Remarks
made at the International Policy Dialogue: New Sovereign
Debt Restructuring Mechanisms- Challenges and Opportunities-Berlin,
21 February 2003
I would like to congratulate the organizers for bringing
the debate on the SDRM to Europe, somewhat distancing
it from the emotions of debtors and creditors in the
Western Hemisphere, and to thank them for giving us
an opportunity to express our views on this matter.
In what follows I should like to comment on what the
SDRM does and does not do, keeping in mind the questions
posed by the organisers. It is, however, important
to remember that we are shooting at a moving target.
The proposal on the table a year ago was quite different
from what we have in front of us today, and there
may be further changes before anything is finally
agreed.
I should like to start by pointing out that UNCTAD
was the first international organisation calling for
orderly workout procedures for international debt
of developing countries, drawing on certain principles
of national bankruptcy laws, notably chapters 9 and
11 of the United States law. We raised the matter
during the debt crisis in the 1980s, noting in our
1986 Trade and Development Report that the absence
of a clear and impartial framework for resolving international
debt problems trapped many developing countries in
situations where they suffered the stigma of being
judged de facto bankrupt without the protection and
relief which come from de jure insolvency. We returned
to this issue in TDR 1998 after the East Asian crisis,
making specific proposals, and then developed them
further in TDR 2001.
In referring to bankruptcy principles in crisis management
and resolution, we pursue two interrelated objectives.
On the one hand, there is a need to prevent financial
meltdown and deep economic crises in developing countries
facing difficulties in servicing their external obligations
- a situation which often results in a loss of confidence
of markets, collapse of currencies and hikes in interest
rates, inflicting serious damage on both public and
private balance sheets and leading to large losses
in output and employment and sharp increases in poverty,
all of these being part of actual experience in East
Asia, Latin America and elsewhere during the past
10 years. On the other hand, mechanisms are needed
for an equitable restructuring of debt which can no
longer be serviced according to the original provisions
of contracts. Attaining these two objectives does
not require full-fledged international bankruptcy
procedures but the application of a few key principles:
A debt standstill whether debt is owed by public or
private sector, and whether debt servicing difficulties
are due to solvency or liquidity problems (a distinction
which is not always clear-cut). The decision for a
standstill should be taken unilaterally by the debtor
country and be sanctioned by an independent panel
rather than by the IMF because the countries affected
are among the shareholders of the Fund which is itself
also a creditor. This sanction would provide an automatic
stay on litigation. Such a procedure would be similar
to WTO safeguard provisions allowing countries to
take emergency actions when faced with balance-of-payments
difficulties. Standstills may need to be accompanied
by capital controls in order to stop attacks on their
currency and to gain greater autonomy in monetary
policy.
Provision of debtor-in-possession financing, automatically
granting seniority status to debt contracted after
the imposition of the standstill. IMF should lend-into-arrears
for financing imports and other vital current account
transactions rather than for meeting the claims of
creditors and maintaining convertibility. There should
be strict limits to IMF crisis lending since otherwise
it would be difficult to ensure private sector involvement.
Debt restructuring including rollover, write-off,
etc., based on negotiations between the debtor and
creditors, and facilitated by the introduction of
automatic rollover clauses and CACs in debt contracts.
These principles still leave open several issues of
detail, but they nonetheless could serve as the basis
for a coherent and comprehensive approach to crisis
intervention and resolution. How does the SDRM relate
to such a framework and how effective would it be
in responding to and resolving financial and debt
crises in developing countries?
The SDRM is effectively a mechanism designed to facilitate
sovereign bond restructuring for countries whose debt
is deemed unsustainable. It concerns a handful of
emerging markets, primarily in Latin America, and
it has little interest for other developing countries
which do not or cannot issue international bonds,
as is generally the case in East Asia and sub-Saharan
Africa respectively. The proposed mechanism is quite
innovative in bringing debtors and bondholders together
whether or not bond contracts contain CACs, in securing
greater transparency, and in providing a mechanism
for dispute resolution. Thus, it is a step forward
in sovereign debt restructuring.
However, there is considerable room for improvement
in its design even without extending its scope and
objectives. First, compared to national bankruptcy
principles, creditors are granted considerable leverage:
there would be no generalized stay on the enforcement
of creditor rights and hence no statutory protection
for debtors against litigation; and creditor permission
would be required in granting seniority to new debt
needed to prevent disruptions to economic activity.
Second, the proposal could result in a significant
increase in the role and power of the IMF even though
this is supposed not to be the intention. A role for
the Fund appears to be envisaged in decisions on debt
sustainability. The Sovereign Debt Dispute Resolution
Forum would have no authority to challenge decisions
of the Board or make determinations on issues relating
to debt sustainability. But the past record of the
Fund in assessing sustainability (in Russia, Argentina
and HIPC) is not very encouraging, suggesting that
it may be facing political not just technical difficulties
in making sound judgement on debt sustainability.
More fundamentally, the SDRM is designed to collect
the debris rather than to put out the fire. Clearly
it would not help countries facing liquidity shortages
in servicing their public or private debt and runs
on their currencies such as those witnessed in East
Asia or more recently in Brazil and Turkey where current
IMF programs are based on the assumption that debt
is sustainable under feasible policies. But even for
countries with unsustainable sovereign debt, the SDRM
provides no new mechanism to stem attacks on their
currencies and prevent financial turmoil. It includes
a provision to discourage litigation by sovereign
bondholders through the so-called "hotchpot"
rule. Such a rule may not be very effective against
litiginous investors (the so called "vultures").
More importantly, it does not address the problem
of how to stop financial meltdown, since in a country
whose debt is judged to be unsustainable currency
runs would take place whether or not bondholders opt
for litigation.
Finally, the current proposal does not fundamentally
address the problems associated with IMF bailouts.
It can reasonably be expected that countries would
generally be unwilling to declare themselves insolvent
and to activate the SDRM. Instead, they would be inclined
to ask the Fund to provide financing in order to address
their liquidity problems. In most cases it might be
difficult for the Fund to decline such requests on
grounds that the country is facing a solvency problem.
Indeed, as part of its promotion of the SDRM the IMF
has suggested that unsustainable debt situations are
rare. Here lies the rationale for limits on IMF crisis
lending whether the problem is one of liquidity or
insolvency: with strict access limits creditors cannot
count on an IMF bailout, and debtors will be less
averse to activating the SDRM and standstills when
faced with serious difficulties in meeting their external
obligations and maintaining convertibility. This means
that to encourage countries to move quickly to debt
restructuring the SDRM should be combined with limits
on crisis lending. But this could create problems
unless private sector involvement is secured through
a statutory standstill and stay on litigation.
The SDRM proposal has not elicited strong support
from developing countries. Here, the cause for concern
varies:
Many countries fear that the introduction of statutory
and even contractual mechanisms for debt restructuring
would impair their access to international capital
markets and discourage capital inflows. This is often
the reaction of countries which have become heavily
dependent on capital inflows. There is some ambivalence
in the IMF response to such concerns. On the one hand
the Fund recognizes that the SDRM may prevent over-lending
and over-borrowing but on the other they refer to
some empirical studies to argue that CACs and spreads
are not correlated. In reality the introduction of
statutory standstills and restructuring mechanisms
could indeed deter certain types of capital inflows
but this may not be a bad thing. The appropriate response
of developing countries should be to increase their
domestic savings and investment efforts and to reduce
their dependence on foreign capital. Such efforts
would certainly help improve their credit ratings
and reduce borrowing costs.
A second source of concern is that the proposed mechanism
may give too much power to the IMF where participation
of developing countries in decision making is highly
restricted. This concern is expressed mostly by countries
which do not depend on foreign capital to supplement
domestic savings, but have nevertheless experienced
boom-bust cycles in capital flows and speculative
attacks on their currencies. Independent assessment
of debt sustainability and expansion of powers of
the SDDRF, as well as a fundamental revision of voting
rights and procedures in the Fund could help meet
their concerns.
In conclusion, despite the shortcomings in its design
and objectives, the SDRM could bring improvements
in sovereign bond restructuring. However, it does
not constitute a coherent and comprehensive framework
for crisis intervention and resolution. Not only would
it not solve everything, a point conceded by its architects,
but it would also not address the most important problems
connected with financial and currency crises. Much
of the work still remains to be done.
February 27 ,2003.
*Director, Division on Globalization
and Development Strategies, UNCTAD, Geneva. The opinions
expressed here and the designations employed are those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views
of UNCTAD.
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