Hot Money Blues
Paul Krugman, New York Times, March 24, 2013
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/25/opinion/krugman-hot-money-blues.html

Whatever the final outcome in the Cyprus crisis — we know it’s going
to be ugly; we just don’t know exactly what form the ugliness will
take — one thing seems certain: for the time being, and probably for
years to come, the island nation will have to maintain fairly
draconian controls on the movement of capital in and out of the
country. In fact, controls may well be in place by the time you read
this. And that’s not all: Depending on exactly how this plays out,
Cypriot capital controls may well have the blessing of the
International Monetary Fund, which has already supported such controls
in Iceland.

That’s quite a remarkable development. It will mark the end of an era
for Cyprus, which has in effect spent the past decade advertising
itself as a place where wealthy individuals who want to avoid taxes
and scrutiny can safely park their money, no questions asked. But it
may also mark at least the beginning of the end for something much
bigger: the era when unrestricted movement of capital was taken as a
desirable norm around the world.

It wasn’t always thus. In the first couple of decades after World War
II, limits on cross-border money flows were widely considered good
policy; they were more or less universal in poorer nations, and
present in a majority of richer countries too. Britain, for example,
limited overseas investments by its residents until 1979; other
advanced countries maintained restrictions into the 1980s. Even the
United States briefly limited capital outflows during the 1960s.

Over time, however, these restrictions fell out of fashion. To some
extent this reflected the fact that capital controls have potential
costs: they impose extra burdens of paperwork, they make business
operations more difficult, and conventional economic analysis says
that they should have a negative impact on growth (although this
effect is hard to find in the numbers). But it also reflected the rise
of free-market ideology, the assumption that if financial markets want
to move money across borders, there must be a good reason, and
bureaucrats shouldn’t stand in their way.

As a result, countries that did step in to limit capital flows — like
Malaysia, which imposed what amounted to a curfew on capital flight in
1998 — were treated almost as pariahs. Surely they would be punished
for defying the gods of the market!

But the truth, hard as it may be for ideologues to accept, is that
unrestricted movement of capital is looking more and more like a
failed experiment.

It’s hard to imagine now, but for more than three decades after World
War II financial crises of the kind we’ve lately become so familiar
with hardly ever happened. Since 1980, however, the roster has been
impressive: Mexico, Brazil, Argentina and Chile in 1982. Sweden and
Finland in 1991. Mexico again in 1995. Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia
and Korea in 1998. Argentina again in 2002. And, of course, the more
recent run of disasters: Iceland, Ireland, Greece, Portugal, Spain,
Italy, Cyprus.

What’s the common theme in these episodes? Conventional wisdom blames
fiscal profligacy — but in this whole list, that story fits only one
country, Greece. Runaway bankers are a better story; they played a
role in a number of these crises, from Chile to Sweden to Cyprus. But
the best predictor of crisis is large inflows of foreign money: in all
but a couple of the cases I just mentioned, the foundation for crisis
was laid by a rush of foreign investors into a country, followed by a
sudden rush out.

I am, of course, not the first person to notice the correlation
between the freeing up of global capital and the proliferation of
financial crises; Harvard’s Dani Rodrik began banging this drum back
in the 1990s. Until recently, however, it was possible to argue that
the crisis problem was restricted to poorer nations, that wealthy
economies were somehow immune to being whipsawed by
love-’em-and-leave-’em global investors. That was a comforting thought
— but Europe’s travails demonstrate that it was wishful thinking.

And it’s not just Europe. In the last decade America, too, experienced
a huge housing bubble fed by foreign money, followed by a nasty
hangover after the bubble burst. The damage was mitigated by the fact
that we borrowed in our own currency, but it’s still our worst crisis
since the 1930s.

Now what? I don’t expect to see a wholesale, sudden rejection of the
idea that money should be free to go wherever it wants, whenever it
wants. There may well, however, be a process of erosion, as
governments intervene to limit both the pace at which money comes in
and the rate at which it goes out. Global capitalism is, arguably, on
track to become substantially less global.

And that’s O.K. Right now, the bad old days when it wasn’t that easy
to move lots of money across borders are looking pretty good.

-- 
Robert Naiman
Policy Director
Just Foreign Policy
www.justforeignpolicy.org
[email protected]
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