The
slanging match over currency and monetary policies
at the annual Fund-Bank meetings, held over the second
weekend of October, points to the disarray in global
economic governance. While the US sought to mobilise
IMF support for an effort to realign exchange rates
and ensure an appreciation of the renminbi in the
wake of China's reserve accumulation, the Chinese
accused the US of destabilising emerging economies
by allowing ultra-loose monetary policy to flood the
emerging world with money. The result was that there
was little agreement on what needs to be done to drag
the world out of stagnation.
Evidence mounts that the much-touted recovery from
the Great Recession of 2008 is yet to gather steam,
and unemployment in the developed world remains at
intolerable levels. On the other hand, there is still
no consensus on how to deal with the problem. Governments
in the developed countries are clearly overcome by
''stimulus fatigue''. Having used up a substantial part
of the head room they had for deficit spending to
bail out the financial sector, and having accumulated
much debt in the process, there is scepticism about
continuing with a fiscal stimulus. So, increasingly,
the push for recovery is moving in two directions.
One is the resort to ''quantitative easing'', or the
injection of liquidity into the system through lending
by central banks, especially the US Federal Reserve,
at near zero interest rates. The other is to increase
pressure on emerging market economies, especially
China, to allow their exchange rates to appreciate,
in the hope that it would expand US exports to and
reduce its imports from those markets and facilitate
a recovery.
The simultaneous advocacy of these two options is
a sure recipe for conflict. It is widely accepted
that the injection of cheap money into the developed
economies is resulting in financial firms borrowing
cheap at home to invest in emerging markets for profit,
with little contribution to domestic recovery in the
developed world. Emerging markets, on the other hand,
are witnessing a capital inflow surge that is not
merely triggering speculative booms in stock and real
estate markets, but also exerting upward pressure
on their currencies. To expect them, therefore, to
allow their currencies to appreciate further would
be preposterous. In fact, despite efforts to use some
capital controls to limit inflows as well as resort
to open market purchases of foreign currencies by
the central bank to absorb surplus foreign exchange
in domestic markets, countries like Brazil have not
been able to prevent appreciation of their currencies.
China, however, is a potential target for the currency
baiters because of the trade and current account surpluses
it runs and the reserves it has accumulated. This
provides the basis for declaring that the country
is manipulating its currency in mercantilist fashion
to sustain growth at the expense of the rest of the
world, especially the US and Europe. Most recently,
the US House of Representatives has passed, with a
348-to-79 majority, a bill that allows the country
to impose countervailing duties on imports from China.
Those duties are to be calibrated using estimates
of the extent of ''undervaluation'' of the renminbi,
to signal that, in the US' view, China is manipulating
its currency for export gain and generating global
current account imbalances in the process. This round
of China bashing has been justified by referring to
the evidence that while China unpegged the renminbi
from the dollar in June this year, the currency has
appreciated only marginally. Thus, the accusation
is not that China is resorting to devaluation, but
that it has not ''permitted'' adequate appreciation
despite its trade and current account surpluses, especially
vis-à-vis the United States.
What is surprising is that the House has resorted
to this move despite evidence that in the past, and
even today, intervention in various forms to prevent
currency appreciation or even ensure depreciation
of currencies has been the norm. The United States,
which protests much today, had exercised its global
economic and political power to ensure the depreciation
of the dollar vis-à-vis other leading currencies,
especially the Japanese yen, through the Plaza Accord
of 1985. A year and a half later, it engineered the
Louvre Accord to prevent further decline of the dollar.
Currency manipulation is an old G8 practice. Most
recently, the Bank of Japan intervened in its currency
market to purchase 20 billion dollars in return for
Japanese yen allowing it to stabilize an appreciating
currency and ensure its depreciation from 83 yen to
the dollar to around 85 yen to the dollar. Since the
Japanese economy is still in deflationary mode, the
injection of liquidity into the system to manage the
currency does not stoke fears of inflation.
Japan's decision to intervene does weaken the legitimacy
of the attack on the renminbi implicit in the US bill
and of the pressure being mounted by the G20 on China
to ensure further appreciation of the renminbi. However,
while Japan's move has indeed been criticized by many
of its trading partners, dissent is muted because
of the recognition that Japan has suffered for long
from a recession that was triggered in part by developments
flowing from the appreciation of the yen consequent
to the Plaza Accord.
Given its governance structure, it is not surprising
that the IMF has joined this chorus. In its view,
the sharp divergences in growth or uneven development
in the global economy calls for a process of ''external
rebalancing, with an increase in net exports in deficit
countries and a decrease in net exports in surplus
countries, notably emerging Asia. This, in turn, is
seen as requiring a realignment of currencies involving
''greater exchange rate flexibility'', with an appreciation
of the Chinese renminbi, for example, and a relative
depreciation of the dollar and the euro.
There are a number of issues this argument glosses
over. To start with, uneven development is an essential
characteristic of capitalism, and in the past, for
centuries, today's developed countries were the winners
in a process that polarised the world into the developed
and underdeveloped. Underlying that polarisation was
the consolidation of a division of labour wherein
the developed were the producers of productivity-enhancing
manufactured goods and the underdeveloped were left
to live off the technologically less dynamic primary
products that were losing out in world trade. What
we have been observing in a gradual and limited manner
over the last three decades is a partial reversal
of this process, with a few emerging markets having
turned winners in the trajectory involving uneven
development.
Secondly, as economist Prabhat Patnaik has argued,
this shift in favour of emerging markets has been
the outcome of the nature of recent processes of globalisation
in which capital and technology have flowed easily
across borders, while labour movement has been far
less flexible and increasingly more limited. Since
past processes of development have ensured that some
of the more populous countries of the world (including
China) were left with underutilised labour reserves,
this differential in ease of cross-border movement
led to the flow of capital in search of the cheap
labour reserves in those parts of the developing world.
This has not only changed the pattern of uneven development,
but since highly productive modern technology now
combines with the cheap surplus labour in these countries,
it results in a rise in the surpluses or profits garnered
from production and therefore to inadequate- or under-consumption
that depresses overall global output and employment
growth. It must be noted that among the beneficiaries
of this distorted process are also firms from the
developed countries that seek to locate production
facilities in these low-cost, labour surplus economies,
and produce for world markets including the markets
of their countries of origin. Yet their role rarely
receives the attention it deserves in discussions
of global imbalance.
Finally, given these drivers of contemporary uneven
development, adjusting any one currency, such as the
renminbi, is unlikely to redress the global imbalances.
It would at most merely shift the balance of payments
surpluses to other countries with labour reserves
that would now become the new hubs for world market
production.
Despite all this, since countries that are the target
of capital inflows are finding it difficult to prevent
the appreciation of their currencies, the US and Europe
are receiving explicit or implicit support for the
China-bashing. Central banks from many other countries
have been and are intervening in currency markets
to hold down the value of their currencies, but have
not been all too successful. This is true, for example,
of South Korea, India, Malaysia, Taiwan, the Philippines
and Singapore. Their moves have received global attention
ever since Guido Mantega, Brazil's finance minister,
declared that a currency war had broken out in the
global economy. ''We're in the midst of an international
currency war, a general weakening of currency. This
threatens us because it takes away our competitiveness,''
Mr Mantega reportedly said. In doing so he was being
disingenuous because Brazil's immediate problem is
not the weakening of the currencies of its competitors
but the strengthening of the Brazilian real, which
has been identified as one of the world's most overvalued
currencies.
In fact ''overvaluation'' that affects export competitiveness
adversely seems to be the factor accounting for currency
market interventions by central banks in most countries.
The explanation for such ''overvaluation'' is the surge
in foreign capital flow to these countries in the
period between 2003 and the Great Recession and once
again over the last one year. Intervention to address
the excessive strength of individual currencies is
costly since the reserves accumulated by buying foreign
currency have to be invested in liquid financial assets
that offer very low yields, while the foreign investors
bringing in the dollars that lead to appreciation
of the local currency earn substantially high returns.
Moreover, for countries that do not have the ''advantage''
of low inflation and low interest rates, the problem
can be never-ending. Thus, in India, for example,
increases in interest rates aimed at combating inflation
are resulting in further inflows and a substantial
strengthening of the rupee.
The implications are clear. The resort to monetary
easing in the developed counties, with another round
of such easing expected in the US after figures pointing
to the loss of 95,000 jobs in September were released,
is triggering a boom in the ''carry-trade''. Financial
investors borrow cheap in dollars and put their money
in emerging markets to earn high returns. In the event,
emerging market countries unwilling to impose controls
on capital inflows experience a capital surge and
invite an appreciation of their currencies. Since
such appreciation undermines their export competitiveness,
they are forced to intervene in currency markets to
limit or reverse such appreciation. To justify this
costly way of dealing with the problem created by
fluid capital flows, they point their fingers at other
countries which are preventing currency appreciation.
China comes in useful here, not just because it severely
limits appreciation, but because it is a successful
exporter and records current account surpluses. Thus,
joining the American clamour against China becomes
a way of deflecting attention from the fact that the
failure to export enough stems from an inadequacy
of domestic policies rather than the aggressive currency
moves of others. This ''currency war'' blame game makes
the prospect of progress on formulating a coordinated
recovery plan in the G20 summit at Seoul next month
extremely dim.
October
20, 2010.
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