95/17
The IMF and the Challenges of Globalization--
The Fund's Evolving Approach to its Constant Mission:
The Case of Mexico
Address by Michel Camdessus
Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund
at the Zurich Economics Society
Zurich, November 14, 1995
Ladies and gentlemen, it is a great pleasure to be here with you and
to have this opportunity to address the Zurich Economics Society. Zurich
has a tradition in the world of finance that dates back centuries. In my
remarks to you today, I would like to focus on a very contemporary issue
by offering you some thoughts on the globalization of the world's financial
markets and, in particular, on the new challenges that today's global financial
markets pose to the economies that tap them, especially the emerging market
economies. As a case in point, I would like to describe the circumstances
surrounding the Mexico crisis. Finally, I will turn to what this experience
suggests about the future role of the IMF.
As the 20th century comes to a close, the international economic system
is undergoing profound change. It is not just that markets are more vast,
more complex, and more closely integrated than ever before; the fact is
that the international economy is also increasingly a global one. This
globalization has many facets, but perhaps the most striking is its effect
on financial markets. The size and complexity of today's markets--and the
speed at which information is communicated across them--would in fact have
been inconceivable just a generation ago.
To begin with, let us consider just how large the world's financial
markets have become. As of December 1994, the outstanding amount of international
bond issues had increased to $2.4 trillion, more than a fourfold increase
over the previous ten years. Over the same period, international bank loans
more than tripled to $4.3 trillion. The outstanding amount of currency
swaps grew by five and a half times between 1988 and 1994, reaching over
$1 trillion, while the notional amounts outstanding of currency forwards,
futures, and options increased to over $10 trillion in 1994.1 Trading volume
in the global foreign exchange market has also accelerated--to over $1.2
trillion per day, according to the most recent survey by the BIS.2
The globalization of financial markets is a very positive development.
It provides opportunities for borrowers to obtain additional resources
for investment and growth, and for investors to obtain attractive returns
on their savings, thereby promoting a more efficient allocation of global
resources. Developing countries have seen a marked increase in capital
inflows, which averaged over $130 billion per year during 1990-94, a nearly
fourfold increase over the previous five-year period.3
Not only did the magnitude of inflows increase during this period, but
their composition changed fundamentally. In particular, private market
sources more than accounted for the surge in capital inflows, while official
capital flows to developing countries fell in both absolute and relative
terms. Moreover, while in earlier periods private sector lending had mainly
been in the form of bank lending, the new surge in capital flows consisted
primarily of portfolio investment, with increased direct investment also
playing a role. Not since the opening decades of the twentieth century
have private portfolio capital inflows been such a significant source of
financing for developing countries.
To an important degree, the increased volume of international lending
to developing countries has reflected a growing trend toward portfolio
diversification and the desire for higher returns on the part of investors
in the industrial countries. However, the implementation of far-reaching
programs of stabilization and structural reform in a growing number of
developing countries has also been an important factor. I can say without
false modesty that the IMF has played a critical role in this process through
its country surveillance, its lending programs, and its technical assistance
efforts. In particular, the IMF has focused on creating the stable macroeconomic
policy environments that are conducive to promoting investment and sustained
economic growth, correcting overvalued exchange rates, eliminating trade
barriers, liberalizing financial markets, and removing structural impediments
to economic efficiency.
All that is well and good, but there are two sides to the coin. The
presence of large capital inflows requires increased vigilance and foresight
on the part of economic policymakers in borrowing countries. In some circumstances,
capital inflows can complicate domestic economic management--for example,
by putting upward pressure on the country's exchange rate or, if the inflows
are not adequately sterilized, by permitting an excessive expansion of
domestic liquidity. Moreover, a rapid expansion of credit fueled by capital
inflows can set the stage for problems in the financial sector, particularly
if prudential supervision is inadequate.
Further, countries that successfully attract large capital inflows must
also bear in mind that their continued access to international capital
is far from automatic, and the conditions attached to that access are not
guaranteed. The decisive factor here is market perceptions: whether the
country's policies are deemed basically sound and its economic future,
promising. The corollary is that shifts in the market's perception of these
underlying fundamentals can be quite swift, brutal, and destabilizing.
Indeed, shifts in market sentiment can amplify the adverse effects of policy
errors.
Thus, the fact that large capital inflows are often seen as a sign of
market confidence in the domestic economy must not lull governments into
relaxing policy discipline. Just the reverse! The globalization of world's
financial markets has sharply reduced the scope for governments to depart
from traditional macroeconomic policy discipline. Moreover, if countries
are to retain market confidence, policymakers must be prepared to tighten
policies when needed. This, in turn, points to the importance of establishing
solid domestic institutions--especially strong domestic banking systems--that
can accommodate tighter fiscal and monetary conditions as the need arises.
It also highlights the importance of structural reforms--such as trade
liberalization, privatization and the establishment of transparent regulatory
systems--so that capital inflows can be more readily used for long-term
productive investment.
Against this background, let me turn to the case of Mexico. During the
period 1987-93, Mexico successfully pursued an ambitious program of economic
adjustment and structural reform, building upon the economic progress that
had already been achieved since 1982. The strategy was designed to lay
the basis for strong, private sector-led growth, by reducing macroeconomic
imbalances and the public sector's role in the economy and by restructuring
the country's large external debt.
By some measures, this strategy yielded impressive results. The overall
balance of the public sector shifted from a deficit (including interest)
of 15 percent of GDP in 1986-87 to a surplus of 1.2 percent of GDP in 1992-93.
Inflation declined from around 160 percent at the end of 1987 to under
10 percent in 1993, reaching single-digit levels for the first time in
two decades. Meanwhile, important structural reforms were being carried
out. These included, among other initiatives, a major tax reform, the freeing
of interest rates and the elimination of credit controls, the privatization
of Mexico's 18 commercial banks and a number of important public sector
enterprises, and a constitutional amendment granting autonomy to the Bank
of Mexico.
These and other reforms signaled the authorities' commitment
to a market-based economy, which, along with Mexico's comprehensive restructuring
of external debt, set the stage for renewed access to the international
financial markets. Indeed, during 1990-93, private capital inflows surged
to an average of over 6 percent of GDP, substantially strengthening international
reserves. Nevertheless, the widening of the current account deficit to
6.5 percent in 1993, up from around 2 percent of GDP in 1988-89, and the
fact that it was financed in part by short-term inflows, was cause for
concern. Indeed, these concerns were distinctly expressed during the Fund's
regular annual consultation with Mexico in February 1994, and reiterated
in our Annual Report published in July of the same year.
Thereafter, several adverse developments at home and abroad helped provoke
Mexico's exchange crisis. Internally, the assassination of the principal
candidate for the presidency, the uprising in Chiapas, and the fact that
1994 was an election year contributed to a climate of economic and political
uncertainty. Outside Mexico, the tightening of financial conditions in
the United States and other markets prompted foreign investors to reassess
their portfolio investment in emerging markets, including Mexico.
At the same time, some dubious policy choices by the authorities helped
to deepen the crisis. One particular misstep was the authorities' decision
to replace peso-denominated government debt with securities indexed to
the U.S. dollar. While this may have helped stabilize financial markets
for a time, it also increased Mexico's vulnerability to the exchange rate
pressures that re-emerged in the following months. To be sure, Mexico did
take steps in late December 1994 and in early 1995 to gradually tighten
its economic policy. But the loss of confidence following the adoption
of an expansionary policy, the devaluation of the peso, and the subsequent
abandonment of the managed exchange rate regime, could not be reversed.
The market's disenchantment set the stage for the market turmoil and sharp
depreciation of the peso that continued into early 1995.
Although the ensuing
crisis had serious effects on the Mexican economy, its impact was not limited
to Mexico. Indeed, concern about the situation in Mexico prompted investors
to scrutinize the investment climate in other emerging market economies
more closely. Equity and currency markets came under pressure in Latin
America and, to some extent, in Asia, raising the possibility of spillover
effects. In fact, there was a very serious risk that the collapse of one
of the most promising emerging markets could lead international private
investors to interrupt the flow of their capital to other developing countries,
thereby severely damaging economic performance in a number of them. In
this event, the international economy would have been deprived of one of
the driving forces of global economic growth in recent years.
But we should also acknowledge frankly that the problem was exacerbated
by the difficulty of finding a cooperative solution at the international
level--a task complicated by the difference of views between the United
States administration and the Congress--as well as by the prevailing diagnosis
in Europe--that the crisis was a regional problem, not a global one, which
should be resolved within NAFTA.
Once it became clear that the U.S. Congress would not approve the proposed
assistance of $40 billion and that the Europeans' contribution would be
lean, should the IMF have resigned itself to the looming major crisis,
or mobilize all means at its disposal in order to head it off? That is
the situation we had to respond to in a matter of hours.
I do not feel comfortable talking about this today, with the Mexican
exchange rate market still experiencing turbulence. But, at the same time,
this should not make us forget the fundamental and welcome reorientation
of Mexico's economic policy in the course of the past year. The health
of public finance has been restored, the necessary external adjustment
has taken place, and the country has regained its access to the international
capital markets. Although economic conditions remain difficult, growth
is expected to resume, and the markets will stabilize as economic agents
become convinced of the authorities' policy commitment. Moreover, the potentially
devastating spillover effects on other, primarily Latin American, countries
have been contained. How was this achieved?
First, Mexico undertook a strong adjustment program designed in consultation
with the IMF. Second, it had the support of a large international financial
package. The IMF arrangement for Mexico was the largest ever approved for
any member country, both in absolute amount and in relation to the member's
share in the Fund. As you know, a number of questions have been raised--in
Switzerland and in other IMF member countries--about this action. Let us
consider the principal ones.
Was such exceptional support warranted? Yes. Mexico's adjustment program
was strong, as was its track record in implementing previous adjustment
programs. The strengthened program approved in March 1994 aimed at cutting
the external current account deficit from about 8 percent of GDP in 1994
to 1 percent in 1995 and containing the inflationary impact of the peso's
devaluation. In the event, Mexico's determination has paid off, and the
program is on track. The current account deficit is projected to return
to about balance this year, while monthly inflation has declined from 8
percent in April to about 2 percent in September. Interest rates have also
declined from their levels earlier this year. As I just indicated, the
markets are still undecided, but it is hard to imagine that they will persist
in their hesitation if the authorities continue to apply a policy that
has enabled to achieve such a rapid turnaround.
Should the IMF itself have lent such an extraordinary level of support
to Mexico? Again, an emphatic yes. The IMF's support of Mexico fits squarely
within the Fund's traditional mandate. The Fund's Articles of Agreement
call upon it "to give confidence to members by making the general
resources of the Fund temporarily available to them under adequate safeguards,
thus providing them with the opportunity to correct maladjustments in their
balance of payments without resorting to measures destructive of national
or international prosperity." In the absence of our support, what
alternative would the authorities have had in the aftermath of the peso's
devaluation? One policy alternative would have been to impose exchange
controls, a debt moratorium, and trade restrictions. Such an approach would
have dealt a terrible blow to Mexico's past liberalization efforts and
future market access; it would have certainly been followed for precautionary
reasons by similar moves in almost all Latin American countries, and would
have increased the possibility of spillover effects in other markets. A
decade of unstinting international efforts to open markets and liberalize
emerging economies would have been at risk. Instead, Mexico was able to
address its problems, to put itself back on the path of recovery, while
at the same time limiting the negative impact of the crisis on other countries.
Finally, questions have been raised as to whether the Fund's assistance
to Mexico poses problems of moral hazard. Certainly the answer is "no".
It would be perverse indeed for a country to allow a serious crisis to
develop in the expectation of financial support in its aftermath; the resulting
effects on interest rates, real income, employment, and financial market
access should suffice to deter such behavior. As regards private investors,
the message should be clear: the IMF never extends its assistance automatically--our
policy will always be to keep investors guessing. And finally, when we
do extend future Fund support, it will as always depend on the nature and
seriousness of the problem and on the speed and strength of the member's
policy response.
The Mexican experience demonstrated in a very concrete way that no country--OECD
member or not--is immune to shifts in market sentiment, and that no country
is exempted from the need for heightened policy discipline in today's world
of global financial markets. But what conclusions should be drawn about
the role of the IMF and the ways it fulfills it in this new environment?
I believe that the Mexican crisis shows that the role of the Fund in
"giv[ing] confidence to members to correct maladjustments in their
balance of payments" remains more relevant than ever. This is the
essence of what the Fund did in Mexico. The experience with Mexico also
demonstrated, however, that prevention is better than cure. Thus, considerable
attention has been given to the ways in which Fund surveillance over the
policies and performance of its member countries can be strengthened, so
that emerging problems can be more readily addressed before they become
full-blown crises. Let me share with you our major conclusions.
First, the experience underscored the importance of having information
that is as up to date as possible. The Fund's ability to pinpoint impending
problems in member countries, especially in the period between two consultations,
depends critically on the availability of accurate, comprehensive economic
and financial data that is communicated rapidly. Accordingly, the Interim
Committee of the IMF Board of Governors has agreed on a list of core data
categories, representing the minimum to be provided to the Fund by all
members on a regular basis, and allowing for continuous monitoring. At
the same time, we are developing standards to guide members in the dissemination
of economic and financial data to the public, so that markets will be better
informed--and less prone to surprises. We are aiming at a two-tier system
in which all countries will be encouraged to meet a certain minimum standard
for the public release of statistical information, while countries seeking
to tap the international financial markets will be encouraged to meet more
exacting standards with regard to the coverage and periodicity of the data
they provide.
The phenomenon of globalization also persuades us that the Fund's policy
dialogue with member countries needs to be further intensified. Thus, the
Fund is seeking to develop a more continuous, intensive, and probing dialogue
with members. It is also paying greater attention to the soundness of domestic
banking systems, to financial flows and their sustainability, to the problems
of countries at risk, and to countries where financial market tensions
are likely to have spillover effects.
We also concluded that we needed to clarify the procedures whereby the
Fund could respond rapidly to give confidence to members and the international
monetary system. These procedures have now been clarified--as have, of
course, the principles that the use of such procedures must be limited
to truly exceptional circumstances; that our support must remain catalytic
in nature; and that the possibility of Fund support should in no way be
considered a guarantee against sovereign default.
One final point: the Mexican crisis demonstrated that the Fund must
have adequate resources so that it can continue to fulfill its mandate.
In addition to Mexico, there have been a number of other large Fund arrangements
this year in support of major stabilization and reform programs--in Argentina,
Russia, and Ukraine. The demands on the Fund's resources are likely to
remain large, and its liquidity position is projected to weaken considerably
over the next two years.
Several initiatives are therefore being pursued to strengthen Fund resources;
I will mention them briefly. As you may know, the G-10 countries, including
Switzerland, currently provide lines of credit to the Fund under the General
Arrangements to Borrow (GAB). These countries are now working to establish
parallel financing arrangements complementary to the GAB, with the aim
of doubling the credit lines currently available to the Fund under this
mechanism.
At the same time, there is full agreement among the Fund's membership
that an expansion of the Fund's borrowing arrangements cannot be a substitute
for an increase in member quotas, which, after all, remain the essential
resource base for IMF lending. The Eleventh General Review of quotas is
now underway, and this will remain our top priority. In order for the IMF
to be able to continue providing support for countries in difficulty--as
it did in Mexico--a doubling of quotas will, in my judgment, be essential.
Finally, I would be remiss if I did not also mention efforts to secure
the necessary resources to enable the Fund to continue assisting its poorest
member countries--not in their development efforts as such, since this
is the task of the World Bank, but with macroeconomic stabilization and
reform. The countries I have in mind are not those that are currently in
the position to tap international capital markets, but rather, the many
countries for which it is a struggle not to be excluded from the mainstream
of the world economy. If we are to thwart this risk, and it is our duty
to do so, we must provide firm support to the poorest countries. The Fund's
instrument for assisting the poorest countries is the ESAF--the enhanced
structural adjustment facility. Last year, with the generous support of
Switzerland, the ESAF was extended; this year agreement was reached to
establish a self-sustaining ESAF beginning early in the next century. The
challenge now is to find a way to finance the ESAF in the interim period,
before it becomes self-sustaining. We will be discussing options for financing
an interim ESAF in the coming months.
In conclusion, I would like to emphasize again that the globalization
of the world's financial markets is a positive development that enhances
the growth prospects of developing countries. At the same time, the experience
with Mexico has deepened the world's appreciation of the size and agility
of these markets and the problems that may arise. Moreover, it has led
to some healthy reflection on the part of countries that tap the market,
as well as by the Fund. For countries, it has increased awareness of the
need for strong policies and the need to reassess the appropriateness of
economic policy continually. For the Fund, Mexico has reaffirmed the importance
of the IMF's role in giving confidence to members and promoting stable
exchange rates. But it has also prompted us to re-evaluate and strengthen
our tools for exercising effective surveillance over member countries.
That being said, I believe that we must also be realistic about our
expectations--and modest about our capabilities. For example, while market
sentiment is supposed to be determined by underlying fundamentals, it is
sometimes more volatile than the underlying economic fundamentals suggest
that it should be. We have not found a satisfactory way to deal with this
problem. There will also be cases where the shift in sentiment is sparked
by political developments, or where there is an insufficient will to adjust;
in such circumstances, there will be little the Fund can do, aside from
trying to limit spillover effects.
As these reflections suggest, I do not expect that we will be able to
avoid all future crises. However, I do believe that the Fund, its member
countries, and the financial markets themselves are now in a stronger position
to recognize and avert such crises. This provides greater assurance that
the benefits of global financial markets will be realized, and thereby
strengthens the basis for sustained, noninflationary growth in the global
economy.
1. Global Economic Outlook (Washington, D.C.:
International Monetary Fund, May 1995).
2. Press commmuniqué, October 24, 1995 (Basle: Bank for
International Settlements).
3. Global Economic Outlook (Washington, D.C.:
International Monetary Fund, May 1995).
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