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How
Risky is Financial Liberalization in the Developing Countries
‘Many
countries, in Europe but also in Asia, have been able to grow fast over
decades while retaining heavy-handed financial restraints. This alone
shows that there is no urgency to undertake liberalization, even though
that step should clearly be taken somewhere down the road.’ This
conclusion appears in a paper by Charles Wyplosz of the Graduate
Institute of International Studies, Geneva, published by the Centre for
Economic Policy Research.
Professor
Wyplosz takes as his starting point the fact that ‘Something has
changed in the world of financial crises’. They once could strike
anywhere, but they are now confined to developing countries and they hit
countries with no serious imbalances. ‘These changes carry profound
implications. They challenge the wave of capital liberalization observed
over the last decade...They require new thinking among international
financial institutions and…the developed countries. They also affect
banks and financial institutions which have moved significant parts of
their activity to emerging markets’.
The
author compares the gradual process of liberalization that occurred
after the Second World War in Europe with that of rapid reform which has
occurred in some transition countries. The second variety was often
based on the idea that ‘financial repression serves only powerful
private and political interests apt at thwarting ambitious reforms’.
The
paper, through the use of clear examples, shows that financial
liberalization can be much more destabilising in developing than in
developed countries. ‘Developing countries tend to go through a
boom-bust cycle, especially in the case of external liberalization.’
It is pointed out that liberalization can be just one of several
measures taken by a reform-minded government. ‘In that case,
liberalization can have radically different effects depending on the
accompanying measures. Sometimes, of course, financial restrictions
obscure and mitigate the effects of other, faulty, policies.’
Professor
Wyplosz comes to an unexpected conclusion: his analysis shows that those
who argue that restrictions can be self-defeating and those who say
their removal leads to destabilising speculation can both be right. This
is so because, while it is true that ‘restrictions cannot prevent the
collapse of exchange rate when the underlying macro-economic policies
are unsustainable’, it is also perhaps true that liberalization
‘opens up a window of fragility that can last several years’. Other
lessons drawn from the study are that we have little idea of the precise
effects of capital flows on developing countries; that liberalization
can reduce foreign exchange pressure in the long run but is initially a
source of instability, and, finally, it is surprising how little we can
explain about the crises of the nineties. ‘Most countries are
potentially guilty of something; when they liberalise their financial
markets they are potentially about to face a currency crisis, but no one
knows for sure’ where the guilt may lie.
Professor
Wyplosz sets out three main conditions for ‘safe’ liberalization. It
may be useful to wait until proper economic, financial and, possibly,
political infrastructure has been built. Then governments need adequate
welfare systems before liberalising, so as to mitigate the inegalitarian
effects of free markets. And, thirdly, find the right currency system:
more study of the ‘hard peg’ is advocated.
The
paper ends with some lessons for the International Monetary Fund. If
balance-of-payments crises were confined to developing countries then
the IMF would become an institution run by the developed countries but
at the service of the developing world. That is not what was intended.
And the author adds, ‘The IMF has now tamed its early enthusiasm for
liberalization but it has failed to recognise early enough the
associated dangers. It has been seen as protecting the lender at least
as much as the borrowers.’
The
main lesson is, perhaps, that ‘liberalization is a risky step, one in
which our knowledge remains rudimentary’.
Notes
for Editors:
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The
Author:
Charles
Wyplosz is
Professor of Economics at the Graduate Institute of International
Studies, Geneva and is also a Programme Director in CEPR’s
International Macroeconomics research programme and a Research Fellow in
CEPR’s Transition Economics research programme.
How
Risky is Financial Liberalization in the Developing Countries?
Charles
Wyplosz
CEPR
Discussion Paper
No 2724
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