Free
flows in capital questioned
SEVERAL leading economists,
business and political leaders told attendees at The Nation's ''Asia: Back
to Basics?'' seminar that two themes currently being forwarded by the international
community -- emphasising free capital movements and concurrently adopting
greater exchange rate flexibility -- may be unworkable and incompatible
concepts.
Finance Minister Tarrin Nimmanahaeminda,
who chaired the seminar section, said that capital was critical for any
economy's development. ''The issue is providing mechanisms broad enough
to make savings and capital mobilisation efficient enough,'' he said.
Richard Cooper, professor
of international economics at Harvard University, said that these themes
were in deep tension with one another, and particularly incompatible for
countries such as South Korea and Thailand. ''These two countries were
performing very well economically, but suffered because they still had
weak and imperfect capital markets,'' he said.
He said that when other countries
traded with Thailand and Korea, most of them viewed the exchange rate as
each country's most important asset price. ''It's disturbing for any economy
to have its principal price for allocating resources among sectors jerked
around by changes in financial market sentiments,'' said Cooper.
Moreover, he added, it could
be argued that under those conditions, domestic financial markets will
not develop. ''Residents can hold their savings abroad,'' he said.
Cooper sees a deep tension
between the two objectives currently being propagated on developing economies
by the international financial community. ''I think there has been inadequate
understanding of the total consequences,'' he said.
He said economists had long
known of the incompatible triangle of fixed exchange rates, free capital
mobility and some flexibility in domestic monetary policy. ''A country
cannot have all of those three things at the same time in today's world,''
he remarked.
If countries choose two options,
such as fixed exchange rates and free capital mobility, he said they virtually
give up the autonomy of their monetary policy. ''Their monetary policy
will be determined principally by the world economic environment and by
the country to which their exchange rate is fixed,'' he said.
Cooper also warned that the
concept of floating exchange rates and free capital mobility in countries
with imperfectly developed capital markets was also incompatible. ''If
I'm right in this, countries such as Thailand will have to choose, and
it's an uncomfortable choice, between free capital mobility and some form
of fixed exchange rates and loss of monetary autonomy,'' he said.
Thailand, he said, could also
choose to float exchange rates, enact some form of international capital
restrictions, and maintain some preservation of monetary autonomy. ''There
are ways to influence capital movements without controls -- such as the
Chilean method of requiring non-interest bearing reserves,'' he said.
In 10 years, when Thais look
back at the current economic crisis, Cooper said they would remember this
as a period of adolescent growing pains. ''The real economy got out in
front of the financial system, which in turn got out in front of the regulatory
framework,'' he said.
In Cooper's view, Thailand
and Korea will be much stronger because of regulatory improvements and
lessons learned from the crisis.
Clark Andersen, a Goldman
Sachs vice president in charge of sovereign risk management, added that
the contagion effect of the current economic crisis showed that open developing
economies such as Thailand need some form of capital controls. ''Countries
must have the means with which to protect themselves from capital volatility,''
he said.
Admitting that his Wall Street
colleagues would recoil in disgust at his suggestion, Andersen said countries
such as Thailand needed some type of regulating mechanism because in today's
fast moving computer-driven economy, there was a disparity between the
contagion's speed and policy-making's deliberate pace. ''Governments simply
cannot react fast enough to keep up with a fast-moving crisis, as we have
seen over and over during the past two years,'' he said.
Andersen also warned Thai
policy officials to protect themselves from blindly applying free-market
thinking. He said that a global capital system as advocated by leading
economies such as the US did not and could not exist. ''Capitalism is,
and will remain, a national, and not an international phenomenon,'' he
said.
Both Andersen and Kosit Panpiemras,
Bangkok Bank's executive board chairman, emphasised that markets were only
sustainable to the extent they are embedded in social and political institutions.
They added that global markets required a foundation from global and social
political institutions, which do not exist.
Quoting current US treasury
secretary Larry Summers, Andersen said: ''We cannot have the impossible
trinity of continuing national sovereignty, financial markets that are
regulated, supervised and cushioned, and the benefits of global capital
markets. They are incompatible,'' he said.
Syahril Sabrin, Indonesia's
central bank governor, said that deterioration of confidence was the main
contributor to the current crisis. ''People suddenly lost confidence on
the future of the economy and in the government's ability to deal with
economic problems,'' he said.
To bolster Indonesia's recovery,
Sabrin said the central bank had to implement and execute a comprehensive
policy package which addressed key issues. ''First of all, we initiated
a tight monetary policy which was aimed to attain price and exchange rate
stability,'' he explained.
During the crisis's peak,
Indonesia's exchange rate depreciated from 2,500 rupiah per US dollar before
the crisis to 17,000 rupiah. Inflation ran close to 80 per cent and gross
domestic product shrunk by 14 per cent in 1998. ''We now have negative
inflation and the rupiah has strengthened and stabilised at 6,500,'' he
said.
Sabrin added that blanket
government guarantees on deposits in domestic banks and the current ongoing
government-led recapitalisation and restructuring of the financial sector
had contributed to the return of confidence in Indonesia's future.
He stressed that political
reform and the recent democratic elections had also gone a long way in
boosting sentiment. ''The recent crisis has taught us very valuable lessons.
We need to sit back and thoroughly evaluate what basic principles in economics
and business we have neglected or violated in the past,'' he said.
Indonesia, he continued, had
learned that it must be consistent and prudent in monetary management and
the implementation of general economic policies. ''We have learned that
we must strictly adhere to and consistently apply prudential banking practices,''
he said.
A final principle which Sabrin
said Indonesia had learned from the crisis is that over-optimism, particularly
for business prospects, is highly dangerous. ''We learned that companies
with prudent capital structures, namely low debt-to-equity ratios, survived
and were more resilient to withstand economic shocks,'' he said.
BY K I WOO
The Nation
07/31/99 |