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The case for an Asian
Monetary Fund
By
Henry C K Liu
This article appeared in AToL
on July 12, 2002
Some wonder about whether there should be a single currency for
mainland China, Hong Kong and Macau. Indeed, the separate currencies
for the two special administrative regions (SARs) are a legacy of
Western colonialism and a transitional compromise accommodation of the
"one country, two systems" formula. The arrangement has no economic
rationale.
However, there is a broader question about monetary cooperation
throughout East Asia, not just Greater China. It is a question that has
been high on the Asian agenda since the regional financial crisis that
began in 1997.
In 1978, China experimented with multiple currency arrangements in its
special economic zones (SEZs): the renminbi (RMB, also known as the
yuan), the Foreign Exchange Certificate, and the SEZ yuan. The result
was considerable confusion and added transaction cost and friction. The
arrangement was discontinued after three years. Chinese central bank
chief Dai Xianglong has said he would "seriously consider" an
International Monetary Fund (IMF) proposal to ditch the yuan link to
the US dollar in favor of a link to a basket of currencies. Full
convertibility and free float would come after that.
It is highly unrealistic to expect the Hong Kong dollar to be a
functioning currency independent of the RMB for 45 more years, as
mandated by the Basic Law. It is likely that Hong Kong would
voluntarily adopt the RMB, or a currency with a close link to it, as
soon as the RMB is freely convertible. Beijing has offered the option
of a new currency as part of the negotiation for the reunification of
Taiwan. A single currency for all parts of China, including Taiwan,
does not constitute a regional currency, but a single national
currency.
Although the yuan is officially pegged to the US dollar at 8.2: 1, its
(and the dollar's) floating exchange value in relation to the Japanese
yen is of critical importance to both economies. In 1998, when the yen
fell to 147 against the dollar, Beijing served notice that a yen below
148 would force the yuan to devalue against the dollar. Tokyo and
Washington took steps to reverse the fall of the yen to avoid a yuan
devaluation. Washington had put forth the notion that the Asian
financial crisis of 1997 was precipitated by Chinese devaluation two
years earlier of the RMB yuan from 5 to 8.2. Beijing has since received
praise from Washington for resisting devaluing the yuan all through the
Asian financial crisis that began on July 2, 1997. Market forces since
1999 have been putting pressure on the yuan to appreciate against other
currencies, reflecting China's robust economy. Some have accused China
of de facto devaluation through its rebate of taxes (20 percent) to
exporters.
In 1996, about US$100 billion flowed into East Asia, but in 1997, $150
billion flowed out in the three months after July. Even though the
Washington Consensus argued that domestic policies had caused the Asian
financial crises that broke out in 1997, Asian governments have been
looking to regional financial arrangements to protect themselves from
similar volatility in the future. The most visible cause for the crises
was the fixed-exchange-rate regimes adopted by Asian governments
through the 1990s, all pegged to the US dollar at rates at odds with
economic realities, alternatively too high and too low. The fixed
exchange rates had to be defended by the central banks' foreign
reserves earned from trade surpluses accumulated at the pegged exchange
rates. As speculative attacks gathered force against the most
vulnerable Asian currencies, several central banks found themselves
drained of foreign reserves in short order, forcing them to abandon the
fixed exchange rates. As local currencies devalued abruptly, it became
impossible for local-currency revenue to service short-term dollar
debts, causing defaults and bankruptcies and general economic collapse.
To withstand the full fury of money-market forces, it has been argued
that domestic policies have to reform in areas such as flexible
exchange rates, corporate governance, capital-market deepening and
increased market discipline. The World Bank and the IMF have jointly
prepared Reports on Standards and Codes (ROSCs) to rate countries in
eight dimensions: statistical data dissemination, fiscal discipline,
supervision of banks, non-bank financial institutions (NBFIs) and
securities markets, transparency in monetary and fiscal policies,
payments settlements, corporate governance, accounting and auditing
standards, and insolvency and creditor rights. Yet unless an
economically honest, or at least responsive, exchange-rate regime is
operative globally, such reforms cannot happen at the local level. On
some of the eight dimensions, notably corporate governance and
accounting and auditing standards, the United States is the leader of
questionable practice. Yet the US dollar has been exempt from attacks
from market forces, speculative or fundamental, because it is at once
the preferred currency for international trade and a fiat currency that
the US government can print at will. This contradictory dual status of
the dollar is what gives it its hegemonic character.
The rapid pace of globalization has brought forth an urgent need for a
Global Central Bank as lender of last resort, regulatory authority,
global rules and standards, etc. But the reality is that this is not
likely for the foreseeable future because governments, except in such
places as Hong Kong and Argentina, are reluctant to surrender national
sovereignty in the protection of national economic interest. What then
is the option facing individual governments? Already, the formation of
the European Union, the North American Free Trade Area (NAFTA),
Mercosur (Mercado Comun del Cono Sur, or Southern Cone Common Market)
and other groupings demonstrate that other regions are moving ahead
with regional arrangements. East Asia has lagged behind largely as a
result of US geopolitical dictate.
The many market failures in the global financial regime, panics and
herd behavior, have been well documented. Instead of dealing with the
real problem, the international creditor community responds with IMF
pressure. Not only will this approach not lift the financial yoke on
emerging market economies, it is also unfair, because it imposes on
these economies austerity measures they do not deserve or, worse,
serves no constructive purpose except to perpetuate dollar hegemony. Of
course, countries need banking, accounting, and regulatory standards,
but there is no agreed best universal practice. Even the Group of Seven
(G7) industrialized nations cannot agree among themselves on a common
standard. Even after Enron and Global Crossing telecom IRU
(indefeasible right of use of excess capacity) swaps and WorldCom
accounting-fraud controversies, the United States continues to resist
regulation in favor of market discipline. Yet under pressure from the
IMF, developing countries are being forced to do what the US rejects
for itself. In reaction, East Asian countries have gotten together to
discuss this issue and to arrive at their own common standards. East
Asia is quite capable of becoming a common-currency area.
The most important changes to the world's financial architecture are
likely to come from the new regional arrangements being realized in
East Asia by Japan, China, South Korea, and the 10 member countries of
the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). The idea of a
multilateral cooperation agreement was revived on May 6, 2000, when the
finance ministers of the ASEAN+3 countries met in Chiang Mai, Thailand,
and concluded an agreement called the "Chiang Mai Initiative" (CMI).
The CMI was the first and significant step in official financial
cooperation for the whole region, better to enable the region to cope
with potentially disruptive currency fluctuations and international
capital movements, so that the countries within the region can protect
themselves from volatile and unpredictable capital movements. As a
follow-up on the CMI, an ASEAN Central Banks Forum took place recently
in Brunei and Kuala Lumpur. The 10 monetary authorities of ASEAN then
agreed to expand the size of the multilateral currency-swap facility
among the member countries from $200 million to $1 trillion. The
uniform framework of bilateral swap agreements between the three
Northeast Asian countries and ASEAN was debated by the 10+3 leaders in
their Singapore Meeting in November 2000 and Kuala Lumpur Meeting in
April 2001. And in Honolulu, exactly one year after the CMI was
announced, three bilateral currency-swap agreements between South Korea
and Japan, Malaysia and Japan and Thailand and Japan amounting to an
additional $6 billion were signed. China and Japan signed a yen-yuan
swap agreement in March 2001.
The CMI, which is a bilateral swap arrangement among 13 countries,
achieved much more than expected. With monitoring and surveillance, it
could be the beginning of an Asian Monetary Fund (AMF). The arrangement
has already been in existence for two years and participating countries
are working together on the regulatory arrangements.
The proposal of an Asian Monetary Fund initially received a cool
response from the IMF and the G7, led by Washington, but their position
has softened since. IMF managing director Horst Kohler has said that an
Asian Monetary Fund would be acceptable if it were complementary to the
IMF, and this has been echoed by the G7 and the Asia Europe Meeting
(ASEM).
Monetary cooperation in East Asia has progressed at an encouraging
pace. Examples of such cooperation include the work toward the Asian
Monetary Fund, Manila Framework Group, ASEAN surveillance process,
ASEAN+3 surveillance process, Chiang Mai Initiative, bilateral
arrangements, short-term capital flows monitoring by the ASEAN
secretariat, ASEAN+3 early warning system, third ASEM finance ministers
meeting, and the Kobe Research Project.
Structural reform, while necessary, is not enough. There is a need for
a safety net through a regional financial arrangement. Asia needs an
Asian system, operated by Asians and for Asia.
Exchange-rate stability and monetary coordination are legitimate
regional multilateral concerns. Capital markets nowadays are global but
market power is not equally distributed. A regional financial
arrangement to deal with its implications then becomes necessary. US
and European standards are converging rapidly. The Basel Capital Accord
is becoming more inclusive and East Asian participation is complete.
Yet there is evidence that the Japanese banks' problems are caused
largely by the "international" standards of capital requirements that
do not fit Japanese historical conditions well. While it may make sense
to pool risks at the global level, it makes even more sense to pool
them at the regional level, because international standards may not be
sensitive to regional conditions.
Sakakibara Eisuke, the former Japanese vice finance minister for
international affairs, is an initiator of an Asian monetary scheme. It
has a distinct Japanese provenance - even though Finance Minister
Miyazawa Kiichi denies any link between the current plan and one
bearing his name that emanated from Tokyo in 1997. Washington vetoed
that proposal during an IMF meeting in Hong Kong in October 1997, which
called on the Asian Development Bank to support Asian currencies that
came under speculative attack with a special $100 billion fund to be
provided by Japan.
The signatory governments of the CMI agreed to contribute $40 million
each to a common fund. The money will be used to allow them to swap
each other's currencies and run a system to spot threatening moves in
currency markets. Still to be resolved are the details of the "swap"
mechanism, and exchange rates. The plan is to build up a $20 billion
war chest (an amount proposed by Eisuke). The AMF won't replace the
IMF, but it could be a quick-reaction force to avert disaster while the
IMF deliberates on global implications. It can also offer rescue
packages more suited to Asian conditions than typical IMF
conditionalties, which have been under serious criticism
Bilateral relationship between an emerging East Asian economy and the
lead global economic power was historically the strategy for a regional
economy to achieve growth. This phenomenon, which brought economic
growth in tandem with inter-regional relationship that lacked
sufficient diversification, rendered the economies of the region
susceptible to severe and excessive external shocks. Most major East
Asian economies depended on extra-regional trade and investment, while
intra-regional financial flows were relatively light. Sudden and
simultaneous capital flights by extra-regional investors and creditors
left the region devastated in 1997. The concentration of
foreign-currency-denominated external loans was an economic disaster to
the countries in the region, because practically all of them were short
of foreign exchange for external debt repayment when the financial
crisis erupted in 1997. When local-currency depreciation precipitated a
loss of confidence on the part of foreign investors and creditors,
short-term external loans were recalled and massive capital flights
followed. Many Asian countries were caught short of foreign-currency
assets, and external debt repayment difficulty mounted overnight.
Currency speculation that contributed to the triggering of a process
that led to the economic (and political) collapse of several countries
in Asia was a clear proof of the lack of effective, cohesive
cooperation in the region. The only option remaining at the time was to
turn for assistance to stronger economies and international financial
institutions whose interests were not closely aligned with those of the
region.
In order to prevent international currency speculation, it is essential
that any preventive financing be arranged in large amounts and quickly.
Hong Kong, with its huge US dollar reserves, was able to withstand
speculative attacks, albeit at high cost. What is even more important,
therefore, is the sheer availability of a sufficiently large financing
facility standing ready to assist. Such readily available financing can
serve as an effective preventive mechanism against the possibility of a
balance-of-payments difficulty. International organizations that
endeavor to provide assistance financing globally are already spreading
their resources too thin. China and Hong Kong each provided the IMF
with $1 billion in July 1997, with the understanding that the IMF would
contain the crisis within Thailand. Instead, the IMF exploited the
crisis to promote dollar-based global market fundamentalism. The East
Asian region therefore must accept the fact that it has to rely on
itself more than on outside help alone.
Unlike many of the cases in Latin America, it can be argued that the
balance-of-payments problems of 1997-98 in Asia were not fundamental
but transitory in nature. They were in fact due to unforeseen and
sudden capital outflows. Moreover, the crisis could have been a mere
temporary setback had it not been further aggravated by restrictive IMF
policy stances taken in the earlier days after the crisis. The
Malaysian temporary financial derailing may provide a case in point,
and swift deinternationalization of its currency worked. For the most
part, the Asian financial crisis was thus more of the
capital-account-related nature than that of the traditional
current-account disequilibrium.
After the 1997 financial crises, Asian countries began to look inward
within the region. The concept of self-reliance and mutual support,
lying dormant for so long under the domination of globalization, has
been revived. Although regional trade cooperation in Asia has been
continuously strengthened via economic consolidation, cooperation in
financial areas still leaves much to be desired. Financial illiquidity
of Asian countries during and immediately after the crisis provides
sufficient evidence to prove the point. Hong Kong suffered for its
market liquidity more than for fundamental weakness. Regional investors
sold in liquid Hong Kong markets to meet margin calls to try to save
their investments in other illiquid parts of the region. The 1997
financial crisis of Asia necessitated international financial
adjustments in the crisis-hit countries. Japan, China, Hong Kong and
other Asian countries were ready to help, despite their own domestic
problems, but were prevented from doing so by Washington. This brought
about the awareness of need for greatly enhanced intra-regional trade
and finance and led ultimately to some form of coordinated,
intra-regional, financial policy framework and shared financial
resources, something close to a new international financial
architecture for Asia.
In order to strengthen self-help and support mechanisms in East Asia
through the ASEAN+3 framework, the need to establish a Regional
Financing Arrangement (RFA) to complement the existing international
facilities is recognized. The CMI multilateral and bilateral swap
facilities that are put in place among the 10+3 monetary authorities
will be utilized only when one or more countries encounter short-term
and temporary balance of payments difficulties. In the framework of the
RFA, the emphasis is placed on the role of the regional currencies.
This is a major theme in the arrangement.
The lack of currency diversification in the past led to detrimental
effects associated with external payments difficulties. The
multi-currency placement mechanism is thus designed in an attempt to
reflect this diversification objective. Based on the amount of total
out-placements, each country can then borrow up to a multiple of the
placement amount, a concept similar to the much-practiced margin loans
in the securities business. A formula to determine each country's
multiple would be developed and negotiated, perhaps on the need to
borrow and ability to repay basis. Once the multiples are agreed upon,
each of the monetary authorities can utilize the multilateral and
bilateral swap facilities up to the maximum amount as determined by the
respective multiples.
The RFA also introduces a new element in regional financial
cooperation, one of building up a formal and committed relationship
among the participating member countries from Day 1 onward, prior to
any borrowing actually taking place. The system so envisaged will in
effect become a mutual give and take, which forms a fair and logical
foundation for financial self-help and support among monetary
authorities of the East Asian countries.
The countries within the region need to be protected against serious
balance-of-payments and international-liquidity problems. The financing
facility required for the purpose must be accompanied by proper
monitoring of capital flows and an efficient regional surveillance
process. The resulting regional financing arrangement (RFA) will then
constitute an important element in East Asia's self-help and support
mechanisms. The development and implementation of the RFA must
therefore be expedited with binding commitment by the regional member
countries.
The implementation of the ASEAN Swap Arrangement (ASA) and some
bilateral swap agreements between Japan and South Korea, Malaysia and
Thailand have been finalized, thereby completing the first building
block of the East Asian financial cooperation. By the end of 2001,
comprehensive research had been done on the subject of capital-movement
monitoring within the framework of ASEAN+3. By last month, two-way
bilateral swap arrangements (TBSAs), or arrangements whereby China,
Japan, and South Korea can financially assist one another in a
reciprocal manner in times of similar needs, were also to have been
instituted. The second building block in the framework of ASEAN+3
financial cooperation will be completed.
The third building block of mutual placements will be completed among
the 13 regional countries as the foundation of the RFA scheme by
year-end 2002 at the latest, by which time obstacles to the regional
financing arrangement will also have been eliminated or minimized. In
order to get the new RFA scheme off the ground rapidly, concrete
operations can conceivably begin to proceed step by step as early as
possible. Any ASEAN+3 country that is willing and well prepared enough
might begin by making some bilateral agreements within the framework of
this scheme and then keep on expanding the number of new partners with
which further agreements can be made. Once all the possible pairings of
countries are achieved, full-scale "constructive engagement" of the
multilateral RFA scheme will thereby have been completed and a
full-fledge preventive scheme created and ready to be activated
whenever called for by the events.
The monitoring and surveillance unit for the ASEAN+3 countries will
have built up its expertise and facilities such that it will stand
ready, together with a final decision-making body well
institutionalized to deliberate on recommendations tabled by the
monitoring and surveillance unit upon regional member countries'
requests for drawdowns of assistance funds, by mid-2003. Within a
decade pursuant to the time when the multi-currency placements will
have been made, regional financial cooperation and institutionalization
will have grown to a point where a common-currency area will become a
viable and realistic option for East Asia.
In the near future, the finance ministers and central bank governors of
the 10+3 East Asian countries will have the final say as to what would
be the modalities, sizes, mechanisms, operating procedures, rules, and
regulations of East Asia's RFA. Whatever and whenever they finally
decide upon as a logical follow-up to the CMI, East Asia will move
another step closer to the ultimate goal of intra-regional cooperation
and integration to stabilize the foreign-exchange markets and macro
financial systems of the member countries.
This newly proposed RFA scheme would aim at eventually becoming
complementary to existing international facilities in terms of the
out-placements made up front as well as the time frame involved in the
operations; it would have sufficient size; and it would allow certain
ASEAN member countries to benefit from the financing from the Northeast
Asian countries, which they otherwise might not be able to gain access
to under a bilateral framework.
There is also the question of moral hazard, whereby a country realizing
that there is emergency rescue funding available might become less
cautious with its macroeconomic policy management, particularly as
related to the balance of payments. A crisis to be avoided would
therefore be inadvertently made to happen. To avert the problem of
moral hazard, the scheme as proposed must be accompanied by an
effective and efficient system of surveillance, self-monitoring, peer
review, and final decision-making capability.
China views the CMI as a substantial step toward financial cooperation
among East Asian countries. The objective is to complement existing
international facilities by providing liquidity support for the nations
in difficulty of international payment. According to Article 7 of the
CMI, 10+3 finance ministers also mandated the ASEAN secretariat, on top
of the currency-swap agreement, to work on an appropriate
self-financing vehicle for the region with a view to strengthening the
collective capacity against a possible future financial crisis.
East Asian cooperation has a strong political commitment, thereby
creating a solid foundation and impetus for further development. In the
face of the difficulties posed by the 1997 financial crises, the
leaders of Asian countries have realized that it is imperative for
them, through coordination and cooperation, to strengthen collective
capability against crises so as to recover their economies as quickly
as possible.
In this context, the leaders of ASEAN, China, Japan and South Korea
took advantage of the 30th anniversary of ASEAN to hold their first
informal meeting in Malaysia in late 1997. Since then, leaders of
ASEAN+3 have met regularly and had in-depth discussions on the issues
concerning regional finance, economy, politics and security, etc.
Specifically, they reached the consensus on the key role of financial
stability in sustaining regional economic development. The leaders also
shared the conviction that building a peaceful environment for economic
development serves the greatest common interest of East Asian
countries. To this end, it is imperative for the East Asian countries
to strengthen coordination and cooperation among themselves. In
November 1999, leaders of 10+3 issued the Joint Statement of East Asia
Cooperation in Manila, which crystallized the direction and priority
for the future by highlighting the importance of developing economy
through cooperation.
In light of this principle, the concept of a regional financing
mechanism symbolized by the CMI has been moving forward steadily while
cooperation in trade and investment is making headway.
The financial and economic cooperation under 10+3 framework has given a
spur to the progress in overall East Asian cooperation. In November
2000, the fourth 10+3 informal leaders meeting in Singapore agreed to
designate two task forces to study the possibility of transforming
informal meetings to summits and establishing an ASEAN + Northeast Asia
Free Trade Zone. Moreover, the leaders of China, South Korea and Japan
agreed to meet regularly on the occasion of the 10+3 leaders meeting
since 2001.
Given their diversified background in history, culture and level of
economic development, the East Asian countries must pursue regional
cooperation in a gradual and orderly manner, taking into account their
unique characteristics. Compared with other regional cooperative
mechanisms, particularly the European economic and monetary union,
Asian nations are more diversified in history, culture, political
regime, and levels of economic development. In recent centuries,
Western imperialism and colonialism have fragmented Asia. The Cold War
aggravated that fragmentation. Therefore, there is still a long way to
go and arduous task faces these nations. They must choose a cooperative
pattern suitable to the regional characteristics rather than blindly
copying the model of others.
It is noteworthy that the evolution of ASEAN itself experienced several
stages. It started with those countries of similar economic features,
then was gradually expanded to more countries. Likewise, the current
cooperation among the East Asian countries should also start from the
areas where the consensus can be more easily reached, and then spread
gradually on the basis of consolidation. In contrast to other regional
organizations that started from trade cooperation before their
expansion, East Asian cooperation started from the financial field
where they shared consensus before the comprehensive cooperative
relations could be gradually established in the fields of finance,
trade and investment.
East Asian cooperation has emerged along with the vigorous momentum of
regionalization in the global economy, which is consistent with
economic globalization. Globalization has two sides. While having
accelerated world economic development, it has also brought about the
problem of uneven distribution of benefits, thereby accentuating global
economic polarization. As a result of dramatic advancement of modern
information technology, the digital divide has further widened the
income and development gap between the developed and developing
countries. Many developing countries found themselves increasingly
marginalized in the course of globalization.
Developments in Asia do not always received adequate attention in the
Western media. This summary may serve to help correct the impression
that Asia is merely an appendix of a Western global system.
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