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Let me begin by stating that
I have a fairly optimistic view of "the Asian crisis" today. This is the
first time in some months I would have ventured such a view. Exchange rates
in most countries have stabilized to some degree recently; some have appreciated
significantly. Korean stock prices have risen by 50 percent. Stock prices
in other countries have risen from 35 to 50 percent from their lowest levels
in December and January. These are all hopeful signs. Having said this,
I do think we need to remain cautious.
There is a great deal that
still remains to be done. Part of the optimism now is because the Korean
government has proposed a package to international banks that could extend
the maturity of credit lines to Korean banks. This still has to be accepted
by the banking community. Before we become too confident, we need greater
progress dealing with the severe problems in the financial sector.
There are also political
problems, particularly in Indonesia. The questions of succession that surround
President Suharto are well known. The depreciation of the rupiah to 16,000
in early January has no economic base; it can only be explained by a lack
of confidence in the political regime.
ISSUES
There are three main questions
that need to be addressed:
We have seen the problem
before, in Mexico. In the early 1990s, Mexican officials traveled widely
in developing and emerging market countries explaining how these countries
could have growing and successful economies like Mexico's. By the end of
1994, the Mexican economy was in shambles. A similar syndrome had developed
in Asia over the past few years. In early 1995, in the wake of the Taquuilla
crisis, investors looked at Asia and saw high savings rates, high growth
rates, low inflation, fiscal surpluses, and high foreign direct investment
and concluded that a Mexican style crisis could not occur in that setting.
Another factor is the lack
of transparency of the problems in Asia. Mexico's problems were fairly
evident: large imbalances in the macroeconomic accounts. That is not the
case in Asia. The problems in Asia were not, for the most part, high inflation,
nor large current account deficits. The problems were in the financial
sector and the corporate sector, problems that are much less visible to
observers, including the IMF, credit rating agencies, and investors. Most
of the Asian countries had reasonable macroeconomic performance for quite
a few years.
The exception was Thailand.
Thailand was the first to witness severe market pressures. Thailand did
have some classic macroeconomic imbalances, particularly a current account
deficit of eight percent of GDP. Despite research, no one has yet perfected
a system of early warnings for economic crises. I think all would agree,
however, that a current account deficit indicates problems.
Over the last few years,
Thailand had permitted a highly vulnerable and unstable financing structure
to develop, relying more and more on short-term capital inflows. The International
Banking Facilities in Bangkok created instruments to encourage larger capital
inflows with shorter maturities, even when capital flows had already reached
excessive levels. That situation was blurred by very weak supervisory and
regulatory standards.
There are many analysts working
in Asia, trying to help resolve these problems. One positive effect they
are having is to convince everyone that Asian countries have to establish
sensible and strict regulatory and supervisory regimes, if they are to
avoid the problems we have seen in this episode.
The IMF had been warning
the Thais for more than a year about the problems they were facing. Periodically,
financial markets were providing the same warning, and attacking the baht.
Even some of the credit rating agencies—which have not, in my opinion,
distinguished themselves in this episode—had raised some cautionary signals
about Thailand. The authorities did not react. By the time they did act,
they made the problems worse in several ways.
First, they did not deal
with the problems in the financial system. In fact, they did the opposite
of what should have been done. When they finally saw how dangerous the
situation was in the nonbank financial institutions, they guaranteed all
the depositors and creditors in those institutions, increasing the moral
hazard problem in the system. In addition, when the baht was under attack
last summer, authorities tried to defend it, and, in so doing, committed
virtually all their reserves in the forward market.
When the Fund was first called
in to help, we were under the impression that Thailand had international
reserves of $30 billion. We did not know, however, that Thailand also had
nearly $30 billion dollars on the forward book. They had virtually no net
reserves and no room to further intervene in the exchange market.
Many of the Thai problems
were self-inflicted. But, then the question is: Why did it not stop with
Thailand? Indonesia faced pressure late in the summer. Eventually the authorities
floated the rupiah. They came to the IMF for assistance in early October.
Korea faced pressure in October and November. They requested help only
in late November.
Like the Thais, the Koreans
mounted a desperate defense. They did not have a fixed exchange rate, but
they did not want the won to go above an exchange rate of 1000 to the dollar.
The Koreans did two things. They miscounted the level of their reserves.
The Fund was told that Korean reserves were $50 billion. However, that
figure included $20 billion that was not usable. So, the reserves were
actually $30 billion. By the time the IMF became involved, just before
Thanksgiving, Korea had only $7 billion left in gross usable reserves and
they were losing those reserves at $1 billion a day. In six days, we negotiated
and the IMF Board approved the biggest financial package we have ever had
with a country. We did that so that Korea would not default; they were
on the verge of facing that reality.
Why didn't we just let them
default? Some experts argue that a default would have been good for the
international system; this would have promoted self regulation by the banks
involved. Both Korea and Indonesia had sound macroeconomic policies. If
you look at the typical measures of robustness in a macroeconomic system,
they were satisfactory for both of these countries. But, there were problems.
Contrary to the faith expressed
in "efficient" markets in so many quarters, I do not believe that markets
are always very sophisticated. Technically, of course, they are extraordinarily
sophisticated. They are not, however, as affective as they should be at
risk assessment or at assuring that risk assessments drive credit decisions.
Many individuals and institutions were offering loans to Asian governments
and corporations. Many lenders knew less than they should have about their
customers. When the crisis was recognized and people began to understand
the situation, there was surprise about the structure of the external debt
of Asian financial institutions and corporations. Too many discovered too
late that the external debt structure was fundamentally unstable. It had
only been two years before, when Mexico's troubles began to surface, that
everyone had asked "What about Asia?"
Experts had looked at Asia,
and at that time the economies looked reasonably stable. In the last couple
of years, though, there has been an enormous explosion of short-term, unhedged
cross-border borrowing, which has now come to haunt these countries. Most
of the borrowing corporations did not bother to hedge their exposure because
of their confidence in the exchange rate pegs. Once rates were floated,
institutions and individuals rushed to cover their positions, and a self-aggravating
cycle began. That was only one of a number of factors.
The second factor was that
a speculative bubble had developed. There was a growing awareness of the
underlying problems in the banking sectors of many Asian countries. Much
of the short-term money flowing into banks in Thailand was loaned to build
condominiums and office buildings. Short-term dollar-denominated liabilities
funded long-term, fixed rate loans, with collateral that was not worth
its book value at the banks. One of the things that is surprising about
this is how similar it is to what happened in Japan in the late 1980s and
to the U.S. savings and loan crisis of the mid-1980s. The characteristics
are very much the same, but not enough was learned from either the Japanese
or American experience to prevent a reoccurrence.
Third, besides the problems
of the financial institutions, the mismatched maturities and the unhedged
positions, these systems were also riddled with special interest operations
and political influence.
The fourth factor was devaluation.
Once Thailand devalued the baht, that eroded the stability of the exchange
rates for the Indonesian rupiah and the Malaysian ringgit, since both compete
with the baht in international markets. The competitive pressures moved
from one country to another putting pressures on those exchange rates.
Finally, the fifth factor
was the role of the authorities. The situations deteriorated because the
efforts of the authorities to deal with crises were not very credible in
the beginning. Using all of a nation's reserves, down to the last dollar,
removes all room for maneuvering. Moreover, the monetary policy response
was tepid at best. The central banks did not adjust interest rates sufficiently;
they did not use monetary policy the way classic theory dictates.
All of these factors were
occurring simultaneously, not just weakening the systems, but weakening
them in a self-aggravating way.
IMF Assistance
Given these difficulties,
how has the IMF tried to help? The Fund has applied a mix of policy adjustments—adjusting
both macroeconomic and structural policies—along with the provision of
very large financing. Our operations have brought us to new terrain in
both of these areas.
On the financing side, with
the exception of the commitments made to Mexico, we have never provided
the level of resources that we are providing to Asia. The Fund has committed
$35 billion to three countries: Indonesia, Thailand, and Korea. In all,
$120 billion has been committed by the IMF, the World Bank, bilateral creditors,
the Asian Development Bank, and others. This effort has been controversial.
Some critics have said that we have provided too much money. Other critics
have said that we have not provided enough and that the programs are underfunded.
On the policy side, our work
has, in some respects, been fairly traditional. In Thailand, for example,
there was a classic macro-imbalance situation with a very large deficit
in the balance of payments. So, we called for a tightening of fiscal policy
and tight monetary policy. With a current account deficit as large as eight
percent of GDP, the public sector had to contribute to the adjustment.
Hence, we urged a reduction in the fiscal deficit.
In Thailand, more so than
in any operation that we have had before, the focus was on the financial
sector. The operations of 58 nonbank financial institutions were suspended,
representing half of all the institutions in that sector. In November,
after each of these 58 institutions had been examined, 56 were permanently
closed. That shows the magnitude of the problems among the financial institutions
in Thailand.
In Indonesia and Korea, the
situation was different. This was partially due to the fact that the IMF
became involved in each of those countries somewhat later—in October in
Indonesia and in November in Korea. By that time, the regional context
had changed substantially. Consequently, the calls for fiscal adjustment
were much more moderate. We asked those two countries to adjust their fiscal
position only to make room for the carrying cost of the inevitable financial
sector restructuring that would be required. There were requests for a
tightening of monetary policy, as well.
The keys, though, in both
Indonesia and Korea, were again restructuring and reforming the financial
sector. The elements were similar in the two countries. As in Thailand,
some insolvent institutions were closed. For weaker institutions, restructuring
plans included the demand that owners invest new capital; otherwise, there
would need to be government intervention. Moreover, these institutions
have been asked to adopt the Basle standards on capital adequacy.
We have recommended much
more stringent regulatory and supervisory regimes for all of these countries.
Regulatory agencies need to be reorganized, and deposit insurance should
be introduced. Other than the former Soviet Republics, where we and they
were building from the ground up, the IMF has seldom gotten so deeply involved
in the specifics of financial institutions as we have in the current Asian
crisis. But, then, we have also never gone into a group of countries where
the difficulties in the financial sector were so deep and so widespread.
We have gone one step farther,
here—and raised many questions about the role that we are playing—in getting
more deeply involved in questions of governance. There is no alternative
to level the playing field for investors in each country. In all three
countries—Korea, Thailand, and Indonesia—we were dealing with what has
come to be called "crony capitalism," the vast network of influence from
the political side on economic decisionmaking. It remains to be seen whether
or not we can be effective in that area.
It is very difficult to be
immersed in the political arena as deeply as is required in these countries.
But, we went into it convinced that many of the problems in the financial
sector were the direct results of the way business and politics mix in
these countries. In Indonesia, for example, many of the banks and the corporations
that the banks are financing are owned by the politically well connected.
The weakness in the banking system was common knowledge. Our judgment was
that the authorities' efforts and our own would be credible only if there
was a public agreement with Suharto that he would change this situation,
even if it meant affecting the financial interests of those closest to
him. None of the market reforms will be effective unless markets perceive
that there really is a new way of doing business.
The Fund agreement with Indonesia
was reached November 3rd. One of the 16 banks that was closed belonged
to one of President Suharto's sons. There were questions at the time about
the commitment of the President to the process. Sure enough, two weeks
later, a new bank was opened with a new name, located in the same building,
with the same staff, and owned by the same younger Suharto. Needless to
say, that was all it took for the skeptics to reappear. The rupiah basically
collapsed. The IMF had to go back in January to repeat our efforts.
This is now my "two-try"
thesis. A similar process evolved in Mexico two years ago. It took us two
tries before we had a program that was sufficiently financed and sufficiently
credible that it had a positive impact on financial markets. The same thing
has occurred in Thailand, in Indonesia, and in Korea. We had to revisit
each one of those programs and renegotiate.
Over the last five years,
my conviction has grown that countries are like people. When initially
confronted with a problem, they deny it. We have seen this repeatedly.
You begin dealing with a country that is facing severe economic problems.
You talk to the authorities who are the ones who have been implementing
policies as these problems have developed. Those same authorities are not
about to say, "You're right, there is a problem. I made major mistakes.
Now what should I do?"
Rather, too often, there
is denial that there is a problem. But, we still try to help, negotiating
the best program that we can, obtaining whatever policy adjustments we
can, and making judgments about how the markets are going to react and
what kind of financing is needed. And, after we go through all that, it
sometimes proves to be insufficient.
At times the problems are
political: In Mexico, for example, we negotiated a program, and then a
new president faced problems in Chiapas. In Thailand, we encountered the
collapse of the government and a new government entered in November. In
Korea, just two weeks after our program had been negotiated, presidential
elections were held. This may have been the best thing to happen. But,
the political tension during that time did not help. Nor did the fact that
each of the presidential candidates disavowed the Fund-supported program
and promised to renegotiate it after the election. During that period,
international banks withdrew their credit lines from banks, putting enormous
pressure on the Korean financial system.
In Indonesia, we now face
a similar problem. There are questions about President Suharto's health,
which raises the question of succession. What will happen if he has a heart
attack? What will happen if the country faces a political transition? Nobody
knows, but everybody is worried. That is what sends the rupiah to 16,000,
when it had been 2,500 per dollar only six months ago. Economics do not
explain it; only the political situation can.
I do get impatient when I
read articles about how the IMF is "bailing out" the investors of the world.
I think there is a moral hazard issue here, but it is not the one that
is being portrayed in the press.
Any owner of a mutual fund
in one of these countries knows that they have not been bailed out. The
stock markets in these countries have fallen by 60-80 percent in dollar
terms. The stockholders are not being bailed out. Bondholders, also, have
suffered large losses. The owners of the closed financial institutions
have also incurred losses.
Short-term lenders have incurred
losses, too. In Korea, we have asked for extension of maturities on short-term
debt. The lenders are incurring major losses, especially if they would
prefer to be out of that market quickly. Most loans will become one-to-three
year claims. That extension has been negotiated with a spread of 250 basis
points. If the credit extension is successful, creditors will realize profits.
There is moral hazard in
this approach. Addressing any of the questions about moral hazard raises
substantive questions about both bankruptcy and sovereignty. Will the United
States, for example, be willing to give an institution like the IMF the
right to determine that a certain country is in distress and decide or
rule that its creditors cannot collect for, perhaps, the next six months
until a financial program is developed? Would the IMF have the authority
to delay the payments?
Actions and Needs: The
View in 1998
These and other ideas are
going to percolate for a long time. In the meantime, I am confident that
ten years from now the IMF is still going to be an important global institution.
There are a number of things that the international community should do.
I will begin with one requirement
that may sound trite, but it is critical: data. Public sector and business
decision makers did not know enough about the developing situation in a
number of Asian countries. Not enough was known about the substantial level
of short-term exposure in the banking and corporate sectors. The level
of exposure to foreign creditors was underestimated in the Indonesian corporate
sector. It turned out to exceed $65 billion. How did $65 billion cross
borders without a full accounting of it. The reason is because the data
systems are inadequate. And, I have to believe that if the last person,
the one lending that last dollar, knew that there was more than $64 billion
in line for collection ahead of him or her, that lender might have been
more careful.
Data systems need to be constructed
and then applied continually to monitor obligations and risks. The Managing
Director of the IMF thinks that the IMF should accept this responsibility.
In fact, we have developed a data system, called the Special Data Dissemination
Standard that can be found on the world wide web (www.IMF.org). This statistical
system is established by countries, and computer users can hyperlink from
that system to a country's data system. It is easy to obtain information
that was not previously available. However, the system is not sufficiently
robust.
One limitation of our system,
and any other, is that there are not sufficient statistics on short-term
exposure. I am not sure how that can be corrected because the financial
exposure can change in many ways. As one example, when we were monitoring
Korea, a major bank had to find resources quickly to repay a loan. That
originally had been a medium-term loan, but there was a "put" in it. When
Standard and Poors reduced the credit rating of this bank, the put was
exercised and the loan became due. Developing data systems that can capture
that kind of change is very difficult, but necessary.
Another suggestion is to
disseminate information about both our successes and failures. We dealt
with Thailand effectively, and we are proud of that. We made mistakes with
Korea. IMF monitoring has worked in some instances but not always. The
failures were mainly because we could not convince the policymakers to
do what was necessary.
A related question is whether
or not the IMF should publicize information when we know something is wrong.
Since we have confidential relations with these countries, the answer is
not so simple.
Clearly much needs to be
done in the banking systems, regulatory systems, and supervisory systems
of emerging economies. They are often weak and need to be strengthened.
All need to adopt common internationally accepted regulatory and accounting
standards, including transparency, and public disclosure.
Lessons Learned: The View
from 1999
There are important lessons
being learned from the recent crisis in Asia and elsewhere that are likely
to bring changes in international financial markets and in certain institutions,
including the IMF.
Open financial markets would
work better (1) if they had better, more accurate and more timely information;
(2) if that information were taken seriously in the analysis conducted
by investment houses, financial institutions and others; and (3) if that
analysis worked its way through to the people who do the deals. This proposition
is leading to a massive effort to increase transparency and to improve
the standards on which data and information are produced and disclosed
and on which the private sector, governments, and institutions make decisions.
There is a major effort underway
in the IMF, the World Bank, the BIS, IOSCO, the OECD and elsewhere to improve
standards and to assure adherence to and accurate reporting under such
standards. Core principles for banking regulation and supervision have
been drawn up by the Basle Committee on Banking Supervision and are being
promulgated to member countries through an intensive effort in the IMF.
In a much broader initiative, the IMF has been asked, in the context of
its surveillance work with all member countries, to prepare a "transparency
report" for each member country that will assess the adequacy of standards
and practices in all these areas. This is a major task and we are only
just beginning to explore what can be done in this area. But whatever we
can do, it will succeed only if (1) the information is made public and
(2) financial markets really demand improvement on the part of countries,
financial institutions, and corporations that access the capital markets.
There has to be a real reward for following such standards and a penalty
for not following them—hopefully reflected in the margins paid on market
borrowings.
Open capital markets bring
potential enormous benefits to all and especially to developing countries.
This is generally agreed among all but the more radical of those discussing
the issues. Countries need to take greater care in the process through
which they integrate themselves into the global financial markets. Domestic
financial institutions—and the regulatory and supervisory systems that
oversee them—need to be much better prepared for such integration. Greater
care needs to be given to the pace and sequencing of liberalization and
integration—both for banks and for the corporate sector. Short term loans
cannot be used to finance medium and long term lending. The critical lesson
is: open your capital markets, but do it carefully.
These are areas in which
we are actively working in the IMF. We are encouraging all countries to
adopt the regulatory and supervisory standards developed by the Basle Committee
of Bank Supervisors at the BIS. The IMF offers technical assistance along
with the World Bank to help countries establish systems that comply with
these standards and the IMF employs surveillance of member countries to
assess the progress of countries in conforming with the standards.
Policy makers need to resist
the temptation to misuse some of the opportunities created by open markets.
One particularly dangerous misuse of markets involves the creation of unstable
debt structures by governments themselves. A number of countries recently
in crisis, such as Russia and Ukraine, financed unduly large budget deficits
over an unduly long period of time that led to a level of short-term exposure
that proved unmanageable. Too much reliance by governments on short-term
financing will result in a structure against which markets can turn with
a vengeance when attitudes and expectations change—as, inevitably, they
do.
International capital flows
appear to be unacceptably unstable without changes to the system. In particular,
short term flows and, particularly, interbank lines are a source of trouble.
The structure and incentives under which bank lines operate need to be
examined—from the perspective of both creditor banks and borrowing banks.
There is also a need to assure
that governments do not inadvertently create a presumption of guarantees
in the way they manage either financial or macroeconomic policy. This was
a problem in the banking systems and to a certain degree in the exchange
rate regimes in all the Asia crisis countries.
There is a need for automatic
stabilizers and better social safety nets to help cushion the effects on
the real economy of shocks emanating from the financial system. In all
the recent crisis cases, the initial pressures were severely aggravated
by a rush to the exits by creditors and by the dynamic processes set in
motion by that rush—further devaluations, a further rush to hedge previously
unhedged foreign exchange positions, further increases in interest rates
to protect the currency, further weakening of balance sheets, a further
fall in confidence and into a downward spiral.
In many cases the rush was
led or aggravated by short term creditors. For bond holders and equity
investors, the exit leads to a price adjustment that can by itself help
to stabilize the situation as new investors are attracted. But with short
term lines, the creditor banks can simply wait for them to mature.
There are a number of proposals
to deal with short term credit. There are suggestions that those that exit
during a crisis should be able to do so only with a loss of capital—so-called
"mandatory haircuts." "Moral suasion" could be more employed to induce
a "voluntary" rollover or restructuring of short term claims as occurred
in Korea in December 1997 after the situation deteriorated to an unsustainable
position.
In critical situations the
problem can go well beyond short-term lines and a much broader approach
may be needed to stabilize the situation and to provide a vehicle for the
country and its creditors to find an orderly process to share the burden
of the necessary adjustment.
The international community
does not have the necessary mechanisms to assure an orderly process in
such circumstances. There is a genuine risk of disruptive litigation that
could prevent even the best efforts of the country to reform and to correct
its problems. The issue is to prevent creditors from disrupting the flow
of export receipts, seizing the country's reserves, or taking other legal
action that could disrupt a country's efforts to correct the problems that
led to the crisis in the first place.
Suggestions to help deal
with such situations would allow internationally issued bonds to contain
majority voting clauses, sharing arrangements and other terms that would
facilitate negotiations and foster agreement in the event of a need to
restructure. These clauses are aimed at helping overcome the "collective
action" problem. But it has also been suggested that the international
community needs the authority to endorse a stay on payments by a debtor
country under certain well-defined conditions. The purpose would be to
protect the debtor against litigation for a temporary period to permit
an orderly process of negotiation with creditors.
Finally, I would like to
discuss a new instrument the IMF has created to help members confronted
with a sudden loss of market confidence. It is called the Supplemental
Reserve Facility (SRF), which permits much larger lending (no access limit),
at shorter maturity (1–1½ years) and higher interest rates (a surcharge
of 300–500 basis points) than any of the Fund's earlier facilities. This
facility takes the Fund a few steps in the direction of a lender of last
resort—even though the Fund has neither the resources nor the authority
to serve that function completely.
This is being taken one step
further in current discussions following a proposal made by President Clinton
in September 1998. Discussion is underway to create a mechanism that could
be used by the Fund to commit a, possibly large, volume of resources to
a country that may be threatened by contagion from crises elsewhere in
the international capital markets—something in the nature of a Contingent
Credit Line. The commitment of support from the IMF could have the effect
of bolstering market confidence and helping the country ride out the storm.
One problem is how to avoid doing this in a way that simply provides an
opportunity for private creditors to reduce their exposure. Another question
involves balancing the need for a firm commitment regarding the availability
of the resources to the country with the country's assurances to the Fund
and the official international community that the country will continue
to follow appropriate policies.
Lessons from the Asian Crisis:
The View from 1999
Original remarks by
Jack
Boorman, Director of the Policy Development and Review Department in
the International Monetary Fund, on February 5, 1998, hosted by the Capital
Markets Research Center of Georgetown University. Updated material provided
by Dr. Boorman in February 1999. Copyright 1999.
How did this happen? There were
a number of factors. Among them are the mindsets that evolved over the
last decade or two: the so-called "Asian miracle" and the thought that
the next century would be the "Asian century." This kind of thinking is
dangerous. When everyone, including policy makers, hears the same thing
over and over, there is a risk that everyone begins to believe that these
countries and their economies are infallible and that success is somehow
predestined.
Thailand
Korea
Market Failures
Financing and Policies
Moral Hazard
Lesson 1
Lesson 2
Lesson 3
Lesson 4
Proposals