The global financial crisis
ten years later triggered reforms to the IMF and the global financial safety
net that are still to be fully implemented. Without follow through on these
reforms — to correct the disenfranchisement of the emerging Asian powers in the
Bretton Woods system — the global financial system is vulnerable to Asia
starting or amplifying the next financial crisis. The uncertainty and risk as
China navigates its financial integration into the regional and global economy
magnifies that risk.
From the middle of 1997,
with Thailand, Indonesia and South Korea unable to defend their collapsing
currencies from capital flight, debt denominated in US dollars ballooned, asset
prices plummeted and these countries effectively became insolvent. Other
countries in the region were not affected as badly, but the crisis shook Asia
and brought it to its knees with a drop in incomes that more than matched that
in industrial countries in the Great Depression of the 1930s.
The IMF stepped in to stop
the crisis spreading but the help provided to Asia was late and the medicine
was bitter, with harsh, and in retrospect unnecessary, conditionalities that
had strong side-effects. The global financial crisis 10 years later saw very
different policies adopted towards North Atlantic economies. Perhaps the
lessons of the Asian financial crisis had been learnt; perhaps it had more to
do with the weight of the North Atlantic powers in the IMF and global
institutions.
The lesson for Asia was that
it had to build its own defences and insurance against crises. Asian economies
have accumulated vast foreign exchange reserves — increasing by almost ten-fold
since before the Asian financial crisis to US$11 trillion globally today — to
defend against financial shocks and capital flight. They also tried to beef up
regional cooperation and laid the foundations for their own institutions in the
region to protect against future financial shocks. Japan’s proposed Asian
Monetary Fund was a step too far but the Chiang Mai Initiative (CMI) — a set of
currency swap arrangements between countries — was created in 2000. The CMI was
then multilateralised in 2010 so that any member could draw on the funds in a
time of crisis.
No country has yet drawn on
the CMI’s regional pool of funds. And though it doubled to US$240 billion in
2012, that’s still not enough to be of help to the region’s large economies in
a time of crisis. Asia cannot rely solely on regional arrangements and nor
should it. Nor can the IMF as presently constituted cover the world.
The opportunity cost of
holding large foreign exchange reserves are high. US Treasury bills may be safe
investments but the return is low and those funds could be mobilised in more
productive investments. They also exacerbate the savings glut and currency
account surpluses. Even in times of crisis countries are hesitant to use them,
with none of the nine largest
emerging market economies touching their reserves during the global
financial crisis.
Without confidence in a
global safety net there is little option but to hold trillions of dollars in
reserves.
China is currently
hemorrhaging foreign exchange reserves at the rate of US$100 billion a month in
defending its currency.
Though this is likely to stabilise, there will be ongoing uncertainty in
managing risks in China’s financial market and capital account liberalisation
down the track.
Asia needs a financial
safety net and the current set of arrangements — the accumulation of foreign currency
reserves, bilateral currency swaps and the multilateralised Chiang Mai
Initiative — are not adequate. Nor does the IMF have the liquidity to bankroll
a major Asian financial crisis.
The reforms prescribed and
agreed to for the IMF in 2010 in the aftermath of the global financial crisis
are meant to help avoid the next major crisis. They were passed by US Congress
late last year and are currently being implemented. The five year gap prolonged
reliance on costly alternatives. Now as the reforms are implemented, quotas and
votes have been changed to better reflect the structure of the global economy,
though there is more to do. The IMF does not have, nor does it have to prospect
of having, adequate resources or reach unless it can serve to catalyse regional
or other cooperation.
In this week’s feature essay,
Adam Triggs argues that the global financial safety net ‘is too fragmented
because of the significant growth in regional, bilateral and domestic
arrangements that are increasingly decoupled from the IMF’.
The global financial safety
net, he suggests, is also ‘too unresponsive because this fragmentation has
reduced the safety net’s speed, flexibility, coverage and consistency in
responding to crises’. And it is too small given the size of the global
financial system.
Without an adequate
financial safety net there is less confidence in financial integration into the
global economy and reaping the benefits of opening up. The strength of the WTO
encouraged trade integration; a robust and reliable IMF is needed for financial
integration. The best option for pooling risk is at the global level,
especially given how financial integration has already proceeded.
The regional arrangements
play an important role but, to be effective, there needs to be coordination
with the IMF. Asia, left to its own devices, would find it difficult to
mobilise the resources or impose the conditions on neighbouring countries
needed to manage financial crisis. It’s been difficult enough in Europe to
mobilise the resources and negotiate an exit strategy, as the case of Greece
demonstrates, in a region with much more political cooperation and trust.
Access to a financial
lifeline before the crisis occurred or spread to other countries would have
contained the Asian financial crisis. Triggs explains that making precautionary
financing instruments available through the IMF would bring greater flexibility
and speed in responding to crises.
For the IMF to be fully
effective, emerging market economies must have a greater say. They now have
increased quota and voting rights (China until very recently had the same quota
and voting rights as Australia). Soon the emerging market economies will be
better represented on the elected board. Quota reform had been stalled because
of domestic political resistance in the United States but ultimately it was understood
that it’s in the interest of the American people to better protect their own
economy with a stronger global financial system.
But without a bigger and
more integrated global financial safety net the risks loom large. The reform
agenda is clear. The G20, the steering committee of the global economy, is
chaired by China this year but the only way China can lead is collectively,
through engaging the established powers, to fix the global institutions they
still dominate.
The G20 was at its most
effective and successful when the major powers came together in responding to
the last global financial crisis. The time has come for it to act to avoid the
next.
The EAF Editorial Group is
comprised of Peter Drysdale, Shiro Armstrong, Ben Ascione, Ryan Manuel and
Jillian Mowbray-Tsutsumi and is located in the Crawford School of Public Policy
in the ANU College of Asia and the Pacific.
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