Currencies and capital flows

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Currencies and capital flows

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Strong-currency countries: new parities close to floating rates (France) ... G-5 statement regarding 'orderly appreciat on of non-dollar currencies' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Currencies and capital flows


1
Currencies and capital flows
  • Monetary issues more important
  • Internal and external balance
  • The international monetary system

2
Monetary issues more important
  • Increasing capital mobility
  • long run possible to finance more investment
  • short run volatility? Daily turnover in intl
    forex markets at least USD 1,500 billion
  • Increasingly volatile exchange rates
  • larger fluctuations than in underlying real
    variables (trade, production)
  • Institutional consequences

3
Conceptual framework
  • Accounting identities
  • Y C I X - M
  • Y - C - I X - M
  • S - I X - M
  • Internal balance External balance

4
Conceptual framework
  • More complicated, with government
  • (Sp T) - (Ip G) X - M
  • T government savings (taxes)
  • G government investment (expenditure)

5
Conceptual framework
  • International macroeconomics
  • S - I X - M
  • Employment Current account
  • Growth Exchange rates
  • Interest rates Capital inflows
  • Govt budget
  • Inflation

6
The international monetary system
  • Historical development of solutions to reconcile
    internal and external balance
  • Not only choice of currency arrangement (fixed or
    flexible exchange rates) but also regulation of
    trade and capital flows (current account and
    capital account regulations)

7
Schedule
  • Gold standard ( - 1914)
  • Interwar period (1920 - 1939)
  • Bretton Woods (1945 - 1973)
  • Post-Bretton Woods (1973 - )
  • European solutions
  • Developing countries
  • New financial architecture

8
Gold standard
  • Established in Western Europe during 1870s (in
    Great Britain in 1717)
  • Extended to rest of the world by 1900
  • Stable exchange rates contributed to first round
    of internationalization...
  • but free trade and capital flows also
    contributed to success of gold standard

9
How did the gold standard work?
  • Price-specie flow model (Hume 1752)
  • trade deficit gt outflow of gold gt
  • lower money supply and lower prices gt
  • improvement in competitiveness gt
  • new equilibrium
  • increase in discount rate speeds up price
    adjustment without gold transfers

10
Why did the gold standard work?
  • Political commitment to converitibility
  • no doubts about priorities
  • weak labor interests
  • flexible prices and wages
  • Free trade and free capital mobility
  • leading country - Great Britain - recycled
    surpluses by lending to infrastructure
    development.
  • International cooperation - but still unstable at
    the periphery

11
Interwar period
  • War expenditures so large that gold
    convertibility was abandoned - soldiers and
    suppliers paid with fiat money. Only USD remained
    convertible into gold.
  • Widely diverging exchange rates because of
    differing rates of inflation
  • Floating rates until mid-1920s
  • Differences in new gold parities

12
Interwar period
  • Weak-currency countries attempts to get close to
    old gold parities (Britain)
  • Strong-currency countries new parities close to
    floating rates (France)
  • Weak countries in chronic BoP deficits, strong
    countries with persistent surpluses

13
Interwar period
  • Changing political environment reduced absolute
    commitment to convertibility
  • democratization and stronger labor intersts
  • burden of reconstruction
  • Great Depression end of gold standard
  • primary product exporters hurt by lower prices
    and reduced capital flows
  • bank failures in Europe drained gold reserves
    capital controls, end of convertibility,
    protectionism

14
Lessons from interwar period
  • Unquestionable commitment to convertibility
    central issue
  • if yes international capital flows will
    facilitate equilibrium
  • if no speculation will aggravate imbalances

15
The Bretton Woods system
  • Comprehensive solution negotiated after 2nd World
    War
  • Strong institutional basis
  • ITO
  • IBRD
  • IMF

16
Bretton Woods
  • Fixed but adjustable exchange rates
  • Capital controls
  • IMF for monitoring and BoP financing
  • Current account controls until 1959 to facilitate
    post-war expansion
  • Intervention interest rate controls, no capital
    account convertibility

17
Main objective free trade
  • To create conditions for rapid increase in
    international trade
  • Controls necessary because full employment had
    become new policy goal little room for
    deflationary policy
  • Last line of defence adjustment of peg

18
Problems with Bretton Woods
  • Asymmetry
  • US leading power. Deficits could always be
    financed with USD. Could be too expan-sionary
    (inflation) or restrictive (deflation)
  • Liquidity needs
  • expansionary policies low interest rates
    fixed exchange rates gt need for financing
  • Unwillingness to change peg
  • Fund approval required, only ex post adj.
  • destabilizing, admission of past mistakes?

19
Bretton Woods collapse
  • Attempts to save system
  • central bank collaboration, Gold Pool
  • US policies to tighten capital controls
  • Still, too much USD in circulation
  • Vietnam war
  • Suspension of USD gold convertibility 13 August
    1971, Smithsonian broad-band agreement
  • USD devaluation, wider bands, finally collapse of
    fixed rates in 1973

20
Why did Bretton Woods collapse?
  • No credible political commitment to fixed rates
    (or gold convertibility)
  • lower price and wage flexibility
  • Pressure from increasing international capital
    flows
  • current account convertibility reduces impact of
    capital controls
  • increase in FDI
  • Warming of cold war
  • less international collaboration

21
Post-Bretton Woods
  • Two solutions
  • Large countries floating rates
  • external trade small share of GDP
  • Small countries pegged rates
  • much external trade, need to avoid excessive
    volatility
  • capital controls, particularly in developing
    countries

22
Floating rates 1970s
  • Some volatility, but surprising stability in
    spite of oil crises and commodity shocks
  • concerted intervention by central banks
  • remaining capital controls used extensively
  • Willingness to adapt domestic policies to
    maintain external balance (justified by external
    crises?)
  • Main problem inflation
  • money creation by central banks to finance
    expansionary policies

23
Floating rates 1980s - volatility
  • US policy driven by domestic agenda
  • Reagan tax cuts, military spending, budget
    deficits, high demand
  • Fed chairman Volcker interest rate increases to
    keep inflation in bounds
  • capital inflows and USD appreciation
  • Severe consequences
  • Latin American debt crisis
  • widening US current account deficit and
    protectionist pressures

24
Floating rates 1980s - solutions
  • Plaza agreement September 1985
  • G-5 statement regarding orderly appreciatíon of
    non-dollar currencies
  • rapid dollar depreciation
  • Louvre meeting February 1987
  • problem excessive depreciation of USD
  • ambition to stabilize exchange rates and instead
    adjust domestic policies expansion in Japan and
    Europe, contraction in US
  • little internal adjustment in the US contd
    overvaluation in Europe (and Japan)

25
Meanwhile in Europe pegged rates
  • 1970 Werner plan (EMU) failed
  • Bretton Woods collapse and EC expansion
  • 1971 agreement about bilaterally pegged EC rates
    Snake in the tunnel
  • 1973 collapse of Smithsonian tunnel Snake in the
    lake
  • But Snake very troubled
  • oil shocks but no harmonization of economic
    policies
  • asymmetry Bundesbank dominant

26
1979 European Monetary System
  • Attempt to create symmetric system with
    harmonization
  • Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM) to fix rates within
    set bands
  • European Monetary Fund (EMF) for BoP financing
    and monitoring of policies
  • Tough start
  • remaining policy divergence - expansion in
    France, contraction in Germany - big threat
  • French thoughts of leaving EC in 1983

27
The European Monetary System
  • More stable development after 1983 as oil shocks
    ebb out
  • Fundamental inconsistencies emerging
  • EMS reduced scope for macro policy
  • instead, micro policies to affect social
    objectives wages, job security, benefits
  • problem reduced labor market flexibility and
    Eurosclerosis
  • Proposed solution EU Single Market and EMU

28
Problems with EMS
  • Single Market program included free capital
    mobility
  • but free capital mobility led to larger
    imbalances and made it hard to maintain fixed
    exchange rates before EMU
  • several shocks in early 1990s German
    reunification, Gulf war, global recession
  • EMS crisis in 1992
  • Danish no to Maastricht led to doubts about
    commitment and currency crises

29
Economic and Monetary Union
  • Need to establish ultimate peg a common currency
  • Convergence criteria to achieve enough domestic
    adjustment
  • inflation
  • interest rates
  • budget deficit and public sector debt
  • Apparent political commitment likely to succeed
  • but what about USD/Euro rates?

30
Developing countries
  • Large financing needs
  • investment essential for growth, but limited
    domestic savings capacity
  • fluctuations in export incomes
  • Fixed rates popular in 1970-80s
  • nominal anchor to limit inflation
  • Reasonably stable system up to late 1980s
  • extensive capital controls helped insulate
    domestic markets

31
Developing countries
  • Changing environment from mid-1980s
  • Washington consensus liberalization of
    international capital flows
  • private capital more important
  • Temptation to borrow a lot
  • but capital inflows are hard to combine with
    fixed exchange rates
  • and are OK only if the strengthen economy
  • warning for crisesLatin America(1980s), Mexico
    (early 1990s), Asia (late 1990s)

32
Anatomy of a crisis
  • Increases in supply and demand of capital
  • export boom, investment demand
  • deregulation, improved availability of credits
  • gt rising asset prices and inflation
  • Appreciating real exchange rates
  • weaker intl competitiveness, current account
    deficits, foreign borrowing
  • Collapse when foreign confidence disappears
  • no money, not funny

33
Developing country crises worse than our own
crises because
  • Weak banking supervision
  • Lack of transparency
  • Corruption and cronyism
  • Weak human capital
  • Industrial policy and development strategy
    Korean example

34
Differences between developing countries
  • Middle-income countries have access to private
    capital flows
  • problem capital account and volatility of
    private flows
  • extreme solutions currency boards
  • Low-income countries have little FDI and private
    capital
  • problem current account and volatility of world
    market prices of primary products

35
Differences between developing countries
  • Middle-income countries subject to IMF financing
  • Argentina, Mexico, Indonesia, Russia, Korea
  • Low-income countries more dependent on foreign
    aid
  • but aid flows have fallen since mid-1980s

36
Solutions for low-income countries HIPC
  • WB/IMF program to support Highly Indebted Poor
    Countries
  • main item debt reduction
  • countries that are identified as HIPC are
    required to undertake structural reforms
    (exports, public revenue)
  • in return, external debt will be reduced to
    sustainable levels (150 of annual export
    revenue)

37
New Financial Architecture
  • Mainly relevant for middle-income countries
  • Key words
  • transparency and crisis prevention
  • regulation and policies
  • financing

38
New Financial Architecture
  • Information and transparency
  • international reserves, foreign debt, NPLs
  • fiscal transparency
  • Regulation
  • sound macro policies
  • controls on capital inflows?
  • prudent regulation of financial sector
  • Financing
  • IMF Contingency Credit Line (April 1999)
  • remaining question lender of last resort?

39
Summary
  • Complex evolution of international financial
    system
  • remaining problems mainly for LDCs
  • Trend free capital mobility and problems to
    maintain adjustable pegs
  • Consequences
  • tough adjustment and protests
  • industry localization new choice variable
  • new instruments for improving domestic
    competitiveness industrial policy
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