Asia Can Fight Speculators Without Its Own IMF: Andy Mukherjee

Sept. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Indonesian authorities might have hoped for a 
salutary effect on the rupiah when they announced their plan to seek $6 
billion in standby funds from Japan to bolster the country's depleting 
foreign reserves.

Just the opposite happened.

After details of the rupiah-dollar swap agreement became public knowledge 
early last week and before the Aug. 31 signing of the accord between Bank 
Indonesia and Bank of Japan in Tokyo, the Indonesian currency slumped to a 
four-year low.

That's how little respect the market has for the ``Chiang Mai Initiative,'' 
a homegrown Asian mechanism that was born when the countries of Southeast 
Asia and their bigger North Asian neighbors -- Japan, China and South Korea 
-- came together to help each other fight off currency crises.

This is how the Chiang Mai Initiative is supposed to work: A country such as 
Indonesia, facing a speculative attack on its currency, borrows dollars from 
another country -- say, Japan -- and uses them to buy its own currency and 
shore up its value.

Including the recent $6 billion commitment by the Bank of Japan to swap 
rupiah against dollars, the size of the war chest is a tiny $52.5 billion.

The amount is small, and not just in relation to the $2.56 trillion foreign 
reserves held in Asia. During a contagion, like the region suffered in 
1997-1998, the International Monetary Fund and other lenders had to put up 
$119 billion to contain the speculative runs on Asian currencies.

Chiang Mai

The $52.5 billion kitty is inadequate for bailing out even a single country. 
That's because the initiative agreed upon in 2000 in Chiang Mai, a resort 
town in northern Thailand, is a cocktail of 17 deals, each between two 
countries. Indonesia's share works out to just $8 billion because it has, 
besides the arrangement with Japan, two other credit lines: $1 billion each 
from China and South Korea.

The second weakness is that the money, a 90-day credit facility to be 
renewed if required, isn't to be given in full when it's needed the most. 
Until the member countries agreed in May this year to raise the limit to 20 
percent, only 10 percent of any allocation was to be made available on 
demand.

The disbursal of the rest is contingent upon the crisis-hit nation entering 
an IMF program and accepting the loan conditions that come with it. That 
pretty much rules out Chiang Mai funds for a country that wants to avoid 
going to the IMF.

Asian Monetary Fund

Governments resent IMF conditions. Much as national authorities want help to 
prevent a collapse of their currency, they often find the lender's demands 
to be politically unfeasible and economically unbearable.

Right at the beginning of the Asian crisis, Japan had proposed a 
full-fledged Asian Monetary Fund, an idea that was shelved because of strong 
objections by the U.S. Treasury and the IMF. The Chiang Mai Initiative was 
born as a compromise.

It's clear that for Chiang Mai to become a true crisis- fighter, it must 
become a large common pool that's able to provide real help to any member 
country that may need it, when it needs it, while keeping lenders' interests 
secure.

At a meeting of Asian finance ministers in Istanbul in May this year, there 
was an agreement on simultaneously activating all swaps for any country 
through collective decision-making.

The ministers also resolved to establish a system for early detection and 
speedy resolution of irregularities that may precipitate a crisis. Is it 
possible to do all this without a powerful agency? Who would tell Indonesia 
to tighten its monetary policy? Wouldn't the creation of such a body amount 
to the revival of the Asian Monetary Fund idea? Not necessarily.

The surveillance mechanism could be modeled along the system that the Group 
of Seven industrial nations have created for their own economies.

Latin American Model

As for emergency funding during currency crises, a model exists, albeit on a 
much smaller scale, in the form of the Latin American Reserve Fund, set up 
by Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Venezuela, Peru and Costa Rica.

Member countries that have borrowed from this fund to tackle 
balance-of-payment problems have promptly repaid their loans even when they 
have suspended payments to other creditors. As a result, FLAR, as the fund 
is called, has a higher credit rating than its members, a United Nations 
report noted in July.

To be sure, a financial institution that works well for 97 million people in 
Latin America may not serve 2 billion Asians as effectively. However, there 
are other solutions. One of them, proposed by the Tokyo-based Institute for 
International Monetary Affairs, is for each country to earmark a small part 
of their foreign reserves for a region-wide crisis-prevention fund.

Meanwhile, long-awaited changes to the IMF's quota-based governance will 
make it more representative of Asian interests.

The rationale for a unified regional response to speculative attacks will 
remain, as recent events in Indonesia have so amply demonstrated. However, 
with changes in the IMF, the case for an Asian Monetary Fund will become 
weaker.



To contact the writer of this column:
Andy Mukherjee in Singapore at  [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Last Updated: September 5, 2005 20:23 EDT
http://quote.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=nifea&&sid=aFpeHQZzEVSY#




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