The
world’s attention is riveted on the United States
economy, as the financial crisis in the global superpower
promises a depression within that country and threatens
economic growth everywhere else. But as crisis management
in the US comes into play with the huge proposed government
bailout of troubled banks, it is interesting to look
at how other financial crises in less powerful countries
have been managed. The details of the plan to contain
the financial turmoil in the US are still emerging,
but it is clear that it will involve a very large
draft on US taxpayers, both present and future, and
rely on resources from other countries, including
developing Asia.
But most other countries that have financial crises
are not so fortunate as to be able to make the rest
of the world pay for their problems. Especially in
developing countries, a financial crisis is usually
a double whammy, as internal bank failures and stock
market collapses are compounded by the external flight
of capital and associated collapse of the currency.
And then (once again unlike the US at present) the
governments of these countries in the throes of financial
crisis have to put up with (largely mistaken) advice
from the IMF and similar organisations, who insist
on ramming down more free market medicine on economies
that have been destroyed by reckless liberalisation.
Argentina was one such country in 2001, as one of
the most severe financial crises to hit any emerging
market caused a precipitate decline in output and
employment, doubled poverty rates within a year and
caused huge political instability such that no fewer
than six governments were installed over two years.
The policies imposed by the IMF only served to accelerate
the economic decline and push the country into an
apparently endless downward spiral. By 2002, half
of the population was living below the official poverty
line.
Yet, after the government of Nestor Kirchner came
to power in 2003, there has been a remarkable recovery,
which made Argentina the fastest growing economy of
the developing world after China in the past four
years, with annual rates of real GDP growth in excess
of 8 per cent. The recovery was all the more noteworthy
because it was based on very different economic principles
from the neoliberal model that had governed Argentine
policy making in the 1990s, and which continued to
be supported by the IMF and the major external creditors.
The IMF plan was for Argentina to go in for further
privatisation of public assets and more deregulation,
along with maintaining very high real interest rates,
in the hope of “restoring investor confidence” and
once more attracting foreign capital into Argentina.
Instead, the Kirchner government stopped bothering
about placating foreign investors, and directed its
attention to domestic producers. It used a stable
and competitive exchange rate regime to ensure that
domestic production revived and grew. It focussed
on improving the consumption of ordinary people and
reducing poverty. It sought to provide basic (but
privatised) services at a more accessible rates, often
through renationalisation or controls on pricing of
utilities. Significantly, the government also took
a hard line – which ultimately proved very effective
– with Argentina’s external creditors, forcing a majority
of them in 2005 to accept a debt write-off agreement
that effectively cancelled 65 per cent of the value
of their outstanding debt.
The neo-liberal perception, widely touted in the international
press at the time, was that this would spell complete
doom for the economy in international markets. The
new policies – according to the proponents of the
“Phoenix Plan” group that emerged after the crisis
- envisaged a renewed role for the state in re-structuring
the economy in the direction of greater transparency
and efficiency, moving towards a welfare state even
in the much more difficult context of contemporary
capitalism. Obviously all this was anathema to those
wedded to the neo-liberal model, as well as to its
beneficiaries in international finance, who predicted
continuing and even more devastating economic collapse
in Argentina as punishment for the move away from
economic orthodoxy.
Yet this did not happen, and if anything the economy
went from strength to strength. It is true that the
government could not borrow from international bond
markets, but it was able to find other investors (including
the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela) to hold its
public debt. Foreign direct investment also started
coming back in as the economy grew, and amounted to
about $4 billion a year, around the same level as
in the market-friendly 1990s. And most important of
all, the continued growth in output was also associated
with employment growth and diversification.
How did this miracle come about? The conventional
wisdom is that this was all due to exports of agricultural
commodities, and that Argentina simply benefited from
the boom in global primary commodity prices. It is
certainly true that Argentina is a major exporter
of wheat, beef and now soya bean, and that these exports
soared in both quantity and value. But exports have
accounted for only around 13 per cent of the economic
growth of the past four years, and cannot be held
solely responsible for the recovery.
Rather, it was the government’s ability to manage
the boom to diversify the economy and direct investible
resources to other domestic sectors that was the key.
Throughout this period, the exchange rate was maintained
at a level that not only encouraged exports but –
more importantly – discouraged imports and allowed
domestic producers to sell in the home market. This
produced a revival of many labour-intensive traditional
industries that were badly affected by the earlier
high currency regime, such as textiles and metal machinery.
It also led to the emergence of newer activities,
including services such as tourism and Spanish software
delivery, which benefited from the cheaper peso.
Meanwhile, the government was able to gain at least
some part of the rents from the sharp increase in
world agricultural prices by imposing an agricultural
export tax of 25 per cent. This tax has to be seen
in the specific context of Argentine agriculture,
which is dominated by large farmers who are either
themselves landholders or corporate businesses who
cultivate with the help of hired labour on land taken
on lease from small owners. A tax on agriculture (which
is otherwise untaxed) in this context, in the form
of the export tax, therefore is a means of income
redistribution. The revenues from this tax in the
period of high world prices allowed the government
to increase its own spending in important areas such
as education, health and anti-poverty programmes,
and still maintain a primary fiscal surplus.
This very heterodox economic approach paid rich dividends
until early this year. Cristina Fernandez, wife of
Nestor Kirchner and herself a noted Senator, easily
won the Presidential election on the basis of widespread
public support for these economic policies. And the
impressive success of this strategy was underlined
by the fact that the growth was accompanied also by
relatively stable inflation rates, rising employment
rates and a dramatic reduction of poverty.
Yet the recent past has been much more troubled. Two
major problems have emerged in the past few months,
creating some amount of political instability and
resentment against the government, despite all its
other successes. The first is the battle with farmers,
as the government attempted to introduce a variable
export tax rather than a flat rate. Since this unfortunately
coincided with the global decline in agricultural
prices since March, there was very vociferous protest
from farmers who are a strong and powerful lobby.
Ultimately this variable tax, which is otherwise a
good policy in Argentina’s specific economic context,
had to be withdrawn.
The second problem is one that directly affects much
greater segments of the economy, including the ordinary
people who have been beneficiaries of the boom. Inflation
has been running high especially for the past year,
but the official rate of inflation has been suppressed
through statistical jugglery. Thus, while the official
rate is now about 9 per cent, unofficial estimates
suggest that in actual fact both wholesale and consumer
prices are rising at the very high annual rate of
25 per cent.
This attempt to conceal the actual rate of inflation
is both bizarre and wrong-headed, since it obviously
cannot succeed it preventing people from realising
what prices they are paying, and because it then distorts
all the other measures that the government itself
uses for its economic policies. Thus, those workers
who are able to negotiate on the basis of the higher
perceived rate are able to maintain their real wages,
but public sector workers whose wages are calculated
on the basis of the official consumer price index
suffer declines in real wages. The holders of inflation-indexed
bonds also suffer. Most of all, of course, such a
strategy reduces the credibility of the government
not only in the eyes of some possibly unreliable investors,
but for its own citizens.
But this is a problem that can be relatively easily
dealt with, if the government decides to recognise
the true inflation and then do something about it.
It is clear that subsequent inflation control will
require other measures, such as an incomes policy,
but for this is likely to be much political support
among ordinary people.
So the current problems in Argentina are tractable,
especially in the context of the still growing economy.
This is worth noting, because not only did the economy
recover fairly quickly from a very severe crisis,
but it did so by implementing heterodox measures that
involved controlling capital and improving the consumption
of the poor. This is likely to be an instructive contrast
to both the unfolding crisis in the US and the measures
that the Bush regime will take to deal with it.
October
24, 2008.
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