In
the midst of their fourth year of recession, with
the official unemployment rate approaching 20%, and
with increasing cutbacks of social programs, Argentineans
took to the streets in the days before Christmas.
Sparked by the government's latest economic policies,
which restricted the amount of money people could
withdraw from their bank accounts, political demonstrations
and the looting of grocery stores spread across the
country. First the government declared a state of
siege, but with the police often standing by watching
the looting "with their hands behind their backs,"
there was little the government could do. Within a
day after the demonstrations began, the principal
economic minister had resigned; a few days later came
the president's resignation.
A hastily assembled interim government immediately
defaulted on $155 billion of Argentina's foreign debt,
the largest debt default in history. The new government
then promised a public works jobs program and announced
it would issue a new currency, the argentino, that
would circulate as a "third currency," along
side the old pesos and U.S. dollars. Argentineans,
however, seemed to have little hope for the new currency,
and, fearing a severe devaluation, they continued
to line up outside of banks hoping to get dollars
from their accounts. As for the new programs, they
did little to confront the fact that per capita income
has already fallen by 14% in this recession. As economic
instability deepened, the new government proved unable
to win the popular support it needed, and it quickly
dissolved.
At the opening of 2002, Argentina faced widespread
political and economic uncertainty. The main question
seemed to be whether the short run would bring more
unemployment, severe inflation, or both. As to the
stability of Argentina's currency, virtually everyone
expects a sharp devaluation fairly soon.
Argentina's experience leading into the current debacle
provides one more lesson regarding the perils of free
market ideology and of the economic policies pushed
on governments around the globe by the International
Monetary Fund (IMF). In Argentina and elsewhere, these
policies have been embraced by local elites, who see
their fortunes (both real and metaphoric) tied to
the deregulation of commerce and the reduction of
social programs. Yet the claims that these free market
policies would bring economic growth and widespread
well being have been thoroughly discredited. (In spite
of the economic collapse and political turmoil in
Buenos Aires, the wealthy appear to have protected
themselves by having moved their money out of the
country.)
From Good to Bad to Ugly
Not long ago, Argentina was the poster-child for the
conservative economic policies pushed by the IMF.
The Buenos Aires government privatized state enterprises,
liberalized foreign trade and investment, and tightened
government fiscal and monetary policy. During the
1990s the country's economy seemed to do well. The
good times of the mid-1990s, however, were built on
weak foundations. Economic growth in that period,
while substantial, appears to have been in large part
the result of an increasing accumulation of international
debt, fortuitous expansion of foreign markets, and
short-term injections of government revenues from
the sales of state enterprises. Before the end of
the decade, things began to fall apart.
Argentina's current problems are all the more severe
because, in the name of fighting inflation, in the
early 1990s the government created a "currency
board," charged with regulating the country's
currency so that the Argentine peso would exchange
one-to-one for the U.S. dollar. To assure this fixed
exchange rate, the currency board maintained dollar
reserves, and could not expand the supply of pesos
without an equivalent increase in the dollars that
it held. The currency board system appeared attractive
because of absurd rates of inflation in the 1980s,
with price increases of up to 200% a month.
By the mid-1990s, inflation in Argentina had been
virtually eliminated—but flexibility in monetary policy
had also been eliminated. When the current recession
began to develop, the government could not expand
the money supply as a means of stimulating economic
activity. Worse yet, as the economy continued downward,
the inflow of dollars slowed, restricting the country's
money supply even further (by the one-to-one rule).
And still worse, in the late 1990s, the U.S. dollar
appreciated against other currencies, which meant
(again, the one-to-one rule) that the peso also appreciated;
the result was a further weakening in world demand
for Argentine exports. During 2001 the Argentine recession
grew rapidly deeper. Although the IMF pumped in additional
funds, it provided these funds on the condition that
the Argentine government would entirely eliminate
its budget deficit. With the economy in a nose-dive
and tax revenues plummeting, the only way to balance
the budget was to drastically cut government spending.
Yet, in doing so, the government was both eviscerating
social programs and reducing overall demand. In mid-December,
the government announced that it would cut the salaries
of public employees by 20% and reduce pension payments.
At the same time, as the worsening crisis raised fears
that the peso would be devalued, the government moved
to prevent people from trading their pesos for dollars;
it promulgated a regulation limiting bank withdrawals.
These steps were the final straws, and in the week
before Christmas, all hell broke loose.
Failure under the Direction
of the IMF
Economic policies in Argentina during the past 15
years have had Substantial support among the country's
business elite, especially from those whose incomes
derive from the financial sector and primary product
exports. These groups have gained substantially, and
officials in the Argentine government have been active
in formulating and executing the policies that have
led to the current debacle.
At the same time, the country's economic policies
during the 1990s were developed under the direction
of the IMF. From the late 1980s onward, a series of
loans gave the IMF the leverage to guide Argentine
policymakers as they increasingly adopted the Fund's
conservative economic agenda.As the country entered
into the lasting downturn of the current period, the
IMF continued, unwavering, in its support. The IMF
provided Argentina with "small" loans, such
as the $3 billion made available in early 1998, when
the country's Economic difficulties began to appear.
As the Argentine crisis deepened, the IMF increased
its support, supplying a loan of $13.7 billion and
arranging $26 billion more from other sources at the
end of 2000. As things worsened still further in 2001,
the IMF pledged another $8 billion.
The IMF coupled its largess with the condition that
the Argentine Government maintain its severe monetary
policy and continue to tighten its fiscal policy.
Deficit reduction--which according to the IMF is the
key to macroeconomic stability (which in turn is supposed
to be the key to economic growth)—was undertaken with
a vengeance.In early July 2001, on the eve of a major
government bond offering, Argentine officials announced
budget cuts of $1.6 billion (about 3% of the federal
budget), hoping that these cuts would reassure investors
and allow interest rates to fall. Apparently, however,
investors saw the cuts as another sign that the country's
crisis was worsening, and the bonds could only be
sold at sharply higher interest rates (14% as compared
to the 9% that similar bonds had commanded in mid-June).By
December, the effort to balance the budget required
far more severe expenditure cuts, and the government
announced a drastic reduction of $9.2 billion in its
spending, about 18% of its entire budget.
Argentina is now providing one more example of the
failure of IMF policies to establish the bases for
long-term economic growth in low-income countries.
Numerous other countries demonstrate similar sets
of problems: much of sub-Saharan Africa; Mexico, and
several other countries in Latin America; Thailand,
and other parts of East
Asia hit by the 1997 crisis; and Turkey, along with
Argentina in 2001. IMF policies do often succeed in
curtailing inflation; sharp cuts in government spending
and restrictions of the money supply will usually
yield reduced price increases. Also, IMF programs
can provide large influxes of foreign loans--from
the Fund itself and the World Bank, from the U.S.
government and the governments of other high-income
countries, and, once the approval of the IMF has been
attained, from internationally operating banks. But
nowhere has the IMF policy package led to stable,
sustained economic expansion. Also, as in Argentina,
it often generates growing inequality.
The IMF's mania for reductions of government spending
in times of crisis has been rationalized by the claim
that balanced budgets are the foundation of long-term
economic stability and growth. The IMF officially
laments the fact that these policies have a severe
negative impact on low-income groups (because they
both generate high rates of unemployment and eviscerate
social programs). Yet, Fund officials claim these
policies are necessary to assure long-term stability.
Nonsense. In recessions, moderate government deficits
(like those of recent years in Argentina) are a desirable
counter-cyclical policy, and balanced budgets only
exacerbate down-turns. Also, curtailing social spending--on
education, health care, physical infrastructure projects--cuts
the legs out from under long-term economic progress.
Why Does the IMF Stick to Failed Policies?
Yet the IMF sticks to its policies, probably because
those policies serve important and powerful interests
in the U.S. and world economies. The IMF, after all,
is not an institution controlled by either the people
or the governments of low-income countries. It is
not even like UN agencies, where governments have
formally equal voice with one another. Instead, the
IMF is controlled by the governments of high-income
countries that provide the funds for its operations.
The U.S. government has by far the greatest influence
at the IMF. With over 18% of the voting shares in
the Fund, the U.S. government has de facto control.
Indeed, over the years, the IMF has operated largely
as a branch of the U.S. foreign policy apparatus,
attempting to create a context that assures the well-being
of U.S. interests—which is to say the interests of
U.S.-based internationally operating firms.(The same
context serves the interests of firms based in Europe,
Japan, and elsewhere; so the U.S. generally has the
support of its allied governments in directing the
IMF.)
Most important, the IMF tells governments that a key
to economic growth lies in providing unrestricted
access for imports and foreign investment. Virtually
all experience, however, suggests the opposite--that
extensive regulation of foreign commerce by a country's
government has been an essential foundation for successful
economic growth. Britain, the U.S., Japan, countries
of Western Europe, Taiwan Province of China, South
Korea--all built the foundations for development not
on "free trade" but on government regulation
of trade.
The IMF gets around the inconvenient facts of history
by conflating free trade with extensive engagement
in the international economy. But the two are not
the same. Yes, successful development has always been
accompanied by extensive international engagement,
but through regulated commerce and not free trade.The
dramatic experience with financial capital demonstrates
a similar disconnect between IMF proclamations and
reality. Through the period of its increasing influence
in the 1980s and 1990s, the IMF pushed Governments
in low-income countries to liberalize their capital
markets. Capital controls were, claimed the IMF, anathema
to development. Then came 1997, when the open capital
markets of East Asian countries were instruments of
disaster. In the aftermath of 1997, it seemed clear
that the real winners from open capital markets were
financial firms based in the U.S. and other high-income
countries.
These same financial firms are also the winners from
another component in the IMF policy package. Fiscal
responsibility, according to the IMF, means that governments
must give the highest priority to repayment of their
international debts. In fact, the immediate justification
of new IMF loans is often that this influx of capital
is necessary to assure prompt payments of past loans.
While there is no doubt that banks operating out of
New York and other financial centers gain from this
policy, experience does not support the contention
that when governments fail to pay foreign debts they
bring on financial disaster. Instead, experience suggests
that at times, defaulting on foreign debt can be an
effective, positive policy option. (Also, as has been
frequently noted, as long as the IMF provides the
funds to assure payment of loans made by the internationally
operating banks, those banks will have no incentive
to assure that they are making sound loans.)
IMF advocacy of privatization is one more example
of its effort to open the world economy more fully
for U.S.-based firms. When state enterprises in low-income
countries are sold, large internationally operating
firms are often the buyers, able to move in quickly
with their huge supply of capital. Of course, in Argentina
and elsewhere, local business groups have often been
the direct beneficiaries of privatization, sometimes
on their own and sometimes as junior partners of firms
based abroad. Either way, whether the buyers of state
enterprises are national or foreign, this enlargement
of the private sphere of operation works to the benefit
of the private firms. The problem here is not that
privatization is always inappropriate, but simply
that, contrary to IMF nostrums, it is not always appropriate.
Privatization is especially problematic when it only
replaces an inefficient government monopoly with a
private monopoly yielding huge profits for its owners.
Moreover, the record from Mexico City to Moscow demonstrates
that privatization is often a hugely corrupt process.
A Growing Popular Opposition
The policies of the IMF and those of the World Bank
have generated a great deal of popular opposition
in low-income countries as well as in the U.S. and
Europe. During recent years, that opposition has become
increasingly strident, staging major demonstrations
at meetings of the IMF and the Bank, as well as at
other gatherings of the government officials guiding
globalization. This opposition has been dubbed the
"anti-globalization movement." The title
is misleading because most of the activists are not
opposed to the growing international economic and
cultural connections among peoples, but are opposed
to the way those connections are being structured,
benefiting large firms, while creating hardship and
instability for many, many people. Policies like those
of the IMF in Argentina typify the problem. Also,
the recent political upheaval in Argentina lends new
strength to the argument of the opposition movement
that the IMF adjustment policies not only fail to
bolster economic development but also lead to social
and political disintegration.
Pressure from this movement has had some impacts.
The IMF's contribution to the Asian financial crisis
in 1997 unleashed a torrent of criticism that the
movement both built upon and contributed to. While
no major policy changes have ensued, the Fund has
responded rhetorically, renaming its "Enhanced
Structural Adjustment Facility" as the "Poverty
Reduction and Growth Facility." Over a longer
period, the World Bank has also adjusted at least
the appearance of its policies, focusing more attention
on the issue of poverty and starting to examine the
role of gender in economic development.
The World Bank, in addition, has backed off from some
of its large-scale water control projects in low-income
countries as a result of pressure from local organizations
and international environmental groups. These changes
have not basically altered the programs of the international
financial institutions, and the IMF has been especially
resistant to change. Yet these adjustments do suggest
that opposition has begun to have an impact.
The lesson is that the movement for change should
increase its pressure on these institutions that are
playing such central roles in shaping globalization.
While the movement has emerged largely in response
to the hardships and inequality that have grown--even
while IMF-type policies generated some economic growth--this
opposition will gain greater legitimacy as growth
is replaced by crisis, as in Argentina. The appeal
of alternative policies will be even greater as the
IMF and local elites can no longer claim that economic
growth will eventually solve all problems.
Beyond Denunciation: Alternative
Strategies
There is, however, a need and an opportunity for the
opposition movement to go beyond denunciation of the
IMF's conservative policies and to articulate alternative
strategies, strategies that would support a democratic,
egalitarian form of economic development.Such strategies
would promote structural adjustment in low-income
countries, but a very different and more fundamental
structural adjustment than has been advocated by the
IMF. A democratic development strategy could begin
with a focus on the expansion of social programs,
a greater investment in schooling, health care, and
other Public services that would establish a social
foundation for long-run economic expansion.
A democratic strategy would not ignore macroeconomic
stability, but instead of seeking that stability in
government cutbacks, it would pursue expanding the
government revenues (raising taxes) as a means to
provide fiscal balance. Also, a democratic strategy
could not ignore the private sector, but it would
recognize the problems of allowing the private sector
to be guided simply by private profits in an unregulated
market. It would, for example, push the private sector
toward high-technology activity instead of production
based on low wages, and it would seek to provide support
for local farmers to maintain their livelihoods and
community stability.The first problem in implementing
an alternative development program in Argentina and
elsewhere is to overcome the power of elite groups
that have directed the existing system. In spite of
the current difficulties, the policies that the Argentine
government has followed in recent years, and the similar
policies pursued by the governments of many low-income
countries, have delivered substantial benefits to
local elites. Those policies have allowed them to
strengthen their positions in their own economies
and secure their roles as junior partners with U.S.-based
and other internationally operating firms. Changing
policies will therefore require changing the balance
of power. Shifting the balance of power in a country
is never easy, but the emergence of an international
movement for change and the growing economic crisis
present some substantial opportunities. If people
in low-income countries are to move in an alternative
direction, hey must find ways to deal with the oppressive
burden of foreign debt. Not only is the debt itself
a problem, creating a growing drain on countries'
resources, but also the need to continually seek new
debt in order to repay old debt forces governments
to accept the IMF conditions that perpetuate the problem.
Here, those forces that want change can take a lesson
from the high-income countries. As the governments
of high-income countries work together in pursuing
their economic relations with the low-income countries,
low-income debtor countries have a common set of interests
that could provide the foundation for common action.
Working as a bloc, they would have a greater chance
of gaining better terms, greater leeway in the conditions
that come with foreign finance, and the freedom to
pursue the meaningful structural adjustment of democratic
strategy.
Ultimately, the power of such a bloc would depend
on the willingness of member countries to repudiate
their foreign debts. Such repudiation would have legitimacy
because of the coercive practices that have given
rise to this debt, and repudiation would have wide
popular support.
But would debt repudiation invite economic disaster?
In Argentina, Quite to the contrary, it was a refusal
to repudiate the debt that led into the December debacle.
The new government has now defaulted, but not in a
controlled manner that might yield the greatest advantage,
but as an act of desperation. Also, debt defaults
in the past have generally not generated disaster,
certainly nothing worse than the current Argentine
situation. In any case, if forces in debtor countries
could make the threat real, actual repudiation would
probably not be necessary. The power that the high-income
countries have in the threat to cut off new loans
would be matched by the power that low-income countries
would have from their threat to cut off the flow of
repayments.
There are substantial political barriers to the emergence
of democratic development strategies in low-income
countries and to joint action by debtor countries.
At the end of December, as a new spate of rioting
Broke out in Buenos Aires, U.S. President Bush told
the Argentine government to seek guidance from the
IMF and "to work closely with" the IMF to
develop its economic plans. And the policies of the
IMF are unlikely to change in any significant way.
Indeed, as Argentineans went to the streets in response
to their long suffering under the aegis of the IMF,
the IMF disclaimed all responsibility. "The economic
program of Argentina was designed by the government
of Argentina and the objective of eliminating the
budget deficit was approved by the Congress of Argentina,"
declared the IMF's spokesperson on December 21.
This continued pressure from the U.S. government
and the persistence of the IMF in pursuing its discredited
policies make progressive change difficult. Also,
powerful elites in Argentina and other low-income
countries re-enforce the barriers to change. Yet the
economic case for change is overwhelming, and one
way or another a political route to this change needs
to be found.
MORE ON ARGENTINA
CRISIS
January 10, 2002.
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