For
a while now, the IMF has been caught wrong-footed
during almost every major global economic event. In
the years just before the Great Recession of 2008,
it was an international institution on life-support:
ignored by most developing countries; derided for
its failure to predict most crises and then for its
counterproductive responses; even called to book by
its own auditors for poor management of its own funds!
It encouraged financial liberalisation that pushed
many countries to crisis, and became famous for congratulating
bubble economies for their healthy and sound financial
management (Thailand in 1997; Argentina in 1999; most
recently Ireland and Iceland in 2008) often just a
few months before their spectacular financial crashes.
Its policy prescriptions were widely perceived to
be rigid and unimaginative, applying a uniform approach
to very different economies and contexts.
In this sorry situation, the global financial and
economic crisis came as real manna from heaven for
the organisation. It was back in the forefront as
G20 largesse in early 2009 once again made it potentially
relevant, providing it with large resources to enable
it to expand less conditional lending to developing
countries hit by the crisis. So how has the IMF dealt
with this recovery in its fortunes? Has it actually
changed, as it claims, to become more flexible and
less orthodox in its approach to economic distress?
Unfortunately, so far the signs are not that good,
despite protestations of internal change at the IMF.
According to the IMF's own Financial
Statistics, over 2009 and 2010 it disbursed
credit of only $93 billion out of total available
resources of $595 billion. In other words, it lent
out less than 16 per cent of the money it could have
lent, even though there were many developing and least
developed countries in dire need of such resources.
Even these little dribs and drabs of loans were accompanied
by the usual heavy doses of conditions that have made
economic contraction much worse in recipient countries,
destroyed wages and employment opportunities and meant
reduced living standards for ordinary people. The
claim that recent IMF programmes have prevented cuts
in social spending has also been to be false by independent
studies.
This is hardly a stellar performance for an organisation
charged with ensuring that developing countries did
not suffer unduly from the collapse of capital flows
from private sources.
The most recent evidence of change in the IMF is being
presented as the new attitude towards capital controls,
which are restrictions that governments can place
on the free movement of various kinds of financial
flows across borders. For several decades, the IMF
actively promoted the reduction of all such controls,
even when it was obvious that volatile capital flows
across borders were subjecting developing countries
to the caprices of international financial players
and creating domestic economic havoc.
So when the IMF recently published a set of papers
noting that such capital controls (or what they chose
to call ''capital account management techniques'')
could usefully be employed in certain conditions,
this was widely welcomed. The IMF finally admitted
that capital flows can be destabilising! Progressive
economists like Kevin
Gallagher and Jose Antonio Ocampo have
noted in this newspaper that these amounted to ''yet
another big step forward for the IMF - though there
is still a long way to go".
Of course, where the IMF is concerned, we have learned
to be grateful for small mercies. But is this really
something worth celebrating? The papers published
by the IMF provide at best lukewarm form of support
for any kinds of capital controls. They insist that
some conditions must be fulfilled before the country
concerned should think about employing them: the exchange
rate is getting overvalued because of capital inflows:
that this is affecting economic activity: and that
the country has more than sufficient foreign exchange
reserves so it does not need to use the capital inflows
to add to these reserves.
The IMF also notes that such controls are always distorting,
and so should be used only temporarily. They argue
that capital controls should not substitute for macroeconomic
policy instruments like fiscal policy and the interest
rate. This is more than a little strange, since once
a country has allowed free capital flows, it is almost
impossible to have independent macroeconomic policies
anyway!
Most notable are the silences. The IMF focuses entirely
on controls on capital inflows - such as having different
tax rates for some kinds of foreign investment, or
higher reserve requirements or lock-in periods for
minimum stay in the country. It does not even talk
about controls on outflows, which are still presumably
beyond the pale and should not even be considered.
You could say that this is an advance from its previous
rigidly anti-control position. But hang on a minute,
which are the countries that can apply such controls
on capital inflows? Those that are getting large inflows
of capital, of course. But these are precisely the
countries that do not need to consult the IMF at all,
because they are being favoured by private capital
and so have no balance of payments constraint.
So this policy advice is being provided to those countries
that do not need to listen. In fact, it is very clear
that they have not been listening, because many of
them (Chile, Brazil, Thailand, etc) have gone ahead
and instituted such controls on inflows well before
the IMF decided it could be acceptable. So once again
the IMF is behind the policy curve, struggling to
remain relevant by belatedly justifying policies that
have already been put in place in many emerging markets.
The countries that do need to go to the IMF are the
ones with balance of payments difficulties. You might
think that the IMF would be equally accepting of their
need to put in some controls on capital outflows to
stave off further crisis. No such luck: in these cases
the IMF insists that they countries must maintain
their open capital accounts, and even indulge in further
financial liberalisation, so as to ensure ''investor
confidence''.
So where the IMF actually has policy teeth, it still
uses them to bite the recipient countries in the usual
way, without any evidence of ''rethinking'' its already
discredited positions.
Even so, the IMF could still be genuinely useful to
developing countries that are being battered by high
food and fuel prices. The G20 meeting did note the
need to regulate financial activity in commodity futures
markets, but so far the IMF has been silent on this.
But the IMF could also provide direct assistance,
by using its Compensatory Financing Facility to provide
resources without conditions to economies being battered
by these price hikes. Surprisingly, this has not even
been suggested in the organisation, despite calls
from economists like Kunibert
Raffer.
So far, then, there is little to celebrate in terms
of real change at the IMF. Will change of leadership
at the helm make much difference? It's hard to say,
but if the next IMF chief turns out to be yet another
person who only ''understands the dangers of excessive
debt, excessive deficit'' - as the current British
Prime Minister apparently wants - without recognising
the crucial role of state spending in maintaining
incomes and employment, then things can only get worse.
A version of the piece has been
published in the Guardian today and is available at
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/apr/20/imf-relevant-leader-gordon-brown.
April
21, 2011.
|