If
the financial media is to be believed the International
Monetary Fund is rethinking its views on liberalization
of financial markets in developing countries. For
more than two decades now the IMF has been the world's
leading and most successful advocate of liberalization
of financial markets in both developed and developing
countries. There was however a difference in the role
of the IMF in the so-called "mature" and
"emerging" markets. Financial liberalization
in the developed countries was an internal and autonomous
process driven by the rise to dominance of finance
capital. The IMF merely adopted that programme based
on its discovery of the "value" of that
regime.
The earnestness with which it subsequently pursued
its new-found mission to open up financial markets
in developing countries led to criticism that Wall
Street, more than even the US Treasury, was influencing
the stance of the IMF. This changed focus from an
emphasis on trade liberalization accompanied with
policies aimed at balance of payments adjustment to
an emphasis on financial market policies served the
IMF well, since it provided the Fund with a new role
in a world of predominantly private capital flows.
The subsequent success of the IMF in ensuring financial
liberalization in developing countries was reflective
of the new clout it had garnered as a formally-unnamed
representative of international finance.
It is surprising, therefore, that in recent months
there have seen a spate of analyses from the IMF attempting
to revisit the experience with financial liberalization
worldwide and assess the gains and losses from the
wave of liberalization in developed and developing
country financial markets over the last decade. This
desire to revisit the debate on financial liberalization
has been attributed to two factors. First, evidence
that the viability of the Anglo-Saxon, particularly
US, model of financial markets and financial policies,
is itself in question. According to the Global Financial
Stability Report released by the Fund in March this
year, between the stock market peak recorded on March
24, 2000 and the end of February 2003, the S&P
500 stock market index had fallen by 45 per cent,
the NASDAQ by 73 per cent and the FTSE Eurotop 300
by 55 per cent. This was the period which not merely
witnessed the bursting of the new technology bubble,
but also a further decline encouraged by evidence
of accounting frauds and market manipulation. The
resultant huge erosion of paper wealth has raised
questions about the appropriateness of organizational
forms in US financial markets.
More damaging has been the evidence that the last
decade-and-a-half, when the wave of financial liberalization
in developing countries was unleashed, has witnessed
a series of financial and currency crises, the intensity
of some of which has been severe. Moreover, analyses
of individual instances of crises have tended to conclude
that the nature and timing of these crises had much
to do with the shift to a more liberal and open financial
regime. The latest set of countries affected by the
volatility described by the IMF as the "feast
or famine" dynamic is in Latin America, where
two relatively good performers till quite recently
– Argentina and Brazil - have been hit by reduced
or near negligible access to capital markets. These
instances of volatility followed a spate of crises
in developing-country markets in Asia, Africa, Europe
and Latin America during the 1980s and 1990s. Yet,
there were no signs of any rethink on the effects
of financial liberalization, and the prevailing global
financial architecture was defended by the Bretton
Woods Institutions on the grounds that it has served
the objective of economic growth well and requires,
if anything, minor modifications accompanied by supportive
institutional strengthening.
However, as mentioned, there are superficial signs
of a change in attitude more recently. Am IMF Working
Paper, authored by Graciela Kaminsky of George Washington
University and Sergio Schmukler of the World Bank,
authorized for distribution in February 2003 by the
IMF's Chief Economist and Research Director Kenneth
Rogoff, declares that findings in the "crisis
literature" suggest that "booms and busts
in financial markets are at the core of currency crises
and that these large cycles are triggered by financial
deregulation", even though some of "the
finance literature tend to support the claim that
deregulation is beneficial, with liberalization reducing
the cost of capital."
More recently an IMF study dated March 17 2003 and
titled "Effects of Financial Globalization on
Developing Countries: Some Empirical Evidence",
which includes Kenneth Rogoff among its co-authors,
has gone even further. It recognizes: (i) that "an
objective reading of the vast research effort to date
suggests that there is no strong, robust and uniform
support for the (neoliberal) theoretical argument
that financial globalization per se delivers a higher
rate of economic growth; and (ii) that even though
neoliberal theory suggests that "the volatility
of consumption relative to that of output should go
down as the degree of financial integration increases,
since the essence of global financial diversification
is that a country is able to offload some of its income
risk in world markets," in practice "the
volatility of consumption growth relative to that
of income growth has on average increased for the
emerging market economies in the 1990s, which was
precisely the period of a rapid increase in financial
globalization."
This new candour on the part of the IMF has not gone
unnoticed. The Financial Times declared that "the
new study marks a continued shift within the IMF towards
much greater caution in encouraging countries to open
up their capital accounts," necessitated in particular
by its experience in Argentina and Brazil. One other
observer remarked that "The IMF has just abandoned
its fatwa against the unmitigated evil of capital
controls. Institutional confessions of error don't
come much bigger than this one. But while the IMF's
many critics are rubbing it in, they shouldn't forget
that such a burst of intellectual honesty takes a
lot of guts."
The reality regarding the IMF's attitude is, however,
entirely different. A close reading of both the working
paper and the study referred to earlier indicates
that the IMF has decided to accommodate the growing
evidence of the adverse consequences of financial
liberalization in developing countries, not so much
to learn from it and revise its positions but to provide
what some are seeing as a more "nuanced"
defence of financial liberalization. Kaminsky and
Schmukler in fact argue that the problem with existing
analyses of financial liberalization is that they
separate countries into those that have and those
that have not liberalized their financial markets.
In actual fact, countries remove different kinds of
restrictions at different times, which not merely
lead to different degrees and patterns of financial
liberalization, but also to "reversal" of
the liberalization trend in many contexts.
Once these features of the extent of liberalization
of individual markets are taken account of, they argue,
the evidence suggests that stock market booms and
busts have not intensified in the long run after financial
liberalization. The real difference between developed
and developing countries is that in the latter, the
evidence indicates that in the short run financial
liberalization tends to trigger larger cycles, even
though it is beneficial in the short run. In mature
markets, on the contrary, liberalization appears to
be beneficial in the short run as well.
What explains this difference in the case of the developing
countries. It is, according to the authors, the fact
that institutional reforms aimed at increasing transparency
and appropriate regulation of markets do not predate
liberalization. It is only after liberalization is
adopted as a strategy that governments turn their
attention to institutional quality, resulting in the
fact that the institutional requirements needed to
ensure that liberalization delivers its beneficial
effects are put in place only with a lag. This leads
to the paradoxical contrast between the short run
adverse and long-run beneficial effects of financial
liberalization.
The IMF's own study builds on this argument, indicating
that the timing and sequence of the release of the
two studies may not be coincidental. Taking a more
nuanced view of liberalization, as does the Kaminsky-Schmukler
paper, the IMF study divides countries into those
that are more and less financially liberalized not
on the basis of their de jure liberalization suggested
by their policies, but on the basis of their de facto
liberalization as indicated by the volume of capital
inflows and outflows relative to GDP. Thus, if a country
has not adopted liberalization measures to any significant
degree, but yet has received large capital inflows,
it is treated as a more liberalized financial market.
That is, the link between liberalization and capital
flows is assumed and not established.
Having classified countries in this manner, the study
finds that there is no clearly identifiable effect
of financial liberalization on growth in developing
countries, and that there is evidence that consumption
volatility, in fact, increases with liberalization.
However, the study goes on to argue: "Interestingly,
a more nuanced look at the data suggests the possible
presence of a threshold effect. At low levels of financial
integration, an increment in financial integration
is associated with an increase in the relative volatility
of consumption. However, once the level of financial
integration crosses a threshold, the association becomes
negative. In other words, for countries that are sufficiently
open financially, relative consumption volatility
starts to decline. This finding is potentially consistent
with the view that international financial integration
can help to promote domestic financial sector development,
which in turn can help to moderate domestic macroeconomic
volatility."
This makes the proliferation of financial and currency
crises among developing
economies a natural consequence of the "growing
pains" associated with financial globalization,
and therefore an inevitable stage they have to go
through to realize the gains of liberalization. But
what cause these short-term crises? The IMF study
itself identifies four factors. First, international
investors have a tendency to engage in momentum trading
and herding, that can be destabilizing. Second, international
investors "may" engage in speculative attacks
on developing-country currencies, leading to instability
that is not warranted by fundamentals. Third, the
"contagion" effect that has been repeatedly
observed, could result in international investors
withdrawing capital from otherwise healthy countries.
Finally, some governments, may not give sufficient
weight to the interest of future generations and exploit
financial globalization to over-borrow with purely
short-term considerations in mind. All of these, needless
to say, have a mutually reinforcing effect that exacerbates
financial crises when they occur.
It should be obvious that of these the first three
have little to do with the behaviour of developing-country
governments or financial agents but with the behaviour
of financial agents from developed countries. Since
developing countries can do little about the latter,
the case for preempting the effects of such behaviour
with financial controls is strong. Yet, having recognized
their importance the IMF study goes on to argue that:
"The vulnerability of a developing country to
the "risk factors" associated with financial
globalization is also not independent from the quality
of macroeconomic policies and domestic governance.
For example, research has demonstrated that an overvalued
exchange rate and an overextended domestic lending
boom often precede a currency crisis. In addition,
lack of transparency has been shown to be associated
with more herding behaviour by international investors
that can destabilize a developing country's financial
markets. Finally, evidence shows that a high degree
of corruption may affect the composition of a country's
capital inflows in a manner that makes it more vulnerable
to the risks of speculative attacks and contagion
effects."
Developed industrial countries, the study implicitly
suggests, do not have these institutional features
that generate the vicious nexus between financial
liberalization and short-term volatility, leading
to periodic crises. To be like the developed, developing
countries have to cross the "threshold",
since the greater financial integration that this
requires would automatically lead to improvements
in institutional quality as well. So the implication
is not that developing countries should give up on
financial liberalization but that they should go far
enough to ensure that it is accompanied with reform
that delivers the institutional quality needed to
realize the virtuous relationship between financial
liberalization and economic performance.
This is indeed surprising, given the evidence of the
factors that led up to the collapse of stock markets
in the developed countries, especially the US. As
mentioned earlier, that collapse was exacerbated by
evidence of conflict of interest (as in the Merrill
Lynch case), of market manipulation (Enron) and of
accounting fraud (Enron, WorldCom, Xerox), which does
not say much for either the transparency or quality
of institutions in the US. If it was institutional
quality that accounts for the threshold effect, if
any such exists, then the instances of successful
and failed financial liberalization should not coincide
with their categorization as "mature" or
"emerging markets".
The failure of the studies quoted to take account
of these factors points in two directions. First,
it suggests that the effort to make a more "nuanced"
classification of countries into those that are more
and less liberalized countries amounts to manipulating
the evidence to yield results that defend liberalization
in the long term, even though its consequences are
obviously adverse. Second, the new candor is not a
reflection of the need to change track, but of the
need to ensure that liberalization is persisted with
despite the ostensibly short-run "pains"
of the process. The IMF's case is clear: it does not
deny the volatility, the crises and the pain associated
with financial liberalization; it merely sees them
as the inevitable consequence of the pain that must
be suffered to enjoy the long-run benefits of liberalization.
The strategy is to assert that evidence that contradicts
its case is actually supportive.
April 10, 2003.
|