Title: IX. The post-war reconstruction
1IX. The post-war reconstruction
2IX.1 The new beginning
3Basic framework (1)
- Economic
- War damages
- Great Depression experience
- Political
- Superpower position of the USA and the USSR,
Britain definitely lost its dominance - Europe strong influence of socialist movement
4Basic framework (2)
- Theoretical
- Keynesian teaching
- Planning
- War experience
- Technology (linear programming, computers)
- Soviet experience
- gt
- General acceptance of interventionist policies
5IX.2 Bretton-Woods System
6An urgent priority
- Inefficient gold standard one of possible
explanations of Great Depression (see LVI) - After the collapse of gold standard floating of
major currencies - Lack of any international coordination
- Competitive devaluations,
- Protectionism
- ? beggar-thy-neighbor policies ? prolonged
recession - WWII exceptional situation, no international
coordination, neither in forex, neither in trade - Since 1944 - Allied forces started to create a
new international monetary system - John Maynard Keynes and Harry Dexter White
7Institutions and intentions
- July 1944 - Bretton Woods conference (New
Hampshire, USA), result Articles of Agreement - 3 essential institutions
- International Monetary Fund
- World Bank
- Organization to promote cooperation in
international trading arrangements - Basic intentions
- Promote stability of the monetary system
- Provide financing for the reconstruction after
the war and to the developing countries - Support the free trade
8IX.2.1 IMF Goals and Tools
- Disastrous pre-WWII experience
- After WWII, main economic policy goals full
employment, price stability, external balance
with free trade - B-W system based on a believe that gold exchange
standard serves best these goals - Need for flexibility in case of disequilibria
- Countries contributions to the pool of financial
resources to provide funding (lending) to
countries in need - There could have been a devaluation, in case of
fundamental disequilibrium
9Articles of Agreement summary (1)
- New Permanent Institution, IMF, as consulting
body, executor of the Articles, lender to
countries in case of BoP problems - Gold exchange standard
- Each country establishes a gold price for its
currency (par value), keep it within 1 per cent
range in the short run - Currency convertibility for the current account,
capital controls for financial account - Changes of par values (de/revaluations) only with
the Funds approval and in case of fundamental
disequilibrium - Unfortunately, never precisely defined
10Articles of Agreement summary (2)
- Temporary imbalances were to be financed from
domestic forex reserves (difference from pure
gold standard, where those reserves were just
monetary gold), in case of more substantial
deficits, Fund was prepared to lend to individual
countries - Each country contributes to the Fund a certain
quota according its size in the world economy - Symmetry in treating all the currencies,
including USD - Theoretically possibility to de/revaluate USD
- Independent domestic monetary policies (provided
they did not undermine other IMFs rules) - It was assumed that after transitional period,
currencies will become fully convertible,
including the liberalization on financial account
11IX.2.2 International Bank for Reconstruction and
Development (World Bank)
- Helping to finance investment projects for
reconstruction and development - Long-term loan and technical assistance
- Guaranteeing and participating in loans by
private investors - Borrower need not be a government, but government
must guarantee the loan, that must finance
productive purposes, be used for original
purposes and the borrower must be able to repay - Borrower must prove that in the prevailing market
conditions, he would be unable to obtain the loan
from private sources - Individual countries subscription of capital ?
shares on total capital stock - 2 paid in gold and USD, 18 in countries
individual currencies, remaining 80 subject to
call when Bank is required to meet its obligations
12IX.2.3 Missing leg international trade
- At Bretton-Woods, a third institution recommended
- Not created at the conference
- Preparatory discussions scheduled to start in
1946 - In 1949 Havana conference GATT
- Some progress
- The full-fledged organization WTO, only in 1994
13IX.3 The immediate post-war reality
14Difficult years 1945-1947
- The economic situation of European countries
worse than expected - War damages, lack of resources of any type,
adverse weather (namely winter 1946-7) - Gold and USD reserves depleted
- Strong BoP deficits, reflecting huge need for
imports and lack of ability to export - dollar shortage
- War financing from USA (like Lend and Lease) or
war relief international help (UNRRA) either
terminated or insufficient - Political threats from communism and too many
very interventionists politicians in western
Europe (F, D, etc.)
15Basic principles
- Note What follows is an easy ex-post
description, in the post-war aftermath very few
had such a clear view - Liberalization of prices, accompanied by
anti-inflationary policies - In the post-war reality balanced budgets and
removal of excess money, created by war economics - Extremely difficult given the pressing
reconstruction needs - Balancing budgets
- ? BoP improvement ? chance to import raw
materials and intermediate inputs, even under
dollar shortage - ? reduction in public investment ? lower
growth, unless offset by private investment - Need for strong trust in market economy
- No fear of excessive taxation and nationalization
- ? vicious political circle, call for actions that
has not been previewed early 1945 and that did
not enjoy full support in post-war political
reality in Europe
16IX.3.1 Marshall Plan
- Official title European Recovery Program (ERP)
- June 5, 1947, US Secretary of State, George
Marshall, speech at Harvard University - Offered aid to any nation, did not specify any
number, any other detail - In reality directed towards Europe (originally
including USSR), under the condition that
recipient countries will be able to organize the
rebuilding plan themselves - Plan rejected by USSR and other countries under
its influence
17Logistics
- US side
- Economic Cooperation Administration (ECA)
- US envoy in capital of each country that
participated - European side
- Participating countries A, B, DK, F, D, GB, GR,
ICL, IRL, I, L, NL, N, P, S, CH, TR - Coordinating agency Organization for European
Economic Cooperation (OEEC) - Acceptance of market economy principles and free
trade - Drawing the money
- Each country allocated the funds (money)
- OEEC (with local governments) allocated the money
to particular projects, ECA arranged for transfer
of goods, US supplier was paid in USD by ERP - European recipient, including private firms, had
to repay back (in local currencies, with delay,
in installments, etc.) - Crucial repayments in local currency, deposited
by governments in so-called counterpart funds
used for financing of further investment projects
(Germany KfW) - Final repayment only Germany and only about 1
BUSD (1971)
18Basic numbers
- Period 1948-1951
- Total amount 12,741 MUSD
19Appraisal (1)
- Was it the most unselfish act in the history
or an act of American imperialism? - None of those extreme descriptions
- Removal of vicious circle above
- Relaxation of external (dollar) constraint
- Conditioned the aid on agreeing to decontrol
prices and stabilize exchange rates and budgets - Helped to reduce inflationary pressures
- It contributed to European reconstruction
- Was not a panacea, but provided immediate results
20Appraisal (2)
- It helped to oppose communism in Europe
- Proved to people that market economy can work
- Pushed the political equilibrium towards
coalition that respected parliamentary democracy,
market economy and rule of law - Was very beneficial to US exporters and to US
economy as such - Important link to International Monetary System
(see next subsection) - It provided first lessons in European cooperation
21IX.3.2 The Fixed Rate Dollar Standard
- The immediate post-war reality asymmetry of
international monetary system - Both Europe and Japan strong demand for dollars
- Dollar, being the only convertible currency,
quickly became a dominant, both as a reserve and
intervention currency (instead of gold), inflow
through Marshall plan - Shift in the logic of the original B-W system
- US dollar fixed at 35 USD per oz. of gold, FED
committed to keep and trade gold at this price
(no foreign exchange intervention by the US) - ExR rates of other member countries fixed to USD
(by implication fixed ExR among all other
currencies) - International reserves of member countries held
in USD, USD as a reserve currency, countries (not
US) expected to intervene to keep the rates fixed
22Consequences (1)
- For Europe
- Countries (except US) limited in their monetary
policies (long-term money supply must more or
less follow US inflation) - Adjustment to disequilibria via intervention with
international reserves (mainly USD) ? need for
keeping reasonable level of reserves - To keep reserves ? limits of convertibility and
of capital flows - Europe convertibility only in 1958 and on
current account only (regulation of capital
flows) - Limit current account imbalances by adjustment in
fiscal policies
23Consequences (2)
- US
- USD as reserve currency, main task keeping the
USD price of gold (35 USD per oz.) - No way to de/revaluate USD
- Practice free trade with no BoP or exchange rate
target - Accept BoP deficits, if needed
- No capital controls, keep the US capital market
open - Compared to the rest of the world, US monetary
policy independent, but provides a nominal anchor
for all
24Asymmetry US as a center country
- US never had to intervene
- If N countries, N-1 fix their currencies ? Nth
currency fixed by definition - Corollary US did not have to be afraid that in
case of BoP deficit, it will have to sacrifice
international reserves to keep fixed ExR - US was able to use monetary policy actively even
when exchange rates are internationally fixed - Advantage it can selfishly use it as a
stabilization tool (e.g. in a Keynesian sense) - Disadvantage US kept responsibility for world
price level
25IX.4 Post-war policies
26IX.4.1 Lessons from 1945-1948
- The reform solution, hinted above (IX.3), was
made feasible by - Marshall plan
- Adjustment of B-W International Monetary Standard
(IX.3.2) - Necessary, but not sufficient conditions for fast
recovery - Immediate needs
- Investment, namely in sectors food, coal, steel,
transportation - Free trade and larger market (not limited by
national boundaries) - Need to keep international reserves (USD) enough
to cover eventual deficits link to adjusted B-W
system - Social stability, keeping the political extremism
out of parliamentary life and execution
(governments)
27Four main lessons
- Understanding that Germany must be included into
European economic mainstream - The core is reform solution above, namely
- Monetary reform (to remove monetary overhang)
- Decontrol of prices, abolition of rationing
- Fiscal austerity
- Real wages under control, profits back into
investment - Keeping the real exchange rate competitive
- Looks very simply, but quite difficult to
understand (and form a policy) and even more
difficult to politically defend
28IX.4.2 Policy actions
- Systemic reforms, mainly price decontrols
- Most important example German monetary reform
in 1948 - Ludwig Erhard, economist, politician, statesman,
1948-1963 Minister of Economy, later, 1963-1966,
German Chancellor, his reform immediately
successful - Other countries similar actions, albeit with
different speed and different success - European devaluations in 1949
- Large range (from 8 in Italy up to 53 in
Austria), increase in competitiveness of European
exports - Both steps drastic measures, but triggered the
growth. However, many other accompanying policies
in different countries
29IX.4.2.1 Coordinated capitalism
- Neocorporatist structures negotiating bodies of
labor (workers), management and governments
(Tripartite), main goal - keep the real wage growths under control
- reassure workers that profits will be plugged
back into necessary investments - Institutionalization - different countries
various ways workers in supervisory boards
(D,A), PBO (NL), Cooperative Body for Increasing
Exports and Production (S), production
committees (N), etc. - Economic incentives to reach Tripartite
agreement tax breaks, social security,
unemployment insurance and benefits - Trade-off between wage restrain (workers) and
social security provisions (managers, governments)
30Regional cooperation (1)
- Unilateral opening of European economies
unfeasible danger of quick loss of forex
reserves - Access to large (multi-country) market
- Concentration of resources (human, material,
financial) to sectors with highest priority
again beyond the possibility of a single country - ? all this led to the creation of several crucial
regional institutions
31Regional cooperation (2)
- Marshall Plan coordination OEEC
- Later, till today, OECD
- The first school of European bureaucrats
- European Payments Union (EPU)
- Funded by Marshall Plan, countries had to accept
liberal policies - Multilateral cancellation of bilateral imbalances
- Credits to finance temporary deficits
- Mechanisms, forcing the countries to accept
corrective policies - Proved as successful in dealing with Europes
reserve crisis in late 1949, via support to BoP
of D and NL
32Regional cooperation (3)
- European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC)
- 1951 F, D, I, NL, B, L (not UK!)
- Coordinated the development of coal and steel
industries - The first truly supra-national European
institution, with bodies that resemble todays EU - In 1969 merged into EC
33Complementing the market
- Apart of many common policies above, there was
the crucial coordination question will market be
able to quickly direct the necessary resources
into most demanding sectors without the support
of the Government? - Mostly the answer was no and various countries
provided solutions in different ways
34Nationalizations and state ownership
- Nationalizations
- 1945 - UK (also Czechoslovakia), in 1955 A
- Confiscations and from pre-war period (F)
- By definition (D)
- Concentration of production/financial
conglomerates either in state hands or under the
control of few private groups - France control of banking system and most
important firms to direct credit to particular
sectors - Italy state-owned holding companies (IRI, ENI)
preferential credits, if they invest into heavy
industries - Spain copied the Italian example some years
later - Sweden Wallenberg family
35Indicative planning (1)
- In the situation immediately after the war, it
could have complemented markets - Setting targets, that markets were not quick to
achieve - Directing the resources to four most important
sectors above - Later, after 1952, it extended the coverage to
many areas that could have been better without
state intervention - To increase employment
- To ensure conditions for long-term growth
- To improve export performance of the country
- To develop the infrastructure
- To protect domestic industries and help to create
strong national companies - To support certain structure of energy resource
utilization (e.g. nuclear vs. coal) - It had some positive impact in the first years of
post-war reconstruction
36Indicative planning (2)
- Complements or distorts the markets?
- Competition vs. national monopolies
- Free trade suffers
- Bureaucracy
- Price distortions
- Financing, budget deficits
- Short-term gains vs. long-term losses
- The main problem
- Selective, targeted policies tax relieves,
cheap credits, export subsidies, direct
subsidies, structured tariffs, etc.
37National diversities
- Institutional differences different planning
agencies - F Commisariat Général du Plan
- NL Central Planning Bureau
- Japan Economic Planning Agency (EPA) and
Ministry for International Trade and Industry
(MITI) - Differences in social, political and cultural
aspects - D ordoliberalism
- Scandinavian countries strong feeling of social
solidarity from pre-war years - NL scientific and mathematical methods of
planning - Japan strong discipline, respect of the
authorities - All countries strong feeling that hard work,
saving and investment is needed ? between
1945-1952 common feeling and common approach
among different groups of societies
38IX.4.2.2 Personalities
- F Robert Schuman, Jean Monet
- D Konrad Adenauer, Ludwig Erhard
- B Paul-Henri Spaak
- I Alcide de Gasperi
- NL Jan Tinbergen
39IX.5 Conclusions
- Note Full evaluation of the period 1945-1969
will be provided in one of the later Lectures - 1945-1952 very difficult, extraordinary period,
that need extraordinary measures - Core of the solution market oriented reforms
monetary reform and price liberalization - Period of strong state intervention
- Probably justified in this short period
- Seeds of future problems
- Most countries extremely fast restart of the
economic machine - See data from LI
40Literature to Ch. IX
- On Bretton-Woods
- Krugman, Obstfeld, Chapter 18, pp. 499-500
- Solomon, R., The International Monetary System
1945-1976. HarperRow 1977 (excellent survey,
based on personal experience, also useful as to
Marshall Plan) - General
- Eichengreen, B., The European Economy Since 1945.
Princeton University Press, 2007, Chapters 1-4 - On different national approaches after WWII
- Gardner, Stephen H., Comparative Economic
Systems. The Dryden Press, 1988 - Marshall Plan
- Behrman, Greg, The Marshall Plan, Aurum Press
Ltd., 2008