The
United Nations Conference on Trade and Development
(UNCTAD) is expected to offer distinct analyses and
insights into the problems afflicting developing countries
and the global economy in general. If therefore, one
were to scan through only the Overview that reads
like a nuanced crossover between rhetoric neo-liberal
and heterodox views in the current economic policy
discourse, the Trade and Development Report (TDR)
2006 published by the UNCTAD would have come as a
disappointment. Even so, one would have just concluded
that it was only symptomatic of the woes of our times.
But, fortunately, going beyond the boundaries drawn
by rhetoric, TDR 2006 does provide an insightful discussion
of several fundamental contradictions within the current
growth paradigm and the subsequent challenges facing
developing countries in industrial, trade and macroeconomic
policymaking. Titled 'Global Partnership and National
Policies for Development', the Report thus revolves
around the following two central themes: (1) the urgent
need for economic policymaking to move beyond the
Washington Consensus and the "inbuilt" and
"implanted" constraints imposed on this
by neo-liberal policies and institutions; and (2)
the growing imbalances in the world economy.
The Report starts by pointing out that how the present
phase of relatively fast growth in developing countries,
driven by strong global demand originating mainly
in the United States as before and amplified by the
rapid expansion of the large Chinese economy, has
also benefited from rising prices and continuing strong
demand for primary commodities[1].
Against the backdrop of these positive prospects for
growth, it highlights the recent turbulence in emerging
market financial markets reflected in increasing volatility
in stock, commodities and currency markets as well
as in short-term capital outflows from some emerging
markets (several East European countries as well as
South Africa and Turkey). Even though in some cases,
these episodes show similarities to the typical speculative
cycle experienced in the Asian as well as in the Latin
American or Russian crises of the 1990s, the current
turbulence is limited only to some areas and to a
number of countries with rather high current-account
deficits. The conclusion is that most emerging-market
economies appear to be in a position of strength owing
to their current account surpluses and therefore,
the risk of a financial crisis on a global scale originating
in the developing world is relatively small.
This appears to be a rather naïve conclusion.
No amount of foreign exchange reserves may prove sufficient
to support a concerted speculative attack on an emerging
market currency as the East Asian crises of the late
1990s showed. Further, most financial crises in the
past were regional in the sense that it directly involved
only countries of a specific region. But each of these
regional crises has had significant global impact
of one form or the other, including global recessions,
due to very fact that financial and trade liberalization
have increased the interlinkages between countries
across regions. Thus, there is also a significant
risk of contagion because several countries share
similar vulnerabilities and common creditors.
Even as it underestimates the risks associated with
an imminent large-scale financial crisis, the report
cautions that prospects for growth in the coming years
should be weighed against the increasing imbalances
in the world economy, as their correction could have
serious repercussions for developing countries.
Global Imbalances as a Systemic
Problem
It is indeed significant that the UNCTAD has chosen
to highlight concerns about growing global economic
imbalances that have been repeatedly raised by several
economists and analysts in the last few years[2].
Even though the previous year's TDR also addressed
the issue of growing global economic imbalances, TDR
2006 has built a robust theoretical analysis in Chapter
I, through a detailed critique of the "static"
savings-investment gap framework on which orthodox
policy prescriptions are based[3].
The fact is that given the severe experience with
financial crises associated with capital account liberalisation
and a hands-off approach to exchange rate management,
most countries affected by the crises in Asia and
in Latin America have accumulated large current account
surpluses. In fact, the South and East Asian countries
recorded a large surplus on their current accounts
(4.6 per cent of GDP) in 2005; and only ten of these
22 countries were in deficit. The Latin American region
as a whole was also in surplus, in the order of 1.3
per cent of GDP[4]. While
current surpluses do not necessarily result in increasing
foreign exchange reserves, there are overall balance
of payments surpluses in these countries. Some countries
(like India) now have current deficits, but larger
capital account surpluses. The stark fact, which is
closely related, is that many of these developing
countries are reinvesting these huge amounts of foreign
exchange reserves mainly in securities such as government
bonds in the rich countries. In particular, as has
been highlighted by other authors, global savings
flow primarily in the direction of the largest and
richest developed country, the United States and its
government bonds. Ironically, this is true even for
many developing countries that have positive net capital
inflows (like India and China) who then store it in
reserves that are invested in the US, etc.
The Report suggests that having learned that reliance
on foreign savings rarely pays off as a sustainable
development strategy, a growing number of developing
countries have shifted to an alternative strategy
that relies on trade surpluses as the engine for investment
and growth. Since this strategy requires them to defend
strategically favourable post-crisis competitive positions,
they have unilaterally pegged their currency vis-à-vis
the dollar at a slightly undervalued level.
However, the report does not address the channels
through which this trade surplus is being generated
in developing countries. As argued by Chandrasekhar
and Ghosh (2005), there are two reasons why this could
have occurred: crisis-induced deflation that restricted
imports and generated a current account surplus, or
unusual success as an exporter of goods and/or importer
of foreign capital. While China and India may be countries
that fall in the latter category, most other developing
countries recorded surpluses by following deflationary
policies and restricting domestic investment to below
potential. Thus, the remarkable extent of capital
outflow from the developing world came about not because
of any real increase in savings rates in the aggregate
(as the orthodox "savings glut" argument
goes), but because investment rates have not gone
up commensurately. The period of most significant
increase in net lending abroad by Asian NICs, for
example, was when domestic savings rates were actually
falling, because investment rates were falling even
faster. On the other hand, increases in domestic savings
rates in other developing countries dominantly reflect
fiscal consolidation and expenditure cutbacks by their
governments. Growth is curtailed through deflation
so that, even with a higher import-to-GDP ratio resulting
from trade liberalisation, imports are kept at levels
that imply a trade surplus[5].
This crucial link between the current account surpluses
being generated by the emerging markets and the contractionary
fiscal policies they adopt out of the compulsions
of neo-liberal policy framework is one that the report
fails to explore.
Further, reliance on trade surpluses as an engine
of growth by all or most developing countries as the
report argues cannot succeed for all, basically because
of the race-to-the bottom with competitive export
pricing and the reduction in export revenues this
implies. Again, as TDR itself highlights, such a strategy
can only function as long as there is at least one
country in the global economy that accepts running
the corresponding trade deficit. Clearly, the US seems
to fit these attributes of an economy which will accept
running large and rising trade deficits. But the problem
is that the possibility of a slowdown in the United
States economy looks increasingly likely. There is
the prospect that this would entail further dollar
depreciation, which would tend to restore competitiveness[6]
and, together with the economic slowdown, would help
re-balance the United States economy. But, given the
existing structure and concentrated dependence of
global growth on demand stimuli from the United States,
a marked slowdown in the US growth could quite easily
unravel the momentum seen in developing countries
in recent times.
But there is another problem with the argument of
developing countries' reliance on trade surpluses.
Whether it is one or more economies that will help
balance trade across the globe, the point is that
on the exporting countries' side, there are several
supply-side and demand side constraints that come
in the way while countries try to export their way
to economic growth. Ironically, the subsequent chapters
of the report are in fact devoted to detailed discussions
of these very constraints facing developing countries'
export-led development project.
National Development Policy
Choices and Constraints
Another contribution of the TDR relates to national
development strategies. It is noted that the Washington
Consensus approach to development represented a shift
away from the focus on capital accumulation to an
almost exclusive reliance on improved efficiency in
factor allocation generated by market forces. The
latter was based on the belief that capital accumulation,
the basic precondition both for output growth and
economic restructuring would follow automatically
from improved allocation of existing resources. This
expectation was rarely met. Thus, the savings-led
approach favoured by the mainstream view in economics
is misleading.
If markets do not automatically deliver positive and
stable growth rates of real income and catching up,
then the dynamic view, highlighting the incentive
of temporary monopoly rents for pioneering investors,
is more than ever relevant for the development of
the system as a whole. The report thus calls for active
government policies to encourage investment and technological
progress in support of a dynamic process of growth
and structural change that benefits from – rather
than being constrained by – integration into the world
economy.
Against the backdrop of external constraints on development,
and given the experience with reforms over the past
15 years as well as recent developments in economic
theory concerning the creation of new areas of comparative
advantage, the Report makes a strong case for the
adoption of proactive trade and industrial policies.
Supportive national economic policies advocated by
this interpretation focus on strengthening the dynamic
forces of markets related to information externalities,
coordination externalities and dynamic economies of
scale. The form of trade integration envisaged represents
a mix of import substitution through temporary protection
and export promotion using temporary subsidies. Contrary
to orthodox dogma, fiscal incentives, directed public
credit and subsidies are cited as measures that lower
the cost of innovative investment and enable capital
accumulation for sustained growth.
However, the Report makes the point that that in order
to foster diversification and technological upgrading,
subsidies should be given only to investment that
is undertaken to discover the cost function of new
goods or new modes of production in the respective
economy. The argument is that such policies should
not be employed as defence mechanisms to support industries
where production and employment are threatened the
most by foreign competitors that have successfully
upgraded their production. For example, the Report
suggests that this general principle does not support
selective trade protection or other selective support
measures that many developed countries are still applying
in agriculture or in labour-intensive manufacturing
sectors such as the clothing industry.
There is a problem if this argument is applied in
the case of agriculture in many developing and less
developed countries. It is generally accepted that
farming and associated activities constitute more
than just production activities in these countries,
and that they are a source of livelihood and food
security for millions in the countryside. This distinction
should have been mentioned by the report while discussing
the applicability of this general principle. The second
area which this general principle does not support
is a large number of contemporary industrial policy
measures which focus on attracting FDI and related
export-oriented activities, where domestic production
already exists.
Even as it advocates the need for proactive trade
and industrial polices, the Report recognises and
highlights the reduced degree of freedom that remains
for policy implementation as a result of global production
and financial integration. The Report makes a distinction
between de facto ("inbuilt") constraints
that result from policy decisions relating to the
form and degree of a country's integration into the
international economy and de jure ("implanted")
constraints on national policy autonomy that are the
result of commitments to obligations and acceptance
of rules set by international economic governance
systems and institutions. But, it can be seen that
this distinction between de jure and de facto constraints
is more conceptual than real. Multilateral (as well
as regional/bilateral) agreements are very much part
and parcel of a country's decision to integrate with
the world economy through trade and financial liberalization.
Thus, they are largely inseparable processes that
overlap and reinforce each other. Thus, for all practical
purposes, this distinction hardly matters for developing
countries' policy choices.
Most notable among de facto constraints is the loss
of the ability to use the exchange rate as an effective
instrument for external adjustment, or the interest
rate as an instrument for influencing domestic demand
and credit conditions, because of a reliance on private
capital inflows to finance trade deficits following
the opening up of the capital account. Indeed, this
is what leads to the lack of coherence between the
prevailing macroeconomic environment and microeconomic
measures directed to expanding productive capacity
and improving productivity. In order to provide a
favourable macroeconomic framework, monetary policy
has to take on a much broader responsibility than
is stipulated by orthodox theory. In order to avoid
excessive adjustment of interest rates and exchange
rates with attendant adverse effects on the real economy,
a more flexible and efficient approach for inflation
control might be to consider the use of "supply
side" tools including, for example, government
influence on income negotiations and/or the redefinition
of the inflation target depending on the origins of
the inflationary pressure.
While discussing "de jure" constraints,
the Report shows how the various WTO rules have made
it far more difficult for developing countries to
combine outward orientation with the policy instruments
that the mature and late industrializers employed
to promote economic diversification and technological
upgrading. The Subsidies and Countervailing Measures
(SCM) agreement is a good illustration of how WTO
rules and commitments that are equally binding, legally,
impose more binding constraints on developing countries
economically. Even as countries still have the possibility
to pursue policies (Article 8-type subsidies) relating
to the provision of public funds in support of R&D
and innovation activities, such subsidies are of primary
concern to developed countries in their quest to develop
high-tech capabilities and technological innovations.
Further, subsidies impose a cost on public budgets,
which developed countries can afford more easily than
developing countries.
According to the report, regional or bilateral agreements
with large developed countries offer substantial benefits
to developing-country members as they usually provide
greater market access than multilateral agreements,
and often include a wider range of products than traditional
trade preference schemes such as the Generalized System
of Preferences (GSP). Moreover, their adoption is
generally expected to lead to additional FDI. But
empirical studies on existing US bilateral free trade
agreements (FTAs) involving developing countries have
shown that both greater market access and more FDI-led
exports under such preferential trade agreements are
largely an illusion[7].
Further, greater integration often involves additional
steps towards regulatory disciplines, and thus further
constrains the de jure ability of developing countries
to adopt appropriate national regulatory and development
policies, particularly with regard to FDI and intellectual
property rights. This could make it even more difficult
to develop the supply capacity needed to take advantage
of improved export opportunities. Thus, the analysis
in fact ends on a pessimistic note on developing country
prospects.
Where are the Solutions?
The Report advocates that in order to assuage the
situation and to enable all developing countries to
reach the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), the
global partnership for development, stipulated in
Goal 8 of the MDGs, needs to be strengthened further.
However, it is pointed out that the current system
of global economic governance does not seem to be
satisfactory because of two overlapping asymmetries.
First, unlike in the trade arena, current international
monetary and financial arrangements are not organized
around a multilateral rules-based system that applies
a specific set of core principles to all participants.
This asymmetry has particularly strong adverse effects
on developing countries according to the Report, because
self-centred national monetary and financial policies
can have much more damaging effects than those caused
by trade and trade-related policies. Second, the multilateral
rules and commitments governing international economic
relations are, in legal terms, equally binding for
all participants, but in economic terms they are biased
towards an accommodation of the requirements of the
national economic strategies of developed countries.
There is a direct corollary to this: the institution
that is in charge of promoting exchange-rate stability
and of avoiding excessive and prolonged payments disequilibria
is unable to impose meaningful disciplines on the
policies of those economies that run the most significant
external imbalances and whose exchange-rate volatility
has the most significant negative impact on the international
economy.
It follows that while the Report calls for a global
partnership for development that ensures the right
balance between sovereignty in national economic policymaking
on the one hand and multilateral disciplines and collective
governance on the other, this can hardly be achieved
in the real economic policymaking arena. When rules,
in which developing countries have little say, are
being formulated and become part of their "obligations"[8],
evidently very little flexibility is actually afforded
to developing and less developed countries to undertake
institutional reform in the manner suggested by the
Report. The conditions for development and the agenda
are already set. Therefore, the global partnership
for development should first and foremost ensure effective
developing country participation in international
policymaking that impacts their development strategies.
The Report stops short of calling for this critical
challenge facing the global development project. In
fact, this lack of developing country participation
in global economic policymaking is precisely the reason
why UNCTAD ironically has to talk of "the urgent
need to move beyond Washington Consensus" nearly
two decades after it has been discredited in Latin
America's lost decade.
It is indeed crucial to ensure actual developing country
participation in rule-making before we insist on a
"multilateral rules-based system" in finance
as in the case of trade. Otherwise, we would be compromising
for more instances of Special and Differential Treatment
(S&DT) provisions that have no teeth; or ending
up with ever more instances of serious and adverse
development consequences of "multilateral rules"
imposed from the top. The latter is being envisaged,
for instance, in the case of the revised capital adequacy
norms for banks prescribed by Basel II. The need of
the hour therefore is an aggressive expansion of enlightened
developing country engagement in international policymaking
institutions and agencies, and to ensure that the
march towards global harmonisation of economic policies
can be checked so as to maintain adequate policy space
for each country's development needs.
February 13, 2007.
[1] Annex I to Chapter I of the report
contains a detailed discussion of the reasons behind
the current commodity price boom and the implications
for terms of trade.
[2] See, for instance, the analyses
by several authors in Ann Pettifor (ed.), 2003, Real
World Economic Outlook: Debt and Deflation, Palgrave
Macmillan. Also see, Chandrasekhar C.P. and Jayati
Ghosh, 2005a, The Myth of a Global Savings Glut”,
available at http://www.networkideas.org/focus/Sep2005/fo30_Balance_Payments.htm
[3] See Annex II to Chapter I on the
debate on savings-investment theory.
[4] By contrast, in Central and Eastern
Europe and the CIS region, 21 out of 25 countries
recorded relatively high and stable current-account
deficits of around 5 to 6 per cent of GDP during the
last ten years.
[5] See Chandrasekhar and Ghosh, 2005a,
and Chandrasekhar, C.P. and Jayati Ghosh, 2005b, “Developing
Countries and the Dollar”, at http://www.networkideas.org/focus/Sep2005/fo30_Balance_Payments.htm
[6] In fact, this is already being
suggested by some authors. See Baily, Martin Neil
and Robert Z. Lawrence, 2006, “Can America Still Compete
or Does It Need a New Trade Paradigm?”, Policy Brief
No. PB06-9, Peter G. Peterson Institute for International
Economics, Washington.
[7] See the analyses in the papers
presented at the 2nd Workshop on “ASEAN Expert Collaboration
for FTA Negotiations with the United States”, Bangkok,
Thailand, 3-4 August, 2006, available at http://www.networkideas.org/feathm/aug2006/ft19_Abstracts_Bangkok.htm
[8] Kallummal, Murali and Smitha Francis,
2005, Sub-Federal Governance and Global Harmonisation
of Policies” available at http://www.networkideas.org/focus/feb2005/Global_Harmonisation.pdf
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