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A Pragmatic Approach to Coping with Financial Globalization

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Potential Collateral Benefits. Financial market development ... Collateral Benefits Framework May Help Make Progress. Unified conceptual framework ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A Pragmatic Approach to Coping with Financial Globalization


1
A Pragmatic Approach to Coping with Financial
Globalization
Eswar Prasad Cornell University

2
Benefits of Financial Integration Theory
  • Efficient international allocation of capital
  • Consumption smoothing via international risk
    sharing
  • Large welfare effects for developing economies

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Growth Benefits of Financial Integration Evidence
  • About 25 studies of growth effects
  • No effect 4
  • Mixed 18
  • Positive 3
  • No robust macroeconomic evidence
  • of growth benefits

6
Correlation between Growth and Current A/c
Balance Non-industrial Countries, 1970-2004
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Volatility and Risk Sharing
  • No evidence that financial integration by itself
    is proximate determinant of financial crises
  • Developing economies, including emerging markets,
    have not attained better risk sharing

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Other Ways of Looking at the Data
  • Effects of different types of private capital
    flows
  • gt Equity flows
  • gt FDI
  • gt Debt
  • Macroeconomic vs. microeconomic evidence

12
Summary of New Evidence
  • Equity market liberalization seems to work
  • FDI benefits becoming more apparent
  • Benefits more evident in micro data

13
The Traditional View
More efficient international allocation of
capital Capital deepening International
risk-sharing
GDP growth Consumption volatility
Financial Globalization
14
A Different Perspective
Traditional Channels
Potential Collateral Benefits Financial market
development Institutional development Better
governance Macroeconomic discipline
GDP / TFP Growth Consumption volatility
Financial Globalization
15
FG and Financial Development
  • Foreign ownership of banks improves efficiency of
    domestic banking system
  • Inflows add to depth of equity markets
  • Financial sector FDI has benefits

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FG and Quality of Institutions, Governance
  • Openness to foreign capital provides incentives
    for improving corporate governance
  • Corruption, lack of transparency discourage FDI,
    portfolio flows gt
  • incentives for improving public governance

19
Complication Threshold Effects
GDP / TFP growth Risks of Crises
Above Thresholds
Threshold Conditions Financial market
development Institutional Quality,
Governance Macroeconomic policies Trade
integration
X
Financial Globalization
?
GDP / TFP growth Risks of Crises
Below Thresholds
20
Why Do Thresholds Matter?
  • Financial Market Development
  • - Allocates financial flows efficiently
  • - Enhances macroeconomic stability
  • Institutional Quality
  • - Affects the volume and stability of financial
    flows
  • - Shifts the composition of flows towards FDI
    and equity
  • Trade Openness
  • - Makes less vulnerable to sudden stops
  • - Mitigates the adverse effects of financial
    crises

21
TENSION !!
  • Financial integration can catalyze financial
    development, improve governance, impose
    discipline on macro policies...
  • But, in the absence of a basic pre-existing level
    of these supporting conditions, financial
    integration can wreak havoc

22
Collateral Benefits Framework May Help Make
Progress
  • Unified conceptual framework
  • Country-specific requirements, initial conditions
    can be taken into account
  • Selective approach to liberalization based on
    prioritization of collateral benefits
  • Can manage risks during transition to thresholds,
    but can not eliminate them

23
Has the Benefit-Cost Tradeoff Improved?
  • Composition of inflows and stocks of external
    liabilities has become more favorable

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Has the Benefit-Cost Tradeoff Improved?
  • Composition of inflows and stocks of external
    liabilities has become more favorable
  • High levels of foreign exchange reserves

26
Has the Benefit-Cost Tradeoff Improved?
  • Composition of inflows and stocks of external
    liabilities has become more favorable
  • High levels of foreign exchange reserves
  • Greater exchange rate flexibility, with inflation
    targeting
  • Rising trade openness

27
Has the Benefit-Cost Tradeoff Improved?
  • Composition of inflows and stocks of external
    liabilities has become more favorable
  • High levels of foreign exchange reserves
  • Greater exchange rate flexibility, with inflation
    targeting
  • Rising trade openness
  • New players, new instruments have made
    international financial markets deeper and more
    efficient

28
But
  • Many developing economies still below threshold
    levels of financial, institutional development
  • Still de facto fixed or tightly-managed exchange
    rates
  • Inflation targeting creates problems when there
    are surges in inflows
  • Real exchange rate appreciations hurts poor and
    undeveloped economies
  • Herding behavior of unregulated investors such as
    hedge funds risks in system harder to trace

29
Reality on the Ground
  • De facto financial openness increasing over time
  • Capital controls becoming less effective
  • gt Expansion of trade
  • gt Larger international financial flows
  • gt Rising sophistication of international
    investors
  • Trying to maintain rigid capital controls doesnt
    solve inflows problem creates distortionary
    costs

30
Implications
  • Best to actively manage the process of capital
    account liberalization rather than fight the
    inevitable
  • Seize windows of opportunity when benefit-risk
    tradeoff improves but coast is never completely
    clear.
  • Capital account liberalization not an end in
    itself
  • needs to be put in the context of a more
    complete
  • policy/reform agenda

31
Broader Policy Messages
  • Need more room for macro policies to respond to
    domestic and external shocks
  • Broader range of financial markets, greater
    financial depth can help deal with shocks, make
    transmission of macro policies more efficient
  • Financial integration can support and catalyze
    other reforms, especially financial development
  • Make room for financial innovations--incentives
    and flexible regulatory structures
  • Excessive caution may have its own cost

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International Business Cycles
  • Convergence among industrial and emerging market
    economies divergence between them
  • Nonlinearities
  • gt Large shocks in U.S. may have
    large spillover effects smaller shocks may not
  • (recessions vs. slowdowns)
  • Financial convergence real decoupling ?
  • gt Financial shocks get transmitted quickly
  • gt Do deeper financial markets insulate real
    economy from financial shocks?
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