Title: THE ARGENTINE CRISIS
1THE ARGENTINE CRISIS
- International Finance
- Dr. Michel Henry Bouchet
- Group 1
21.The causes of economic collapse
- Fiscal weakness. The unsustainable growth of
public debt. - Weak institutions and political instability.
- The growing REER imbalance. Convertibility and
external shocks.
3The Argentine economy during Convertibility
1992/98 1999/2001 real GDP 5,21
-2,77 inflation 4,50
-1,33 unemployment 12,60 15,60 public deficit
0,80 2,76
4The fiscal problem
- According to official data, debt/GDP grows
gradually after 1993 and speeds up remarkably
after 1998. - Official figures underestimate debt during the
first half of the 90s. Hence, effective debt
growth in the period was smaller. Moreover, part
of the debt after 1995 reflects the reform in the
pension system.
5The primary surplus prevents debt from getting
out of control until 1998. Since then, debt
dynamic became unsustainable. The primary balance
remains stable during the whole period. Indeed,
what changes after 1998 is growth and interest
rates. The deepening recession, coupled with
deflation and increasing interest rates cause
fiscal unsustainability.
6Why did Convertibility fail?
- Monetary discipline does not guarantee fiscal
discipline, at least as long as there is access
to capital markets. - The labor market was not sufficiently flexible to
facilitate deflation without recession. - Argentina suffered considerable foreign shocks,
in particular, the Russian crisis which caused a
sudden and persistent change in investors risk
perception with regard to emerging markets
72. Some lessons from Argentina
- Exchange rate regimes
- Hard pegs are extremely demanding. In particular
they require price flexibility and very prudent
fiscal policies. Otherwise it is better to float. - The banking system and sovereign risk
- It is critical to isolate the private financial
sector from sovereign risk. Solvent banks may
suffer contagion from an insolvent sovereign. In
Argentina doubts about sovereign solvency caused
a bank run. - Sovereign default would undermine banks assets.
An eventual devaluation would boost NPL. Together
with doubts about the solvency of public banks,
this gave rise to
8Incorrect Pricing of Risk
During the year before the crisis, the loan loss
reserve ratio declined even though the ratio of
foreign-denominated loans to total loans
increased.
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103.The role of the IMF in Argentina
- During the 90s Argentina became the darling of
the international community, especially the IMF.
It was widely considered a model that other
emerging economies should folow. - The Fund actively monitored and supported
Argentina during the whole decade.
11Anatomy of a Crisis
- The Fund supported the relatively strict macro
policies and the structural reforms (financial
liberalization, privatizations, reform of the
pension system, etc.) implemented by Argentine
authorities. - At first, the IMF was somewhat skeptical about
Convertibility. However, the ability of Argentina
to weather the Tequila crisis appeared to
convince the Fund staff. - Despite the fast growth macroeconomic stability,
a large part of the population did not benefit
from the economic success during the 90s
unemployment increased, poverty remained high and
inequality was on the rise.
12- The summer of 1998 was a turning point for
Argentina (Russia), but it did not require large
multilateral assistance until the beginning of
2000 (about US7billion from the Fund). - However, the economic situation deteriorated
further and a large package, el blindaje (US 7
billion additional from the IMF and US 5 billion
from the WB and the IDB) was approved in December
2000. - After an initial short period of apparent
success, the program began to go off track due to
the worse than expected performance of the
economy. - An additional augmentation of the program was
approved in September 2001, but the economic
situation continued to deteriorate and the
targets could not be met.
13The Fund in Argentina today
- The behavior of the IMF in Argentina, on behalf
of the international community, does not
necessarily respond to a hard interpretation of
the Prague framework. - The unilateral breach of contracts by Argentina
is yet to be corrected. - Argentina has still to take some further measures
to comply with the IMF prior actions - The credibility of Argentine authorities has been
undermined. - Resources are limited. The IMF (as well as the
WB and the IDB) has a large exposure to Argentina
that they have a responsibility to carefully
manage. - However, both Argentina and the IFIs need to
reach an agreement as soon as possible.
14Currency risks and fiscal deficits
15Argentine interest rates
16Dependence on BIS-bank creditors
17Vulnerabilities
184. Dollarization
- The rise and fall of Argentinas currency board
- Good times financial deepening, increased
financial dollarization, and RER exposure - Bad times a currency-growth-debt (CGD) trap
- The meltdown anatomy of a currency run in a
financially dollarized country - A reappraisal of hard pegs (no discipline, quite
reversible, prudential concerns, exit strategies) - Refocus the exchange rate debate to the currency
problem
19The Costs and Benefits Depend on Country
Circumstances
- Dollarization to consolidate a reform agenda
- El Salvador 2001 Argentina 1999?
- Dollarization as an element of crisis resolution
- Ecuador 2000 Argentina 2002?
20Devaluation and Default RiskArgentina
21Argentina 1999Dollarization, A missed
opportunity?
- Would Argentina have avoided crisis?
- Depends on preferred crisis explanation - see
Powell 2002. - Dollarization would have helped
- reducing devaluation risk/default risk
- increasing confidence/investment/growth
- Dollarization would not have helped
- problems of competitiveness
- fiscal problems not related to growth
22Would dollarization havebeen permanent?
- If dollarization had been perceived as permanent,
had reduced default risk and enhanced fiscal
sustainability sufficiently, then it would have
been permanent! - If dollarization had not been perceived as
permanent or competitiveness problems had been
paramount then it might not. - A monetary treaty would have provided some
incentives towards permanence
23Motives for DollarizationEl Salvador (2001)
- Locking in successful reforms
- Deeper trade and financial integration into US
dollar area (?70 of trade with US or
dollarized, remittances are ?15 of GDP) - Lower interest rates but El Salvador was not
highly dollarized previously, reduction in
interest rates due to replacement of colon with
dollar rates and wider credit availability
24Argentina 2002
- Authorities caught between
- political and economic costs of the financial
system restrictions (el corralito). - potential exchange rate instability and
inflationary consequences if lifted - Argentina cannot grow until this solved
- if solved without generating an inflationary
spiral, it may be possible to create some
monetary instruments and hence an independent
monetary policy (a First Best). - if not, Argentina will most likely have to
reinvent Convertibility or Dollarize
25Conclusions
- Dollarization has been thought of in two ways
- to consolidate reforms deepen integration
- as crisis resolution.
- In the case of an El Salvador or Argentina
(1999) - the main costs are related to notions of
sovereignty and (possibly) giving up future
monetary policy - the main immediate gain is lower interest rates
especially in dollarized economies (Powell
Sturzenegger). - In the case of Ecuador dollarization helped to
stabilise the financial system. - Argentina 2002 dollarization should not be ruled
out, otherwise it may very well still happen!