The IMF’s Switch in Time


May 6, 2011

The IMF’s Switch in Time

by Joseph E. Stiglitz (May 5, 2011)

NEW YORK – The annual spring meeting of the International Monetary Fund was notable in marking the Fund’s effort to distance itself from its own long-standing tenets on capital controls and labor-market flexibility. It appears that a new IMF has gradually, and cautiously, emerged under the leadership of Dominique Strauss-Kahn.

Slightly more than 13 years earlier, at the IMF’s Hong Kong meeting in 1997, the Fund had attempted to amend its charter in order to gain more leeway to push countries towards capital-market liberalization. The timing could not have been worse: the East Asia crisis was just brewing – a crisis that was largely the result of capital-market liberalization in a region that, given its high savings rate, had no need for it.

That push had been advocated by Western financial markets – and the Western finance ministries that serve them so loyally. Financial deregulation in the United States was a prime cause of the global crisis that erupted in 2008, and financial and capital-market liberalization elsewhere helped spread that “made in the USA” trauma around the world.

The crisis showed that free and unfettered markets are neither efficient nor stable. They also did not necessarily do a good job at setting prices (witness the real-estate bubble), including exchange rates (which are merely the price of one currency in terms of another).

Iceland showed that responding to the crisis by imposing capital controls could help small countries manage its impact. And the US Federal Reserve’s “quantitative easing” (QEII) made the demise of the ideology of unfettered markets inevitable: money goes to where markets think returns are highest. With emerging markets booming, and America and Europe in the doldrums, it was clear that much of the new liquidity being created would find its way to emerging markets. This was especially true given that America’s credit pipeline remained clogged, with many community and regional banks still in a precarious position.

The resulting surge of money into emerging markets has meant that even finance ministers and central-bank governors who are ideologically opposed to intervening believe that they have no choice but to do so. Indeed, country after country has now chosen to intervene in one way or another to prevent their currencies from skyrocketing in value.

Now the IMF has blessed such interventions – but, as a sop to those who are still not convinced, it suggests that they should be used only as a last resort. On the contrary, we should have learned from the crisis that financial markets need regulation, and that cross-border capital flows are particularly dangerous. Such regulations should be a key part of any system to ensure financial stability; resorting to them only as a last resort is a recipe for continued instability.

There is a wide range of available capital-account management tools, and it is best if countries use a portfolio of them. Even if they are not fully effective, they are typically far better than nothing.

But an even more important change is the link that the IMF has finally drawn between inequality and instability. This crisis was largely a result of America’s effort to bolster an economy weakened by vastly increased inequality, through low interest rates and lax regulation (both of which resulted in many people borrowing far beyond their means). The consequences of this excessive indebtedness will take years to undo. But, as another IMF study reminds us, this is not a new pattern.

The crisis has also put to the test long-standing dogmas that blame labor-market rigidity for unemployment, because countries with more flexible wages, like the US, have fared worse than northern European economies, including Germany.  Indeed, as wages weaken, workers will find it even more difficult to pay back what they owe, and problems in the housing market will become worse. Consumption will remain restrained, while strong and sustainable recovery cannot be based on another debt-fueled bubble.

As unequal as America was before the Great Recession, the crisis, and the way it has been managed, has led to even greater income inequality, making a recovery all the more difficult.  America is setting itself up for its own version of a Japanese-style malaise.

But there are ways out of this dilemma: strengthening collective bargaining, restructuring mortgages, using carrots and sticks to get banks to resume lending, restructuring tax and spending policies to stimulate the economy now through long-term investments, and implementing social policies that ensure opportunity for all. As it is, with almost one-quarter of all income and 40% of US wealth going to the top 1% of income earners, America is now less a “land of opportunity” than even “old” Europe.

For progressives, these abysmal facts are part of the standard litany of frustration and justified outrage. What is new is that the IMF has joined the chorus. As Strauss-Kahn concluded in his speech to the Brookings Institution shortly before the Fund’s recent meeting: “Ultimately, employment and equity are building blocks of economic stability and prosperity, of political stability and peace. This goes to the heart of the IMF’s mandate. It must be placed at the heart of the policy agenda.”

Strauss-Kahn is proving himself a sagacious leader of the IMF. We can only hope that governments and financial markets heed his words.

Joseph E. Stiglitz is University Professor at Columbia University, a Nobel laureate in Economics, and the author of Freefall: Free Markets and the Sinking of the Global Economy.

Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2011.
http://www.project-syndicate.org

8 thoughts on “The IMF’s Switch in Time

  1. This is the new IMF mission: “Ultimately, employment and equity are building blocks of economic stability and prosperity, of political stability and peace. This goes to the heart of the IMF’s mandate. It must be placed at the heart of the policy agenda.”(Strauss-Kahn).

    Stiglitz can look back with satisfaction that he finally won the debate. It may be recalled that when as the World Bank as its Chief Economist he challenged the Washington Consensus and capital market liberalization. He argued that free and unfettered markets are neither efficient nor stable and they do not necessarily do a good job at setting prices, including exchange rates.

    In Strauss-Kahn, Stiglitz finally found an intellectual soulmate. My favourite Malaysian economist, K.S. Jomo, now with the United Nations as Assistant Secretary General for Economic Development, who analyzed the root causes of the 1998 Asian Financial Crisis independently came to the same conclusion (see Tigers in Trouble (Zed, 1998) and Malaysian Eclipse (Zed, 2000),. –Din Merican

  2. “…unfettered markets are neither efficient nor stable…”

    No! They are plain wrong. Simple. So many Nobel Prize winners and so many years later (and after creating so much pain to ordinary people) and they have come to a conclusion that any old-fashioned storekeeper could have told them.

    Boo to these so-called economists…

  3. All said and done , Din , these institutions ( the IMF, the WORLD BANK , the UNITED NATIONS , etc ) are made to seem very NOBEL but they are still arms or TOOLS of western or imperialist powers USED TO SERVE THEIR EVIL , SELF SERVING PURPOSE .

    If you have the time , read Antony Samson’s book titled ” THE MONEY LENDERS “. IT TELLS YOU EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THESE INSTITUTIONS AND THE RAISON D’ E’TRE for their existence in our midst .

    They are definately not here for the betterment of mankind as we are made to believe. They have sinister and evil motives .

    And after reading Antony Samson’s book , if you reflect upon the world around you , you will realise that it is true – that these international bodies are nothing more then tools and an extension of the western imperialist powers.

  4. time is relative…….a decade of suffering has been caused…….and there will definitely be new problems where employment and equity only will not necessarily be the solution…..the IMF should find a way to make itself irrelevant and be wound up voluntarily….it would then have made a really meaningful switch.

  5. Are we reading something about the “Illuminati”?
    Humankind has never “suffered”, before all these capitalist roaders existed?
    Ask Mao, who was definitely not a Illuminated, until he croaked of tertiary syphilis.

  6. Oh btw Datuk, congrats on achieving your second million hits on this blog. Here’s to you and Dr Kam:

  7. I am now reading Howard Stein’s Beyond The World Bank Agenda: An Institutional Approach Development(2008). It is a more serious treatment of the subject than Anthony Samson’s book.

    In his book, Dr. Stein argues that the World Bank (International Bank for Reconstruction and Development-IBRB) is plagued by a myopic, neoclassical mindset that wrongly focuses on individual rationality and downplays the social and political contexts that can either facilitate or impede development. He discusses the works of Gunnar Myrdal, Ronald Coase, Douglas North and other institutional economists and severely criticises the development economists of the Bank who are neo-classical theorists and who believe that growth and development would arise from the stabilisation, liberalisation and privatisation of economies.

    According to this neo-classical logic, stabilisation by contraining monetary growth and cutting government spending (instead of promoting good governance) should reduce inflation and imbalances in the current account of the balance of payments and government budget. Liberalisation, on the other hand, retracted state intervention that distort prices. It also means freeing up prices by removing government subsidies (like what we are doing now the price of petrol at the pump) for food and input commodities. It entails liberalisation of capital flows, leaving exchange rates to market forces (after 1973).

    Privatization meant selling state assets to the private sector (in Malaysia to UMNO cronies and proxies of politicians in power) on the assumption that private property would encourage greater efficiency, investment and growth. No mention was made of poverty eradication and equitable distribution. This was the Bank’s approach in the 1970s-1990s.

    Yes, the World Bank is pro-Big Business, especially American economic and foreign policy interests. Policies during the Mahathir era too were pro-business but to those associated with UMNO. Read Terence Gomez and K.S. Jomo.–Din Merican

  8. Correct…correct….correct…..Prof K> JOMO is one of Makaysia’s top Economic Brains, the country did NOT want – My guess is he is in greener pasture elsewhere.

    Good luck and all the good wishes for him….

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.