[stop-imf] ECONOMY: Confessions of the Washington Ideologues (fwd)
Robert Weissman
rob@essential.org
Fri, 14 Jan 2000 23:05:20 -0500 (EST)
Excellent piece by Abid Aslam:
Robert Weissman
Essential Information | Internet: rob@essential.org
Copyright 2000, Inter Press Service
ECONOMY: Confessions of the Washington Ideologues
Analysis - By Abid Aslam
WASHINGTON, Jan 14 (IPS) - The past week has seen remarkable confessions
from officials at the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF)
about policy positions that have affected millions of people in borrowing
countries.
First, Joseph Stiglitz, outgoing chief economist and senior vice president
of the World Bank, faulted not only the results but also the very intent of
the agencies' response to the "Asian financial crisis." This, he said, had
been designed to coddle investors at the expense of workers.
"A standard message was to increase labour market flexibility, and the
not-so-subtle subtext was to lower wages and lay off workers," Stiglitz
declared.
The results included spiraling unemployment and severe deflation - falling
prices as a result of declining economic activity - a combination that
consigned 40 percent of the global economy to recession. This, even as
IMF-led emergency financing poured more than 100 billion dollars on the
financial wildfire that engulfed Asia and spread to Latin America.
Also this week, a team of IMF staffers admitted - albeit implicitly - that
their agency had been driven by ideology rather than empirical observation
in doggedly opposing capital controls. These are measures to regulate the
speed and volatility with which short-term and speculative investment -
so-called "hot money" - is allowed to cross borders.
Investors would shun countries using controls, the IMF has long argued,
setting back long-term hopes of tapping relatively cheap financing for
national development.
This week, the agency's Monetary and Exchange Affairs Department admitted
in a report that controlling both the inflows and outflows of capital has,
to varying degrees, helped countries to protect themselves from crisis.
Indeed, overwhelming capital inflows precipitated Asia's woes by
encouraging investment in projects of questionable financial pedigree and
economic merit.
The experience of countries that have sought to control short-term capital
inflows showed that "to be effective, the coverage of the controls needs to
be comprehensive, and the controls need to be forcefully implemented." Case
studies included Brazil in 1993-97, Chile in 1991-98, and Malaysia in 1994.
What's more, the IMF team conceded, Malaysian moves to control outflows
since 1998 - first by preventing, then by regulating foreigners seeking to
repatriate their investments - appear to have paid off.
"Since the introduction of the controls, there have been no signs of
speculative pressures on the exchange rate, despite the marked relaxation
of fiscal and monetary policies to support weak economic activity," the IMF
admitted. "Nor have there been signs that a parallel or nondeliverable
forward market is emerging; and no significant circumvention of efforts
have been reported."
Technical jargon notwithstanding, "it's so nice to see this arrogant and
disdainful agency have to eat crow," or admit it was wrong in slamming
Malaysia for introducing controls against IMF advice, said Doug Hellinger,
executive director of the Development Group for Alternative Policies
(DGAP), a Washington think tank.
That pleasure, Hellinger told IPS, was tempered by the knowledge that
vulnerable countries have been denied what the Fund now admits is a
legitimate policy tool.
What's more, the confession was not without considerable qualification.
"This review of...capital controls in 14 countries cannot be considered
exhaustive and it again illustrates the difficulty of precisely assessing
the effect of capital controls, which may have benefits as well as costs,"
the IMF report said.
As far as Malaysia was concerned, "the jury is still out," insisted Stefan
Ingves, a former Swedish central banker who now heads the department that
produced the IMF report.
Malaysia was well on its way to recovery, but time would reveal whether
the country would be punished with higher costs of access to international
capital markets. Nor could the IMF tell how much of Malaysia's improvement
was due to the capital controls and how much was because of other domestic
and international factors.
In any event, according to the report, "capital controls cannot substitute
for sound macroeconomic policies. Countries with serious macroeconomic
imbalances, and no credible prospect for improvement in the short run, were
regularly unable to address large-scale capital flows or their adverse
economic effects by using capital controls."
Thus, the Fund appeared to balance its retreat on capital controls with a
renewed push for economic restructuring in borrowing countries.
"Now that they're wrong, they raise other factors," Hellinger said. "They
never raised them before when their position was simple and outright
rejection of controls."
For years, the Fund has been urging countries to open their capital
markets to overseas investors and, until last year, had actively sought to
amend its charter so it could require member states to do so.
Enthusiasm for this idea has waned amid the financial crises of the past
three years. Successive meetings of IMF and World Bank member states have
seen a growing number of delegates from borrowing countries question the
merits of removing all restraints on what they see as herds of roaming
speculators.
By late 1998, the IMF had begun to shift its emphasis, urging a gradual
and properly-sequenced process of liberalisation to help countries mitigate
unsettling side-effects.
By last September's annual meetings of the Bretton Woods siblings, there
was no formal talk of the need to liberalise - much less make this part of
the IMF's central mission.
This does not mean the agenda has been abandoned, however. Fund and
outside analysts alike said this week that the agency was updating its
hymnal but its underlying religion remained unchanged.
"In the long run," Ingves argued, "capital controls are bad."
(END/IPS/12/EF/aa/ks/00)