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INTERVIEW: STANLEY FISCHER
An Economic Insider's View

Few people are ever privy to how world leaders try to cope with their
economic woes. But from his position at the IMF, Stanley Fischer
certainly was


INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND former deputy chief Stanley Fischer's
first day as vice-chairman of Citibank in New York earlier this month
was spent sorting out his computer connections and finding his
bearings in the nation's financial capital, where he has been a
presence but never a resident. The former Massachusetts Institute of
Technology economist, whose last job at the IMF was special adviser to
the managing director, also found time to talk to REVIEW editor
Michael Vatikiotis. His comments ranged across Asia's economic
landscape from the perspective of someone who has just left the IMF
and is about to launch himself into the uncertain world of private
banking. However, the main focus of the interview was on China and
Japan, and the likely fallout of a weaker yen on the region's
currencies:

WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON JAPAN?
We should be worried about Japan. Part of the 1997 crisis was related
to Japan. In particular, Japanese banks were bringing money back. That
was related to balance-sheet problems in Japan. If the Japanese
economy continues to decline, that's a very negative influence on
global growth. Now if the banking system gets significantly weaker
it's much less important in Southeast Asia than it used to be, but
it's still a major factor. So you'd have the transmission through
weakening of demand in Japan, and you'd have transmission through the
weak financial system.

WHAT SHOULD BE DONE?
My guess is that there are very high-quality people and they know
what's going on. Probably, as was true in the IMF, there are strong
internal arguments but you present a united face to the outside. I
would bet that the bureaucrats are pretty well informed. The question
is what will move the political system. The IMF has had a series of
disputes with the Japanese authorities over the extent of
nonperforming loans. There is an official estimate, but when year
after year the unofficial estimates turn out to be more accurate than
the official estimates, that loses credibility. And of course, the
quality of the loans is dependent on what happens to the economy. So
what may have been true at one moment when they expected 2%-3% growth
the following year is not true after another year of recession. The
difficulty is grasping the nettle. Everyone thought [Prime Minister
Junichiro] Koizumi would do it. The question is, if he can't do it who
will be able to do it?

WHAT'S THE SINGLE MOST IMPORTANT MEASURE THAT COULD BE TAKEN?
First, an accounting of the current situation that is more credible.
There is a remote possibility that the official estimates are correct
and the analysts' estimates are wrong, and if that is the case it
would be nice to find a way of establishing it. But I don't think
that's the situation. And then once that is done, a programme,
whatever it is, [is needed] that is more determined. In some cases
that will involve bankruptcies. I think the image of bankruptcies is
wrong in Asia. Here in the United States people think of bankruptcy as
a way to get on with business, mostly. The distinction between
bankruptcy and liquidation is well understood. In Japan, their view is
that if you need a procedure, or that somebody must go bankrupt, that
you're advocating a close-down of Japan, which I doubt would be the
outcome.

WHAT ARE YOUR VIEWS ON CHINA'S ECONOMY?
The dynamism in that economy is phenomenal. We've had a couple of
economies like [South] Korea go through sustained 35-year bursts of 7%
to 8% to 9% economic growth. China's been doing it for 25 years. It
has not had a big crisis like Korea had in 1982. In 1982 when you
looked at the numbers you couldn't tell that Korea would do better
than Latin American countries during the debt crisis, but of course
Korea was so much more capable of taking hard, dramatic action. I
suspect that China is more like that in terms of the political system
and the determination of the team when they see things coming.

Remember [the 1989] Tiananmen [Massacre] was politically awful but
that was the period in which they dealt with inflation-they just dealt
with it. My guess is they would move pretty fast on the banks and on
the exchange rate if they had to. So I'm judging a lot on people and
the political system. They've had superb economic leadership with Zhu
Rongji. He's not going to be there forever. But one man cannot do what
he's done. He must have had a team, so I assume there's a whole
apparatus in place that will help if there's a deep crisis. If the
growth rate comes down 3%-4%, that's a lot, though, for China.

IS THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM CHINA'S ACHILLES HEEL?
If there is going to be an Achilles heel, that looks like it will be
it. What one does, nonetheless, not know for sure, is that it will
happen. It's mainly because they have managed an incredibly difficult
process of transformation so well so far. Now, the American phrase,
which no doubt has a Chinese equivalent, is that trees don't grow from
the sky. You can't keep doing that, except that the Chinese have kept
on doing that. Furthermore they appear analytically to have grasped
what needs to be done with the banks by putting these assets in
asset-management companies and spinning them off for others to deal
with. So they've got the essence of the framework; now actually
getting all that done will be politically very hard. So I would say
the financial system is the weakest point.

IS CHINA'S GROWTH A THREAT TO THE REST OF ASIA?
It's very hard to imagine that China could have an absolute advantage
in everything. There are still formidable problems investing in China.
In most cases having a prosperous neighbour helps the countries on the
periphery. I have not seen a lot of cases where it is a bad thing to
be next to a rapidly growing economy.

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THE REGIONAL CURRENCY SITUATION?
The natural thing to think is that the yen will weaken because Japan
is weak. But actually, a weak Japan bringing back money from the rest
of the world could see a strengthening of the yen, which we've seen on
previous occasions. The yen strengthened as the economy weakened
because capital flows reversed and Japanese companies started bringing
financing home. I suppose more likely is a weakening of the yen that
would lead to a weakening of Asian currencies, that would be very
difficult for China.

If the yen weakens, the other Asian currencies will weaken. Korea is
clearly not pegging but is intervening. If you look at what happens to
the won, it moves according to some weighting of the dollar and the
yen. And if the yen goes, the won will go, somewhat, not 100%. And I'm
sure the Thais will see devaluation. Malaysia is stuck, but Malaysia
is undervalued, so is immune until a yen weakening has a big impact.
The Philippines is being very pragmatic on its exchange-rate policy.
So that would leave China very exposed. Would it match Japan? That
would be a very big change in policy to what is happening now, which
is that China is playing more and more an important role as a source
of stability, which is politically important to them. So I guess
they'd be reluctant to do it. Then there's the question of the rest of
the Group of Seven. My sense is that if the yen moves much beyond
135-140 to the U.S. dollar, the other countries will react quite
vociferously.


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