Title: Managing the Financial Crisis: Argentina 2002 Mario I. Blejer
1Managing the Financial Crisis Argentina (2002)
Mario I. Blejer
2Managing the crisis
- Assess the Nature and the Root Causes of the
Crisis - Define the Tradeoffs
- Define and Operational Strategy
- Persevere in the Implementation
- Learn some Lessons
3The Nature of the Argentina Crisis
- The Argentine crisis is both a CURRENCY and a
BANK crisis Inter-related but caused by a
number and combination of different factors - Analytically, better to distinguish between them
in an explicit manner
4THE CURRENCY CRISIS
- The Currency Crisis reached its peak with the
January 2002 devaluation. It is usually analyzed
in the context of the ARGENTINE CURRENCY BOARD
SYSTEM, established in 1991 as an
anti-inflationary devise. - The question to be analyzed is
What were the
weaknesses and the main causes for the demise of
the convertibility regime?
5- THREE APPROACHES
- 1. The loss of competitiveness of the Argentine
economy - 2. Macroeconomic policy inconsistencies
- 3. The Sudden Stop argument
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7Fiscal misalignement turned the burden of the
debt unsusutainable
-1,0
-2,0
-3,0
-4,0
8Fiscal misalignement turned the burden of the
debt unsusutainable
Public Debt
-1,0
-2,0
-3,0
-4,0
9Fiscal misalignement turned the burden of the
debt unsusutainable
-1,0
-2,0
Country Risk
-3,0
-4,0
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13Capital Flow s and Economic Activity
(Accumulated 4 quarters - USm. GDP Cyclical
Component)
Capital Flows Private Sector
8
15.000
10.000
6
5.000
4
0
2
-5.000
0
-10.000
-2
-15.000
-4
-20.000
Russian Crisis
GDP Growth
-6
-25.000
-8
-30.000
-10
-35.000
IV 94
IV 95
IV 96
IV 98
IV 01
IV 97
IV. 99
IV. 00
14Sudden Stops in Argentina and Chile (Private
Capital Flows, Percentage of GDP
4
8
7
3
6
2
5
Argentina
4
Argentina
Chile
1
3
0
2
1
-1
Chile
0
-2
-1
1998-I
1999-I
2000-I
2001-I
1998-II
1999-II
2000-II
2001-II
1998-III
1999-III
2000-III
1999-V
1998-IV
2000-IV
15- THE BANKING CRISIS
- While the problems of convertibility and the
consequent exchange rate uncertainty played a
role, the banking crisis was largely caused by
the government abuse of the banking sector,
given its inability to to adjust the budget
deficit -
-
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17Credit to Private Sector
18- The main cause for the banking crisis was the
fear was that banks would be rendered insolvent
by government policy and that deposits would be
confiscated. - An important reason behind this fear was the fact
that private sector assets were being displaced
by public sector assets in banks balance sheets.
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20- The increasing banking exposure to the public
sector was accompanied by
- 1. a rapid decrease in deposits and
- 2. a sharp increase in country risk
-
-
21EMBI Index Public Sector Loans / Net Worth ()
Private Deposists - Index Dec 00 100
(2nd axis)
22- November 2001withdrawal restrictions on bank
deposits (corralito). - December 2001 Riots the De la Rua and Cavallo
government. - First two weeks of January 2002
--public debt default
--currency board is abandoned and the
currency devalued
--bank assets and liabilities are
pesified asymmetrically - i.e. at different rates
23The abandonment of the currency board was
traumatic
- -- Complete loss of confidence in the banks, the
currency, and the government - -- Continuous bank run
- -- A run on the peso that pressured strongly the
exchange rate - -- No money market or debt instruments for open
market operations
24The Tradeoffs and The dilemma for the central bank
- Having regained the LOLR function the CB could
provide the liquidity needed to finance the bank
run. Pesos would fly to the exchange market
risk of hyperdevaluation and hyperinflation. -
- OR
25- The CB could restrain the rediscount facility and
let banks deal with the deposit run. May prevent
hyperinflation, at the risk of the total collapse
of the banking sector.
26- Only feasible intermediate solution
-
- slow the pace of the bank run
- and, at the same time, try to avoid excessive
liquidity expansion.
-
27The Strategy Followed
- -- Provide liquidity support to banks to prevent
massive bank closures. - -- Develop sterilization instruments at the
Central Bank --the LEBAC-- to mop up liquidity
and to compete with the US. - -- Utilize part of CB reserves to intervene in
the foreign exchange market to slow the pace of
depreciation and to avoid chaotic conditions.
28- Choice of Foreign Exchange Market Strategy
-
- high interest rates
- vs.
- FE market intervention
- substitutes or complements?
29- persevere to the point where
- greed gt panic
30The central bank provided rediscounts to illiquid
banks and financed about 1/3 of the deposit drop
31- The market for Central Bank ST Bills (LEBAC) was
actively developed, initially with 7 days
maturities and then with 14 and 28 days, in Pesos
and US. Interest rates reached 140 initially.
32- Intervention in the foreign exchange market
prevented disorderly behavior but did not peg the
rate, that devalued from 1 to 3.6 Pesos per
Dollar. Intervention in the first five months was
about US 2 bn.
33Initially deposit withdrawals continued
34However, the trend reversed after four months
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36- The need for the provision of liquidity from the
Central Bank where largely reduced
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38- The demand for LEBACs grew strongly.
- -- LEBACs with up to one year maturities were
introduced successfully. - -- By October interest rate has fallen to 8-45
range, according to maturities.
39Decrease of average cost and duration of LEBACs
40- The exchange rate stabilized and started to
appreciate. The CB has stopped selling and is
actively buying reserves to prevent a large
appreciation in the exchange rate. - In total the CB has regained more than the
initial stock of intervention
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42The stabilization of the exchange rate has also
resulted in a sharp decline in level of inflation
43- Indeed, as always,
greed gt panic
44The Financial System needs restructuring
Financial statements situation - Dec2001/Dec2002
180
160
Loans to Private Sector
140
120
100
45
17
80
60
54
21
40
20
0
Dec 01
Dec 02
Loans to
the Public Sector
45- LESSONS
- 1. The Potential Fragility of Financial
Institutions - Solid and solvent financial structures could
deteriorate quickly in the face of inadequate
interventions and policies. - The fact is that weak financial sectors are not
necessarily crisis prone. Crises are generated by
inconsistent policies and an unstable
macroeconomic environment -
46- 2. Financing the Public Sector and the Crowding
Out Effect
47- 3. The Importance of Proper Liquidity Management
- Availability of liquidity is a crucial element in
the prevention and the management of financial
crises - LOLR does not guarantee stability but its
absence accelerates the erosion of confidence
48- 4. The Role of Foreign Banks
- -- Do they reduce financial vulnerability?
- -- Can they provide, implicitly, LOLR function?
49- 5. Capital Controls
- Does capital account integration reduce financial
vulnerability? - Long run desirability vs. short run,
transitional, risks - Capital controls and crisis management