The latter could slam global growth back to about 1% this year, effectively a recession on a per-capita GDP basis.
'PERILOUS' RISKSThe IMF's Global Financial Stability Report warned of a "perilous combination of vulnerabilities" in financial markets, saying that some participants had failed to adequately prepare for the impact of interest rate increases.
Despite the warnings, the IMF's chief economist, Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas, said inflation is still the bigger problem and that price stability should take precedence over financial stability risks for central banks' monetary policy.
Only in the event of a very severe financial crisis should those priorities be reversed, he said in a news conference.
She added that the global financial system was also resilient due to reforms enacted after the 2008 financial crisis.