Why
the IMF Meetings Failed
by
Michael Hudson
Recently
by Michael Hudson: America’s
China Bashing: A Compendium of Junk Economics
And the
Coming Capital Controls
“Coming
events cast their shadows forward.” ~ Goethe
What is to
stop U.S. banks and their customers from creating $1 trillion, $10
trillion or even $50 trillion on their computer keyboards to buy
up all the bonds and stocks in the world, along with all the land
and other assets for sale, in the hope of making capital gains and
pocketing the arbitrage spreads by debt leveraging at less than
1% interest cost? This is the game that is being played today.
The outflow
of dollar credit into foreign markets in pursuit of this financial
strategy has bid up asset prices and foreign currencies, enabling
speculators to pay off their U.S. positions in cheaper dollars,
keeping the currency shift as well as the arbitrage interest-rate
margin for themselves.
Finance has
become the new form of warfare – without the expense of military
overhead and an occupation against unwilling hosts. It is a competition
in credit creation to buy foreign real estate and natural resources,
infrastructure, bonds and corporate stock ownership.
Who needs an
army when you can obtain monetary wealth and asset appropriation
simply by financial means? Victory promises to go to the economy
whose banking system can create the most credit, using an army of
computer keyboards to appropriate the world’s resources.
U.S. officials
demonize countries suffering these dollar inflows as aggressive
‘currency manipulators’ for what Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner
calls “‘Competitive nonappreciation,’ in which countries block their
currencies from rising in value.”[1A]
Oscar Wilde would have struggled to find a more convoluted term
for other countries protecting themselves from raiders trying to
force up their currencies to make enormous predatory fortunes.
Competitive
nonappreciation’ sounds like ‘conspiratorial non-suicide.’ These
countries simply are trying to protect their currencies from arbitrageurs
and speculators flooding their financial markets with dollars, sweeping
their currencies up and down to extract billions of dollars from
their central banks.
Their central
banks are being forced to choose between passively letting these
inflows push up their exchange rates – thereby pricing their exports
out of foreign markets – or recycling these inflows into U.S. Treasury
bills yielding only 1% with declining exchange value. (Longer-term
bonds risk a price decline if U.S interest rates should rise.)
U.S. officials
demonize foreign countries as aggressive “currency manipulators”
for keeping their currencies weak. But these countries simply are
trying to protect their currencies from arbitrageurs and speculators
flooding their financial markets with dollars. Foreign central banks
must choose between passively letting these inflows push up their
exchange rates – thereby pricing their exports out of global markets
– or recycling these inflows into U.S. Treasury bills yielding only
1% and whose exchange value is declining. (Longer-term bonds risk
a domestic dollar-price decline if U.S interest rates should rise.)
The euphemism
for flooding economies with credit is “quantitative easing.” The
Federal Reserve is pumping liquidity and reserves into the financial
system to reduce interest rates, ostensibly to enable banks to “earn
their way” out of negative equity resulting from the bad loans made
during the real estate bubble. This liquidity is spilling over to
foreign economies, increasing their exchange rates. Joseph Stiglitz
recently acknowledged that instead of helping the global recovery,
the “flood of liquidity” from the Fed and the European Central Bank
is causing “chaos” in foreign exchange markets. “The irony is that
the Fed is creating all this liquidity with the hope that it will
revive the American economy. … It’s doing nothing for the
American economy, but it’s causing chaos over the rest of the world.”[1]
What U.S. quantitative
easing is achieving is to drive the dollar down and other currencies
up, much to the applause of currency speculators enjoying quick
and easy gains. Yet it is to defend this system that U.S. diplomats
and bank lobbyists are threatening to derail the international financial
system and plunge world trade into anarchy if other countries do
not agree to a replay of the 1985 Plaza Accord “as a possible framework
for engineering an orderly decline in the dollar and avoiding potentially
destabilizing trade fights.”[2]
The Plaza Accord
derailed Japan’s economy by raising its exchange rate while lowering
interest rates, flooding its economy with enough credit to inflate
a real estate bubble. IMF managing director Dominique Strauss-Kahn
was more realistic. “I’m not sure the mood is to have a new Plaza
or Louvre accord,” he said at a press briefing on the eve of the
IMF meetings in Washington. “We are in a different time today.”
Acknowledging the need for “some element of capital controls [to]
be put in place,” he added that in view of U.S. insistence on open,
unprotected capital markets, “The idea that there is an absolute
need in a globalised world to work together may lose some steam.”[3]
At issue is
how long nations will succumb to the speculative dollar glut. The
world is being forced to choose between subordination to U.S. economic
nationalism or an interim of financial anarchy. Nations are responding
by seeking to create an alternative international financial system,
risking an anarchic transition period in order to create a fairer
world economy.
Re-inflating
the financial bubble rather than writing down debts
The global
financial system already has seen one long and unsuccessful experiment
in quantitative easing in Japan’s carry trade. After its financial
and property bubble burst in 1990, the Bank of Japan sought to enable
its banks to “earn their way out of negative equity” by supplying
them with low-interest credit for them to lend out. Japan’s recession
left little demand at home, so its banks developed the carry trade:
lending at a low interest rate to arbitrageurs to buy higher-yielding
securities. Iceland, for example, was paying 15%. So yen were borrowed
to convert into dollars, euros, Icelandic kroner and Chinese renminbi
to buy government bonds, private-sector bonds, stocks, currency
options and other financial intermediation. Not much of this funding
was used to finance new capital formation. It was purely financial
in character – extractive, not productive.
By 2006 the
United States and Europe were experiencing a financial and real
estate bubble of its own. And after it burst in 2008, they did what
Japan’s banks did after 1990. Seeking to help U.S. banks work their
way out of negative equity, the Federal Reserve flooded the economy
with credit. The aim was to provide more liquidity, in the hope
that banks would lend more to domestic borrowers. The economy would
“borrow its way out of debt,” re-inflating asset prices for real
estate, stocks and bonds so as to deter home foreclosures and the
ensuing wipeout of collateral on bank balance sheets.
Quantitative
easing subsidizes U.S. capital flight, pushing up non-dollar currency
exchange rates
Quantitative
easing may not have set out to disrupt the global trade and financial
system or start a round of currency speculation, but that is the
result of the Fed’s decision in 2008 to keep unpayably high debts
from defaulting by re-inflating U.S. real estate and financial markets.
The aim is to pull home ownership out of negative equity, rescuing
the banking system’s balance sheets and thus saving the government
from having to indulge in a TARP II, which looks politically impossible
given the mood of most Americans.
The announced
objective is not materializing. Instead of increasing their loans
against U.S. real estate, consumers or businesses, banks are still
reducing their exposure. This is why the U.S. savings rate is jumping.
The “saving” that is reported (up from zero to 3% of GDP) is taking
the form of paying down debts taken out in the past, not building
up liquid funds. Just as hoarding diverts revenue away from being
spent on goods and services, so debt repayment shrinks spendable
income. Why then would banks lend more under conditions where a
third of U.S. homes already are in negative equity and the economy
is shrinking as a result of debt deflation?
Mr. Bernanke
proposes to solve this problem by injecting another $1 trillion
of liquidity over the coming year, on top of the $2 trillion in
new Federal Reserve credit already created during 2009–10. This
quantitative easing has been sent abroad, mainly to the BRIC countries:
Brazil, Russia, India and China. “Recent research at the International
Monetary Fund has shown conclusively that G4 monetary easing has
in the past transferred itself almost completely to the emerging
economies … since 1995, the stance of monetary policy in Asia has
been almost entirely determined by the monetary stance of the G4
– the US, eurozone, Japan and China – led by the Fed.” According
to the IMF, “equity prices in Asia and Latin America generally rise
when excess liquidity is transferred from the G4 to the emerging
economies.”[4]
This is what
has led gold prices to surge and investors to move out of the dollar
since early September, prompting other nations to protect their
economies.
Speculative
credit from U.S., Japanese and British banks to buy bonds, stocks
and currencies in the BRIC and Third World countries is a self-feeding
expansion, pushing up their currencies as well as their asset prices.
Their central banks end up with these dollars, whose value falls
as measured in their own local currencies. U.S. officials say that
this is all part of the free market. “It is not good for the world
for the burden of solving this broader problem … to rest on the
shoulders of the United States,”[5] insisted
Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner on Wednesday, as if the spillover
from U.S. quantitative easing and deregulation was not promoting
the speculative dollar glut.
So other countries
are obliged to solve the problem on their own. Japan is holding
down its exchange rate by selling yen and buying U.S. Treasury bonds
in the face of its carry trade being unwound as arbitrageurs pay
back the yen they earlier borrowed to buy higher-yielding but increasingly
risky sovereign debt from countries such as Greece. These paybacks
have pushed up the yen’s exchange rate by 12% against the dollar
so far during 2010, prompting Bank of Japan governor Masaaki Shirakawa
to announce on Tuesday, October 5, that Japan had “no choice” but
to “spend 5 trillion yen ($60 billion) to buy government bonds,
corporate IOUs, real-estate investment trust funds and exchange-traded
funds – the latter two a departure from past practice.”[6]
This “sterilization”
of unwanted inflows is what the United States has criticized China
for doing. China has tried more normal ways to recycle its trade
surplus, by seeking out U.S. companies to buy. But Congress would
not let CNOOC buy into U.S. oil refinery capacity a few years ago,
and the Canadian government is now being urged to block China’s
attempt to purchase its potash resources. Such protectionism leaves
little option for China and other countries except to hold their
currencies stable by purchasing U.S. and European government bonds.
The problem
for all countries today is that as presently structured, the global
financial system rewards speculation and makes it difficult for
central banks to maintain stability without recycling dollar inflows
to the U.S. Government, which enjoys a near monopoly in providing
the world’s central bank reserves by running budget and balance-of-payments
deficits. As noted earlier, arbitrageurs obtain a twofold gain:
the margin between Brazil’s nearly 12% yield on its long-term government
bonds and the cost of U.S. credit (1%), plus the foreign-exchange
gain resulting from the fact that the outflow from dollars into
reals has pushed up the real’s exchange rate some 30% – from R$2.50
at the start of 2009 to $1.75 last week. Taking into account the
ability to leverage $1 million of one’s own equity investment to
buy $100 million of foreign securities, the rate of return is 3000%
since January 2009.
Brazil has
been more a victim than a beneficiary of what is euphemized as a
“capital inflow.” The inflow of foreign money has pushed up the
real by 4% in just over a month (from September 1 through early
October), and the past year’s run-up has eroded the competitiveness
of Brazilian exports. To deter the currency’s rise, the government
imposed a 4% tax on foreign purchases of its bonds on October 4.
“It’s not only
a currency war,” Finance Minister Guido Mantega explained. “It tends
to become a trade war and this is our concern.”[7]
Thailand’s central bank director Wongwatoo Potirat warned that his
country was considering similar taxes and currency trade restrictions
to stem the baht’s rise. Subir Gokarn, deputy governor of the Reserve
Bank of India, announced that his country also was reviewing defenses
against the “potential threat” of inward capital flows.”[8]
Such inflows
do not provide capital for tangible investment. They are predatory,
and cause currency fluctuation that disrupts trade patterns while
creating enormous trading profits for large financial institutions
and their customers. Yet most discussions treat the balance of payments
and exchange rates as if they were determined purely by commodity
trade and “purchasing power parity,” not by the financial flows
and military spending that actually dominate the balance of payments.
The reality is that today’s financial interregnum – anarchic “free”
markets prior to countries hurriedly putting up their own monetary
defenses – provides the arbitrage opportunity of the century. This
is what bank lobbyists have been pressing for. It has little to
do with the welfare of workers in their own country.
The potentially
largest speculative prize promises to be an upward revaluation of
China’s renminbi. The House Ways and Means Committee is demanding
that China raise its exchange rate by the 20 percent that the Treasury
and Federal Reserve are suggesting. Revaluation of this magnitude
would enable speculators to put down 1% equity – say, $1 million
to borrow $99 million – and buy Chinese renminbi forward. The revaluation
being demanded would produce a 2000% profit of $20 million by turning
the $100 million bet (and just $1 million “serious money”) into
$120 million. Banks can trade on much larger, nearly infinitely
leveraged margins, much like drawing up CDO swaps and other derivative
plays.
This kind of
money has been made by speculating on Brazilian, Indian and Chinese
securities and those of other countries whose exchange rates have
been forced up by credit-flight out of the dollar, which has fallen
by 7% against a basket of currencies since early September when
the Federal Reserve floated the prospect of quantitative easing.
During the week leading up to the IMF meetings in Washington, the
Thai baht and Indian rupee soared in anticipation that the United
States and Britain would block any attempts by foreign countries
to change the financial system and curb disruptive currency gambling.
This capital
outflow from the United States has indeed helped domestic banks
rebuild their balance sheets, as the Fed intended. But in the process
the international financial system has been victimized as collateral
damage. This prompted Chinese officials to counter U.S. attempts
to blame it for running a trade surplus by retorting that U.S. financial
aggression “risked bringing mutual destruction upon the great economic
powers.”[9]
From
the gold-exchange standard to the Treasury-bill standard to “free
credit” anarchy
Indeed, the
standoff between the United States and other countries at the IMF
meetings in Washington this weekend threatens to cause the most
serious rupture since the breakdown of the London Monetary Conference
in 1933. The global financial system threatens once again to break
apart, deranging the world’s trade and investment relationships
– or to take a new form that will leave the United States isolated
in the face of its structural long-term balance-of-payments deficit.
This crisis
provides an opportunity – indeed, a need – to step back and review
the longue durée of international financial evolution to see where
past trends are leading and what paths need to be re-tracked. For
many centuries prior to 1971, nations settled their balance of payments
in gold or silver. This “money of the world,” as Sir James Steuart
called gold in 1767, formed the basis of domestic currency as well.
Until 1971 each U.S. Federal Reserve note was backed 25% by gold,
valued at $35 an ounce. Countries had to obtain gold by running
trade and payments surpluses in order to increase their money supply
to facilitate general economic expansion. And when they ran trade
deficits or undertook military campaigns, central banks restricted
the supply of domestic credit to raise interest rates and attract
foreign financial inflows.
As long as
this behavioral condition remained in place, the international financial
system operated fairly smoothly under checks and balances, albeit
under “stop-go” policies when business expansions led to trade and
payments deficits. Countries running such deficits raised their
interest rates to attract foreign capital, while slashing government
spending, raising taxes on consumers and slowing the domestic economy
so as to reduce the purchase of imports.
What destabilized
this system was war spending. War-related transactions spanning
World Wars I and II enabled the United States to accumulate some
80% of the world’s monetary gold by 1950. This made the dollar a
virtual proxy for gold. But after the Korean War broke out, U.S.
overseas military spending accounted for the entire payments deficit
during the 1950s and 60s and early 70s, while private-sector
trade and investment were exactly in balance.
By August 1971,
war spending in Vietnam and other foreign countries forced the United
States to suspend gold convertibility of the dollar through sales
via the London Gold Pool. But largely by inertia, central banks
continued to settle their payments balances in U.S. Treasury securities.
After all, there was no other asset in sufficient supply to form
the basis for central bank monetary reserves.
But replacing
gold – a pure asset – with dollar-denominated U.S. Treasury debt
transformed the global financial system. It became debt-based, not
asset-based. And geopolitically, the Treasury-bill standard made
the United States immune from the traditional balance-of-payments
and financial constraints, enabling its capital markets to become
more highly debt-leveraged and “innovative.”
It also enabled
the U.S. Government to wage foreign policy and military campaigns
without much regard for the balance of payments.
The problem
is that the supply of dollar credit has become potentially infinite.
The “dollar glut” has grown in proportion to the U.S. payments deficit.
Growth in central bank reserves and sovereign-country funds has
taken the form of recycling of dollar inflows into new purchases
of U.S. Treasury securities – thereby making foreign central banks
(and taxpayers) responsible for financing most of the U.S. federal
budget deficit. The fact that this deficit is largely military in
nature – for purposes that many foreign voters oppose – makes this
lock-in particularly galling. So it hardly is surprising that foreign
countries are seeking an alternative.
Contrary to
most public media posturing, the U.S. payments deficit – and hence,
other countries’ payments surpluses – is not primarily a trade deficit.
Foreign military spending has accelerated despite the Cold War ending
with dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991. Even more important
has been rising capital outflows from the United States. Banks lent
to foreign governments from Third World countries to other deficit
countries to cover their national payments deficits, to private
borrowers to buy the foreign infrastructure being privatized or
to buy foreign stocks and bonds, and to arbitrageurs to borrow at
a low interest rate to buy higher-yielding securities abroad.
The corollary
is that other countries’ balance-of-payments surpluses do not stem
primarily from trade relations, but from financial speculation and
a spillover of U.S. global military spending. Under these conditions
the maneuvering for quick returns by banks and their arbitrage customers
is distorting exchange rates for international trade. U.S. “quantitative
easing” is coming to be perceived as a euphemism for a predatory
financial attack on the rest of the world. Trade and currency stability
are part of the “collateral damage” caused by the Federal Reserve
and Treasury flooding the economy with liquidity to re-inflate U.S.
asset prices. Faced with this quantitative easing flooding the economy
with reserves to “save the banks” from negative equity, all countries
are obliged to act as “currency manipulators.” So much money is
made by purely financial speculation that “real” economies are being
destroyed.
The
coming capital controls
The global
financial system is being broken up as U.S. monetary officials change
the rules they laid down half a century ago. Prior to the United
States going off gold in 1971, nobody dreamed that an economy could
create unlimited credit on computer keyboards and not see its currency
plunge. But that is what happens under the global Treasury-bill
standard. Foreign countries can prevent their currencies from rising
against the dollar (which prices their labor and exports out of
foreign markets) only by (1) recycling dollar inflows into U.S.
Treasury securities, (2) by imposing capital controls, or (3) by
avoiding use of the dollar or other currencies used by financial
speculators in economies promoting “quantitative easing.”
Malaysia used
capital controls during the 1997 Asian Crisis to prevent short-sellers
from covering their bets. This confronted speculators with a short
squeeze that George Soros says made him lose money on the attempted
raid. Other countries are now reviewing how to impose capital controls
to protect themselves from the tsunami of credit flowing into their
currencies and buying up their assets – along with gold and other
commodities that are turning into vehicles for speculation rather
than actual use in production. Brazil took a modest step along this
path by using tax policy rather than outright capital controls when
it taxed foreign buyers of its bonds last week.
If other nations
take this route, it will reverse the policy of open and unprotected
capital markets adopted after World War II. This trend threatens
to lead to the kind of international monetary practice found from
the 1930s into the ‘50s: dual exchange rates, one for financial
movements and another for trade. It probably would mean replacing
the IMF, World Bank and WTO with a new set of institutions, isolating
U.S., British and eurozone representation.
To defend itself,
the IMF is proposing to act as a “central bank” creating what was
called “paper gold” in the late 1960s – artificial credit in the
form of Special Drawing Rights (SDRs). However, other countries
already have complained that voting control remains dominated by
the major promoters of arbitrage speculation – the United States,
Britain and the eurozone. And the IMF’s Articles of Agreement prevent
countries from protecting themselves, characterizing this as “interfering”
with “open capital markets.” So the impasse reached this weekend
appears to be permanent. As one report summarized matters: “‘There
is only one obstacle, which is the agreement of the members,’ said
a frustrated Mr Strauss Kahn.”[10] He
added: “The language is ineffective.”[11]
Paul Martin,
the former Canadian prime minister who helped create the G20 after
the 1997-1998 Asian financial crisis, noted that “the big powers
were largely immune to being named and shamed.” And in a Financial
Times interview, Mohamed El-Erian, a former senior IMF official
and now chief executive of Pimco, said: “You have a burst pipe behind
the wall and the water is coming out. You have to fix the pipe,
not just patch the wall.”[12]
The BRIC countries
are simply creating their own parallel system. In September, China
supported a Russian proposal to start direct trading between the
yuan and the ruble. It has brokered a similar deal with Brazil.
And on the eve of the IMF meetings in Washington on Friday, October
8, Premier Wen stopped off in Istanbul to reach agreement with Turkish
Prime Minister Erdogan to use their own currencies in tripling Turkish-Chinese
trade to $50 billion over the next five years, effectively excluding
the U.S. dollar. “We are forming an economic strategic partnership
… In all of our relations, we have agreed to use the lira and yuan,”
Mr. Erdogan said.[13]
On the deepest
economic plane today’s global financial breakdown is part of the
price to be paid for the Federal Reserve and U.S. Treasury refusing
to accept a prime axiom of banking: Debts that cannot be paid, won’t
be. They tried to “save” the banking system from debt write-downs
in 2008 by keeping the debt overhead in place while re-inflating
asset prices. In the face of the repayment burden shrinking the
U.S. economy, the Fed’s idea of helping the banks “earn their way
out of negative equity” is to provide opportunities for predatory
finance, leading to a flood of financial speculation. Economies
targeted by global speculators understandably are seeking alternative
arrangements. It does not look like these can be achieved via the
IMF or other international forums in ways that U.S. financial strategists
will willingly accept.
Footnotes
Reprinted
with permission from Michael-Hudson.com.
October
18, 2010
Michael
Hudson is President of The Institute for the Study of Long-Term
Economic Trends (ISLET), a Wall Street Financial Analyst, Distinguished
Research Professor of Economics at the University of Missouri, Kansas
City and author of Super-Imperialism:
The Economic Strategy of American Empire
(1968 & 2003), Trade,
Development and Foreign Debt
(1992 & 2009), and of The
Myth of Aid
(1971). Visit his website.
Copyright ©
2010 Michael Hudson
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