Real exchange rates have soared during the transition from central
planning to market economies. New research by Charles Wyplosz and his
colleagues helps us understand these dramatic increases.
The appropriate exchange rate regime for formerly command economies
remains an issue of controversy, following the recent attack on the
Czech currency, speculative pressure on Poland and Russia, and the
adoption of a currency board in Bulgaria. Yet little is known about the
specific forces driving the exchange rate during transition.
In 1995, László Halpern and Charles Wyplosz proposed a series of
‘stylized facts’ concerning these exchange rates, notably that on
returning to convertibility, the currencies in transition economies
underwent a massive devaluation followed by a path of real appreciation,
sometimes by impressive amounts. These ‘facts’ have been confirmed
by later research but to date, there have been few efforts to explore
their theoretical underpinnings.
A new CEPR Discussion Paper (also by Charles Wyplosz, this time with
Clemens Grafe) offers a first step in the explanation. It models the
transition process as one where old state-owned enterprises are replaced
by a modern industrial sector and a previously undersized non-traded
(service) sector. The analysis recognises the crucial role of external
finance while the domestic financial system is being built from scratch.
It also takes into account limited labour mobility out of the subsidised
old state sector.
The central result of the paper is that the real appreciation of the
exchange rate plays a crucial role in bringing about the reallocation of
labour away from the old state sector. Real appreciation allows the new
sectors to attract manpower by raising the real wages they offer.
This result contrasts with the so-called Balassa-Samuelson effect,
which predicts that fast productivity gains in the traded goods sector
are accompanied by real appreciation. In the Grafe-Wyplosz model,
causality runs the other way: real appreciation and increases in real
wages force the old sector to raise its productivity, which effectively
leads to the closing down of inefficient units. Such an effect explains
why ‘old industrialists’ complain about overvaluation - and why they
should be ignored.
In addition, the paper looks at state subsidies and foreign
financing, both of which may have a role in the reallocation of labour,
though they may also lead to ‘transition traps’: situations when the
real exchange rate is either too low to force a scaling down of the old
industrial sector or too high to allow modern firms to emerge. Just as
undervaluation blocks transition by preventing labour from migrating to
the modern sectors (traded and non-traded goods), overvaluation may wipe
out profitability in the new manufacturing sector.
The Grafe-Wyplosz model of the exchange rate emphasises the links
between productivity, capital accumulation, real wages and relative
prices as the old state sector gradually makes room for the modern
sectors to expand. The transition process is represented by five main
features:
A weak banking system and an unclear transformation of property
rights result in the almost complete absence of lending to the new
private sector.
Parts of the old manufacturing sector continue to operate under
‘soft budget constraints’. This has the effect of trapping resources
in low productivity production lines, many of which are effectively
insolvent. The resultinginefficiency affects both demand and supply.
Labour mobility away from the old state sector is limited by various
factors inherited from the command economy, including access to housing,
health and education. This effect is captured by assuming the existence
of a gap between wages in the modern sectors and wages in the old state
sector.
Transition is described as the instantaneous release of pent-up
demand for services and for internationally traded goods. The result is
the emergence of a market-determined real exchange rate - the ratio of
the price of non-traded goods to the price of traded goods.
The dismantling of ‘Berlin walls’ is accompanied by the
availability of foreign financing.
A number of results emerge from the model. First, the real exchange
rate is simply the other side of the coin of the real wage. Labour costs
and the real exchange rate need to be initially low to allow the new
traded sector to generate high enough profit margins to be able to
expand. At the same time, a continuous real appreciation is needed to
attract labour away from the state sector, which is then forced to close
down inefficient production lines. Contrary to Balassa-Samuelson, rising
productivity in the traded good sector is a reaction to the real
appreciation, not the driving force behind it.
Second, the proper level of the real exchange rate is a knife-edge.
If real wages are too low, they provide no incentives for labour to
leave the state sector. But if real wages are too high, they reduce
retained earnings and capital accumulation in the modern manufacturing
sector. In the latter case, a transition trap occurs: only the old
manufacturing sector and the low capital-intensive service sector exist.
Third, frictions in the labour market and subsidies to the state
sector enhance this transition trap effect by requiring higher real
wages and a higher real exchange rate. Such frictions can be so high
that a modern manufacturing sector cannot emerge at all.
Fourth, foreign finance tends to offset the effects of subsidies and
labour market frictions. Under certain conditions, it sustains demand
and raises the real exchange rate, which, in turn, imposes tougher
foreign competition on the old sector. Alternatively though, limits on
foreign borrowing can cause the real exchange rate to be undervalued
(given the productivity levels), thus keeping real wages too low.
Finally, if there is too much foreign financing, it can lead to
another transition trap, one akin to the Dutch disease: a large supply
of foreign funds props up demand, which leads to real appreciation and
high real wages. This wipes out profits in the modern traded sector and,
given the financial market distortion, blocks investment and the
development of state-of-the-art manufacturing.
The Grafe-Wyplosz results have a number of policy implications. One
is that it is futile and possibly counter-productive to resist real
appreciation since it is the market channel through which labour is
attracted out of the inefficient state sector. Another is the crucial
role played by IMF or World Bank money in the early days of reform: in
the absence of other outside sources, such financing allows countries to
overcome the debilitating effects of distortions in the labour and
financial markets.
This is true even though the model assumes that foreign loans are
used purely to finance consumption. Investment rather than consumption
of foreign funds is naturally preferable since they supplement retained
earnings in the build-up of capital stock and hence accelerate the
transition. But whether used for consumption or investment, capital
inflows raise productivity and help the economy outgrow its external
debt. This result disproves the popular argument that a consumption boom
financed by a current account deficit is harmful.
This article reviews research reported in ‘The Real Exchange Rate
in Transition Economies’,