---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Fri, 13 Nov 1998 04:00:40 +1300
From: janice <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Jeffrey Sachs to G7- Stop Preaching, Start Working

Stop Preaching:

The G7 has stopped blaming the victims for the global financial
crisis. Now it must give them a bigger say in reform:
By Jeffrey Sachs
The Financial Times
November 8, 1998
When the global financial crisis broke out last year, the Group of
Seven largest rich nations was quick to seize on Asian misdeeds as the
source of the crisis. This "blame-the-victim" approach was not only
erroneous but extremely harmful. The G7's rhetoric against "Asian
crony capitalism", backed by the International Monetary Fund's demands
for abrupt bank closures, swinging budget cuts, and sky-high interest
rates in the Asian countries, convinced the G7's own capitalists to
cut and run, helping to launch a worldwide panic.

Last week, the G7 finance ministers adopted a far more constructive
approach. True, the proposals reflect many continuing flaws,
especially a tendency to preach to developing countries. But if
followed up by real negotiations between creditor and debtor
countries, the initiative will lay the groundwork for a much improved
international financial system.

The declaration makes advances in four areas:
First, it calls for heightened supervision of creditor financial
institutions, including investment banks, hedge funds and offshore
institutions. There is surely a serious problem here. The
international banks had lent just five Asian countries - Indonesia,
South Korea, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand - no less than $
175bn (#104bn) in short-term loans by mid-1997, perhaps twice the
level of liquid foreign exchange reserves in those countries. It was
the flight of those loans, accelerated by the short positions of hedge
funds and investment banks, that brought down the Asian economies. At
the same time, the bail-out of Long-Term Capital Management, US hedge
fund, exposed the G7's own variants of crony capitalism, as well as
serious gaps in financial market supervision in the advanced
economies. Faulty risk management practices in the international banks
and weak banking supervision surely contributed to the debacle.

Second, the G7 has come down firmly against the IMF tradition of
secrecy. Recognising that it could no longer preach transparency to
debtor countries without exercising transparency itself, the G7 now
calls for a presumption "in favour of the release of information".
Equally importantly, it calls for formal mechanisms for external
review of IMF operations. A good start would be for the IMF executive
board to hold open sessions to take testimony from outside experts. I
am sure I would not be alone in warning the executive board of the
deep flaws inherent in any Brazil bail-out package in the context of
an overvalued currency and little large-scale private involvement.
Third, the G7 is more nuanced and realistic than previously about
capital market liberalisation. Such liberalisation, it acknowledges,
"must be carried out in a careful and well-sequenced manner if
countries are to benefit from closer integration into the global
economy". There is a lot of crucial detail left out of the
declaration. Will the G7 support, as it should, strong prudential
limits on cross-border flows of short-term loans? Will the Chilean
approach of taxing short-term inflows win international approval for
the first time?

Fourth, the G7 recognises, albeit in muted terms, the failings of
recent IMF bail-out loans, in which private-sector creditors walked
away with the IMF money, while debtor countries effectively
nationalised the private-sector debts. The early days of the Korean
and Russian bail-outs were particularly egregious. The IMF money went
out to foreign creditors as fast as it arrived to the debtor
governments. The Korean debacle ended only when Korea ran out of IMF
money, forcing the international bank creditors to agree to roll over
the debts owed by Korean banks. (Scandalously, the IMF stood by as the
Korean government was cajoled into guaranteeing the repayment on the
rolled-over bank debts).

In response to these abuses, the G7 declaration calls on the private
sector to play a larger role in crisis management and resolution,
aiming at "orderly work-out arrangements" in which the private
creditors, rather than the official lenders, provide emergency
financing. I have favoured this approach for years, pointing out that
US bankruptcy courts get working capital to municipalities and
corporations in financial distress not by the courts making loans
themselves, but by courts approving standstills on repayments of old
debts and granting priority on new market borrowing by the bankrupt
entity. The G7 has taken an important step in this direction, though
very gingerly, as the inter-national law in this area will have to be
built from scratch.

On the down side, the G7 completely ducks some of the most important
issues, especially international policies on exchange rate regimes. A
close reading of the emerging markets crises in recent years leaves
little doubt that pegged exchange rates have played a pivotal role in
the onset of crisis. The logic is roughly as follows. Countries
undertaking macroeconomic stabilisation (as in Latin America) of
financial liberalisation (as in east Asia) pegged their exchange rates
to the dollar as a confidence-building measure. Initially, capital
flowed in, tending to push up domestic prices in the midst of an
internal boom. As the boom peaked, the squeeze on exporters from the
pegged rate became clear. Investors therefore began to withdraw funds
in anticipation of a devaluation. Eventually, the central bank ran out
of reserves in hapless defence of the exchange rate. The sudden market
recognition that reserves were depleted set the stage for a
full-blooded financial panic.

While the G7 makes important advances in financial market regulation,
IMF openness, capital market liberalisation, and orderly work-out
arrangements, the headline grabber was the proposal for a new
contingency finance mechanism. This proposal can be either creative,
or a further waste of time and money.

If such contingency financing comes in the context of flexible
exchange rates, prudential limits on "hot money" flows, and orderly
workout arrangements which put the onus of emergency financing on the
private sector, then the new facility can be a constructive part of
the solution. If instead the IMF continues to be the lender of first
resort, aimlessly defending overvalued exchange rates while allowing
private creditors to make off with public funds, the new facility will
add to global instability. Brazil will be an early test of which of
those visions applies.

Let me make a categorical prediction. Until the poor are brought into
the international financial system with real power, the global economy
cannot be stable for long. The G7 countries, plus the rest of the
European Union represent a mere 14 per cent of the world's population.
Yet these countries have 56 per cent of the votes in the IMF executive
board. Even after a miserable year, the G7 declaration, for all its
advances, still reflects a haughty disregard for the rest of the
world. There is no talk about negotiation with the poorer countries,
no talk about finding a fairer voice for those countries in the new
international system. The rest of the world is called on to support
the G7 declarations, not to meet for joint problem-solving.

It would be much better to build on tentative moves towards a true
global dialogue such as the US's initiative to set up the Group of 22
"systemically significant economies" and the UN secretary general's
call for the a United Nations role in global financial reform. The aim
would be to ensure that a real community of nations works to solve
global problems. The G7 declaration looks forward to its next summit
in Cologne in 1999. For the good of the world, that summit should be a
dialogue of rich and poor together, not just a communion of the rich
pretending to speak for the world.



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Jeffrey Sachs is the director of the Harvard Institute for
International Development


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janice






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