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Financial Crisis: The IMF in Latin America and East Asia Tom Schaller.

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Presentation on theme: "Financial Crisis: The IMF in Latin America and East Asia Tom Schaller."— Presentation transcript:

1 Financial Crisis: The IMF in Latin America and East Asia Tom Schaller

2 Introduction There are a number of parallels that can be drawn between the Latin American Debt Crisis (1980s) and the Asian Financial Crisis beginning in 1997. Though the structural causes of the two crises were different, both resulted in an increased level of involvement of the IMF in each region.

3 Motivation Want to know: Whether IMF policies made sense in either region Whether IMF policies benefited either region Lessons that can be taken from each crisis Findings: IMF policies should have differed more between the two regions IMF contractionary policies were harmful to both regions

4 Similarities Large inflows of international short-term debt In Asian-5: foreign bank lending increased from $210 billion at the end of 1995 to $261 billion by the end of 1996 and $274 billion by mid- 1997. In Latin America: net external borrowing rose from $19.4 billion in 1977 to $62.3 billion in 1981. Current Account Deficits In LA: CA deficits increased 4x between 1977-81. In Asian-5: CA deficits doubled between 1994-96. “not sustainable”

5 Differences Public vs Private Debt Holdings LA: Gov’t debt to fund consumption EA: Private debt to fund investment Large D/E ratios in East Asia Firms more at risk to “shocks” – including policy shocks

6 Differences Cont. Macroeconomic “Fundamentals” EA: low inflation, budget surpluses or small deficits, stable or rising foreign exchange reserves Weak fundamentals in LA. Source of Crisis: LA: Mexico announces inability to service its debt EA: Thailand currency devaluation

7 Economies in Crisis Loss of confidence in market Massive reversal of capital Inability to renegotiate short-term loans Declining asset (stock, real estate, etc.) values Rising interest rates Exacerbated liquidity pressures Both regions looked to the IMF for aid

8 IMF Policy In General: Served as lender of last resort: Provided loans to pay off short-term debt obligations. In Latin America: Currency devaluations, austerity measures, real wage suppression, and trade liberalization. In East Asia: High interest rates, austerity, structural reform, and capital controls. Also, shutting down insolvent banks.

9 Policy Goals IMF hoped to restore investor confidence in both regions. Austerity: targeted the CA deficits in both regions. Hoped to restore ability to pay debts. Devaluation: looked to reduce capital flight and make exports more competitive. Wage suppression also looked to improve exports High Interest Rates: hoped to attract foreign capital to stabilize currencies.

10 Results In LA: Austerity not enough to generate CA surpluses, led to import suppression. Output loss: $361 billion between 1980 and 1983 Even with CA surpluses and IMF liquidity, debt to GDP continued to rise. High interest rates  increased debt burden “Lost Decade” Only really turned around with Brady Plan (1989).

11 Results Cont. In EA: failed to improve investor confidence “screamed fire in a theatre” – Wade (1998) High interest rates raised debt obligations Hurt high D/E companies Unnecessary bankruptcies Austerity and other contractionary policies made little sense based on EA’s condition IMF liquidity not enough to service loans “Only when Thailand and Korea started rolling over loans did the crisis abate” (Khakate 1998).

12 Conclusion IMF is fair to “condition” their loans. They didn’t cause the crises, but are not without blame Contractionary policy was not the answer Though it can be argued that it was necessary in Latin America Need: Greater focus on renegotiating loans Better monitoring to prevent crises from occurring


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