-Caveat Lector-

>From http://www.mises.org/fullstory.asp?control=1003

Wednesday, July 24, 2002

A Tradition of Defaults

by Antony P. Mueller

[Posted July 22, 2002]

Argentina's recent bankruptcy and the spreading financial  turmoil in its neighboring 
countries are just the
latest chapters in Latin America's long history of foreign debt and default.

The first wave of international payment inability occurred in the 1820s. After Latin 
American countries
regained access to external markets, it did not take long until the second wave of 
debt renunciations came, in
the 1880s. Declarations of payment inability followed before the outbreak of World War 
I, and further
defaults came in the 1930s. In the 1980s, almost all Latin American countries 
defaulted, and in 2002, the
mega default of Argentina took place, making the Latin American states the "perennial 
defaulters"[i] of the
past 200 years.

While wars have been the primary cause of European defaults, governmental profligacy 
and far-reaching,
illusory, state-sponsored plans of modernization lie at the bottom of Latin America's 
default tradition. By
experience, access to foreign money has become deeply associated with the good life, 
and governments
quickly lose their legitimacy when they fail to deliver.

Even in the face of the current financial crisis, which is most severe in Argentina 
and is about to infect a
series of other countries in the region, rare are the voices that point to the risks 
coming from foreign credit
accumulation and domestic credit expansion. On the contrary: those economists receive 
the most attention
who say that econometric models demonstrate that periods of foreign debt accumulation 
and domestic credit
expansion go hand in hand with economic prosperity, just as inflation goes with 
economic growth. The
promise of a free ride is easily taken up by politicians. Who wants to be guilty of 
producing stagnation?

When the borrowing spree comes to an end, it will be the misery rich countries and the 
greedy speculators
that will be identified as the culprits of another "lost decade."  It must be bad 
intentions that they stopped to
provide new money exactly when the region promised to take off into a new development 
stage. And it was
also the failure of the own governments because they could not manage to get more 
loans.

Gaining access to new foreign exchange forms the basis of the love-hate relationship 
between the debtor
countries of Latin America and the International Monetary Fund (IMF). When debt 
negotiations take place,
the IMF becomes the source of emergency financing and the catalyst for private 
lenders; in this regard, the
IMF's approval is highly welcome. Whatever the deeper rationale of the IMF's policy 
recommendations may be
in the intentions of the governments, it is access to new credit that is the 
overriding objective most of the
time.

Based on the theory that the countries of Latin America are "structurally dependent" 
on foreign capital,
economic policy receives its prime focus from the goal of manipulating the financial 
and macroeconomic
variables that are perceived to constitute the prerequisite for the access to foreign 
exchange. An unending
series of interventionist measures, along with constant endeavors to get contingency 
credit lines from the
IMF, produces the very reason why the dependency will persist and the debt burdens 
will increase.

In the wake of the Argentinean disaster, Brazil now is moving closer to default. As 
was true in Argentina,
economic policy in Brazil is characterized by the obsession to please the IMF. For 
almost two decades now,
economic policy measures in Brazil have been ruled almost exclusively by the proposals 
that have come from
the IMF; thus, the country could regain its access to foreign exchange. But playing 
the good boy has come at
a high price: step by step, internal and external debt levels have been approaching 
the threshold at which
payment inability becomes imminent and the country must go into default.

As promoted by the governments, the concept of "credit" has gained a peculiar 
connotation in Latin America's
financial culture. The meaning of credit has turned into the equivalent of a gift. The 
calculation of future
burdens in terms of interest and repayment is easily brushed away by a high time 
preference that permeates
almost all aspects of life. Access to credit opens the way to instant spending; thus, 
debt is accumulated,
even if--by prudent assessment--it is not that urgently needed. The common attitude 
says that present
money is real, while the service of credit is something of the future and is, 
therefore, unreal. Consequently,
when there is a chance of obtaining a credit, it will be taken.

There are many serious people in Latin America who would prefer to stop this 
disastrous game. But centuries
of easy-money policies and credit expansion have brought about a monetary culture that 
has become deeply
rooted. Those who prefer financial restraint have been taught again and again the 
harsh lessons of inflation
and confiscation. In the end, as the lesson says, goods are real; money is fake 
anyway. When the debt crisis
finally comes, and it always does, and when the government is unable to service its 
debt, the guilt is put
more on those who loaned money than on those who borrowed. While the borrower had at 
least a period of
good time, the lender rightly deserves to be punished due to his greed and gullibility.

The lessons learned by the domestic population are rapidly adopted by foreign 
investors. Due to the
permanent insecurity of the value of money and of property rights, even those 
investors who originally may
have intended to keep a more long-term position will turn into short-term traders. 
Then a game of tentative
mutual exploitation emerges, and strategies get implemented by both sides--strategies 
for which no game
theory is needed to predict their failure.



Antony P. Mueller is a professor of economics at the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, 
Germany. He was a
Fulbright Scholar in the U.S. and currently serves as a long-term  visiting professor 
at the Universidade
Federal de Santa Catarina in Florian�polis, Brazil, under the German-Brazilian 
academic exchange program.
He is an adjunct scholar of the Mises Institute and recently contributed to the QJAE. 
Send him MAIL, and see
his Mises.org Articles Archive.


[i] Niall Ferguson, The Cash Nexus. Money and Power in the Modern World 1700-2000, p. 
142 (New York
2001 (Basic Books)
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