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Agenda to overhaul world financial system
JUST WHEN Asian countries are trying to focus on economic
recovery following the financial crisis of 1997-98, the
possibility of another bout of global instability has increased.
It looks as if Argentina, one of Latin America's largest
economies, is on the brink of a major crisis as it struggles to
keep uptodate with its external debts totalling over $100
billion.
The swings between currency rates (especially between the three
major currencies, of the U.S., Europe and Japan) have not
stopped, and these have contributed to significant fluctuations
in the currencies of developing countries. Thus, the need for
reform to the global financial system is more acute than ever
before.
Unfortunately, as the Trade and Development Report 2001 (TDR)
released last week points out, there has been little or no
progress on such reform. Instead, the discussions on "a new
international financial architecture" (that had been launched
during the Asian crisis) have focused on getting the developing
countries to strengthen their banking and corporate systems. This
in itself is an important task that can prepare these countries
against risks of future crisis. However, national-level measures
are insufficient, as the root causes of financial turbulence lie
in the international system.
Five major areas
The TDR published yearly by the UNCTAD, focuses on five major
areas of global reform that the "new financial architecture"
should be working on, but have so far relatively ignored. The
first two involve measures to prevent future crises: regulation
of global capital flows and stabilisation of currencies. The
third relate to better measures to manage a crisis once it has
broken out. The last two deal with the need for institutional
changes: reform of the International Monetary Fund and governance
of the world financial system.
The UNCTAD report is probably the most in-depth and comprehensive
report on the current debate on the global financial system,
pointing out its weaknesses, criticising the so far extremely
disappointing reform process, and providing detailed proposals
for genuine reforms to the system.
The recent frequent bouts of financial crisis have shown that the
problem is located in the system of global finance which since
the early 1970s has been characterised by flexible exchange rates
and large-scale private capital flows.
Crises blamed on debtors
According to the TDR, instead of establishing global-level
institutions and mechanisms to reduce the risks of crises and
manage them better, "there has been one-sided emphasis on
reforming domestic institutions and policies in developing
countries."
In the past few years, efforts were made to discipline debtors
and provide costly self-defence mechanisms. Developing countries
have been urged to adopt strict financial standards, improve
transparency, adopt appropriate exchange rate regimes and carry
large amounts of reserves.
These reforms have merit, but they presume that the cause of
crises rests primarily with debtor countries and place the onus
for reform on them. By contrast, little attention is given to the
role of institutions and policies in the creditor countries in
triggering crises.
The efforts to set up various financial codes and standards,
while beneficial, offer little to protect developing countries
from supply-driven fluctuations in international capital flows
(caused mainly by policies and conditions in industrial
countries), nor from currency exchange fluctuations.
Regulatory mechanisms
The UNCTAD report proposes the following reforms. First, there
should be institutions or mechanisms to regulate and stabilise
international capital flows. It mentions proposals made by
prominent economists or market players for such institutions,
such as a World Financial Authority that would set up, regulate
and oversee financial enterprises.
The role of such international regulatory institutions or
mechanisms is to prevent excessive risk taking in cross-border
lending and investment, reduce systemic failures and eliminate
weaknesses in regulatory regimes in both creditor and debtor
countries.
Second, there is need to establish a global system of exchange
rates. Since the breakdown of the Bretton Woods fixed exchange
rate system (in 1973), there have in effect been no global
arrangements. Countries have to make their own choice between a
floating system, a fixed system, or something in between
(adjustable or soft pegs).
Each of these systems has its own problems. The floating system,
favoured by the major industrial countries, has failed to
deliver, and is characterised by short-term currency volatility,
and persistent currency misalignments and gyrations. The damage
inflicted by disorderly exchange rate behaviour is limited for
the reserve currency countries (the U.S., Japan and Europe)
themselves, but the disorder is a major source of disturbance for
developing countries as they have smaller economies and are more
dependent on trade.
Currency stability
The UNCTAD proposes changes in the industrial countries: that
they coordinate their macroeconomic policies and thus reduce
instability, and that they stabilise their currencies against one
another, especially the so-called G3 currencies (dollar, yen and
euro).
One proposal to attain stable and properly aligned exchange rates
mentioned by the UNCTAD is the introduction of target zones among
the three major currencies with a commitment by the countries to
defend such zones through coordinated intervention and
macroeconomic policy action.
Meanwhile, if such stabilisation at global level does not take
place, developing countries will still face currency instability,
whichever system is chosen by an individual country, since there
is instability among the three major reserve currencies.
"Whichever option is chosen, it will not be able to ensure
appropriate alignment and stability of exchange rates in
developing countries as long as the major reserve currencies
themselves are so unstable and misaligned, and international
capital flows are volatile and beyond the control of recipient
countries," says the TDR.
Third, the UNCTAD proposes that there should be orderly workout
mechanisms for international debt. In the absence of global
reform, more crises are bound to occur. When they do, there needs
to be a set of measures for the crisis-struck country to take to
prevent the crisis from becoming unmanageable. Otherwise, foreign
creditors and investors will "rush for the exit," each one trying
to collect as much from the country as they can, leading to
massive capital outflows, more devaluation of the currency and
severe financial and economic crisis.
The TDR proposes that the principles of a bankruptcy court should
apply within an internationally sanctioned orderly debt workout
framework. First, the country can declare a temporary debt
standstill, to prevent a "grab race" for assets among the
creditors. Second, the debtor country continues to get access to
working capital (that is, "lending into arrears") so that it can
finance a recovery programme. Third, an arrangement is worked out
to reorganise the debtor's assets and liabilities, including debt
rollover, extension of existing loans and debt write-off or
conversion to equity.
Since developing countries may face grave disapproval if they
were to embark on such a move unilaterally, the UNCTAD suggests
that there should be an internationally agreed system to sanction
the debt standstill and debt work out system. Within that, a
country can declare a mandatory standstill and then rely on an
international independent panel to conduct the work out
arrangements.Fourth, the TDR proposes a reform of the IMF. Its
surveillance of countries and disciplines imposed on them have
applied mainly to developing countries which are debtors. The IMF
should also apply surveillance on the major industrial countries
as their financial policies and instability of their currencies
act as a catalyst for crises elsewhere in the world economy.
Thus, a priority of the reform process must be to strengthen the
surveillance mechanism to achieve a minimum degree of coherence
among the macroeconmic policies of the major countries. The
UNCTAD also suggests a dispute settlement mechanism (similar to
the one that exists for trade), where disagreements over the
impact of macroeconomic and financial policies can be taken up
and resolved.
The TDR also proposes a review of the IMF's policy conditions
attached to its loans. It is critical of the expansion of such
conditions, noting concerns of their undermining sovereignty, as
well as how the excessive conditions intensified the Asian
crisis.
Fifth, the TDR proposes reforms to the system of governance of
international finance. It notes that the reform process has so
far been driven by the interests of the major creditor countries,
which hold most of the power in multilateral financial
institutions. As a result, many issues of crucial importance to
developing countries have been excluded from the reform agenda.
Because of the one-dollar-one-vote system, developed countries
have 61 per cent of the voting rights in the IMF and the World
Bank, compared to 17 per cent in the United Nations and 24 per
cent in the WTO.
Reforms to existing financial structures must provide for much
greater collective influence from developing countries. This will
involve reviewing the representation system and decision-making
practices in the institutions and a major reformulation of the
reform agenda.
Common goals for developing nations
But the UNCTAD is also aware that developing countries themselves
are not well organised to push for such reforms. It lists several
areas on which they could agree in a common agenda: balanced
treatment of creditors and debtors regarding standards, codes,
transparency and regulation; more stable exchange rates; more
balanced surveillance; less intrusive loan conditions; above all,
more democratic and participatory multilateral institutions and
processes.
Effective reform of the global financial system will ultimately
depend on whether developing countries organise around such
common goals, and whether the developed countries accept that
these goals are essential to build a better system of global
economic governance, concludes the UNCTAD. Reading the report,
one is left wondering at the state of the world's economic
system.
The proposals are eminently logical. Looking at the situation
objectively, few can quarrel with the need for basic reforms
along the lines of the UNCTAD analysis. However, vested interests
that make huge profits from currency instability and from the
free flow of funds are jealously guarding their "right" to
benefit from an unstable and unfair system. And unfortunately
they are currently in favour with the ruling political
establishment in the developed countries.
The way forward is for developing countries to insist on their
own rights to a fair and stable global financial system, and find
ways to collectively put their agenda on the table. Unfortunately
it may require more crises ahead, including those that also
affect the developed countries themselves, before the message of
the TDR is heard and acted on by the powers that be in the global
system
Martin Khor
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