Sunday, November 2, 2008

"Key European allies are pushing for broad new roles for international organizations"

From Mark Thoma, a suggestion or two about reforming the IMF as it gets a bigger role from this crisis ( An idea put forward by the Economist, which I agree with ):

"Eswar Prasad says the IMF needs two reforms in order to be more effective:

Getting the IMF’s groove back, by Eswar Prasad: The worldwide financial crisis ... should be the perfect opportunity for the International Monetary Fund to get its groove back. Indeed, a strong multilateral institution with teeth is essential to promote international financial stability. But it will take some radical changes for the IMF to fill that role. ..."

The suggestions are:

1) It needs more money ( Yes )

2) Make it easier to get more money ( Yes )

3) The voting structure needs to change ( Yes ) I've already talked about this. If other countries are going to put more money in, they need more of a vote.

Now, here's where it gets dicey:

"The second idea is to impose conditions on voting rights, rather than just on loans. Each country would get a list of criteria (e.g., a lower budget deficit, a more flexible exchange rate) that it would have to fulfill or have a plan for making progress towards. The IMF already jawbones its member countries, but only countries that borrow from it take its recommendations seriously.

The large countries routinely ignore the IMF’s advice with no consequences..., but why should poorer countries be subject to harsher IMF scrutiny? After all, US or Chinese economic mismanagement can have much larger global consequences. ...

What’s needed is to get incentives right and let a market mechanism achieve an efficient solution. Governments that take the IMF’s advice more seriously and contribute more to its capital should have a bigger role in fashioning its policies. It is time for a radical overhaul ... at the ... IMF..."

Here was my comment:

Don the libertarian Democrat says...

"The large countries routinely ignore the IMF’s advice with no consequences..., but why should poorer countries be subject to harsher IMF scrutiny? After all, US or Chinese economic mismanagement can have much larger global consequences. ..."

This sounds like making the IMF like the ECB. Is that what's being proposed, or what would this scrutiny entail? Surely exchange rates and budget deficits would be a problem? I'm just asking. How would these standards work?

So, here's a post on the Washington Post:

"Still, despite all the posturing, there are different views on what concrete action would mean.

Sarkozy and Brown have voiced support for a new international regulatory body to supervise large transnational banks. Brown has called for strengthening the Financial Stability Forum, created after the Asian financial crisis of the late 1990s. The group of central bankers, finance ministry officials and international financial institution representatives produces important recommendations, Brown said in a speech this week, but, he added, "It never had enough teeth."

Merkel, who has been more conservative in dealing with the crisis than the hard-charging Sarkozy, favors a stronger International Monetary Fund, giving it a supervisory role in international finance and making it a "guard" of financial stability. Brown, too, has proposed making the IMF "an early-warning system" for financial problems, singling out low bank capital ratios or wildly mispriced securities.

IMF officials have embraced the idea that the fund could take on a larger role, perhaps as part of a secretariat involving other multilateral institutions."

So, Sarkozy and Brown want a kind of FSF, while Merkel wants a stronger IMF.

Aso didn't quite say what he favors, but he doesn't like us mucking everything up for Japan:

"Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso, in power just five weeks, spelled out in a nationally televised speech Thursday night what he wants from the summit: international regulation of financial institutions and of credit rating agencies as well as standardized accounting for international business and markets.

"The current system under which the authorities in each individual country supervise their respective financial institutions is insufficient," Aso said."

So he wants some kind of international agency to keep one country from causing an explosion in the future. Actually, he might be thinking about Japan, as we've already talked about lowering interest rates and bubbles.

"He blamed "grave shortcomings" in the credit ratings of subprime mortgage securities and questioned whether the U.S. accounting requirement that firms value securities at market value made sense "given the tremendous volatility in the financial markets that we are currently seeing." Many financial institutions have argued that market panic drives down the value of those securities too far; other experts say that alternatives give financial institutions too much leeway to come up with their own, often inflated, valuations."

I could be wrong, but he doesn't seem to care for mark-to-market.

"China may prove more cautious than any other nation. Wu Xiaoqiu, director of the Institute of Finance and Securities, said he thinks Chinese officials, while joining their European counterparts in calling for an overhaul of current regulatory systems, would stop short of supporting a proposal for a worldwide organization with significant power.

"It is important to have an agency which can coordinate the global market and policies of different countries," Wu said. "But China doesn't like the idea of having a global SEC since no organization should affect the sovereignty of countries."

Well, so much for that idea. Without China or the U.S., we're likely to have something well short of serious international regulation. Probably a good thing. By the way, making the IMF the lender of last resort, you'd better make it very unpleasant to go to it, or you'll be re-introducing a moral hazard we don't need to see again.

"There are dangers, though. The pressure to be seen as taking vigorous action could lead to overregulation, say many business leaders, especially in London, where the financial services sector plays a key role in the economy.

Willem Buiter, a professor at the London School of Economics and a former Bank of England policymaker, said he feared "we will . . . end up regulating so tightly that a lot of financial institutions will be untenable and unprofitable and we will spend the next decade slowly chipping away at over-regulation."

Disunity is another risk. If world leaders fail to coordinate, the consequences could be severe. Their staggered responses to the financial crisis in September contributed to bank runs and currency fluctuations, as money fled to whatever country was promising the most generous guarantees."

Coming problems:

1) Over-regulation ( Serious )

2) Disunity ( Less serious now, but a real problem going forward )

"We're at a point of time where the role of emerging economies has become very apparent and where the G-7 does not have the capacity in the eyes of many people in the world to solve this problem alone," Hormats said.

"We've learned from this crisis that you can't conceivably in the future try to pretend that the global financial system can be run by the occasional phone call between the Fed, the Bank of England, the SEC and the FSA," Davies agreed. "That's not going to work anymore."

Brown, in a speech to business leaders in London this week, said, "We have got to . . . involve China, India and all the emerging market economies because the world economy is changing before our eyes, and the system that is just built on Europe and America will not survive the test of time."

Don't discount jawboning on the phone, our lawmakers here are trying it with TARP. Finally, some real wisdom from Brown:

It's a real mess, and like any good friend, we'd like to invite you into our club.

No comments: