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Central bankers are not sure what to believe — except on climate change

Senior UBS adviser Huw van Steenis found policymakers in pensive mood at the annual gatherings of the IMF and World Bank last weekend

Demonstrators protest the IMF and World Bank's investments in fossil fuels and urge them to confront climate change as they march outside the World Bank and IMF Headquarters during the organizations, Annual Meetings in Washington
Demonstrators protest the IMF and World Bank's investments in fossil fuels and urge them to confront climate change as they march outside the World Bank and IMF Headquarters during the organizations, Annual Meetings in Washington Photo: Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images

As the world’s central banks and economic policymakers convened in Washington over the weekend for the annual meetings of the IMF, IIF and World Bank, there was a distinct lack of conviction in the air.

“Globally synchronised slowdown”, trade wars, political uncertainty and persistent ultralow interest rates have ground down most investors and policymakers’ belief in the prevailing economic or market narratives.

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