[Washington Post]
Reform, Rhetoric and an Argentina on the Rocks

By Sebastian Mallaby
Monday, August 13, 2001; Page A15



After bailing out emerging markets in the 1990s, the world's leaders
thought they could come up with a better answer to crises. Bill
Clinton wanted to "adapt the international financial architecture to
the 21st century." Alan Greenspan wanted to change the "patchwork of
arrangements" that applied to global finance. Three years on,
Argentina's crisis shows why an unreformed system continues to pose
problems -- and why talking about change without delivering it may be
the worst of both worlds.

Over the weekend the International Monetary Fund held talks with
Argentina about a possible bailout. The fact that the IMF even
conducted these discussions is remarkable, because many IMF officials
doubt a bailout will work. The IMF already has awarded Argentina a $40
billion rescue package in January, and some suspect that a second one
will fare no better. Argentina, say the doubters, can't resume growth
until it reduces its huge debt -- a polite way of saying that
Argentina should default.

If Argentina were a U.S. company, this is precisely what it would do.
It would file for bankruptcy and use the court's protection to force
its lenders to take a haircut. But being a country, Argentina does not
have this option. There is no international bankruptcy court to
protect it: If Argentina tried to make its lenders take a haircut, the
lenders might take it to court. Judges might order the seizure of
Argentine assets to compensate international creditors. At the least,
the legal uncertainty involved in default without the benefit of
bankruptcy creates a powerful reason not to go down that route.

If the debate on international financial architecture had lived up to
its grand rhetoric, we might by now have some kind of global
bankruptcy court. But, because no such court has been created,
Argentina has a strong incentive to go for the next best option -- an
IMF bailout. Instead of reducing Argentina's debt burden, a bailout
merely would change the country's debt structure. Argentina would pay
off private loans with longer-term official loans, on the theory that
buying extra time may allow the economy to start growing again -- and
make eventual debt repayment possible.

This might work, which is why the IMF is even considering a bailout
despite misgivings among its staff. But although a bailout may be the
best policy available, it is not the best policy imaginable. Unlike
bankruptcy proceedings, bailouts allow banks and investors who lent
recklessly to get all their money out, which creates a morally
hazardous incentive for them to lend recklessly again. Unlike
bankruptcy proceedings, bailouts place the cost of the crisis on
borrowing countries, which are forced to take on new debt that their
struggling workers will be expected to repay.

So the first lesson from the Argentina crisis is that the
international system is imperfect. Does this mean Clinton and
Greenspan were right to wish for a better one, and that the Bush
administration is right to worry about moral hazard now? Well, get
ready for a paradox. The second lesson from Argentina is that the best
thing world leaders can do about the system's imperfections is to stop
discussing them out loud.

If the discussion led to changes in the international system, that
would be fine. But countries are too jealous of their sovereignty to
accept changes. An international bankruptcy court, for example, would
run up against different countries' conceptions of the proper balance
between lenders and borrowers. Moreover, bankruptcy courts have the
authority to remove a company's managers, and it is hard to imagine a
panel of international judges being empowered to fire Argentina's
elected government. So an international bankruptcy court is not on the
horizon. For lack of a better alternative, bailouts and the attendant
moral hazard will remain for years to come.

If public fretting about moral hazard does not change the financial
system, what does it achieve? Well, in the case of Argentina, Treasury
Secretary Paul O'Neill's anti-bailout rhetoric persuaded investors
until recently that no bailout was likely -- and therefore that
default was in the cards. To offset this perceived default risk,
investors demanded ever higher interest rates on Argentine securities.
But now suppose that the Treasury backs an Argentina bailout after
all. Anyone who bought Argentine bonds over the past six months will
end up having enjoyed high interest rates, offset by a risk of default
that turned out to be illusory. By inveighing against moral hazard and
then backing a bailout anyway, O'Neill would have enriched recent
investors, compounding the moral hazard that he deplores.

Of course, O'Neill may end up opposing an Argentina bailout, though
the recent signals from the Treasury suggest otherwise. It is
possible, too, that Argentina may default eventually and yet contain
the legal chaos; the country has retained Lee Buchheit, one of the
best Wall Street lawyers in this field. But the lessons from
Argentina's troubles already are apparent. The financial system is
imperfect, but there is a risk in rhetoric about reforming it. Empty
reform talk confuses the signals that policy makers send to markets,
making the problems that reformers care about paradoxically worse.

The writer is a member of the editorial page staff.


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