As of April 2007, average daily turnover on the foreign exchange markets of this world reached U.S. $3.2 trillion, an increase of roughly 66% over April 2004, and a mind-blowing 17,000% since 1977. (Give or take maybe 300 percentage points.) Underway since the dismantling of the post-WW II, Bretton Woods – era controls on freely mobile — and savagely, Die Walküre – like — financial capital back in 1971, some 78% of these non-productive currency hedging and speculative contracts have maturities of less than seven days. Were the human species setting out to build a stable and prosperous world wherein it allocated resources justly, wisely, and with an eye towards defeating the "dark forces of time and ignorance which envelop its future," the last thing it would do is saddle itself with the inherently unstable and criminally exploitive financial system that now dominates the globe.
With this caveat in mind, I am once again reproducing here at ZNet an excerpt from
"Global Financial Markets as Discipliners of Policy and Producers of Crises"
The ballooning of financial flows [since the dismantling in 1971 of Bretton Woods’ fixed foreign- exchange system] has greatly increased the power of the financial markets to "discipline" national policy-making around the globe. The rise of the dollar value of daily forex [foreign exchange] trades has vastly overtaken the rise of official reserves. Table 1 shows that in 1977 global official reserves equaled 16.2 days of forex trading, whereas in 1998 they barely equaled one day’s global turnover. This precipitous decline of relative "fire power" has greatly reduced the ability of central banks to intervene in the foreign exchange markets to restrain volatility, or to stabilize the real exchange rate. The success of the 1985 Plaza agreement between the
Table 1
Ratios of Annual Global Foreign Exchange Turnover to Global Exports and Official Reserves, 1977 – 1998[a]
|
Annual Forex Turnover |
Ratio of Forex / Exports |
Ratio of Global Reserves / Exports |
|
|
|
|
1961 – 1965 |
NA |
NA |
0.43 |
1966 – 1970 |
NA |
NA |
0.32 |
1977 |
$4.6 trillion |
3.5 |
0.23 |
1986 |
$67.5 trillion |
33.9 |
0.28 |
1998 |
$380.2 trillion |
67.8 |
0.29 |
2007 |
$800.0 trillion |
NA |
NA |
[a] Reserves include official gold holdings.
Sources: (1) Bank for International Settlements, Central Bank Survey of Foreign Exchange Activities, triannual surveys, 1986-1998. Daily turnover data multiplies by 250 trading days. (2) U.S. Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Summary of Results of the U.S. Foreign Exchange Market Turnover (New York, September, 1992), U.S. 1977 estimate divided by 0.17, the average U.S. share of global turnover computer from the BIS surveys. (3) International Monetary Fund, International Financial Statistics, various issues.
Broader economic and social policies are also being reshaped under pressure from the financial markets. Egged on by the IMF and World Bank, developing countries try to deter capital flight by adopting "sound" policies, notably by measures to stabilize the price level and balance the fiscal budget. They compete for foreign investment by reducing progressive taxes, deregulating their goods and financial markets, privatizing state assets and functions, and "leveling the playing field" between foreign and domestic investors. Despite their thicker financial markets and greater productive prowess, economic policy making of the industrial countries has also been giving way to these pressures.[1]
Nevertheless, this pro-capital trend of economic and social policy has been paralleled by a rising frequency of national banking and currency crises, with some spilling over into international crises. Nearly three-fourths of the 182 members of the IMF, including a substantial number of developed countries, suffered one or more bouts of banking crises of "significant banking problems" during 1980-95. Banking crises, defined in this IMF survey as "cases where there were runs or other substantial portfolio shifts, collapses of financial firms, or massive government intervention," afflicted 36 countries. "Significant banking problems," defined as "extensive unsoundness short of a crisis," afflicted another 108.[2] The recent Asian crisis [of 1997-98] and its repercussions have since raised these numbers significantly.
An analysis of 26 developing and industrialized countries suffering banking and currency crises during 1980-95 found that financial sector liberalization within the five years preceding the crisis accurately predicted 67% of the banking crises and 71% of the currency crises. Liberalization, by broadening access to foreign funds, had encouraged domestic banks and companies to raise their liability leveraging to crisis levels.[3]
The social and economic costs of the frequent crises have been substantial. A World Bank study of a sample of developing country banking crises estimates that during the crises GDP declined by 14.6% below its trend-line growth. The study also points out that banking crises have become intertwined with currency crises due to "surges of international capital inflows — especially private-to-private flows — to developing countries and the growing integration of these economies with world financial markets." The costs of these twin crises have also been much higher than for each occurring in isolation, averaging 18% of GDP in developing countries and 17.6% in industrialized countries.[4]
With events demolishing the welfare claims for capital decontrol, economists have been edging back to the Bretton Woods position that capital decontrol is incompatible with macroeconomic stability. Harvard economist Dani Rodrik observes:[5]
A sad commentary on our understanding of what drives capital flows is that every crisis spawns a new generation of economic models. When a new crisis hits, it turns out that the previous generation of models was hardly adequate….The earliest models were based on the incompatibility of monetary and fiscal policies with fixed exchange rates. These seemed to account well for the myriad balance of payments crises experienced through the 1970s. The debt crisis of 1982 unleashed an entire literature on over-borrowing in developing countries, placing the blame squarely on expansionary fiscal policies (and in some countries on inappropriate sequencing of liberalization). But crises did not go away when governments became better behaved on the fiscal and monetary front. The exchange rate mechanism (ERM) crisis in 1992 could not be blamed on lax monetary and fiscal policies in
The IMF still bases its "sound" policy demands on the first generation of models, which puts full blame on its clients. Events, however, have forced the IMF to muddy its "soundness" accolade. Overvaluing the exchange rate to anchor the price level and to reassure nervous financial markets, and devaluing to balance the trade account, have each qualified as "sound," but with no clarification on how to square the contradiction. The IMF now acknowledges that the crises may involve investor miscalculations, but blames crony capitalism and inadequate information from the client governments for misleading investors. And it clings to the view that more timely and "transparent" information from governments and improved risk evaluation procedures by banks are the keys to enabling free capital mobility to function smoothly.
This tenacious faith in the EMH [efficient market hypothesis] and in the virtues of policy disciplining by the financial markets brushes aside the accumulation of econometric findings that the actual behavior of foreign exchange markets refutes the predictions of Ratex [rational expectations theory] and the EMH. The "forward discount anomaly," that is, the failure of the forward rates in the exchange markets to predict correctly even the direction in which the future spot rate will move, is now a generally accepted finding.[6] The forecast errors of forex dealers, according to various surveys, are usually serially correlated rather than mean reverting, which indicates that they follow trends in the short-term.[7] And their successive shot-term forecasts during 3, 6 or 12 month intervals usually badly over- or under-shoot their forecasts made at the beginning of each interval as to what the spot rate will be at the end of that interval. The practical inference is that in the absence of liquid long-term hedging instruments, investors cannot safely hedge long-term investments against exchange risk by rolling over liquid short-term hedges. Knowing this, investors in a volatile exchange rate environment can be expected to raise the risk premium and the hurdle rate of return for undertaking long-term investments.
The faith also disregards the likelihood that neither "transparency" nor improved risk procedures can stabilize the capital flows. Faster and more "transparent" information about impending difficulties for portfolio investments could merely hasten the onset of currency crises by triggering faster capital flight. The value-at-risk (VAR) models used by international banks to guide their foreign exchange dealing, financing of hedge funds, and customized derivative mongering, have been accused of having encouraged excessive risk-taking, and of having intensified contagion during the 1997-98 global financial crisis.[8] The charge is that in applying their variance – covariance matrices to historic data, and assuming normal risk distributions, they tended to underestimate the possibility of larger deviations from "normal" that could produce large losses from taking highly leveraged positions. This was, indeed, the basic flaw that bankrupted Long-Term Capital Management Hedge Fund. Contagion was intensified because an unexpected reversal in one country automatically generated, through the VAR models, a reassessment of credit and market risk in a correlated country. This then triggered margin calls and a tightening of credit lines in both countries. Such risk control methods help explain why Malaysia’s 1997 imposition of capital controls, and Russia’s 1998 default, produced a rapid cutoff of lending to other developing countries. Tightening the VAR methodology, as called for in the proposed new Basel Accord, could well reinforce contagious reactions.
Following the 1994-95 Mexican crisis, Michel Camdessus, the then Managing Director of the IMF, sketched the road ahead for the IMF as follows: "In today’s globalized markets, we must ensure that our ability to react approaches the instant decision making of investors, if we want to have the ability to give confidence to markets and our members."[9] But the message from both economic theory and the array of recent financial disasters is quite the opposite. Slowing the reaction speed of the globalized financial markets to allow the more measured speed of production and policy decisions to take effect ought to be the primary focus of the IMF and its members.
Table 2 (p. 4 of the Triennial Central Bank Survey 2007)
Global Foreign Exchange Market Turnover[a]
Daily averages in billions of U.S. Dollars as of April, 2007