China's
Currency
PART
2: Tequila trap beckons China
By
Henry C K Liu
PART I - Follies of fiddling with the yuan
This article
appeared in AToL
on November 6, 2004
China is attempting to use macro policy measures to slow its overheated
economy to avoid a dreaded hard landing. Yet a hard landing may be
precisely the cold-turkey medicine needed to veer China away from an
addiction on export for fiat dollars not backed by any specie of value.
Soft-landing is a flawed imagery because there are few economic runways
long enough to land an economy plagued by speculative acceleration.
Running a plane off the runway is much more dangerous than a controlled
hard landing.
The term "macro
policy measures" is illusive and confusing. No one
knows what it means precisely, typical of many economics slogans. There
is not much wrong with China's economy that cannot be cured by focusing
on domestic demand stimulation through a deliberate policy of full
employment with rising wages, away from low-wage exports for fiat
dollars that cannot be reinvested in the yuan economy. Tinkering with
interest rates and exchange rates in the context of a failed
neo-liberal ideology is to miss the defoliation of monetary forests by
focusing on pruning the money trees.
Neo-liberal
globalization of financial markets has become a euphemism
for an age of global debt bubbles. Arguably, the distinction between an
economic bubble and solid fundamentals can only be perceived after the
bubble bursts. So the question of a bubble can be a conceptual dilemma,
like the mental phenomenon of forgetting. One does not realize
something had been forgotten until after one again remembers it. Thus
improving one's memory theoretically increases incidents of
forgetfulness.
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Still, some useful
observations can be made about the high market value
of dollar assets at this juncture in the history of finance capitalism.
Financial assets denominated in fiat dollars are now mostly built on
debt, with sizable amounts in debts external to the US economy. Debt is
not intrinsically objectionable if it is adequately collateralized by
real assets, and the proceeds are invested to increase income to
service the debt. But if debt is collateralized mostly by the wealth
effect of speculative asset appreciation and serviced by incurring more
debt, a bubble is in the making. The so-called air-ball financing,
widely used in financing global telecom expansion in the 1990s, in
which unrealistically anticipated future earnings were used as
collateral for financing over-investments to generate those very
earnings, caused the telecom bubble. A housing bubble exists because
houses are being financed by full-cost mortgages at negative interest
rates, banking on the continuing rise in home prices.
The
making of a bubble
The size of the invisible dollar money pool created by financial
derivatives is now many times (no one knows how many) the amount of M3,
a money supply category accounting for the sum of all short-term liquid
funds, excluding treasury bills, savings bonds, commercial papers,
bankers acceptances and non-bank euro-dollar holdings of US residents.
Granted, derivative notional values are not the amount at risk, as they
are the underlying asset values that exist only as a notion for
calculating the amount of risk to be managed. But notional values allow
the contracting parties to bet on the derivative implications of
virtual assets they neither own nor can safely afford.
At the end of 2002,
the notional value of the dollar derivative market was $56 trillion. A
1% shift in rates would cause a $560 billion change in interest
payments. A speculator with a net worth of $1 million now can bet on
derivatives with a notional value of $100 million, hedging a risk of $1
million with every change in the interest rate of 1%, equaling to his
entire net worth. Since risk is never eliminated but only transferred,
the total risk exposure in the system is inflated by fantastic notional
values. Interest payments derived from notional values can then become
larger than the actual amount of the real capital in the economy.
Derivatives fit the
definition of bubbles, being all air and little substance. Warren
Buffet calls them, with justification, financial weapons of mass
destruction. This invisible supply of virtual liquidity outside the
reach of central banks supports an artificial level of asset market
value detached from fundamentals. Any abrupt, premature unwinding of
these private derivative contracts based on fantasy notional assets
will inevitably cause drastic readjustments in asset prices in the real
markets.
The pervasive
securitization of debt blurs the all-important dividing line between
debtor and creditor and allows an economy to borrow from itself, not
just against its future, but against its current and less sophisticated
debt, not for productive investment but for financial manipulation. The
use of less sophisticated debt as collateral for more sophisticated
debt has characteristics of a bubble. The broad disaggregating of risk
to maximize transactional surplus (profit) ultimately leads to the
socialization of risk (transferring unit risk onto systemic risk) while
the privatization of the resultant profit remains a sacred
prerequisite. The Bank of International Settlement "Lamfalussy Report"
defines systemic risk as "the risk that the illiquidity or failure of
one institution, and its resulting inability to meet its obligations
when due, will lead to the illiquidity or failure of other
institutions".
Global systemic risk
is the illiquidity in one economy leading to illiquidity in other
economies, through what economists call contagion. Asian financial
systems are less developed in securitization and structured finance.
But while Asian economies forego the benefits of the brave new world of
financial engineering, they are not rewarded with any immunity from
global systemic penalties which dollar hegemony imposes on the dollar
economy. China, being the least developed in global finance, is highly
disadvantaged by this imbalance of risk and reward.
Under the accounting
rules of capitalism, capital cannot exist until ownership is
specifically assigned. Thus socialization of capital is a
self-contradiction in term and must stay off the balance sheets of the
capitalist financial system. To own assets, even a government must act
as if it is a corporation, a "legal person". Thus private property and
individualization are inseparable. Pension fund assets and other forms
of collectively owned assets must adopt the governing characteristics
of private capital in order to participate in the economic system. Such
assets enjoy no prerogative to invest at less than maximum profit for
the common good because in a capitalistic market economy, the ultimate
definition of the common good is maximum profit.
Thus employee
pension funds will invest for highest returns in companies that ship
their members' jobs overseas to low-wage economies. The formula of
socialization of risk in support of privatization of profit leads to
the hollowing of the center - a classic definition of a systemic
bubble. Yet the ownership of debt is largely socialized, dispersed
throughout the global financial system, with encouragement of moral
hazard, which is the lack of fear for private consequences of financial
adventurism. The pleasure of excess is not limited by any excess of
pleasure. Golden parachutes are provided free for financial
adventurers, paid for by the public as unknowing victims through
central-bank-induced inflation.
Whether or when a
bubble will burst depends on a government's ability to extend its
elasticity, which is not unlimited, notwithstanding US Fed chief Allan
Greenspan's wizardry. Such elasticity comes from liquidity. To support
the market, government increasingly needs to intervene, which in turn
destroys the market. As is already apparent, the Federal Reserve is
increasingly reduced to an irrelevant role of explaining the economy
rather than directing it. It has adopted the role of a clean-up crew of
otherwise avoidable financial debris rather than the preventive
guardian of public financial health.
In a financial
bubble, the monetary value of financial assets rises but the real
economy itself may not be growing. But asset price appreciation is
defined as growth, not inflation. Thus we have robust "recoveries" that
continue to lose jobs, with the value of money protected by structural
unemployment and underemployment. In the finance sector, wealth is
created by escalating systemic risk exposure, known in the street now
as the "Greenspan put". A writer of a put option profits by the stock
at the end of the contract remaining stable, rise, or fall by an amount
less than his pre-received profit or premium. Inflation and deflation
have become two sides of the same coin that alternate as monetary
concerns in a matter of months, through highly-manipulated markets of
foreign exchange that tend to destabilize real economies via a
multitude of channels, such as wealth disparity effects,
off-balance-sheet creative accounting and alternating recurrences of
credit excesses and crunches. Volatility has become regular market
opportunities.
A few months
earlier, China was blamed by Western economists for exporting deflation
through an undervalued currency. Now China is being blamed for
exporting inflation also through an undervalued yuan while the Chinese
currency continues to be pegged to the dollar. Yet China does not have
an export economy; it has a re-export economy. Most of the factors of
production for Chinese exports are imported, such as capital, raw
material, infrastructure systems, energy, capital equipment, design,
financial services, machine parts, intellectual property licensing,
offshore distribution and sales, the only exceptions being labor and
raw land.
China's trade
deficit widened sharply in April to $2.26 billion from $540 million in
March due to the growing demand for raw materials and energy resources.
That was the fourth consecutive monthly trade deficit this year.
Exports rose 32% in April, compared with a year earlier, to $47.1
billion, and imports jumped 43%, to $49.4 billion. In the year's first
four months, China's exports reached $162.74 billion, up 33.5% from a
year ago, and imports rose 42.4%, to $173.5 billion. China incurred an
overall trade deficit of $8.4 billion in the first quarter of 2004. The
January-April deficit was $10.76 billion. If anything, China is
importing inflation that is now at a 5.3% annual rate. Much of China's
inflation comes from commodity and energy imports, the prices of which
are denominated in dollars and set outside China.
The recent global
commodity market bubble is not caused by real increased demand by the
Chinese economy but by speculation fueled by low dollar interest rates
and speculation of China's future demand based on anticipated Chinese
export growth. Yet the inevitable rise in dollar interest rates will
burst the commodities bubble, affecting the exchange value of the
currencies of commodity-exporting nations such as Australia, South
Africa and Chile. It will also torpedo the anemic US recovery and curb
demand for Chinese exports. The global economy, led by super-low
short-term dollar interest rate, has been sustained by carry trade, a
technical term that describe a speculative strategy of borrowing
short-term in low-interest money markets to invest for gain in
long-term high-interest money markets, or to speculate in
high-inflation sectors such as commodities. A steep fall in copper,
gold and other metal prices in the final week of April 2004 suggested
that the two-year boom in commodity markets might be coming to a close,
except for oil, whose price is being driven by the second Iraq war and
climatic factors.
Hegemony hazards
Copper and nickel each lost more than 5% of their value on April 28,
2004, accelerating a drop that began early in the month. Copper, the
most widely used industrial metal, traded at $2,657 a metric ton on the
London Metal Exchange, down from $3,100 in late March, having more than
doubled from early 2003 until the March 2004 peak. The price collapse
was described by traders as blowing off speculative "froth". Nickel,
used for making stainless steel, has lost almost 40% of its value since
reaching a peak of close to $18,000 a metric ton in early January 2004.
The gold price was fixed in London at $386 an ounce on April 28, down
from a peak of $428.20 in January 2004. Gold closed in London at
$423.45 on October 22. December delivery gold was at $425.60. The
growing nervousness in the metal markets stems mainly from China's
moves to cool its fast-expanding economy as well as a recent rebound in
the dollar, reflecting expectations of higher dollar interest rates.
The rebound of the dollar has roiled metal markets because most prices
are denominated in dollars and often move in the opposite direction.
Booming demand from
China has been blamed for driving the spike in commodity prices since
late 2002, with China either overtaking or approaching the US as the
world's biggest consumer of materials like aluminum, coal, copper, iron
ore and steel. But with fears growing of an inflationary bubble,
Chinese authorities ordered banks in late April to curb their rapid
rise in lending in overheated sectors. The government has also
tightened capital requirements and regulatory approval for investments
in aluminum, cement, real estate and steel projects. The State Council,
China's cabinet, halted construction of a $1.3 billion steel mill in
Jiangsu province as part of an effort to rebalance economic growth. The
expansion of China's steel capacity has outstripped its electricity
capacity and raw material supply. As China becomes the largest consumer
of basic commodities, it would be natural, if it were not for dollar
hegemony, for such commodities to be priced in yuan. Euroland consumes
more imported oil than any other nation, but the price of oil is
denominated in dollars. Iraq under Saddam Hussein was the only
oil-exporting nation that denominated its oil in euros, and we all know
what happened to Saddam.
The commodity boom
of the 21 months between the last quarter of 2002 and the second
quarter of 2004 was exacerbated by manipulation of hedge funds and
other speculative investors in what is normally among the least
glamorous segment of the financial markets, taking full advantage of
negative dollar short-term interest rates at 1% between June 2003 and
June 2004. An estimated $5.2 billion was raised for exploration and
mine development in 2003, more than double the amount in 2002. Another
$2.6 billion has been raised so far in 2004. Easy and cheap money,
undirected by policy or regulations, seldom stimulates the economy in
constructive ways. Markets are singularly without foresight or vision.
Central banks seldom
adjust their monetary policies to prevent asset bubbles and related
instabilities. The days of the central banker being the person who
takes the punch bowl away when the party gets going are long gone.
Central bankers now bring stronger drinks when the party slows. In the
US, the Fed has served notice that it is prepared to move toward
inflation targeting, as suggested by board member Ben Bernanke. Trapped
by their past actions, central banks will continue to provide excess
liquidity to support asset price bubbles and to mask the
destructiveness of burst bubbles by unleashing new bubbles,
euphemistically known as recoveries. Instability in the real economy
has become a major recurring source of profit for financial
institutions.
Dramatic financial
shocks caused by the conflict between fixed foreign exchange rates and
interest rate swings dictated by economic instability have become
recurring phenomena. The Mexican currency crises of 1982 and 1994 were
the mothers of international financial crises. The Asian financial
crisis that began in mid-1997 had its genesis in Mexico, incubated by a
decade of globalization of financial markets. The currency crises
started in Mexico first in 1982, hit Britain in 1992 over ERM (Exchange
Rate Mechanism), again Mexico in 1994, Asia in 1997, spreading to
Russia and Latin America since and finally hitting both the EU and the
US in 2000 and the deeper structural financial challenges facing the
entire global economy. The crises have been the inevitable result of
the Fed, the European Central Bank (ECB) and the Bank of Japan applying
their unified institutional mandates of domestic price stability
through domestic interest-rate policies that have destabilized the
post-Bretton Woods international finance architecture. The common virus
was dollar hegemony.
Lessons from Mexico
The Mexican financial crisis of 1982 set the pattern for subsequent
financial crises around the world. For that reason, a thorough
understanding of the Mexican financial crisis is necessary to
understand what lies in wait for China.
To recycle
petrodollars that the US printed by fiat to pay for sharply higher oil
prices beginning in 1973, US banks had sought out select Less Developed
Countries (LDCs) with acceptable political risk, meaning solidly
anti-socialist authoritative governments, such as Brazil, Mexico,
Argentina, South Korea, Taiwan, the Philippines, Indonesia, etc, for
predatory lending. By 1980, LDCs had accumulated $400 billion in dollar
debt, more than their combined GDP. This is money they cannot produce
through sovereign credit as they cannot print dollars, but must earn
dollars through export. This debt bubble was hailed as a miracle of
free markets and effectively used as Cold War propaganda against
socialist economies. If the socialist economies would only get rid of
socialism and export at low wages to earn fiat dollars, they too would
enjoy the prosperity of capitalism, god's gift to the poor.
The World Bank
reports that after two decades of globalized prosperity, more than a
billion people, or one in five living on this earth, still have to
survive on less than a dollar a day and more than half of the world's
population live on less than $2 a day. China bought this propaganda
lock stock and barrel in 1979 with little understanding of the threat
of this financial narcotic that would make the Opium War of 1840 look
like a minor scrimmage.
Mexico's love affair
with neo-liberalism was unraveling by the end of 1982. Neo-liberalism
is a socio-economic-political ideology that rejects government
intervention in the economy, focusing instead on achieving
socio-economic progress through free markets, with emphasis on raising
national income as measure by gross domestic product (GDP) statistics.
Issues such as income-disparity, impaired national sovereignty, social
injustice and environmental damage are considered necessary prices to
pay for global prosperity. It is an ideology that is controversial even
if successful, but it is a bankrupt ideology that fails even to deliver
the prosperity it promises. The record of the past three decades shows
that neo-liberal ideology brought devastation to every economy it
invaded. China seems to be heading along a similar path.
Impacted by the Fed
under Paul Volcker raising dollar interest rates sharply in 1979 to
fight inflation in the US, Mexico by 1982 was put in a position of not
being able to meet its obligations to service $80 billion in short-term
dollar debt obligations to foreign, mostly US, banks out of a GDP of
$106 billion at an over-valued peso exchange rate. Debt service
payments reached 62.8% of export value in 1979. Exports accounted for
12% of GDP while government expenditures accounted for 11%, which
included public-education expenditure of 5.2%. Mexico was paying more
in interest to foreign banks than it did to educate its young. Mexican
foreign reserves had fallen to less than $200 million and hot money
capital was leaving the country at the rate of $100 million a day.
Against this background, neo-liberal economists were claiming that
poverty was being eradicated in Mexico by "free" trade, a claim they
made the world over. China has been praised by neo-liberals for its
poverty eradication success in the past two decades, while the reality
of a collapse in public education, national health care, public housing
and pension systems remains glaringly obvious.
A Mexican default in
1982 would have threatened the profitability, if not survival, of the
largest US commercial banks, namely Citibank, Chase, Chemical, Bank of
America, Bankers Trust, Manufacturer Hanover, etc. To negotiate new
loans in the private sector for Mexico, all creditors would have to
agree and participate so that the new loans would not just go towards
paying off some holdout creditors at the expense of the others. Many
other creditors were smaller US regional banks that had only limited
exposure to Mexico and they did not want to "throw good money after
bad" merely to bail out the major money center banks.
The big US banks had
to lobby the Fed to step in as crisis manager to keep the smaller banks
in line for the good of the system, notwithstanding that the crisis had
been caused largely by the Fed's failure to impose prudent limits on
the large money center banks' frenzied lending to naive Third World
borrowers in the previous decade. Furthermore, the crisis was
precipitated by Volcker's sudden high-interest-rate shock treatment in
1979, instead of traditional Fed gradualism that would have given the
banks more time to adjust their loan portfolios. Third World economies
were falling likes flies from the weight of dollar debts with floating
interest rates that suddenly became prohibitive to service, not much
different from private businesses in the US, except that countries
could not go bankrupt to wipe out debt the way private business could
in the US.
Third World
borrowers had mistakenly figured, with coaching from New York
international banks, that the dollars they borrowed would be easy to
pay back because of double-digit dollar inflation rate. Volcker's
triumph over domestic inflation was bought with the destruction of the
Third World economies and the destabilization of the international
financial system whose banks had acted like loan sharks in the Third
World with Fed approval. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) then
came in to take over the non-performing bank loans with austerity
"conditionalities" forced on the debtor economies, while the foreign
banks went home whole with the new IMF dollars.
As a result, Third
World economies, including those in Asia, fell into a dollar debt
spiral, having to borrow new dollars from the IMF to service the old
dollar debts, being forced by new loan "conditionalities" to forgo any
hope of future prosperity. Devaluation of local currencies to compete
in export markets made dollar loans more expensive to pay back in local
currency terms. Living standards kept declining while dollar debts kept
piling higher, leading to even higher unemployment and more business
bankruptcies. China was saved from this fate primarily because it went
slow in its reform toward market economy and it resisted full currency
convertibility.
US banks, while
continuing to advocate neo-liberal free trade, market fundamentalism
and financial deregulation, were at the same time falling into habitual
dependence on government bailouts, both domestically and
internationally. US taxpayers were footing the bill the Fed incurred in
bailing out its constituent banks through near-limitless liquidity,
which contributed to higher inflation, which in turn led to higher
interest rates, which in turn intensified the Third World dollar debt
spiral, in one huge vicious circle. As if that was not bad enough,
dollar hegemony took it one step further. It saps not only nations with
dollar debts and deficits, but also economies that earn a dollar trade
surplus, by trapping all the dollars surplus in the dollar economy as
captured creditors, draining capital from all non-dollar economies.
Japan, Korea and China are all victims of this dollar hegemony. Japan,
with the world's largest foreign exchange reserves of $850 billion, is
saddled with a sovereign credit rating below that of Botswana because
it incurred anti-cyclical fiscal deficits financed with sovereign
credit. China will not be exempt from such a fate when it makes the
yuan fully convertible at floating rates.
By the late 1980s,
Mexico had temporarily resolved its dollar liquidity crisis, though not
its dollar debt spiral problem, and was able to resume a Ponzi-scheme
economic growth, relying to a great extent on rising foreign hot money
inflows. To attract more foreign hot money inflows, the Mexican
government, coached by neo-liberal market-fundamentalist economists,
undertook major economic reforms in the early 1990s designed to make
its markets more open to foreign hot money manipulation, to be more
"efficient", and more "competitive" - neo-liberal code words for thinly
disguised market neo-imperialism. It was a strategy of racing to the
bottom and "if you don't smoke, someone else will" approach to export
enslavement. These reforms included privatizing state-owned
enterprises, removing trade barriers that protected domestic producers,
banishing industrial policies, eliminating restrictions on foreign
investment and reducing inflation by tolerating higher unemployment to
push down already low wages and limiting government spending on social
programs. Most importantly, it suspended exchange control and fixed
foreign exchange rates and replaced them with free convertibility with
floating rates.
This is the strategy
that neo-liberals have been trying to lure China into for the past two
decades, not without success, albeit the goal line has yet to be
crossed. What has so far saved China is its residual commitment to
socialist principles, hoping to reap the euphoria of market
fundamentalism without succumbing to its narcotic addiction. Yet, every
addict begins with the confidence that he/she can handle the drug
without falling into addiction.
This was in essence
the "Washington Consensus" solution imposed all over Asia in the early
1990s. In effect, it was a suicidal policy masked by the giddy
expansion typical of the early phase of a Ponzi scheme. The new foreign
investment denominated in dollars was used to provide spectacular
returns on earlier dollar investment with the help of central bank
support of overvalued fixed exchange rates while neo-liberal economists
were falling over one another congratulating themselves on their
brilliant theoretical insight and giving one another incestuous awards
at insider dinners, collecting fat consultant fees from client banks
and governments.
Star academics at
Harvard, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Chicago and
Stanford - multiple snake heads of the academic Medusa - as well as
those in prestigious policy-analysis institutions with unabashed
ideological preferences that served as waiting lounges for policy wonks
of the loyal opposition, busily turned out star disciples from the
Third World elite who, armed with awe-inspiring foreign certificates
and diplomas, would return to their home countries to form influential
policy-making establishments, particularly in central banks, to promote
this scandalous game of snake-oil economics. Harvard-educated Mexican
president Carlos Salinas de Gortari, and Ernesto Zedillo, a
Yale-educated economist who became president of Mexico in 1994, were
prototypes. After totally wrecking the Mexican economy, Salinas was
expelled from Mexico by his own political party. Zedillo now heads a
research center on globalization at Yale.
China by now also
has its army of foreign-trained neo-liberal elites, strategically
placed in key government agencies and in advanced institutes attached
to prestigious academic institutions such as Qinghua University. Every
year, sponsored by the IMF and the World Bank, central bankers gather
in Washington, housed in luxurious hotel suites served by fleets of
limousines, to reassure one another of their monetary magic,
communicating ever optimistic prognosis to the befuddled public through
opaque press releases couched in cryptic jargon, while the global
economy rots in the core. The G7, the club of rich countries, is wooing
China to become a member notwithstanding that China's per capital GDP
is still only $1,000 and there are still more Chinese living in poverty
than the entire G7 population.
The British Example
But even G7 members were not immune to financial crisis. The exchange
Rate Mechanism (ERM) crisis of 1992-93 exploded, involving a mismatch
between the German mark and the British pound. The ERM was a
fixed-exchange-rate regime established in March 1979 as part of the
European Monetary System (EMS) to reduce exchange-rate variability and
achieve monetary stability in Europe through an economic and monetary
union in preparation for the introduction of a single currency, the
euro, which was scheduled to be introduced two decades later on January
1, 1999 at $1.15 per euro. After falling below $0.85 in late 2000, and
again below $0.84 in July 2001, the two currencies reached parity on
July 15, 2002, but the euro fell again below $0.85 in late 2002. During
the fourth quarter of 2003, the euro strongly appreciated against other
major currencies, 10% against the dollar, 3% against the yen and 1%
against the pound sterling. The nominal effective exchange rate of the
euro against the currencies of 12 industrialized countries appreciated
by about 4% during the same fourth quarter, leaving it at 9% above its
inception level. Over the same fourth quarter, while the dollar
depreciated by 6%, the yen and the pound sterling both appreciated by
about 2% in effective terms.
On May 23, 2003, the
euro surpassed its initial trading value for the first time as it hit
$1.18, and in the last days of December 2003, the euro even climbed
above $1.26, the highest to that date since its introduction. Part of
the euro's strength is due to high euro interest rates. The euro traded
at $1.26852 on October 24, 2004, while the euro overnight index average
(EONIA) was 2.05% against a dollar ffr (Fed funds rate) of 1.75%. But a
strong euro by no means spells the end of dollar hegemony. While the EU
registers a greater GDP than the US, the dollar economy is still larger
by far than the euro economy. This is because offshore euro-dollars are
larger in amount than off-shore euros. In fact, the pool of
euro-dollars is greater than the pool of dollars in circulation within
the US. The major part of derivatives and securitized debts are
denominated in dollars.
A unified single currency increases the economic interdependency of EU
members that have adopted the euro and facilitates trade within the
euro zone with less monetary friction. This works toward a unified
market within the European Union. Differences in price levels within
the euro zone will decrease. A unified monetary policy set by the
European Central Bank does not leave much room for fine-tuning the
economic situation in each individual member country, leaving fiscal
policy in each country as the only way in which economic trends can be
managed specifically for regional or national conditions. This is a
structural problem with monetary union prior to political union. The
economies of the EU may not all be "in sync", each may be at a
different stage in government response to the business cycle, or be
experiencing different structural inflationary pressures. Still, the
euro adds liquidity to the financial markets in Europe. Governments and
companies can now borrow in euro instead of their local currency and
can access more sources for funds with less friction and more
simplified financial engineering. Pension funds and national savings
accounts can participate across national borders in a unified euro
market. The EU can benefit from the super liquidity of a single
currency, more than the mere sum of single liquidities of separate
currencies.
The purpose of the
ERM was to stabilize exchange rates, control inflation (through the
link with the strong and stable deutschmark) and nurture intra-Europe
trade. It was also designed to enhance European world trade in
competition with the US, creating a so-called "United States of Europe"
and as a stepping stone to a single-currency regime. To a similar
extent, Asia can also benefit from a unified currency and free its
thriving economies from the penalties of dollar hegemony.
Britain joined the
ERM in October 1990 at a fixed parity of 2.95 deutschmark to the pound,
an over-valued rate intended to put pressure on the British economy to
reduce inflation rather than institutionalizing international trade
competitiveness. This same rationale lies now behind the call for China
to revalue the yuan. Unfortunately for the British people, the UK
Treasury lost some 8.2 billion pound sterling defending the
unsustainable exchange rate. This chosen rate, or any fixed rate
required by ERM membership, proved misguided because it tried to
benefit from the effect of a single currency for separate economies
without the reality of a single currency within an integrated economy.
Withdrawing from the
ERM released the UK economy from persistent deflation and provided the
foundation for the non-inflationary growth subsequently experienced. It
enabled monetary policy to be freed from the sole obsession of
maintaining an inoperative exchange rate, thus contributing to economic
expansion by a combination of rational monetary measures to respond
specifically to British needs. While ERM countries were compelled to
maintain relatively high real interest rates to prevent their
currencies from falling outside the permitted bands, Britain enjoyed
the freedom to benefit from lower rates to stimulate a stalling economy.
Hong Kong has been
facing the same problems since the introduction of its peg to the
dollar in 1983, which created a bubble in its economy dominated by the
property sector and in the past seven years, since the 1997 Asian
financial crisis, has been plagued with currency-induced deflation and
unemployment, and will not recover from economic crisis until its
currency peg to an overvalued US dollar is lifted, or until the dollar
falls in value beyond its current low to induce another bubble that
will inevitably burst again. What Hong Kong did was to buy monetary
stability with economic instability. Waiting for an improved economy to
justify an overvalued currency is like waiting for death to cure an
infection. In the current international finance architecture, there is
only one thing worse than an undervalued currency, and that is an
overvalued currency. This is why China resists pressure to revalue the
yuan while unemployment remains a serious problem.
The appropriate
exchange rate of currencies at any particular time is that which
enables their separate economies to sustain an interest rate regime to
combine full employment of productive resources, particularly labor,
with a simultaneous external balance-of-payment equilibrium. An
operative exchange rate is not determined by trade balance alone. With
a high rate of unemployment and excessively low wages by any standards,
China has no reasons to revalue the yuan's exchange rate. What China
needs is a national full employment policy with an aggressive wage
enhancement strategy. An excessively high exchange rate triggers trade
deficits and exacerbates domestic unemployment, which is what the
strong dollar has done to the US economy.
A low exchange rate
generates an excessive buildup of foreign-currency reserves and creates
domestic inflationary pressures that lead to a bubble economy.
Overvalued exchange rates require high domestic interest rate. Every
nation needs to retain its sovereign right to adjust the external
values of its currency in this unregulated global financial market, but
an international finance architecture based on dollar hegemony preempts
that sovereign right. To be fixated on a fixed exchange rate with free
currency convertibility is to court financial and economic disaster in
the current international finance architecture.
Chinese monetary
conditions are full of contradictions. China has rising foreign
exchange reserves, but an overall trade deficit, with a currency pegged
to an overvalued fiat dollar backed by debt, while yuan interest rates
have been persistently high. China's rising foreign exchange reserves
now come not from trade surplus, but from domestic low wages that
subsidize high return on foreign capital. China will remain an economic
semi-colony until the rise in Chinese wages neutralizes the unwarranted
increase in its foreign exchange reserves. For years, the US since the
Clinton administration has operated on the doctrine that a strong
dollar is in its national interest, using the capital account surplus
to finance its current account deficit. Now domestic political pressure
is forcing the US government to deal with its twin deficits and the
outsourcing of not only low-wage jobs, but increasingly also high-pay
jobs.
The US wants to
force China to revalue the yuan upward so that the dollar can avoid
further devaluation with other major currencies. But an astronomical
disparity of wage levels between economies cannot be overcome by an
adjustment of exchange rates. China is in a peculiar position of having
a booming economy with rising unemployment. That is because the boom
comes from shipping wealth out of the yuan economy into the dollar
economy. What the US needs to do to reduce its trade imbalance with
China is to adopt policies that encourages wage levels to rise in
China. The only way to stop job outsourcing is to steadily remove
low-wage manufacturing from the global system. For example, tariffs and
quotas can focus on wage levels to impose countervailing fees for
overseas wages below US minimum wages. Documentation of import quotas
can be required to include labor cost data.
Britain's disastrous
experience with the Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM) should be a sobering
lesson for China. Since, under ERM, Britain's interest rate was pegged
to that of Germany through the fixed exchange rate with a freely
convertible pound sterling, reduction in interest rates was not
available to deal with increasing unemployment and declining growth in
the UK. The fact that Britain lost independent control over pound
sterling interest rates, coupled with the questionable independence of
the Bundesbank from German national political pressure, was an
important factor in Britain's final decision to withdraw the pound
sterling from the ERM fixed-exchange-rate regime. Making the yuan
freely convertible would be similarly suicidal for China under current
circumstances.
The reunification of
Germany cracked open the structural flaw in the ERM because massive
capital injection from West to East Germany had produced inflationary
pressure in the newly unified German economy, leading to preemptive
increases of interest rates by the Bundesbank, the German central bank.
At the same time, other economies in Europe, especially that of
Britain, were in recession and not prepared for interest rate hikes
dictated by the German central bank. This interest rate disparity
magnified the overvaluation of the pound sterling in the early 1990s.
Nominal interest rate disparity between a higher yuan rate and a lower
dollar rate has magnified the inflow of hot money into China, even with
capital controls and limited currency convertibility. Yet, both real
yuan and dollar interest rates are negative in that they are below
their respective inflation rates, while both economies still face
persistent unemployment problems. For China to raise yuan interest
rates under these conditions is to push its lopsided economy into a
tailspin.
In 1992, the ERM was
torn apart when a number of currencies could not keep within these
limits without collapsing their economies. On Black Wednesday,
September 16, a culmination of factors allowed George Soros, hedge-fund
titan, to break the Bank of England, pocketing $1 billion of profit in
one day and more than $2 billion eventually. The British pound was
forced to leave the ERM after the Bank of England spent $40 billion in
an unsuccessful effort to defend the currency's fixed value against
speculative attacks. The money went directly into the pocket of
speculative hedge funds rather than helping the pound sterling. The
Italian lira also left the ERM and the Spanish peseta was devalued.
Hong Kong's freely
convertible currency with a fixed peg faced similar attacks by hedge
funds half a decade later. After the Asian financial crisis that first
broke out in Thailand on July 2, 1997, the market became less and less
confident that if confronted with a choice between counter-cyclical
interest rate targets and the fixed exchange rate, the Hong Kong
Monetary Authority (HKMA) would necessarily choose the exchange rate.
The deflation effects of the overvalued currency were causing much
unnecessary pain on the population. The situation launched an open
season for currency attacks that broke out predictably and repeatedly
after July 1997. After the fourth major attack on the Hong Kong
currency in August 1998, which required a $18 billion government
"market incursion" to foil, a list of seven "technical measures" was
adopted to shore up the peg's credibility, among which a convertibility
undertaking would obligate the HKMA to guarantee the dollar value of
the clearing accounts of all licensed banks.
This shifted
currency risk from the banks to the HKMA. Now if the peg were
abandoned, the government would have to make up for losses on at least
some of the banks' local currency assets, a commitment enforceable by
law. This technical measure substantially increased the cost of
de-pegging to the government and raised the pain threshold of the
inoperative peg. The economic pain has lingered for seven years with no
end in sight, albeit that the recent fall of the dollar has since
moderated the pain. Hong Kong's economy has not recovered; it has
merely got used to the pain that has been dulled somewhat by subsidies
from China. China is protected from contagion from Hong Kong by the
fact that the yuan is not freely convertible.
In 1992, to curb
German inflation, an increase in German interest rates was necessary,
but if the Bundesbank were completely independent of German
political-economic interests and behaved truly as a dominant regional
central bank, it would not have adopted this policy as there were cries
from all over a depressed Europe for decreases in interest rates. By
adopting tight monetary policies in response to domestic inflationary
pressures that followed German reunification in 1990, German short-term
interest rates, which had been rising since 1988, continued to rise,
reaching nearly 10% by the summer of 1992. So, at a time when Britain
needed a counter-cyclical reduction in interest rates, the Bundesbank
sent the interest rate upwards, plunging Britain deeper into recession
through the ERM.
This was the
fundamental problem with the ERM. Fixed exchange rates for a freely
traded currency conflict with the interest rate levels needed by
different economic conditions in separate member economies. The British
interest rate pegged to that set by the Bundesbank was crippling the
British economy because the UK was in a recession and required low
interest rates. The prevention of an economic bubble in Germany
exacerbated recession in Britain and much of Europe. Another way of
looking at it is that the non-German members of the ERM were
subsidizing the reconstruction of a united Germany.
Wrong move
China's economy would face a similar whiplash from the Fed's interest
rate policy if the yuan were freely convertible. Even with currency
control, the Fed's "measured pace" interest rate hike has forced the
People's Bank of China to lift its benchmark one-year lending rate to
5.58% from 5.31% beginning October 29 to stay above China's inflation
rate, which reached 5.31% in August. Such a timid interest rate
increase will have no effect on the overheated export sector, but will
be highly contracting for the domestic sectors. The unexpected move
appeared to have been taken mostly to appease misguided US pressure. It
made no economic sense.
The problem with the
Fed is that while it has been a de facto world central bank for the
past decade because of dollar hegemony, it does not set monetary policy
for the benefit of the world, but only for what it intuitively thinks
is good for the US economy. In the past decade, the Fed in fact did not
even make monetary policy for the good of the US economy, only the
dollar economy. Pushing China to raise yuan interest rates while the
yuan is pegged to the dollar will cause problems for other economies
whose currencies are also pegged to the dollar, causing interest rates
in those currencies to also rise, slowing those economies and
destabilizing the region and the world economy.
Anyway it is sliced,
a weak dollar adds up to higher inflation in the US, which will push
the Fed to raise the dollar short-term interest rate, thus threatening
equity prices. To offset a crash in the equity markets, the Fed
supplies more liquidity. Dollar liquidity in turn forces other central
banks to supply liquidity in their own currencies, pushing global
long-term interest rates down and bond prices up. This causes a boom in
both bonds and stocks, casting aside the traditional formula that
stocks and bonds move in opposite directions. Gravity has not gone out
of fashion; it was merely temporarily postponed through acceleration. A
slowdown will bring the global economy down in a crash. This is why the
world is nervous over the Chinese economy slowing down.
The 1992 ERM crisis
was followed by the Mexican peso crisis of 1994-95. The Fed started to
raise interest rates in 1994 and sharply curtailed its own purchase of
treasury bills, triggering a global bond crash and a subsequent US
economic slowdown. Across the border, high dollar interest rates caused
a Mexico peso crisis.
Up to the1994
crisis, neo-liberal economists were praising Mexico for doing most
things right since the 1982 debt crisis. Government budget had shifted
from substantial deficit to surplus, thus no longer draining Mexican
private savings, albeit that the social infrastructure of Mexico was
left in dire strait. With businesses privatized and tariffs low, Mexico
was the poster boy of neo-liberal miracle. The inflow of hot money
capital had risen from zero to 5% of GDP. But internal Mexican
inflation and the fixed peso-dollar exchange rate had left Mexico
uncompetitive in world trade. Mexicans were taking the speculative hot
money to finance consumption rather than investment.
The Mexican boom was
applauded as a miracle of neo-liberal wealth effect. The Congressional
Budget Office Report on NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement)
calmly diagnosed the Mexican situation as nothing more serious that an
overvalued peso. The neo-liberal solution was to devalue the peso by
20% and let the peso then drift gradually downward in an orderly market
by as much as Mexican inflation exceeded US inflation in order to keep
Mexico competitive, restoring market equilibrium and all would be well.
Life turned out very differently.
By December 1994,
Mexico ran out of foreign exchange reserves and announced it would
suspend the peso's peg to the dollar and let the market determine the
devaluation of the peso. But the peso fell like a rock by far more than
the 20% that neo-liberals had forecast was necessary to restore
equilibrium. Speculators in the market pushed the peso down sharply and
abruptly by more than 300%. Foreign exchange reserves had fallen from
nearly $30 billion in March, to $5 billion when the decision to abandon
the peg was made in December.
The Mexican
government bet that the drawdown of reserves was a temporary shock
rather than a permanent change in foreign investor/creditor demand for
peso-denominated assets. Mexico's economic fundamentals, balanced
federal budget, successful privatization campaign, financial
liberalization, were "sound enough" in the spring of 1994 to elicit "a
strong and unqualified endorsement of Mexico's economic management"
from the IMF. According to the neo-liberal doctrine, the only weak link
was its overvalued currency. But the market had a better take on
reality. Investors/speculators saw that dollar hegemony was destroying
the peso economy and everyone wanted to be out of peso.
Part of the Mexican
government's strategy for retaining confidence in its stable exchange
rate throughout 1994 was to replace conventional short-term borrowing
with the infamous "Tesebonos", a short-term security whose principal
was indexed to the dollar, as a means of retaining the funds of
investors who feared bottomless devaluation. This policy did retain
some $23 billion of foreign financing but it fatally increased Mexico's
exposure to foreign exchange risk. What in effect happened was that $23
billion stayed in Mexico, but left the peso economy for the dollar
economy. The ultimate irony was that much of the $23 billion belonged
to Mexicans.
By the end of 1994,
the inflow of dollar hot money to Mexico's peso economy had not resumed
as expected by neo-liberal policymakers. Investors/speculators feared
hyperinflation as the Mexican government frantically printed pesos to
cover its peso-denominated debts. Or worse, they feared capital
controls that would trap dollars in Mexico for an indefinite time, or
formal default: a repeat of the 1982 crisis that international banks
had not forgotten. They understood well how dollar hegemony worked.
With $5 billion in
reserves, with $23 billion in Tesebono liabilities that would be
converted into dollars and pulled from the peso economy as it matured,
and with no one willing to lend more dollars to borrowers without
dollar income, Mexico faced imminent default on its dollar debts,
hyperinflation and a severe depression. Either the Mexican government
would push peso interest rates sky-high to keep capital in the peso
economy and strangle the Mexican economy or the Mexican government,
unable to borrow more dollars, would start printing pesos to meet its
obligations in both pesos and dollars and see a spiral of 1980s
Argentina-style hyperinflation and depreciation. The panic began to
spread in what came to be called the "tequila effect", creating
instability in other developing economies in the region and beyond.
Mexico was not
insolvent. As Walter Wriston of Citibank famously said in 1973, nations
do not go bankrupt. Mexico was merely facing a dollar liquidity crisis.
If dollar creditors had been willing to roll over Mexico's short-term
dollar debts, mild contraction policies and a moderate devaluation to
reduce imports and encourage exports would enable the Mexican
government to pay rescheduled dollar liabilities as they came due.
Mexico then would theoretically recover quickly from a short and
shallow recession. But dollar hegemony prevented such a solution.
Mexico was facing a dollar illiquidity it could not possibly solve
because it could not print dollars.
It then fell upon
the US, which could print dollars at will, to provide a rescue package
totaling $40 billion that Mexico could draw on to contain its dollar
liquidity crisis. The Bill Clinton administration, whose chief economic
official had invented dollar hegemony, was prepared to act, but US
domestic politics stood in the way. Conservatives and liberals united
to oppose the rescue package for different ideological reasons. Patrick
Buchanan called the Clinton rescue package a gift to Wall Street: "Not
free-market economics [but] Goldman-Sachsonomics." Ralph Nader urged
the Congress to reject the support package and to demand that Mexico
raise wages. Columnists in the Wall Street Journal demanded that
support be provided only if Mexico first returned the peso to its
pre-December parity.
Mexico's devaluation
of the peso in December 1994 precipitated another crisis in the
country's financial institutions and markets that caused an abrupt
collapse of a "booming" economy that had not benefited Mexico as much
as the dollar economy. Within Mexico, most of the meager benefits went
to the elite comprador class at the expense of the general population,
particularly the poor, but even the middle class who had no dollar
income. International and domestic investors/speculators, reacting to
falling confidence in the peso, sold Mexican equity and debt securities
to buy dollars with which they could buy back what they sold at a
fraction of the selling price.
Foreign-currency
reserves at the Bank of Mexico, the nation's central bank, were
insufficient to meet the massive demand of speculators seeking to
convert pesos to dollars. In response to the crisis, the US organized a
financial rescue package of up to $40 billion from the US, plus another
$10 billion from Canada, the IMF and the Bank for International
Settlements (BIS). The multilateral rescue package was intended to
enable Mexico to avoid defaulting on its dollar debt obligations and
thereby overcome its short-term dollar liquidity crisis and to prevent
the crisis from spreading to other emerging markets through contagion.
It was not to help a Mexican economy hemorrhaging from a bankrupt
monetary policy, one that allowed foreign and domestic speculators to
collect their phantom Ponzi peso profits in real dollars. The Mexican
rescue package in 1995 created moral hazard for international banks on
a global scale.
In the weekend
before Mexico's pending dollar default, the US government took the lead
in developing an emergency rescue package. The package put together by
the Fed under Alan Greenspan and the Treasury under Robert Rubin, a
former co-chairman of Goldman Sachs and a consummate bond trader,
included short-term currency swaps from the Fed and the Exchange
Stabilization Fund (ESF), a commitment from Mexico to an IMF-imposed
economic austerity program for $4 billion in IMF loans, and a
moratorium on Mexico's principal payments to foreign commercial banks,
mostly US, with Fed regulatory forbearance on resultant bank capital
adjustments that affected bank profits. It also included $5 billion in
additional commercial bank loans, additional dollar liquidity support
from central banks in Europe and Japan and pre-payment by the US to
Mexico for $1 billion in oil and a $1 billion line of credit from the
US department of agriculture.
The ESF was
established by Section 20 of the Gold Reserve Act of January 1934, with
a $2-billion initial appropriation. Its resources have been
subsequently augmented by special drawing rights (SDR) allocations by
the IMF and through its income over the years from interest on
short-term investments and loans, and net gains on foreign currencies.
The ESF engages in monetary transactions in which one asset is
exchanged for another, such as foreign currencies for dollars, and can
also be used to provide direct loans and guarantees to other countries.
ESF operations are under the control of the secretary of the treasury,
subject to the approval of the president.
ESF operations
include providing resources for exchange-market intervention. The ESF
has also been used to provide short-term swaps and guarantees to
foreign countries needing financial assistance for short-term currency
stabilization. The short-term nature of these transactions has been
emphasized by amendments to the ESF statute requiring the president to
notify Congress if a loan or credit guarantee is made to a country for
more than six months in any 12-month period. Short-term currency swaps
are repurchase-type agreements through which currencies are exchanged.
Mexico purchased dollars in exchange for pesos and simultaneously
agreed to sell dollars against pesos three months hence. The US earned
interest on its Mexican pesos at a specified rate.
It was Bear Stearns
chief economist Wayne Angell, a former Fed governor and advisor to then
Senate majority leader Bob Dole, who first came up with the idea of
using the ESF to prop up the collapsing Mexican peso. Bear Stearns, a
Wall Street giant, had significant exposure to peso debts. Senator
Robert Bennett, a freshman Republican from Utah, took Angell's proposal
to Greenspan and Rubin. Both rejected the idea at first, shocked at the
blatant circumvention of constitutional procedures that this strategy
represented, which would invite certain reprisal from Congress.
Congress had
implicitly rejected a rescue package that January when the initial
administration proposal of extending Mexico $40 billion in loan
guarantees could not pass. The chairman of the Fed advised Bennett that
the idea would only work if Congress's silence could be guaranteed.
Bennett went to Dole and convinced him that the whole scam would work
if the majority leader would simply block all efforts to bring this use
of taxpayers' money to a vote. It would all happen by executive fiat.
The next step was to persuade Dole and his counterpart in the House,
Speaker Newt Gingrich. They consulted several state governors, notably
then Texas governor George W Bush, who enthusiastically endorsed the
idea of a bailout to subsidize the border region in his state.
Greenspan, who historically opposed bailouts of the private sector for
fear of incurring moral hazard, was clearly in a position to stop this
one. Instead, he used his considerable power and influence to help the
process along when key players balked. Moral hazard infected not only
the banking system, but also the political system making a mockery of
the constitution. Few in Washington were prepared to be reminded that
it was this kind of systemic corruption in the name of the common good
that had brought down the Roman Empire.
The peso bailout
would lead to a series of similar situations in which influential
private financial institutions knowingly got themselves into future
trouble in order to maximize their short-term profit, vindicating the
moral-hazard principle predicting that market participants will take
undue risks in the presence of bailout guarantees. As Thailand,
Indonesia, Malaysia, South Korea and Russia stumbled into financial
crisis, culminating in the collapse of hedge fund giant Long-Term
Capital Management (LTCM), which played key speculative roles in
precipitating the crisis by achieving fantastic returns to begin with,
Greenspan moved to increase dollar liquidity to support the distressed
bond markets. At the helm of LTCM was yet another former member of the
Fed board, former vice chairman David Mullins, to plead for help from
his former Fed colleagues.
When New York Fed
president William McDonough helped coordinate a bailout of LTCM,
Greenspan defended McDonough before a congressional oversight
committee. Reflecting on all the corporate welfare being doled out to
prop up bad private-sector institutional investments worldwide, Bill
Clinton appointee Alice Rivlin, the able former congressional budget
director, observed "the Fed was in a sense acting as the central banker
of the world". During Clinton's first term, Greenspan had handed the
president a "pro-incumbent-type economy" and was rewarded with a seat
next to the first lady in Clinton's televised State of the Union
address and a third-term appointment as Fed chairman. Crony capitalism
was in full swing in the temple of free market.
Historically, the US
and Mexican economies have always been closely integrated in a
semi-colonial relationship. In 1994, the US supplied 69% of Mexico's
high-value-added imports and absorbed about 85% of its low-wage
labor-intensive exports. US investors have provided a substantial share
of foreign investment in Mexico and have established numerous
manufacturing facilities there to take advantage of low wages and
unregulated labor and environmental regimes. Also, the US has served as
a large market for illegal Mexican immigrant labor in its underground
economy and farm sector, which has grown to be a sizable
foreign-currency earner for Mexico. Mexico has long been the
third-largest trading partner of the US, accounting for 10% of US
exports and about 8% of US imports in 1994. The Maquiladora assembly
industry concentrated on the Mexican side of the US-Mexico border was
hailed by neo-liberals as a model of successful free trade, instead of
the sweatshop hell it actually was.
In 1994, under newly
installed president Ernesto Zedillo, a Yale-educated economist, Mexico
entered the North American Free Trade Agreement with the US and Canada.
NAFTA, conceived as a regional economic counterweight to the EU,
further opened Mexico to foreign investment and bolstered investor
interest on the hope that with NAFTA, Mexico's long-term prospects for
stable economic development were likely to improve, at least for the
benefit of foreign investors. NAFTA, as negotiated and signed in
December 1992 by the administrations of Mexican president Carlos
Salinas de Gortari and US president George H W Bush, and as amended and
implemented by the Salinas and Clinton administrations in 1993, did not
offer Mexico any significant increase in access to the US market.
Rather, Mexico was blackmailed into signing NAFTA to prevent Mexican
businesses from being bankrupted wholesale by sudden waves of pending
US protectionism.
Mexico was also
advised by neo-liberals to adopt an exchange rate system intended to
protect foreign investors who could exchange their peso earnings for
dollars at the Mexican central bank at an overvalued rate. In 1988, the
nominal exchange rate of the peso had been fixed temporarily in
relation to the dollar. However, because the inflation rate in Mexico
was greater than that in the US, a peso nominal depreciation against
the dollar was needed to keep the real exchange rate of the peso from
increasing. With the nominal exchange rate of the peso fixed, the real
exchange rate of the peso appreciated during this period. In 1989, this
fixed-exchange-rate system was replaced by a "crawling peg" system,
under which the peso-dollar exchange rate was adjusted daily to allow a
slow rate of nominal depreciation of the peso to occur over time.
In 1991, the
crawling peg was replaced with a band within which the peso was allowed
to fluctuate. The ceiling of the band was adjusted daily to permit some
appreciation of the dollar (depreciation of the peso) to occur. The
Mexican government used the exchange rate system as an anchor for an
unsustainable economic policy, ie, as a way to reduce inflation through
shrinking the economy, to force a politically destabilizing fiscal
policy, and thus to provide a comfortable climate for foreign investors
who managed to carry home the same dollars they brought in via a short
circuit, while leaving only their peso holdings behind that the Mexican
central banks had promised to guarantee as fully convertible at an
over-valued fixed exchange rate despite predictable unsustainability.
The key difference between the peso and the yuan is that the yuan is
not freely convertible.
Before 1994,
Mexico's strategy of adopting sound monetary and austere fiscal
policies appeared to be having its intended effects of making foreign
capital feel secure while producing the unintended effect of steadily
hollowing out the Mexican economy. Inflation had been steadily reduced
by the fixed exchange rate of the peso, government social spending was
down to reduce the budget deficit, and foreign direct investment was
increasing. Moreover, unlike in the years before 1982, most foreign
capital was flowing to Mexico's private sector that yielded higher
returns rather than as low-interest loans to the Mexican government in
1982 to finance budget deficits.
Although Mexico was
experiencing a very large current account deficit, both in absolute
terms and in relation to the size of its economy, neo-liberal
policymakers did not consider it an immediate problem. They pointed to
Mexico's large foreign currency reserves, its rising exports, and its
seemingly endless ability to attract and retain foreign investment.
They had hoped to copy the US strategy of using a capital account
surplus to finance its current account deficit. But they forgot that
unlike the US, Mexico cannot print dollars and that even though the
dollar is the world's reserved currency for trade, it is still a US
currency, not a world currency. They were in fact ignorant of the
danger of dollar hegemony to Mexico. This attitude ignored the fact
that true wealth was leaving Mexico through the turning of peso assets
into dollar assets, masked by a Mexican stock market bubble fueled by
an overvalued peso.
Yuan's Peso Parallels
Though the conditions surrounding the yuan are not totally congruent
with those surrounding the peso, there are similarities between the
yuan in 2004 and the peso in 1994, with the exception that China's
currency is not freely convertible. Prior to the 1994 crisis, Mexico's
foreign exchange reserves kept growing in ratio to the Mexican GDP
similar to the China's rise in foreign exchange reserves in ratio to
its GDP. For both economies, the rise in foreign exchange reserved was
caused by the inflow of hot money. The rise in China's foreign exchange
reserves is actually an ominous indicator of real wealth leaving the
yuan economy into the dollar economy, as it was for Mexico up to the
1994 peso crisis. Mexican GDP in 2002 was $920 billion compared to
China's $1 trillion. Mexican per capita GDP was $9,000, nine times that
of China's, because of Mexico's smaller population. Following a 6.9%
growth in 2000, Mexican real GDP fell to 0.3% in 2001, with the US
slowdown the principal cause. This could also happen to China. With a
sharp fall in interest rates to stimulate and a rise of the peso of 5%
against the dollar, the inflation rate in Mexico was unable to fall
below 6.9%. Foreign direct investment reached $25 billion in 2001, of
which $12.5 billion came from the purchase of Mexico's second largest
bank, Banamex, by Citigroup.
Reality finally unmasked this faulty neo-liberal theory by late 1994.
Mexico's financial crisis was the inevitable outcome of the growing
inconsistency between its monetary and fiscal policies, its
over-dependence on export for dollars to sustain growth and its false
sense of stability based on its exchange rate peg to a fiat dollar.
Partly because of an upcoming presidential election, Mexican
authorities were reluctant to take action in the spring and summer of
1994, such as reducing the inconsistency between interest rates and the
fixed value of the peso. This structural policy inconsistency was
exacerbated by the government's response to several economic and
political events that created investor concerns about the likelihood of
a currency devaluation, such as the issue of large amounts of
short-term, dollar-indexed tesobonos. By the beginning of December
1994, Mexico had become particularly vulnerable to a financial crisis
because its foreign exchange reserves had fallen to $12.5 billion while
it had tesobono obligations of $30 billion maturing in 1995.
A country can
respond to a dollar current-account deficit in four ways:
Attract more foreign capital denominated in
dollars. The US does not need to do this because of dollar hegemony,
but Mexico, which could not print dollars, was forced to attract more
foreign capital denominated in dollars with a Ponzi scheme of paying
old capital with new capital.
Use dollar foreign exchange reserves to cover the deficit. The US can
do this by printing dollars, the reserve currency of choice, but Mexico
could not print dollars, only pesos, which put more pressure on the
peso-dollar exchange rate.
Tighten monetary and/or fiscal policy to reduce the demand for all
goods, including imports, shrinking the economy.
It was obvious that Mexico was experiencing a large current-account
deficit financed mostly by short-term portfolio capital, a euphemism
for hot money, which was vulnerable to a sudden reversal of investor
confidence. Nevertheless, neo-liberal policymakers in both Mexico and
Washington, while acknowledging that the peso was overvalued and the
existing exchange rate was unsustainable, were undecided about the
precise extent to which the peso was overvalued and if and when
financial markets might force Mexico to take action. Estimates of the
overvaluation ranged between a benign 5%-20%.
Moreover, Fed and treasury officials under Greenspan and Rubin did not
foresee the magnitude of the crisis that eventually unfolded. The IMF
was oblivious to the seriousness of the situation that was developing
in Mexico and, for most of 1994, did not see a compelling case for a
change in Mexico's exchange rate policy. In the period prior to July
1997, when the Asian financial crises broke out first in Thailand, the
IMF was praising South Korea and most other Asian economies for their
continuing growth and sound exchange rate policies. Even after
financial contagion was in full force, the IMF kept releasing
complacent prognoses of the temporary nature of the crisis. The IMF
diagnosed the crisis as a passing liquidity crunch, denying its
structural causes, particularly dollar hegemony.
The objectives of the US and IMF rescue packages for Mexico after the
December 1994 devaluation and the subsequent loss of market confidence
in the peso were (1) To help Mexico overcome its allegedly short-term
liquidity crisis and; (2) To limit the adverse effects of Mexico's
crisis spreading to the economies of other emerging market nations and
beyond. No effort was directed at restructuring fundamental neo-liberal
policy faults, or to admit that localized isolation is empty hope in a
globalized system.
Many US observers opposed any US financial rescue to Mexico. They
argued that tesobono investors should not be shielded from financial
losses on moral hazard grounds, and that neither the danger posed by
the spread of Mexico's crisis to other nations nor the risk to US
trade, employment, and immigration was sufficient to justify such a
bailout.
The Bank of Mexico, the central bank, doubled the interest rate on
short-term Mexican government peso notes, called cetes, from 9% to 18%,
in an attempt to stem the outflow of dollar. However, despite higher
interest rates, investor demand for cetes continued to lag. Investors
were demanding even higher interest rates on newly issued cetes because
of their perception that the peso would be subject to progressively
larger devaluation by rising interest rates. It was a classic vicious
circle.
Options available to the Mexican government at this time included:
1) Offering even higher interest rates on cetes.
2) Reducing government expenditures to reduce domestic demand, decrease
imports, and relieve pressure on the peso.
Devaluing the Peso.
All three options would lead to increased downward pressure on the peso
and the economy. The only workable option, exchange control in the form
of restrictive capital flow, was not considered by the
Harvard-Yale-trained Mexican central bankers, nor encouraged by US
advisors. It was not until 1998, when Malaysia successfully adopted
exchange controls, that some born-again market-failure fundamentalists
led by MIT economist Paul Krugman grudgingly acknowledged it as a
legitimate option.
From the perspective of the Mexican authorities, the first two choices
were unattractive in a presidential election year because they could
have led to a significant downturn in economic activity and could have
further weakened Mexico's banking system. The third choice,
devaluation, was also unattractive since Mexico's success in attracting
substantial new dollar investment to feed its Ponzi scheme depended on
its commitment to maintain a stable exchange rate. In addition, a
stable exchange rate had been an essential ingredient of longstanding
policy agreements among the government, labor and business, and these
agreements were perceived as ensuring economic and social stability.
Also, the stable exchange rate was considered a key to continued
reductions in the inflation rate by orthodox neo-classical economics.
Ironically, typical of all Ponzi schemes, success was fatal because it
accelerated unsustainability.
Rather than adopting any of these highly visible options, the
government chose, in the spring of 1994, to increase its issue of
tesobonos quietly as a political expediency to help the ruling
Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) win the coming election.
Because tesobonos were dollar-indexed, holders could avoid losses that
would otherwise result if Mexico subsequently chose to devalue its
currency. The government promised to repay investors an amount, in
pesos, sufficient to protect the dollar value of their investment.
Tesobono financing in effect dollarized Mexican sovereign debt and
transferred foreign exchange risk from investors to the Mexican central
bank and government and to provide a short-term liquidity solution that
would exacerbate long-term structural problems.
Tesobonos proved attractive to domestic and foreign investors. However,
as sales of tesobonos rose, Mexico became vulnerable to a financial
market crisis because many tesobono purchasers were portfolio investors
who were very sensitive to changes in interest rates and related risks.
Furthermore, tesobonos had short maturities, which meant that their
holders might not roll them over if investors perceived (1) An
increased risk of a government default or; (2) Higher returns
elsewhere. Market discipline operated like a pool of frenzied sharks
cycling around the scent of financial blood.
Nevertheless, Mexican authorities viewed tesobono financing as the best
way to stabilize foreign exchange reserves over the short term and to
avoid the immediate costs implicit in the other alternatives in an
election year. In fact, Mexico's foreign exchange reserves did
stabilize at a level of about $17 billion from the end of April through
August 1994, when the presidential elections came to a conclusion.
Mexican authorities expected that investor confidence would be restored
after the August election and that investment flows would return in
sufficient amounts to preclude any need for continued, large-scale
tesobono financing.
After the election, however, foreign investment flows did not recover
to the extent expected by Mexican authorities, in part because peso
interest rates were allowed to decline in August and maintained at that
level until December. During the autumn of 1994, it became increasingly
clear that Mexico's contradictory mix of monetary, fiscal, and
exchange-rate policies needed to be adjusted. The current account
deficit had worsened during the year, partly as a result of the
strengthening of the economy related to a moderate pre-election
loosening of fiscal policy, including a step up in developmental
lending in the domestic sectors, which was considered by market
fundamentalists as a big no-no.
Imports had also surged as the peso became further overvalued. Mexico
had become heavily exposed to a run on its foreign exchange reserves as
a result of substantial tesobono financing. Outstanding tesobono
obligations increased from $3.1 billion at the end of March to $29.2
billion in December. Also, between January and November 1994, US
three-month treasury bill yields had risen from 3.04% to 5.45%,
substantially increasing the attractiveness of US government
securities. In the middle of November 1994, Mexican authorities had to
draw down foreign currency reserves to meet the demand for dollars.
On November 15, 1994, in response to US domestic economic conditions,
the Fed raised the federal funds rate by three-quarters of a percentage
point to 5.5%, raising the general level of dollar interest rates and
further increasing the attractiveness of US bonds to investors. By late
November and early December, poor economic performance spilled over to
political incidents that caused apprehension among investors regarding
Mexico's political stability. These concerns were compounded on
December 9, when the new Mexican administration revealed that it
expected an even higher current account deficit in 1995 but planned no
change in its exchange rate policy. This decision led to a further loss
in confidence by investors/speculators, increased redemptions of
Mexican securities, and a significant drop in foreign exchange reserves
to $10 billion. Meanwhile, Mexico's outstanding tesobono obligations
reached $30 billion, all coming due in 1995. However, Mexican
government officials continued to assure investors that the peso would
not be devalued.
On December 20, Mexican authorities sought to relieve pressure on the
exchange rate by announcing a widening of the peso-dollar exchange rate
band. The widening of the band in effect devalued the peso by about
15%. However, the government did not announce any new fiscal or
monetary measures to accompany the devaluation - such as raising
interest rates. This inaction was accompanied by more than $4 billion
in losses in foreign reserves on December 21. A day later, on December
22, Mexico was forced to float its currency freely and it ran out of
reserves to support the peg.
The discrepancy between the stated exchange rate policy of the Mexican
government throughout most of 1994 and its devaluation of the peso on
December 20, along with a failure to announce appropriate accompanying
policy measures, contributed to a significant loss of investor
confidence in the newly elected government and growing fear that
default was imminent. Consequently, downward pressure on the peso
continued and turned into a rout. The crisis is known as "The December
Mistake". The peso crashed from the official rate of three pesos to the
dollar to a market rate of 10 to the dollar in the space of a week, and
sold for up to 30 pesos at times in some regions. By early January
1995, investors/speculators realized that Mexico's reserves could not
meet tesobono redemptions and, in the absence of external assistance,
Mexico might default on its dollar-indexed and dollar-denominated debt.
As 1994 began, signs were visible that Mexico was vulnerable to
speculative attacks on the peso and that its large and growing current
account deficit and its exchange rate policy might not be sustainable.
However, neo-liberal economists generally thought that Mexico's economy
was characterized by "sound economic fundamentals" and that, with major
economic reforms of the past decade along Washington Consensus lines,
Mexico had laid an adequate foundation for economic growth in the long
term.
In reality, Mexico was exporting real wealth and importing hot money
with the help of a flawed central bank policy that was attracting large
capital inflows and held substantial foreign exchange reserves derived
from foreign debt. Concerns about the viability of Mexico's exchange
rate system increased after the assassination of presidential candidate
Luis Donaldo Colosio in the latter part of March and the subsequent
drawdown of about $10 billion in foreign exchange reserves by the end
of April. Persistent rumors continue to circulate even today that
Colosio, a Salinas protege, was shot on the orders of Salinas himself
because Colosio was turning populist in his election campaign,
threatening to undermine the legacy of Salinas's neo-liberal agenda.
With the assassination of Colosio, neo-liberal candidate Ernesto
Zedillo Ponce de Leon became president and continued neo-liberal
policies for six more years. Just after the Colosio assassination, US
treasury and Fed officials promptly, albeit temporarily, enlarged
longstanding currency swap facilities with Mexico from $1 billion to $6
billion. These enlarged facilities were made permanent with the
establishment of the North American Financial Group in April. Mexican
foreign exchange reserves stabilized at about $17 billion by the end of
April 1994.
The infrastructure of politics is the economic institutions founded on
political ideology. The infrastructure of neo-liberal politics is the
institution of privatization. Harvard-educated Carlos Salinas de
Gortari, in pursuing a neo-liberal agenda, put emphasis on
privatization. In the final years of his term, Salinas pushed the
NAFTA. Unfortunately, Salinas's version of privatization, not unlike
privatization programs everywhere else, primarily took the form of a
giveaway of state assets to his family members, friends and political
associates. In Mexico, since most state assets were controlled by the
ruling party, this giveaway had the effect of dissipating the economic
resources for political patronage that had been a major source of
political power of the ruling PRI, while having only modest results in
terms of effective real investment. This happened also to the
Kuomintang in Taiwan and to the ruling political parties in post-Soviet
Russia. It will also happen to the Chinese Communist Party as China
implement its privatization program.
In addition, the Salinas regime revived political violence to levels
not seen since the early days of the PRI, which culminated in the
assassination of Colosio and Francisco Ruiz Massieu, secretary general
of the PRI. The last year of Salinas's term began with the Zapatista
uprising in Chiapas. The passage of NAFTA has not had the expected
dramatic positive effects. The final indignity of the Salinas regime
came shortly after the installation of his successor, Ernesto Zedillo
Ponce de Leon, who was immediately forced to devalue the peso. Salinas,
as he left Mexico with huge foreign debts, was forced to leave the
country in disgrace, though not in personal poverty.
Zedillo's term was largely devoted to institutionalizing neo-liberalism
in Mexico, establishing a new institutional framework for presidential
elections, including an independent Federal Election Institute (IFE)
that allots disproportionate influence to special-interest groups
through political campaign financing and media spending. A
media-oriented US-style campaign based on sophisticated image
management produced Vicente Fox Quezada of the National Action Party
(PAN), the former president of Coca-Cola Mexico and a prince of the
globalization culture, as the president of Mexico. Mexican politics
typifies the politics of globalization, particularly in relation to
NAFTA. Economic management by the PRI shifted from the populist
policies of the administrations of Echeverría and Portillo to
the neo-liberal agenda of Miguel de la Madrid, which was a dismal
failure.
The accumulated per capita GDP growth through the period 1983-1999 was
0.32% in Mexico, while it was 180.9% in the more pragmatically managed
economy of South Korea. Yet, Korea became a basket case after the 1997
Asian crisis. In spite of the vaunted sophistication of the neo-liberal
model and the Ivy-league-trained technocrats administering it, Mexico
was subject to recurring major financial shocks, the most traumatic
being the currency crises of 1982 and 1994. Twenty years of empirical
evidence of failure to deliver on promises of economic stability,
growth and trickle-down prosperity should be sufficient to suggest that
there is something wrong with the theory. Yet this worn-out,
discredited neo-liberal theory has been invading China in ways
exponentially more destructive than the SARS virus.
Obsessive compulsive export
In addition to reduced government spending and reliance on the free
market, neo-liberal orthodoxy has also promoted a single-minded focus
on global competition and export-driven economic development. Export
cannot possibly be but a small part of any large economy such as
Mexico, China or the US. It may work for special situations like Hong
Kong and Singapore, whose models are totally irrelevant to a large
economy like China. Yet the advice of Hong Kong tycoons is given
disproportionate weight in the high council of the Chinese economic
policy establishment. The preponderance of the export sector will
distort domestic politics that will have adverse effects on national
development policy formulation. This is where real reform is needed in
China.
It has been estimated by Mexican economists that 20-25% of the Mexican
population owe their livelihood to US-Mexico trade. This group crosses
class, regional and even ideological lines. The fate and well-being of
vast regions of the Mexican south and east are as directly connected to
the US as Tijuana and Monterrey. The same applies to the coastal
regions of China. It is not a rich-poor divide. There are Mexican
magnates whose wealth and power are not directly linked to US
connections except as part of a vibrant total economy. And there are
millions of destitute Mexicans whose meager livelihood depends almost
entirely on their association with "el otro lado" (the other side).
The same is true in China. It is not a left-right split. Many on the
Mexican left see interaction with the US as powerful levers to
transform the country toward a modern economy. Many free-market
conservatives in Mexico see US neo-liberal influence as a deadly
menace. The 6% of the Mexican population that is involved in export
manufacture is dominated by large-scale enterprises whose owners at
least are doing very well. However, workers in both export and domestic
sectors have not been touched by much progress. The economy of Mexico
remains polarized into extremes of wealth and poverty, with 4% of the
population owning half the nation's wealth and more than 40% living in
poverty. China is faced with similar trends. Mexico cannot solve its
problems through export. It needs to develop its domestic economy. But
dollar hegemony prevents Mexico from taking the route. The same is true
for China.
Neo-liberal orthodoxy in the context of dollar hegemony prevents
non-dollar economies from focusing on domestic development through the
application of sovereign credit. Increasing government participation in
the domestic economy in ways that promote social well-being and
ecological sustainability is an alternative that have not been
adequately explored. A major feature of this participation would
include an industrial policy focusing on the development of industries
with the greatest capacity to contribute to balanced and sustained
economic growth. It would also include augmenting the government's
capacity to provide essential physical infrastructure in areas such as
housing and transportation, and social infrastructure in areas such as
education, public health and social services. And it would promote
sustainable agricultural self-sufficiency as well as patterns of growth
that are sensitive to the specific needs of a nation's distinctive
geographical regions and cultural heritage. The lopsided emphasis of
neo-liberal economics that look almost exclusively to export-driven
growth based on predatory competition in the global market is no way to
solve problems of poverty.
A new entrepreneurial class that can compete internationally and work
in an interdependent world economy is an asset to any nation. But the
promotion of this class cannot be allowed to lead to the official
disregard for the backbone of the Chinese political economy, which
remains the agricultural sector and the peasants who work in it. China
cannot become a rich economy by being an unjust economy, by simply
moving wealth from the masses to the few.
Salinas bet his presidency on NAFTA. While NAFTA won, Salinas lost.
This should be a dire warning to the Chinese Communist Party, which at
long last is officially debating on ways to strength its mandate and
ability to rule. Salinas and his PRI lost power because neo-liberal
economics serves only part of the population, even when it is well
managed. And it was badly managed by Salinas. Zedillo was able to
restore a modicum of stability, with considerable help from Clinton's
bailout. His economic policy continued to follow neo-liberal orthodoxy
and he stabilized the peso, at a high cost to Mexico. Finally, he lost
control of the government to the opposition in the historic election of
July 2000.
On August 1, 2000, dissidents in Mexico's traditional ruling party,
angered by its first presidential election defeat in 71 years, formally
petitioned for Zedillo's expulsion. Five moderately influential
factions in the PRI also demanded the expulsion of Zedillo's
predecessor, Salinas, accusing both of undermining the PRI through
neo-liberal, free-market economic policies. Shocked by unaccustomed
defeat, the PRI was torn apart by internal power struggles between
pro-Zedillo technocrats, mainly US-educated economists, and the
"dinosaurs" old-style PRI politicians closely associated with
nationalism.
Under Salinas, who ruled from 1988-1994, and Zedillo, whose six-year
term ended in December 2000, Mexico firmly embraced the free market.
Many state enterprises were sold off, its borders opened to trade and
Mexico adopted the neo-liberal economic policies of fiscal and monetary
discipline promoted by the IMF. PRI dissidents opposed Salinas's and
Zedillo's economic and social policies as contrary to the PRI's basic
populist and paternal spirit. They criticized the privatization of
banks and state firms, and hikes in taxes. They blamed the traitorous
policies of Salinas and Zedillo for the victory of Vicente Fox, of the
conservative National Action Party (PAN) who became Mexico's first
non-PRI president in seven decades. Reformist leaders within the PRI
led to the marginalization of the PRI in Mexico. Reformist leader
within the Kuomintang led to the marginalization of the GMD in Taiwan.
A similar fate may await the Chinese Communist Party as it moves China
toward more market and political reform.
At the end of June 1994, a new run on the peso was under way. Between
June 21 and July 22, foreign exchange reserves were drawn down by
nearly $3 billion, to about $14 billion. In early July, Mexico asked
the Fed and treasury to explore with the central banks of certain
European countries the establishment of a contingency, short-term swap
facility. That facility could be used in conjunction with the
US-Mexican swap facility to help Mexico cope with possible exchange
rate volatility in the period leading up to the August election.
By July, Fed had concluded that Mexico's exchange rate probably was
overvalued and that some sort of adjustment eventually would be needed.
However, US officials thought that Mexican officials might be correct
in hoping that foreign capital inflows could resume after the August
elections. In August, the US and the BIS established the requested swap
facility, but not until US officials had secured an oral understanding
with Mexico that it would adjust its exchange rate system if pressure
on the peso continued after the election. The temporary facility
incorporated the US-Mexican $6 billion swap arrangement established in
April. At the end of July, pressure on the peso abated, and Mexican
foreign exchange reserves increased to more than $16 billion.
Significant new pressure on the peso did not develop immediately after
the August election, but at the same time, capital inflows did not
return to their former levels.
The Fed and the treasury did not foresee the serious consequences that
an abrupt devaluation would have on investor confidence in Mexico.
These included a possible wholesale flight of capital that could bring
Mexico to the point of default and, in the judgment of US and IMF
officials, require a major financial assistance package. IMF officials
thought that Mexico's sizable exports meant there was no need to adjust
the foreign exchange policy. They did not foresee the exchange rate
crisis and, for most of 1994, did not see a compelling case for a
change in Mexico's exchange rate policy. The IMF completed an annual
review of Mexico's foreign exchange and economic policies in February
1994. The review did not identify problems with Mexico's exchange rate
policy. This pattern of IMF complacency was repeated in Asia and Latin
America throughout the rest of the decade.
Whereas the 1982 rescue package would turn out to be just the beginning
of a protracted process of managing Mexico's excessive indebtedness,
including several concerted debt rescheduling exercises, a debt buyback
and the 1990 debt reduction agreement negotiated under the terms of the
Brady Plan, the 1995 rescue package worked better, largely because of
widespread moral hazard. After the 1982 rescue package, Mexico received
support from the Fed and the treasury on three other occasions, but
always in the form of interim financing while other workouts were
concluded.
The difference between the 1982 and 1995 packages is that while the
former was followed by a decade of living in "exile" from the
international capital markets, the latter was successful in quickly
restoring market access. The difference in outcomes is related to the
size of the financial package and its medium-term quality, but the
fundamental difference was the market's expectation that the Fed was by
1995 fully committed to crisis resolution through added liquidity. In
1995, the financial rescue package was designed to be large enough,
plausibly to solve Mexico's dollar liquidity crisis. In 1982, the
package was large enough to avoid a Mexican default but for the next
six years the country had to go from one rescheduling exercise to
another, with the uncertainty of whether the country would be able to
meet its obligations always lurking on the horizon. Success in the 1995
package was not applicable to correcting Mexico's fundamental debt
problem. Much of the liquidity provided by the Fed actually came from
the Asian central banks.
In 1995, after the Federal Reserve started to hike interest rates in
1994 and sharply curtailed its own purchase of treasury bills,
triggering the Mexico peso crisis and a subsequent US slowdown, the
Bank of Japan initiated a program to buy $100 billion of US treasuries.
China bought $80 billion. Hong Kong and Singapore bought $22 billion
each. South Korea, Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia and the Philippines
bought $30 billion. The Asian purchase totaled $260 billion in 1994-97,
the entire increase in foreign-held US dollar reserves. These recycled
dollars from US trade deficits pushed down long-term dollar rates from
7.37% in 1994 to 6.67% in 1997, narrowing the spread to less than a
point between 30 year Treasuries and the ffr at 5.82%. The flood of
recycled foreign-owned dollars together with low long-term dollar
interest rates pushed up stock prices in the US despite the Fed raising
ffr targets, forming part of what Greenspan referred to as "irrational
exuberance".
When will we learn?
The Mexican crisis of 1994 raised throughout the world a number of
questions about the sustainability, and even the merits, of the
market-oriented reform process in developing economies. Understanding
how events unfolded in Mexico during the early 1990s continues to be
fundamentally important to assess the mechanics of currency crises. It
is of particular importance to debates on appropriate policy for China
at this juncture. The Asian financial crises of 1997 were evidence that
the lessons from Mexico had not been learned. Capital account
liberalization has been a central aspect of trade liberalization for
the past two decades. Such unregulated markets for currency, debt and
capital have fueled the flow of hot money with highly destructive
force. The collapse of the peso, the IMF structural adjustment (which
includes austerity, including cuts in agricultural supports) were
entirely predictable; and each had the immediate effect of slashing
living standards and wage levels drastically, and increasing debt
burdens.
The steady fall of the dollar versus the yen and deutschmark in the
first quarter of 1995, in the Asian currency crisis of 1997, during the
Russian ruble collapse and debt moratorium of 1998, and most recently,
the sustained collapse of the dollar versus the yen that began in
October 2003 were all part of the recurring pattern of
dollar-interest-rate-induced instability. On the fixed income front,
the most dramatic shocks were the global bear market in bonds in 1994,
and the dramatic widening in credit spreads in the summer/early fall of
1998.
Each of these crises though unique, shared some similar
characteristics. First, each crisis was largely unanticipated by the
market, with the forward markets providing no indication of the
impending upheaval. Second, going into each crisis, over-confident
investors took on highly leveraged long positions in currencies, bonds,
or spread products that were soon to come under heavy speculative
attack. In each case, investors tended to embrace a number of specific
investment themes or paradigms to justify their investment strategies.
They were all proved wrong by reality.
When a relatively large share of investors embraced the same or a
narrow range of investment themes, the commonly shared set of beliefs
became the market's conventional wisdom. But once a crisis hit and the
prevailing accepted wisdom shattered, investors were forced to
liquidate their highly leveraged positions. In each instance, the
unwinding of those highly leveraged positions accentuated the magnitude
of the currency or fixed-income bond market crisis.
Similar to the dollar overshoots of 1985 and 1995, the 1994 global bear
market in bonds also proved to be a transitory event, thanks again to
liquidity provided by central banks. But while the dollar-crisis
episodes represented dramatic overshoots at major turning points in the
dollar's long-term trend, the 1994 global bond market sell-off now
seems to be simply an interruption of a long-range rally in global
bonds fueled by ever-expanding liquidity, although substantial losses
were incurred during the sell-off. Going into 1994, many highly
leveraged bond funds had taken on huge long-duration positions in
several key markets after riding the 1993 bull market in global bonds,
and probably believed that additional hefty returns could be enjoyed in
1994 by maintaining those leveraged long positions. They evidently
ignored the fact that leading indicators of global economic activity
were already turning up strongly from increased liquidity, making those
positions extremely vulnerable if there was even a slight shift in
accommodative monetary policy.
The Federal Reserve's rate hike in February 1994 was the catalyst for
investors to unwind their highly leveraged long positions, triggering a
major sell-off in bond markets around the globe. Global bond yields
rose by 200-300 basis points on an average over the first three
quarters of 1994. By the fourth quarter of 1994, bond yields managed to
stabilize and then begin to fall steadily in 1995. By late 1995, bond
yields had returned to their pre-crisis levels, pushed down by central
bank monetary easing, i.e. more liquidity.
This pattern of collapse followed by stabilization and then recovery
from added liquidity was not too dissimilar from the pattern of the
dollar's collapse in early 1995. In both crisis episodes, the collapse
stage took place over a three-six month period, followed by a period of
stabilization that lasted about three months and a recovery period that
took place over a three-12 month period. This pattern is the direct
result of central banks changing short-term interest rate targets on
the latest economic data, while spiraling upward with ever-expanding
money supply. This is the equivalent of a sailing captain zigzagging
cleverly to respond to shifting wind patterns while sailing straight
towards a gigantic whirlpool of debt fueled by excess liquidity.
The 1998 credit-spread crisis shares a number of similar features with
the 1994 bond market crisis. As in the 1994 crisis, hedge funds in 1998
took on aggressive highly leveraged long positions, this time in spread
product, evidently believing that credit spreads would continue to
narrow. Unfortunately, Russia's decision on August 26 to engineer an
effective default on its dollar debt obligations led to a complete
reassessment of credit risk by global investors/speculators. Fear that
default risk might increase and spread worldwide led to a mad scramble
for dollar liquidity. Quality spreads in the US corporate bond market
widened dramatically and stood at recession levels. The yield spread
between Baa corporates and US Treasuries widened to levels not seen
since the 1990-91 recession. If such wide spreads should endure, US
corporations would be less willing to borrow and therefore would likely
curtail investment spending plans, which would clearly dampen US growth
prospects.
The 1987 stock market recovery proceeded along the same path as the
1994 bond market crisis and the 1995 dollar crisis. Following the 1987
stock market crash, prices stabilized at their new lower levels until
early 1988. Over the course of 1988, equity prices recovered, and by
the spring of 1989 moved above the 1987 highs on the strength of
massive increase in liquidity by the Fed. With such a dismal a record,
it is pure arrogance for US monetary policy wonks to give advice to
China.
Next: Futures Imperfect
for China
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