The Asian Crisis Ten
Years After


Joseph E. Stiglitz


 


This July marks the tenth anniversary of East
 Asia’s financial crisis. In July 1997, the Thai Baht plummeted.
Soon after, financial panic spread to Indonesia
and Korea, then
to Malaysia. In
a little more than a year, the Asian financial crisis became a global financial
crisis, with the crash of Russia’s
ruble and Brazil’s
real.


In the midst of a crisis, no one knows how far an economy
will drop or for how long. But capitalism, since its beginning, has been marked
by crises; each time, the economy recovers, but each crisis carries its own
lessons. So ten years after Asia’s crisis, it is natural
to ask: what were the lessons, and has the world learned them? Could such a
crisis recur? Is another crisis imminent?


Some similarities exist between the situation then and
today: before the 1997 crisis, there had been rapid increases in capital flows
from developed to developing countries – a six-fold increase in six years.
Afterward, capital flows to developing countries stagnated.


Before the crisis, some thought risk premia for developing
countries were irrationally low. These observers proved right: the crisis was
marked by soaring risk premia. Today, the global surfeit of liquidity has once
again resulted in comparably low risk premia and a resurgence of capital flows,
despite a broad consensus that the world faces enormous risks (including the
risks posed by a return of risk premia to more normal levels.)


In 1997, the IMF and the United States Treasury blamed the
crisis on a lack of transparency in financial markets. But when developing
countries pointed their fingers at secret bank accounts and hedge funds, IMF
and US
enthusiasm for greater transparency diminished. Since then, hedge funds have
grown in importance, and secret bank accounts have flourished.


But there are some big differences between then and now.
Most developing countries have accumulated massive foreign currency reserves.
They learned the hard way what happens to countries otherwise, as the IMF and US
Treasury marched in, took away economic sovereignty and demanded policies
intended to enhance repayment to Western creditors, which plunged their
economies into deep recessions and depressions.


Reserves are costly, for the money could have been spent
on development projects that would enhance growth. Nevertheless, the benefits
in reducing the likelihood of another crisis and another loss of economic
independence far outweigh the costs.


This growth in reserves, while providing insurance to
developing countries, created a new source of global volatility. Especially as
the dollar lost its sacred place as a store of value under the Bush
administration, rebalancing these multi-trillion dollar portfolios entails
selling off dollar holdings, contributing to the dollar’s weakening.


Developing countries have also increasingly borrowed in
their own currencies during the last few years, thus reducing their foreign
exchange exposure. For those developing countries that remain heavily indebted
abroad, an increase in risk premia would almost certainly bring economic
turmoil, if not crisis. But the fact that so many countries hold large reserves
means that the likelihood of the problem spreading into a global financial
crisis is greatly reduced.


In the midst of the 1997 crisis, a consensus developed
that there was a need for a change in the global financial architecture: the
world needed to do better in preventing crises and dealing with them when they
occur. But the US Treasury and the IMF realized that the likely reforms, as
desirable as they were for the world, were not in their interest.


They did what they could to ensure that no meaningful
reforms occurred during the crisis, with the knowledge that after the crisis,
momentum for reform would dissipate. They were more right than they knew. Who,
after all, could have anticipated that Bill Clinton would be followed by a US
president committed to undermining the multilateral system in all its
manifestations?


For example, when the IMF correctly suggested, after Argentina’s
crisis, that there needed to be a better way of restructuring debt (an
international bankruptcy procedure), the US
vetoed the initiative. When the OECD proposed an agreement to restrict bank
secrecy, the Bush administration vetoed that initiative, too.


Indeed, the two most important lessons of the crisis have
not been absorbed. The first is that capital market liberalization – opening up
developing countries’ financial markets to surges in short-term “hot” money –
is dangerous. It was not an accident that the only two major developing
countries to be spared a crisis were India
and China. Both
had resisted capital market liberalization. Yet today, both are under pressure
to liberalize.


The second lesson is that in a highly integrated world,
there is a need for a credible international financial institution to design
the rules of the road in ways that enhance global stability and promote
economic growth in developing countries. With the IMF so dominated by the US
(it is the only country with a veto) and Europe (which,
by custom, appoints its head), the Fund was long seen as representing the
interests of international creditors. Its failures in the 1997 crisis further
undermined its credibility, and its failure to do anything about the massive
global financial imbalances that represent the main threat to global financial
stability today, have underscored its limitations.


Reforms are still needed – including an overhaul of the
global reserve system. We may not be facing a repeat of the global financial
crisis of 1997, but make no mistake, imperfections in the global financial
system can still be costly, both in terms of global prosperity and stability.


** Joseph Stiglitz is a
Nobel laureate in economics. His latest book is Making Globalization Work.


Copyright: Project
Syndicate, 2007 http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/stiglitz89







       
____________________________________________________________________________________
Looking for a deal? Find great prices on flights and hotels with Yahoo! 
FareChase.
http://farechase.yahoo.com/

Kirim email ke