The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, a policy body comprising 34 advanced economies, cited data stretching back 50 years in a key report unveiled in the British capital.
"Reforms to make the financial sector more stable can be expected to boost long-term economic growth and improve income equality," read the OECD study entitled "Finance and Inclusive Growth".
The Paris-based OECD said the sector would make a "healthy contribution" to "strong and equitable growth" if it could "prevent credit overexpansion" and ensure "supervision of banks to maintain sufficient capital buffers".
The OECD also criticised excessive financial deregulation, the use of bank lending rather than bond financing, and the deterioration of credit quality.
And it pointed to a growing income inequality, saying that high earners can and do borrow more than those on lower wages -- with household credit more unevenly distributed than income.
The OECD criticised state support to systemic financial institutions deemed too big to fail without threatening the global financial system -- and suggested that such groups could be broken up to prevent credit overexpansion and also boost stability.
"The links between too much bank credit and slower growth, which are stronger where too-big-to-fail banks get more public support, underline the growth benefits of completing reform in this area."
The OECD added: "One way of ending too-big-to-fail would be to break up financial institutions into sufficiently smaller entities.
"Alternatively, reforms can focus on separating the utility functions of too-big-to-fail banks from their more risky activities and on requiring large institutions to set up credible resolution plans, so that they can be closed orderly if they fail the test of the market place."
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