Benefits of Capital Flows:
New Role for Public Institutions
Volume 4, Number 32
November 1999
Written by Jane DArista, Financial Markets Center
Issue Editor: Nancy Alexander (Globalization Challenge Initiative)
Editors: Tom Barry (IRC) and Martha Honey (IPS)
Key Points
- Foreign portfolio investment replaced bank loans as the primary channel
for international capital flows in the 1990s.
- Privatization programs and the removal of capital controls facilitated
the rise of foreign portfolio investment in emerging markets.
- Rising securities prices allowed foreign capital to be absorbed more
rapidly and in larger amounts than in the past, intensifying boom/bust
cycles in developing countries.
After a worldwide removal of regulatory constraints, market forces have
assumed a dominant role in the international financial system. The role
of the public sector has been sharply curtailed, rendering it ineffectual
in its efforts to handle essential functions: liquidity management and
imposition of countercyclical policies to offset the boom/bust of business
cycles. To remedy this problem, it will be necessary to rebuild the powers
of the public sector to promote stability and growth in the global economy.
Cross-border securities transactions in the recurrent boom/bust cycles
have plagued emerging markets in the 1990s. The establishment of a public
international investment fund promoting steady, sustainable growth in
developing countries while providing a basic, guaranteed return to investors,
should be considered by policymakers.
Growth in cross-border securities investments mushroomed in the 1980s
as portfolio investment became increasingly attractive and lending by
international banks declined. By the end of the decade, these trends strengthened,
as many countries removed capital controls and privatized state enterprises.
Securities markets expanded dramatically in the developing world, Eastern
Europe, and the former Soviet Union. With growth in the volume and mobility
of capital flows, global integration accelerated.
Major shifts in saving and investment patterns in the large industrialized
countries also contributed to the rise in foreign portfolio investment
during the 1980s and 1990s. Increasingly, individuals have shifted savings
from banks to pooled funds (e.g., private pensions, life insurance, and
mutual funds) that invest in securities. Between 1978 and 1998, the share
of total U.S. financial sector assets held by institutional investors
rose from 32% to 54% while the share held by depository institutions fell
from 57% to 27%.
U.S. and U.K. insurance companies and pension funds initiated the first
wave of portfolio investment in emerging markets in Asia in the late 1980s.
Interest soon shifted to Latin Americanotably to Mexico, Brazil,
and Argentinaas the repatriation of flight capital deepened those
markets and as privatizations expanded the stock and diversity of new
securities issues. Investments in emerging markets as a portion of industrialized
countries' securities investment flows rose from 0.5% in 1987 to 16% in
1993. Foreign portfolio investment ($325 billion) replaced bank lending
($76 billion) as the dominant source of private capital flows to developing
countries in the period 1990-1994.
In the early 1990s, the switch from bank lending to portfolio investment
drove up securities prices. Foreign capital surged into certain developing
countries, rising rapidly as a share of GDP. For example, from 1990 to
1993, capital flows into Mexico totaled $91 billion20% of all net
inflows to developing counties. Two-thirds of Mexico's net inflow was
portfolio investment. Most of it was invested in the Mexican stock market,
which rose 436% during this period.
In early 1994, the rate of foreign portfolio investment abated as the
recession in industrialized countries eased, demand for credit rose, and
the U.S. Federal Reserve Board hiked interest rates, thereby narrowing
the spreads between U.S. and emerging market debt issues. Prices of Mexican
stocks fell, eroding their value as collateral for bank loans and forcing
liquidations. As that source of financing for its current-account deficit
dried up, Mexico issued dollar-indexed, short-term debt. But political
shocks and dwindling dollar reserves had unnerved investors. Their pullout
in anticipation of a forced devaluation made the December 1994 decision
to devalue the peso unavoidable.
After the Mexican peso crisis, discussion focused on how developing countries
should handle capital inflows. According to the International Monetary
Fund, heavy inflows into most emerging market countries caused exchange
rate appreciation that eroded the competitiveness of export sectors, drove
up asset prices, and increased the vulnerability of their financial systems.
In 1995, the Bank for International Settlements reported widespread agreement
that controls on short-term transactions should not be liberalized until
the soundness of a country's financial system was assured. However, this
view conflicted with U.S. policies favoring the elimination of controls
on international capital flows. The U.S. Treasury Department did not,
therefore, use its influence to promote guidelines for or restraints on
speculative transactions. Despite the heavy economic and social costs
of volatile investment flows, the U.S. stepped up pressure for full capital
account liberalization, both before and after the Asian crisis began to
unfold in 1997. The Treasury Department ignored the call for reforms that
could have averted the contagion brought on by unregulated financial flows
to emerging markets.
Problems with Current U.S. Policy
Key Problems
- The U.S. ignores the extensive damage done by massive capital flows
and continues to press developing countries to open their financial
markets.
- Capital flows into the U.S. also contribute to rising equity prices,
currency appreciation, large current-account deficits, and a boom in
consumption.
- The ability of central banks to conduct countercyclical policies
has been weakened by large and rapid shifts in foreign portfolio investment
across open markets.
The major flaw in U.S. policy is its pursuit of objectives that cripple
the primary instrument that national governments have used to moderate
boom/bust cycles and ensure stable economic growth: countercyclical monetary
operations. Instead, its policies promoting capital flows liberalization
encourage procyclical investment behavior, thereby worsening volatility
rather than dampening dangerous volatility in capital flows.
Traditionally, central banks have had the power to cool economic activity
through countercyclical policies, e.g., raising interest rates. However,
high interest rates may attract, rather than discourage, increased foreign
inflows, thereby stimulating economic expansion rather than contraction.
And attempts by central banks to revive economic activity by lowering
interest rates may prove ineffectual when such action precipitates or
intensifies capital outflows and reduces the flow of credit in a national
economy.
Institutional investors can currently shift their holdings of bonds and
equities from one market to another in response to cyclical developments
that raise or lower returns. By rejecting efforts to moderate these procyclical
flows, U.S. policy has systematically undermined the ability of central
banks to control credit expansion and contraction.
Industrialized countries also experience the negative effects of volatile
foreign investment flows. In the 1980s and 1990s, capital inflows produced
effects in the U.S. similar to those in Mexico and other emerging markets:
rising equity prices, currency appreciation, large current-account deficits,
and a boom in consumption.
In the early 1980s, foreign capital flowed into the U.S. in response
to the combination of easy fiscal and tight monetary policies that drove
up the value of the dollar and real interest rates. However, massive capital
inflows continued throughout the 1980s, even as monetary policy eased
and the dollar depreciated. Highly indebted developing countries exported
goods to the U.S. to earn dollars and then exported those dollars to repay
debt; countries with financial surpluses invested dollars in the U.S.
market in order to build foreign exchange reservesraising the value
of the dollar, lowering the prices of imports, and making additional credit
available to U.S. borrowers.
U.S. consumers borrowed the recycled dollars to buy even more foreign
goods. As foreign capital flowed in, the aggregate debt of all U.S. borrowersgovernment,
households, and businessesdoubled between 1983 and 1990, rising
from $5.4 trillion to $10.9 trillion and pushing debt to GDP ratios in
these sectors to unprecedented levels for a period of low inflation. Meanwhile,
the amount of debt owed to foreigners also increased in both nominal terms
and as a share of GDP.
Unsustainable debt levels in the U.S. and other industrialized countries
contributed to the depth and duration of the recession at the beginning
of the 1990s. Moreover, central banks in the U.S. and other industrialized
countries had difficulty reviving economic activity. Instead of reigniting
economies, interest rate cuts sparked outflows of portfolio investment.
Though these outflows only lengthened the U.S. recession by a few months,
subsequent outflows from emerging markets had a much greater impact, crippling
those countries and weakening the global economy.
Meanwhile, abetted by an immense consumer credit structure, the chronic
U.S. current-account deficit poses a growing concern. The U.S. has become
dangerously dependent upon the continued willingness of foreigners to
invest in its economy. With its huge external debt, the U.S. may be increasingly
susceptible to harsh judgments by the liberalized financial system. Ironically,
U.S. policies imposed this liberalized system on the rest of the world.
The U.S. government and other advocates of financial liberalization believe
that greater capital mobility will spur, not undermine, national economic
growth and development. The U.S. Treasury regards capital outflows as
an inevitable response to poor policies and an acceptable tool of market
discipline. Emerging market countries are urged to adjust stocks of foreign
exchange reserves to cover foreign liabilities. Such views assume that
a countrys primary obligation is to assure returns on investments
rather than to promote the welfare of its citizens.
Toward a New Foreign Policy
Key Recommendations
- Establishing a closed-end investment fund for emerging markets would
eliminate surges in foreign portfolio investment while harnessing the
potential of this foreign investment to provide long-term capital for
development.
- Managed by a public international agency, such a fund would focus
on the economic performance of enterprises and countries rather than
seeking short-term financial returns.
- Holdings of government securities of industrialized countries would
provide a capital cushion and guarantee for pension funds and other
beneficiaries whose savings are currently at risk.
It is increasingly recognized that both development and debt repayment
depend upon stable and long-term capital inflows. Reliability assures
realistic cash-flow assumptions and repayment schedules. As crises in
the 1980s and 1990s illustrated, private bank loans funded by short-term
deposits are not a suitable source of financing for development.
Foreign portfolio investments could provide an expanding source of long-term
capital in developing countries if surges in capital flows could be moderated
to prevent the boom/bust cycles that have characterized the use of this
channel to date. U.S. policymakers should consider promoting measures
that limit the destabilizing impact of portfolio investments in foreign
markets.
Establishing a closed-end investment fund for emerging markets would
be an effective way to address the problems associated with foreign portfolio
investment. Closed-end funds contain stabilizing features that make them
preferable to open-end funds. The typical, open-end mutual fund issues
and redeems its shares on demand, buying and selling assets to accommodate
purchases and redemptions. A closed-end fund would provide stable, patient
capital to emerging markets. Although shares in the closed-end fund could
be traded, share price fluctuations would not prompt purchases or sales
of the underlying investments in emerging markets. A closed-end fund would,
thereby, help countries avoid problems accompanying surges in either inflows
(e.g., rising exchange rates and inflated asset prices) or outflows (e.g.,
collapsing asset prices and exchange rates).
The fund should be adequately capitalized. Between 10-20% of the value
of shares sold to investors should be used to purchase and hold government
securities of major industrial countries in amounts roughly proportional
to the closed-end fund shares owned by residents of those countries. Thus,
the fund would provide a channel for retirement investments and other
pooled funds to diversify their holdings and earn a basic, guaranteed
return in addition to dividends and interest on investments in emerging
market securities. The fund would issue its own liabilities to private
investors. In consultation with developing country governments and citizen
groups, it would then buy stocks and debt obligations of private enterprises
and public agencies in developing countries. Both the number of countries
and the size of the pool should be large enough to ensure diversification.
The creation of one or more public international investment funds would
reduce the need for capital controls, especially in countries that choose
to accept foreign portfolio investment solely through the proposed fund.
The proposed fund would also build the capacity of public and private
institutional investors in developing countries to manage their own pension
funds. Working together, developing country investors and public international
funds could share the cost of investment information and collectively
combat the lack of disclosure by domestic issuers in these emerging markets.
Governments must take the lead in laying the groundwork for a closed-end
fund. The U.S. government has initiated other public-purpose market innovations,
beginning with the Reconstruction Finance Corporation in the 1930s and
culminating in the development of the secondary mortgage market in the
1970s. In todays globalized market, it makes sense to devise similar
investment and development instruments on an international level.
Management of the proposed fund would be consistent with the charter
of the World Bank Group, which facilitates private investment in developing
countries and issues its own liabilities in global capital markets. The
World Bank or its affiliate, the International Finance Corporation, could
be encouraged to partner with governments and civil society organizations
to ensure that needs are met for long-term investment and socially and
environmentally sustainable development. Given the shifts in channels
for international capital flows and their destabilizing impacts on the
economies of emerging market countries, a review of current methods and
programs for extending assistance to these countries is long overdue.
Rather than blindly staying the course of financial liberalization, the
U.S. government should promote a new role for public institutions in managing
international financial flows and advancing sustainable development.
Jane DArista is Director of Programs at the Financial Markets
Center.
Sources for More Information
Organizations
Center of Concern
1225 Otis St. NE
Washington, DC 20017
Voice: (202) 635-2757
Fax: (202) 832-9494
Email: jomarie@coc.org
Website: http://www.igc.org/coc/
Economic Policy Institute
1660 L St. NW, Ste. 1200
Washington, DC 20036
Voice: (202) 775-8810
Fax: (202) 775-0819
Email: epi@epinet.org
Website: http://www.epinet.org
Financial Markets Center
Box 334
Philomont, VA 20131
Voice: (540) 338-7754
Fax: (540) 338-7757
Email: info@fmcenter.org
Website: http://www.fmcenter.org
Globalization Challenge Initiative
9703 Hedin Drive
Silver Spring, MD 20903
Voice: (301) 445-2632
Fax: (301) 445-7321
Email: ncalexander@igc.org
New School for Social Research
Center for Economic Policy Analysis
80 Fifth Ave., 5th Floor
New York, NY 10011-8002
Voice: (212) 229-5901
Fax: (212) 229-5903
Email: cepa@newschool.edu
Website: http://www.newschool.edu/cepa
Overseas Development Council
1875 Connecticut Ave. NW, Ste. 1012
Washington, DC 20009
Voice: (202) 234-8701
Fax: (202) 745-0067
Email: morrison@odc.org
Website: http://www.odc.org
Oxfam America
26 West St.
Boston, MA 02111
Voice: (800) 77OXFAM
Fax: (617) 728-2594
Email: lpnichols@oxfamamerica.org
Website: http://www.oxfamamerica.org
Contact: Lucy Nichols
Publications
Robert A. Blecker, Taming Global Finance (Washington, DC: Economic
Policy Institute, 1999).
Jane DArista, "Financial Regulation in a Liberalized Global
Environment," available at: http://www.newschool.edu/cepa
Jane DArista, "The Debt Trap and a Way Out," available
at: http://www.fmcenter.org
John Eatwell and Lance Taylor, Global Finance at Risk (New Press,
forthcoming, January 2000).
Susan Strange, Mad Money (Manchester, U.K.: University of Manchester
Press, 1998).
Websites
Bank for International Settlements
http://www.bis.org/
International Monetary Fund
http://www.imf.org/
World Bank
http://www.worldbank.org/
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