Sunday, 29 July 2012

MGG Public Lecture (30 July 2012, at GDI/DIE)

http://www.die-gdi.de/CMS-Homepage/openwebcms3.nsf/(ynDK_contentByKey)/MSIN-8W9H7K?Open
Shifting wealth: rising powers and the new world order (in 16 paragraphs)
1.      How has the global development scene changed by the rising powers, or as we at the OECD Development Centre call them, the convergers? It has diversified the pool of actors, aid instruments, capital, trade and tax revenues to low-income countries; it has allowed low-income countries to switch to the growth engine that works; and it has loosened up the policy and paradigm monopole once solidly occupied by the old donor cartel around Bretton Woods institutions and the DAC. While overall it has been good news for poor countries,  it has been rather bad news for aid bureaucracies, for compliance with global soft law, and for donor (& NGO) rethoric and posture.

2.      Strong shifts in net international investment positions and sustained superior growth rates of large middle-income countries are reshaping the world economy – a phenomenon the OECD Perspectives on Global Development refer to and define as “Shifting Wealth”. The recalibration of the world economy – Shifting Wealth – can be interpreted from a stock and from a flow perspective.

3.      The stock perspective: The global current account imbalances of the past decade – which to a large extent reflected a high external US saving deficit financed increasingly by China and oil exporters - have given rise to a significant shift in wealth distribution toward surplus countries linked to fossil-fuel production or high savings and exports. Rich OECD countries are being financed by countries which until recently played no substantial role as international investors. The United States is now the world’s biggest debtor. Joint with Japan, China has extended its position most as the world’s international net creditor.

4.      As long as the rising powers remain ‘immature creditors’, they retain a strong contingent currency risk incentive to switch from acquiring foreign financial to buying foreign real assets. Investment vehicles such as sovereign wealth funds that mostly (with the notable exception of Norway) originate in emerging countries have grown in asset size and prominence. Western debt relief has given way to Eastern export credits. The switch from Western to East and Southern sources of finance translates into a higher share of state-sponsored capital supply as opposed to pure private-sector sources. Many newly cash-rich countries have different political regimes from the countries that previously dominated international investment.

5.      The flow perspective:  Sustained growth that large emerging countries have experienced over the last decade have conferred them a considerable growth advantage over OECD average. The world has seen a switch in the engines of growth, since the late 1990s with a continued rise of global growth being driven from outside the OECD area. Combined with very large populations, these growth differences translate into a new world economy. From 2015, we project the non-OECD economies to exceed the OECD area in terms of PPP-adjusted GDP. The world’s economic mass – production, consumption, wealth – is moving East toward India and China, realigning with the world’s demographic mass.


6.      Apart from falling trade cost and expanding global production networks that are driving global trade, the greater role of emerging countries has induced a much finer degree of international specialisation than occurred previously when North-North trade predominated. Global trade has witnessed the return of comparative advantage in connection with Shifting Wealth. Foreign direct investment (FDI) has been a crucial vehicle in building global production chains and has been usually characterised by a predominant North-South direction, which is slowly changing direction South-South and South-North.



7.      Apart from the stock and flow definitions of Shifting Wealth, its geopolitical dimensions have moved very much into the forefront. The substitution of the G8 for the G20  as the premier global economic policy forum, the gradual rise in inclusion, representation and voice in international organisations such as the Bretton Woods institutions and higher political ‘power’ in particular of the BRICS are noted features of their shifting geopolitical stance on a global scale. However, the majority of smaller emerging countries (Colombia, Egypt, Thailand, e.g.) still submit to the Pax Americana[1], as is for example visible in the ca 60 countries that engage with the OECD in one way or other. And within the BRIC group, there are considerable economic and geopolitical divergences, with China the only true superpower.

8.      For international monetary governance, the prospect of the renminbi and perhaps other emerging-country currencies entering reserve-currency functions aside key OECD currencies has gained momentum.  In global trade policy, Shifting Wealth translates into higher retaliation and bargaining power for the rising powers. Finally, the growing importance of non-OECD countries may translate into acceptance of a different intellectual paradigm underlying cross border collective arrangements and lower effective compliance of standards and best practices defined and scripted by the advanced economies, not least in the global aid architecture. Building a Global Partnership for Effective Development Cooperation has been agreed at the High-Level Forum on Aid Effectiveness, in which governments of many emerging countries signed as donors for the first time. Note that China, India and Brazil only signed as ODA recipients as they do not accept Paris Aid Effectiveness principles to apply to South-South cooperation.

9.      Despite many assertions to the contrary, the positive growth performance of low- and middle-income countries can be explained to a large extent by China’s growth; in other words, emerging-country growth has been endogenous to China’s growth to a certain extent.  We (2012)[2]  have produce findings that do indeed suggest that poor countries, oil and non-oil, have been changing their growth locomotive during the 2000s, from the G7 countries to China. To be sure, GDP growth in itself is not of much help if it fails to bring down poverty .  The number of people living on less than 2$/day/capita started only to decline from the 2000s, in the era of Shifting Wealth.  During the period 1981 and 2008, the number of people living in extreme poverty  (1.25$/day))decline by 650 million people to 1.29 billion, despite a rise in world population by more than 2 billion people over the three decades. Most of that global poverty reduction occurred in China where the number of extreme poor melted down by half a billion. But even correcting for China, the eradication of extreme (and less extreme) poverty has gathered speed during the last decade.



10.  Taking the evidence on growth links discussed above, it is fair to say that China has not only helped reduce local, but also global poverty, despite the much-noted rise in Lewis-Kuznets type inequality in most middle-income countries. While the rise of Africa’s emerging partners has been widely analysed in terms of a scramble for African resources, the more recent rise of manufactured exports from sub-Saharan Africa to China and other emerging countries and by foreign direct investment from emerging countries that has reached Africa’s non-oil countries (in proportion to their respective GDP) not less than it reached oil and raw material producers; in contrast, OECD-country imports from Africa remains as biased towards oil as the FDI flows from OECD to Africa (AEO 2011, ch 6).

 11.  Development cooperation programmes of emerging countries, not just China, focus more on infrastructure and other structural bottlenecks to growth than DAC donors who have prioritised aid toward poverty reduction and health in the past. China, India, and Brazil in particular offer alternative modalities to finance development[3]. ODA is a component of  wider package of economic cooperation (e.g. the Chinese model of development cooperation - turnkey projects, package deals, Angola Mode). Aid is only one element of their engagement toolbox, reflecting striking differences in engagement philosophies between traditional donors and emerging partners.  This blurs the borders traditionally drawn between investment and aid; trade and aid; and between private and public sector involvement. Western “charity” focuses on “assistance” seeking poverty reduction and social welfare, but it is predicted to change toward the “Asian” model[4]. The “Asian” model for co-operation emphasises the partner’s potential and seeks mutual benefits. In fact, it quite resembles the way Japan once practiced cooperation with China[5]. Western aid emphasises policy conditionality, Eastern cooperation project selectivity and control.


12.  How then can we envisage cooperation between traditional and emerging donors going forward? Before I turn to that difficult issue, let me first quote the DAC Outreach Strategy 2008, in oder to understand how NOT to envisage that cooperation: “Outreach constitutes an essential element of the work of the DAC ... Enhanced Engagement aims to bring partners closer to the OECD and what it stands for by engaging them closely in OECD processes while supporting their own reform processes through the adoption of OECD practices, policies, guidelines or instruments. Many representatives of Western donor agencies (and industry lobbies) seem to think that a new world order can be fundamentally addressed by including China and other rising powers in existing arrangements that the advanced countries have built since the Second World War. The semantic corollary of such thinking is reflected in the term ‘outreach’ for a while employed by the West when trying to establish a dialogue with the new donors. It was assumed that the new Eastern donors could be assimilated to Western-built international soft law.
13.  The world is perhaps more likely to become bipolar rather than multipolar. I personally think that the US might be the big stumbling block for cooperation between donors old and new. Hillary Clinton’s warnings on China in Africa[6] as representing the “new colonialism”, or the US push for the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA) to counteract China’s ascendancy through US “economic and military statecraft”[7]  in the Pacific support my fears that the US will find it difficult to engage the rising powers in a constructive way.  The main geopolitical fault line in the next few decades will be the West and China.  Imposing our norms and standards is a non-starter simply as China, India, even Brazil will not accept standards that the West has developed over decades. In a world of increasing competition for exhaustable resources and in a world of inexhaustable protectionism, Policy Coherence for Development (PCD) will have a tough life. The current bureaucratic struggle between aid agencies – using PCD to escape their narrow aid focus through getting a voice in other cabinet issues such as education, food, trade or energy  - and those who want to mainstream development through outsourcing traditional aid items to education, trade and other ministries may turn out to be quite pointless in the era of Shifting Wealth[8].

14.  True, global soft law offers more effective ways of dealing with situations of uncertainty and diversity where hard law would fail. Soft law is easier to achieve than hard law, less expensive and more flexible, especially when actors are jealous of their autonomy.
The OECD and other international organisations have developed mechanisms to raise the compliance with soft law, the major instrument being the peer review. Under what conditions can peer review and peer pressure work in terms of bringing about compliance with a given set of standards? Factors influencing the effectiveness of peer review: value sharing; adequate commitment; mutual trust; credibility; and thightness of policing a soft-law instruments[9]. While a richer China, it is hoped, might move closer to our values, this is not a foregone conclusion. The distribution fight for nonrenewable resources acts to limit adequate commitment for effective peer reviews. And mutual trust, as seen from the Chinese perspective, has suffered not risen over the past years.


15.  In practice, peer reviews have often led to rather weak and incomplete compliance. DAC peer reviews are not excluded from this criticism. Shortcomings of peer reviews also become apparent in other organisations. The failure of IMF surveillance with respect to the US financial system in the run-up to the 2007-2009 global crisis, for instance, may point to another requirement for soft-law effectiveness: limits on the degree of political influence, especially with superpowers. Bear in mind, though, that a new world order is still likely to resort to soft law and peer reviews precisely because harder global  laws and more effective enforcement mechanisms would not be accepted.

16. Western soft law and its edifice of standards, best practices,  norms and policy ‘insights’ built up over the past 50 years was essentially formed in a market economy and in a decentralised and unauthoritarian setting. The recent Western history of development is quite different from the policy lessons and paradigms of the rising powers and low-income countries. For example, China’s practice of packaged cooperation deals in which aid cannot be isolated and computed with any precision makes transparency hard to establish; the components of the package are not individually priced and it is difficult to separate aid from economic cooperation in general. The transparency issue must be dealt with in more intelligent ways than just asking China to become a member of a joint transparency initiative as postulated by the G8 in the past.  A genuine synthesis of approaches  of packaged cooperation that the recipient countries can compare based on hard empirical evidence and social-economic cost-benefit analysis, as opposed to the inclusion of rising powers into existing fragmented Western approaches,  is required but will imply hugh changes in the behaviour of DAC actors. Are they ready?



[1] See Thomas Fues, “Multilateral politics: At a crossroads”, D+C, No 53 (7-8), 2012, on who signed DAC agreements and who didn’t  at the Busan conference 
[2] Garroway, Chris, Burcu Hacibedel, Helmut Reisen and Edouard Turkisch (2012), “The Renminbi and Poor-Country Growth”, The World Economy, 35.3, 273-294.
[3] See, e.g., Mwase, Nkunde, and Yongzheng Yang (2012), “BRICs’Philosophies for Development Financing and their Implications for LICs”, IMF Working Paper 12/74, March.
[4] Kharas, Homi, and Andrew Rogerson (2012), Horizon 2025: Creative Destruction in the Aid Industry, ODI, July.
[5] Dahman Saidi, Myriam and Christina Wolf (2011), “Recalibrating Development Cooperation: How Can African Countries Benefit from Emerging Partners?”, OECD Development Centre Working Paper No. 302, July.
[6] Reisen, Helmut (2011), “China, Zambia and theworldofhillaryclinton.com”, shiftingwealth.blogspot.com, 19. June.,
[7] Clinton, Hillary (2011), “America’s Pacific Century”, Foreign Policy, November. For a geopolitical analysis of the TPPA, see Kelsey, Jane (2011), The TPPA as a Lynchpin of the US Anti-China Strategy”, scoop, 21 November: “China will be increasingly isolated, as a critical mass of APEC countries signs on to the “gold standard” deal, and may ultimately subordinate itself to the TPPA’s US-designed “international norms”.
[9] Paulo, Sebastian, and Helmut Reisen (2010), “Eastern Donors and Western Soft Law: Towards a CAC Donor Peer review of China and India?”, Development Policy Review, 28.5., 535-552.

Tuesday, 10 July 2012

Global Trade Patterns

Global trade has both induced and reflected Shifting Wealth in many ways. Gordon Hanson (2012) in his NBER paper “The Rise of Middle Kingdoms: Emerging Economies in Global Trade”  has recently closely examined changes in international trade associated with the integration and rise of low- and middle-income countries, for the period 1994 – 2008 when the share of developing economies in global trade more than doubled. Two properties of global trade have become apparent over the last two decades:

·         The share of trade in GDP has grown sharply for low- and middle-income countries as growth in trade advanced even more rapidly than their relative economic size; exports over GDP rose from a quarter to more than half of non-OECD GDP during 1994 – 2008.
·         The shifting pattern of global trade has involved much larger South-South (and North-South)  trade flows. Between 1994 and 2008, the South-South component of low-income country exports rose from 22 to 29 percent; the South-South component of middle-income exports rose from 33 to 46 percent during the same period.

To be sure, the growth in Southern trade has been associated with reduced trade and transport cost, WTO membership and unilateral trade reform. An important explanation, according to Hanson (2012), of why South-South commerce has surged over the last decades are expanding multi-stage global production networks. Much of the recent increase in trade appears to be the result of offshoring, with manufacturing fragmented across borders as firms have exploited comparative cost advantages[1].  Apart from falling trade cost and expanding global production networks that are driving global trade, the greater role of emerging countries has induced a much finer degree of international specialisation than occurred previously when North-North trade predominated . Hanson’s (2012) findings emphasise the return of comparative advantage in connection with Shifting Wealth: low income countries have accentuated during the past decades their net exports in three resource or labour intensive sectors – agriculture, raw materials, and apparel and shoes – and their import surpluses in other sectors. Middle income countries have turned into net exporters of electronics, increased (slightly) net exports in the primary sectors, turned into net importers in apparel/shoes and remained so in capital intensive sectors.


Graph 1: Sector Trade Shares, Middle Income Countries


Gordon Hanson (2012), “The Rise of Middle Kingdoms: Emerging Economies in Global Trade”
Foreign direct investment (FDI)  has been a crucial vehicle in building global production chains and has been usually characterised by a predominant North-South direction; indeed, FDI sourced by OECD countries and hosted by developing countries has surged during the 2000s. Like trade, FDI flows have also been growing faster than, hence rising as a fraction of, global GDP. However, while these are by now well documented facts, the rise of outward FDI by emerging countries has been less appreciated. Outflows of FDI as a share of GDP rose over the 1994 to 2008 period from 0.2 to 2.2 percent of GDP in middle income countries, fast approaching ther 3.6 percent of GDP sourced from high-income countries in 2008.



[1] A consequence may be that gross trade flows (i.e., total exports) overstate net exports (corrected for intermediate imports), which might imply that some recent expansion of South-South trade, especially for manufactures,  is merely a statistical artifact.

Thursday, 7 June 2012

Rudi Dornbusch, the Euro and the Latin Triangle

Rudi Dornbusch was born and grew up close to my birthplace in Krefeld, in today’s North-Rhine Westphalia, on 8 June 1942. Precisely 70 years ago, a reason to give this great and generous economist, who died ten years ago,  a memory. There are other reasons for me, more personal. My late aunt knew his mother quite well and always praised her Mutterwitz, if you wonder where his formidable wit and speed of mind might have originated. When Eliana Cardoso visited the OECD Development Centre in Summer 1988, she was accompanied by her husband Rudi who wanted just to have a desk and to circulate freely in Paris, in intellectually more rewarding places. (The invitation of the couple, I am afraid, turned out to be less than the Centre President had hoped for, as they left the place with a deep feeling of disappointment.) Nonetheless,  I had an opportunity to show them my Ph.D. which I had just finished at the tender age of 37, on the “Latin American Transfer Problem”, where I tried to shift the focus to the budgetary problem of public debt, away from the then common view that Latin America suffered mostly from a dollar exchange problem. Dornbusch suggested that I sent a shortened fraft to Peter Kenen, so my Ph.D turned into a Princeton Study in International Finance[1]. I guess they both liked how I used the interwar debate on Germany’s reparation problem to reinterpret the Latin American debt crisis of the 1980s.
Dornbusch’s focus on Latin American financial crises in the 1980s and 1990s provides valuable insights for today’s Europe, as highlighted by a  smart blog entry by Ed Dolan, “How the Latin Triangle Swallowed the Euro”,  based on  Dornbusch’s article[2]. In the graph borrowed from Ed Dolan, the vertical axis denotes the real exchange rate, and real wages that is, as in a fixed-currency setting appreciation lowers import cost and raises the consumption wage;  appreciation is upwards. That upward movement of real wages and exchange rates depicts the past period in Southern Europe and in countries with a hard peg to the euro, such as Estonia. The cycle begins at A, with a balanced current account and full employment (well, God bless& fulfill our assumptions!). The Eurozone brings interest convergence, rising real estate prices and rising wages; the economy shifts to B, which denotes an increasingly unsustainable deficit. And then, to quote Rudi Dornbusch, comes the crisis, eventually:
“The crisis takes a much longer time coming than you think, and then it happens much faster than you would have thought, and that’s sort of exactly the Mexican story. It took forever and then it took a night.”
With a sudden stop in external finance, and with the devaluation option off the table, the remaining alternative is a sharp turn toward fiscal austerity. In the short run, that will move the country toward point C, with falling GDP and rising unemployment. If the austerity is sufficiently stringent and kept in place long enough, nominal prices and wages may begin to fall. In principle, such an internal devaluation could move the country down along the line from C toward A. So in the “best” of worlds, with civil servants salaries cut by more than 20% and flexible labour markets, what can be achied is the recovery path of Estonia. Neither is that outlook too appealing, as Krugman has noted by pointing that only half of the slump has been recovered since the peak, nor is all the deflationary hardship to impose politically feasible in all countries. Bruening tried so, we got Hitler.
In recent weeks, when the Eurozone crisis intensified again in that cycle of extreme market stress and public intervention established by now, I have started to wonder what Dornbusch would have said and written. Dornbusch was a Eurosceptic. In “Euro Fantasies: Common Currency as Panacea”  he doubted that a common currency could work in the absence of flexible labour markets. And as a Keynesian (which he had increasingly become as his Chicago years vanished in the haze) he feared the deep recessions that the budget cuts stipulated by the Maastricht criteria would cause. He shared the scepticism with many US economists, which he classified in a way that now looks increasingly clairvoyant: “The euro: It can’t happen. It’s a bad idea. It won’t last.”[3]





 


[1] Helmut Reisen (1989), Public Debt, External Competitiveness and Fiscal Discipline in Developing Countries, Princeton Studies in International Finance No. 66
[2] Dornbusch, Rudiger (2000), "The Latin Triangle," in Keys to Prosperity, MIT Press.
[3] See Lars Jonung and Eoin Drea (2009), “The euro: It can’t happen. It’s a bad idea. It won’t last. US economists on the EMU”, European Economy, Economic Papers # 395, December.


Wednesday, 9 May 2012

Africa’s CFA zone and the Euro zone crisis after the Greek elections

Once again, the Euro zone is in trouble after the Greek elections last Sunday failed to produce a majority government in support of Euro membership and its implications. While Greece may want to leave the Euro zone, the consequences of such exit cannot be confined Greece alone. The BIS data for locational banking statistics on an ultimate risk basis are also now available for the end of 2011, and show consolidated claims on Greece of EUR 90.5bn (136bn a year earlier) for European banks, with France 44bn (56bn a year ago), most exposed. Portuguese banks remain exposed as well, and Spanish banks in turn to Portugal’s banks.  And so on…Greek cross border claims remain high on Turkey, Bulgaria and Romania, so dislocation from an impaired Greek banking system would imply sudden stops for these countries. My best bet is, therefore, that Greece will not be allowed to leave – yet.
One reason is that there is widespread “fear of floating” in small open economies. Governments in a typical emerging country can hardly tolerate massive overvaluation or undervaluation of their
 currencies.  Reasons for fear of floating are the devastating balance–sheet effects and the growth disruptive effects of prolonged periods of misalignment.

Whether hard pegs or membership in monetary unions are a better alternative for open economies depends very much on institutional and regulatory prerequisites and on their degree of endogeneity with respect to the exchange–rate regime. Braga, Cohen and Reisen (2001)[i] summarized these requirements as follows:

·         the banking system must be strengthened, so that the central banks’ more limited capacity to provide lender–of–last–resort services does not expose the country to financial instability;
·         the fiscal position needs to be strong so that the absence of the central banks’ ability to absorb new public debt does not end in a funding crisis;
·         commercial and intergovernmental credit lines must have been negotiated to secure liquidity in an investor sentiment crisis;
·         the labour market must be made flexible in order to accommodate asymmetric shocks without higher levels of un(der)development; and
·         the real economy structures should be aligned to ensure that cyclical and monetary conditions coincide with the pegging partner.

This is a long list which is not easily met. And it was certainly not met by Greece, which was clear from the outset. In order to see why one should not take for granted that these conditions will be met (somehow endogenously), the CFA experience could have told a lesson already more than a decade ago. Even when monetary unions survive, they can be harmful to growth when the effective (trade–weighted) exchange rate gets out of line, which can happen to a dollarized Latin America as it has happened to the CFA franc zone in Africa, which had been pegged to the French franc since 1949. When the French franc started to appreciate in the mid–1980s against the dollar, but at the same time a prolonged fall in commodity prices reduced the CFA zone terms of trade, the CFA zone countries recorded low growth relative to the rest of Africa, increased current–account deficits and a build–up of external debt.  Alternative adjustment measures were unable to rectify the imbalances, and 1994 saw the end of the longest peg in memory: a 50 per cent devaluation of the CFA franc against the French franc.

Arguably, the fragility of the Euro zone today gives CFA zone (and French) authorities reason to reconsider the peg of the CFA franc to the Euro[ii]. The Euro peg undoubtedly garners benefits for the CFA (e.g., lower transaction costs in trading with EU countries), but its fate is not intrinsically tied to the euro. In the case of a breakup of the Euro zone, it would be a big policy mistake for CFA countries to return to a French franc peg.


Even with the former significance of the trade relationship between African countries and Europe, the degree of monetary and economic integration was lower than was apparent at first sight. With a high share of exports commodity based, much of African trade was sold on dollar denominated markets. Pegging to the euro made those countries vulnerable to fluctuations of the real exchange rate of the euro to other currencies. The same could be said of the opposite choice in favour of the dollar. Both pegs very much destabilize the real effective exchange rate for African exporters, hence providing a disincentive to invest in nontraditional export activities. Now, with the strong rise of the emerging countries (EPs for Partners) over the past decade, the negative impact on growth of a currency peg to either dollar or euro would be even more felt, as a result of further destabilized effective exchange rates and the wrong growth anchor as the engine is now China. With the inclusion of the renminbi in the Special Drawing Rights (SDR) basket of currencies planned for 2014, the CFA zone has a new anchor to peg its currency to, with more stability in prospect.



[i] Braga de Macedo, J., D. Cohen and H. Reisen (2001), Don’t Fix, Don’t Float, OECD: Paris
[ii] Consultancy Africa Intelligence (2012), The Impact of Eurozone crisis on the West African Monetary Union zone, polity.org/za, 20 April.