---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Mon, 28 Sep 1998 15:38:16 +0000
From: "Janet M. Eaton" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Contagion & Deflation -on lips @ IMF/WB Meeting !!!

For your information, 
je 

THE INDEPENDENT, London, September 28, 1998

Andreas Whittam Smith -
          The financial virus can only
          be kept off-shore for so long 

          Contagion and deflation: these are the two words
          which will be on the lips of finance ministers,
          central bankers and commercial bankers as they
          congregate in Washington tomorrow for the
          annual meetings of the International Monetary
          Fund and World Bank. Contagion, because
          financial panic is akin to a viral disease, easy to
          pick up, difficult to shake off. Deflation, because
          in some parts of the world, consumer prices are
          beginning to decline, a rare phenomenon which is
          just as dangerous as inflation.. 

          This is what contagion means in practice: your
          high-street bank, conducting business in many
          parts of the world, has lost a sizeable amount of
          money in lending to, say, an Asian business with
          interests in Indonesia. Nothing to do with you, a
          small British business, trading locally, except that
          when you go to renew your overdraft facility, you
          find, to your surprise, that the negotiation is much
          more difficult than you expected. Your banker is
          uptight because his or her bosses are scared. 

          Contagion is fear, the emotion which, with its
          opposite, greed, causes financial markets to
          oscillate wildly and explains why the business
          cycle, boom followed by bust and then boom
          again, can never be banished. "Contagion" hasn't
          been used in this sense in financial markets
          before, although financial panics have been a
          regular occurrence since money was invented.
          But the word is appropriate this time because of
          the unusually virulent nature of the 1998 panic.
          This one has new characteristics. Globalisation
          has meant that banks and financial institutions
          have been able to put money into countries which
          used to be closed to Western investors - like
          Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam, Russia itself,
          Turkey, Chile. As a result, the shocks originally
          generated by Thailand's devaluation, and then by
          Russia's default, have shaken every financial
          market in the world. 

          Moreover, many of these professional investors
          have relied more heavily than ever upon
          borrowed capital. So called hedge funds -
          George Soros' stamping ground - often borrow
          five or six times their investors' funds. 

          It is said, for instance, that a single hedge fund
          had a position in the Thai currency equivalent to a
          fifth of the country's reserves. With such high
          levels of borrowing, relatively small mistakes can
          wipe out a fund's capital. This is precisely what
          happened in New York last week when the
          Federal Reserve bank had to organise a $3.5bn
          bail-out of one of the largest US hedge funds, the
          misleadingly named Long-Term Capital
          Management. Every one of the 11 main lenders to
          Long-Term Capital, ranging from Goldman Sachs
          to Barclays and Deutche Bank, are major players
          in the London market. From Britain's point of
          view, their business with Long-term Capital
          would be classified as 'off-shore' but you cannot
          keep a virus off-shore for long. 

          Let there be no wishful thinking. Financial panics
          inevitably cause recession. Lenders become
          cautious where they are not actually frightened.
          Credit is restricted. As a consequence economic
          activity is bound to shrink. However, now there is
          a new question to ask. Will this next recession be
          like its predecessors since 1945? Unemployment
          rises significantly while inflation is subdued but not
          eliminated. 

          Or will it more closely resemble the pre-war
          model, when rising unemployment is accompanied
          by falling consumer prices, as last happened
          during the Thirties? 

          Look at the evidence. The oil price is
          spectacularly weak . Other commodity prices are
          generally at 20-year lows. Even in the United
          Kingdom, where inflation is still present, the rise in
          factory prices is the slowest for 30 years. 

          In China, deflation has actually begun; consumer
          prices in August were 3.3 per cent below their
          level 12 months earlier. 

          The Chinese Government is considering setting
          price floors for a variety of products. Japan is on
          the brink of deflation; France and Germany are
          nearly there with current inflation rates of one per
          cent. The forthcoming recession, therefore, could
          tip a number of countries into a deflationary
          experience. 

          This would not be nice. In a regime of falling
          prices, consumers think it wise to defer purchases
          for as long as possible in order to buy more
          cheaply. This natural reaction itself makes it less
          likely that business activity will revive and tends to
          cause prices to fall even more quickly. Moreover,
          anybody with interest to pay on debts and/or
          capital repayments to make would find the task
          had become much more expensive in real terms.
          This could add to the financial strains in the
          system. In addition, governments would have lost
          the use of one of the main instruments for reviving
          confidence and activity - cutting interest rates.
          Interest rates cannot be set below zero. And in
          deflationary times, any positive rate of interest
          might begin to seem like a burden. 

          Before it is too late, can governments devise
          policies to counter the deflationary risk? The few
          commentators who have taken seriously the
          possibility of deflation, such as Roger Bootle in
          his excellent book The Death of Inflation
          (published by Nicholas Brealey), have doubted
          whether governments would act quickly enough,
          so absorbed has the economic establishment been
          for 50 years in fighting inflation, always expecting
          prices to start rising again whenever they have
          been subdued. 

          However, recent statements have shown
          recognition of the danger. The seven leading
          industrial powers said on 14 September that
          inflation was low or falling in many parts of the
          world and "the balance of risks in the world
          economy has shifted". Subsequently, the most
          important central banker, Alan Greenspan, the
          chairman of the US Federal Reserve, observed
          that the deepening economic crisis may slow the
          American economy by "more than sufficient to
          hold inflation in check". Decoded, these
          statements mean, "We see the problem". The
          IMF and World Bank meetings are timely. 

          Watch out for two things. Are governments
          prepared to cut interest rates while such action is
          still efficacious? And will countries with too much
          debt, such as Italy, Belgium, Sweden and
          Canada, show resolution in reducing its level? 



--
For MAI-not (un)subscription information, posting guidelines and
links to other MAI sites please see http://mai.flora.org/


Reply via email to