A group of seven highly indebted rich
countries (HIRC) of the world have organized a meeting of twenty nations
in London in order to discuss the future of the world’s finances. They
have called to the table some creditor developing countries like Brazil,
Argentina, Mexico, some Arab countries, China and India but have left
aside all the other surplus countries in the world, creditors to the US
and Europe. After all, the accumulation of export surpluses over a twenty
year period is what has allowed deficit countries to overborrow to a total
stock to the tune of about 200% of GDP average and growing fast. For good
measure Gordon Brown invited two more European nations into the talks,
feeling a bit weak. A few things come to mind; first, “who pays the piper
calls the tune” and certainly now the piper is paid outside of Europe
and the States. Secondly, the world order we knew since 1944 has finished
and the new world order would have to take the new G7 into account for
quick decisions. This means China, India Brazil and Russia are in and
some European countries are out. Whatever the discussions held by 20 countries+2
will be irrelevant as this needs to be a global discussion given who the
new creditors and debtors are. Third, the significant new role of Asia
as a whole in both international trade and international finance calls
for a reconsideration of the IMF/WB Board reflecting this major change
and diminishing the European and US role. Fourth, this leads to the elimination
of US veto power established in 1944 and to the mechanism by which each
institution has a director from Europe and the States, respectively. This
is hardly relevant these days, aside from being undemocratic, opaque and
not reflecting current economic and financial realities.
Finally, a system where economic policy leads to massive surpluses that
help finance massive deficits created by the model itself cannot work
forever, as this crisis has come to show.
What has emerged is a group of leading nations that are now the major
world debtors. These are highly indebted rich countries that have sustained
trade and fiscal deficits for more than a decade and accumulated major
debts, thereby draining credits to developing nations. These are countries
that have over consumed systematically and in some cases done so with
a very lax domestic credit policy. The argument was that the consumer
in the West was better off with cheaply manufactured goods from Asia,
Central America and Africa. The fact that no nation can borrow indefinitely
for consumption did not come to mind. Initially surplus countries bought
US Treasury Bills and kept their reserves partly in those instruments,
then it was extended to British and European Government bonds. It was
not clear that buying Government bonds in large quantities was going to
lead to overborrowing on the other side. The table below shows the picture
of the former G7 countries that hold roughly one third the reserves of
the new leading emerging nations. If Japan is removed, the group of leading
nations holds one sixth the reserves of the seven largest emerging nations,
most of which are from Asia. The external debtor position, both private
and public in other currencies is very high for Great Britain, France
and Germany in the 150%-450% of GDP range, followed by the US which is
in the 90-100% of GDP range. Public debt, in local currency is highest
for Japan, Italy and the US. The very high level of Japan’s public debt
(in the 70-170% of GDP range) is a result of the banking crisis of the
1990’s. If added up the sum is in the over 200% of GDP range. The growth
perspectives of those countries are negative for all.
Is it reasonable for lenders to continue lending to contracting economies?
What happens to debt payments when the economies that have overborrowed
stop growing? Will they enter a depressive cycle because they have to
adjust consumption downward in order to live within their means? Is it
reasonable or fair that developing nations finance rich nations openly?
The role of the IMF was to be a watchdog for all countries and to be a
whistleblower. It was designed to this end but it lost its track and ended
up looking at emerging nations instead of looking at its constituency.
The Financial Stability Reports are a case in point of what they are not
looking at. The crisis began to unfold after October 2007 I the US but
the FSR looked elsewhere. The first support programmes between the FED
and the European Central Bank happened in late 2007 and the IMF kept very
silent. It did not blow the whistle and hence did not prevent the crisis
from unfolding. True, it does not have the capacity to do so any longer
as derivatives have reached amounts twelve times the global GDP. No one
can prevent a major crisis unless we all agree to new rules that forbid
some financial instruments from being used, return reserves to banks and
forego hedging risk.
In this context, then, with a major leading role for Asia in the new international
financial architecture and a new enhanced role for Latin America and the
Middle East, Russia and its neighbours, in world financial and economic
affairs, it seems odd that Mr Brown wants to lead the discussions on the
changes. Debtors are in no position to determine rules of the game, as
debtor nations learnt in the 1980s.
It may well be that the export led model needs to be buried and a new
one put forward at the same time that we end with floating rates. We went
through this same problem in the 1930s and agreed then to have fixed exchange
rates and industrialization policies together with welfare policies. This
was the background to the Bretton Woods system. This had both a fiscal
and an external angle, supervised by the then newly created IMF. It seems
these days the IMF does not look into HIRCs accounts, or does not care
about them, or HIRCs don’t care much about IMF opinion. All of this must
come to an end and be addressed by all UN member countries as no country
should be outside the scope of international supervision and no new lending
should go to shrinking overborrowed economies however developed they may
be, unless they reorganise their economies and bring financial order to
their nations. At the World Social Forum in Belem do Pará this
January we agreed that this means much more than changing IMF governance.
A new world order is possible.
HIRC
comparative indexes
December 2008 |
|
International
Reserves |
Growth
Perspective
2009 |
GDP
(PPP) |
Public
debt/GDP
** |
External
debt/GDP
*** |
|
(Billions
USD) |
(%) |
(trillions
USD |
%
|
%*** |
USA |
70.57 |
-1.6 |
14.58 |
74.90 |
93.42 |
Canadá |
41.08 |
-1.2 |
1.34 |
62.30 |
56.74 |
Great Britain* |
57.30 |
-2.8 |
2.28 |
47.20 |
458.53 |
Germany |
136.20 |
-2.5 |
2.86 |
62.60 |
156.79 |
France |
115.70 |
-1.9 |
2.10 |
64.40 |
209.63 |
Italy |
104.00 |
-2.1 |
1.80 |
103.70 |
58.86 |
Japan |
954.10 |
-2.6 |
4.49 |
170.40 |
32.25 |
G-7 |
1478.95 |
|
|
|
|
|
China |
2033.00 |
6.70 |
7.80 |
15.70 |
5.38 |
Brazil |
197.40 |
1.80 |
2.03 |
40.70 |
11.63 |
Russia |
435.40 |
-0.70 |
2.23 |
6.80 |
23.69 |
India |
274.20 |
5.10 |
3.32 |
59.00 |
4.91 |
Taiwán |
280.90 |
0.89 |
0.76 |
28.20 |
13.08 |
South Korea |
231.20 |
0.70 |
1.31 |
27.20 |
19.05 |
Singapore |
170.10 |
-2.50 |
0.24 |
92.60 |
10.25 |
|
3622.20 |
|
|
|
|
Fuente: IMF, ( Jan 2009 report), CIA, Central Banks,
US Treasury |
* Great Britain, its external debt
is estimated to December 2007.
**Public debt is measured in domestic currency
***External debt includes private and public debt in foreign exchange
|
Table prepared by Leonel Carranco
Guerra, proyecto www.OBELA.org,
at IIEC UNAM. |
March
30, 2009.
[1] Instituto de Investigaciones Económicas,
UNAM, México, Latindadd.
Dr. Oscar Ugarteche is a Peruvian national residing in Mexico since
2005. PhD in Philosophy and History at the University of Bergen in Norway,
MSc London Business School, B.S, Fordham University, New York. Is coming
out with Genealogy of the International Financial Architecture 1850-2000,
in print in Spanish, IIEC, Mexico 2010. Has cosponsored with Yoko Kitazawa
from Pacific Asia Resource Centre, Tokyo and Paul Dembinsky, Observatoire
de la Finance, Geneva, the conference Beyond Bretton Woods. The transnational
economy in search of new institutions , Mexico City October, 2008. The
results to be published in English, Spanish and French. Is a Senior
Research fellow at the Instituto de Investigaciones Económicas,
UNAM, Mexico, and member of the Mexican Research System; president of
ALAI, the Latin American Information Agency based in Quito (www.alainet.org)
Has published The False Dilemma: globalization, Opportunity of Threat,
ZEDBooks, London, 2000 and more recently has participated in the High
level multistakeholder meetings at the UN on Finance for Development
from 2005 to 2008, ahead of the Doha conference. Writes a fortnightly
column at the Diario El Comercio in Lima.
Ciudad Universitaria, México
D.F. 23 March, 2009.
|