Chief Economist, and Chief Adviser to the Minister of Finance. He joined Banco de México in 2001, first serving as a Senior Adviser to the Board, then as Director General for Economic Research (Chief Economist) and, from April 2011 to December 2018, as Vice-Governor and Member of the Board. Currently, he is the Director General of the Center for Latin American Monetary Studies (CEMLA).

He has given seminars at universities such as Yale Economics, Harvard Business, Harvard Law, Columbia Public Policy, the University of Chicago Business, and ITAM, among others. He has also given conferences and seminars at many central banks such as the Fed, the NY Fed, the Bank of Canada, the Bank of England, the Banque de France, and the central banks of Argentina, Ecuador, Jamaica, Peru, Guatemala, Turkey, and others, as well as at international financial organizations such as the IMF, the BIS, the World Bank, the IIF, and the IADB. Also, at organizations such as LACEA, LAMES, the International Economic Association (IEA), the Reinventing Bretton Woods Committee, and the Adam Smith Seminar. He has also been invited to be a member of the Bretton Woods Committee.

Manuel Ramos-Francia represented Mexico in the G20 Central Bank Deputies Group from 2010 to 2018. He was Chairman of the Deputies of the International Monetary and Financial Committee (IMFC) of the IMF from 2015 to 2017. Similarly, he presided over the Central Bank Deputies Group under Mexico's G20 Presidency in 2012. He was given the Professional Merit Service Award from ITAM in 2009.

He has published various articles on monetary policy, fiscal policy, trade and applied econometrics in refereed economics journals such as: Journal of Money Credit and Banking, Economics Letters, Journal of Financial Stability, and Quarterly Journal of Finance, and many others, as well as in specialized books. He has refereed for journals such as: Journal of Money, Credit and Banking; Empirical Economics; Review of World Economics; International Journal of Economic Sciences and Applied Research; The World Economy, and others. He is Editor-in-Chief of the Latin American Journal of Central Banking. Also, he was a member of the Association of the IJCB's (International Journal of Central Banking) Management Committee.

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Neil Shearing

Neil Shearing is the Group Chief Economist and Director at Capital Economics. Prior to becoming Group Chief Economist, Neil was Chief Emerging Markets Economist and managed a team that won several awards for forecast accuracy. Before joining Capital Economics, he worked at HM Treasury as an economic adviser in various areas, including fiscal policy and global economics. He is also an Associate Fellow in the Global Economy and Finance Programme of Chatham House.

Neil’s main area of research interest is in analyzing and understanding structural shifts in the global economy. He presents regularly on the global economic and financial market outlook and is a well-known voice within the investment community. Neil has written articles in the Financial Times and a number of other newspapers, as well as appearing regularly on TV and radio.

He holds degrees in Economics from the University of York and the University of London and is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts.

 

 

 

 

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