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-------- Original Message --------
Subject: TWN Finance: South Centre report argues that the G20 agenda 
misses some of the key issues for reform of the international monetary 
system
Date: Wed, 10 Nov 2010 12:00:45 +0800
From: Third World Network <[email protected]>
To: Third World Network-2 <[email protected]>


TWN Info Service on Finance and Development (Nov10/05)

10 November 2010

Third World Network

www.twnside.org.sg


South Centre report argues that the G20 agenda misses some of the key 
issues for reform of the international monetary system

This is based on the South Centre report on "Why the IMF and the 
International Monetary System Need More than Cosmetic Reform"

The hopes of a rapid global economy recovery have recently been dashed 
by renewed turmoil in the world economy. The sovereign debt problems in 
several European countries, the gyrations in currency exchange rates, 
volatility in capital flows, and the war of words among major economies 
over “trade sanctions” and “competitive devaluations” are some of the 
many troubling signs of a new crisis that may be worse than the 2008-9 
crisis triggered by the US sub-prime mortgage problem.

The South Centre report on “Why the IMF and the International Monetary 
System Need More than Cosmetic Reform” authored by the Centre's Special 
Economic Advisor, Yilmaz Akyüz argues that these recent problems reflect 
the lack of international mechanisms to prevent financial crises that 
have global repercussions and that threaten to spill over to the trading 
and economic systems.

The report points out that:

• There are no effective rules and regulations to bring inherently 
unstable international financial market and capital flows under control.

• There is no multilateral discipline over misguided monetary, financial 
and exchange rate policies in systemically important countries despite 
their strong adverse international spillovers.

• National and international policy makers are preoccupied primarily 
with resolving crises by supporting those who are responsible for these 
crises, rather than introducing institutional arrangements to reduce the 
likelihood of their recurrence. Through such interventions, they are 
creating more problems than they are solving, and indeed sowing the 
seeds for future difficulties.

The South Centre report is being issued on the eve of the G20 Summit in 
Seoul in early November. The G20 has established itself as the forum to 
deal with the financial crisis.

According to the report, however, the G20 and the IMF agenda does not 
include some of the most important issues that need to be addressed to 
deal adequately with the financial crisis or prevent future crises.

The missing issues include enforceable exchange rate and adjustment 
obligations, orderly sovereign debt workout mechanisms and the reform of 
the international reserves system.

Developing countries are especially vulnerable to the effects of the 
global financial problems, and they also have limited capacity to 
respond to shocks. They thus have a special interest in the reform of 
the international financial and monetary system, including the IMF.

The reforms should lead to the establishment of an orderly and equitable 
international monetary and financial system. However, if this does not 
materialise, developing countries should find ways and means of 
protecting themselves and looking after their interests through regional 
mechanisms.

These include arrangements regarding regional currencies and exchange 
rate mechanisms, intra-regional provision of international liquidity, 
policy surveillance and regulation of financial markets and capital flows.

Global solutions are better than such regional arrangements and 
developing countries should strive to realise them. But if major 
economic powers do not cooperate in building the new global system, it 
is definitely better to have the regional arrangements than to have 
a “non-system” in which the developing countries continue to be the 
victims of global financial crises.

The report can be accessed at the South Centre website 
(www.southcentre.org) or by clicking here

***

TWN Info Service on Finance and Development (Nov10/04)

10 November 2010

Third World Network

www.twnside.org.sg

Ahead of G-20 Summit, Capital Controls Gain New Currency

(NOTE: This is an article published by the Inter Press Service)

By Marwaan Macan-Markar, Bangkok, 5 November 2010

Korea’s closing of ranks with Asian countries that have recently 
embraced capital controls signifies that such measures will be up for 
discussion at next week’s summit of the world’s 20 major economies in Seoul.

This move by South Korea, on the eve of the G-20 summit on Nov. 11-12, 
reflects Asian economies’ worries about the pressure on their currencies 
– and their financial sectors – caused by the disruptive flood of 
short-term foreign capital in recent months.

The imposition of capital controls by Thailand, Taiwan, China, South 
Korea and Indonesia gives new legitimacy to what was seen after the 1997 
economic crisis as a radical measure that undermines free-market policies.

South Korea itself was among the countries badly hit by that crisis. 
"The government believes it needs to turn away from the perception that 
controlling capital flows is always bad and consider introducing 
measures to improve the macroeconomic prudence," South Korea’s ministry 
of strategy and finance said in a Nov. 4 statement.

Indeed, "several developing countries are countering excessive capital 
inflows (and pressures for currency appreciation) either by intervention 
in the currency market, or by capital controls such as taxes on certain 
types of foreign capital entering the country," wrote Martin Khor, 
executive director of the South Centre, a Geneva-based developing world 
think tank, in a recent commentary.

"The governments concerned have a good case when they argue that these 
measures are needed to protect their countries from the damaging effects 
of speculative capital inflows, and that they are not manipulating their 
currencies," he added in his assessment made after the October meeting 
of G-20 finance ministers and central bank governors in South Korea.

Thus far, several Asian economies have imposed different forms of 
capital controls to deal with the unsettling impact of huge amounts of 
capital coming from developed economies. In October, the Thai government 
introduced a 15 percent tax on short-term inflows into its bond market.

Earlier in June, Indonesia introduced what financial analysts describe 
as a "quasi-capital control measure" by making short-term investment 
less attractive to foreign funds. The South Korean government has moved 
to stabilise the won by limiting assets accessible to foreign capital, 
while Taiwanese officials have made some bank deposits off limits to 
foreign investors.

Asian economies hope these measures can manage the capital inflows that 
they have been receiving and putting pressure on their currencies, 
driving their appreciation and prompting exporters to cry foul. ??The 
Japanese yen has appreciated the most, reaching a 15- year high against 
the U.S. dollar in August, followed by the Thai baht, whose appreciation 
in October hit a 13-year high against the dollar, media reports say.

Under renewed pressure to address the perceived undervaluation of its 
currency, China has allowed the yuan to appreciate by more than 2 
percent since June. Financial experts predict continued pressure on 
Asian currencies in the near future. It is actually these Asian 
economies’ financial health following the global financial crisis, which 
began in late 2008 in the United States, that is helping prompt this 
West- to-East capital flight.

"Asian economies are back on track. They are the world’s growth driver, 
the emerging centre of economic gravity," says Nagesh Kumar, chief 
economist for the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the 
Pacific (ESCAP), a Bangkok-based U.N. regional body. "The massive inflow 
of short-term capital reflects the confidence in the region’s emerging 
markets." "Even at the height of this crisis, Asia and the Pacific 
displayed a newfound resilience," stated ESCAP in its annual ‘Economic 
and Social Survey of Asia and the Pacific 2010’.

"Its developing economies achieved an annual growth rate of four 
percent, making it the fastest-growing region in the world." Such 
impressive numbers, heavily shaped by China’s GDP growth of 8.7 percent 
and India’s 7.2 percent in 2009, has ESCAP forecasting that the region’s 
developing economies will grow by 7 percent in 2010 compared to 4 
percent in 2009, "led by the self-sustaining motors of China, growing at 
9.5 percent, and India at 8.3 percent."

But amid concerns by Asian economies that their excessive liquidity 
would lead to inflationary pressure, asset price bubbles and job losses 
in the export sector, they are turning to capital controls as their 
rallying cry. In fact, in the run-up to the G-20 summit, ESCAP convened 
a meeting of its over 50 member states to support the use of such 
controls. "The message we sent was that the G-20 should support member 
states to use mechanisms to control capital flows," Kumar told IPS.

"Capital controls will protect the countries against currency 
appreciation and will help moderate the volatility of capital inflows, 
which are causing the problems." Even the International Monetary Fund 
(IMF), at one time a resolute opponent of such intervention, has been 
warming up to the idea of capital controls. In 2010, an IMF study 
praised its role in reducing the impact of the global economic crisis on 
the developing world.

This rethink by the IMF marks a dramatic shift from its position in the 
wake of the 1997 Asian financial crisis, when it opposed then Malaysian 
Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad’s use of capital controls to protect the 
Malaysian currency and economy. ?Mahathir was vindicated after his 
country became the first success story to rise out of South-east Asia’s 
economic meltdown. Indonesia and Thailand, which went with IMF 
prescriptions that avoided capital controls and included strict 
austerity measures, suffered longer.

Yet some caution against a rush toward capital controls. "This is a 
global issue, a systemic issue. If many countries introduce capital 
controls, where will this global liquidity flow?" asks Masahiro Kawai, 
head of the Asian Development Bank Institute, a Tokyo-based think tank 
for the regional financial institution.

"It is not a global solution; capital controls may be okay for smaller 
economies," Kawai said in a telephone interview from Manila. "This 
global liquidity has to be neutralised. And many countries must allow 
their currencies to appreciate in an equal and even way." (END)

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