Thursday, April 21, 2016

And the Money Kept Rolling In (and Out) - Paul Blustein (PublicAffairs, 2005)

A history of the collapse of the Argentinian economy during its currency crisis of 2001.  The question is how could a country that seemed to live by the Washington consensus and was the darling of investment banks suddenly fall so far and so fast?   [330.98207]

Over the course of ten years, Argentina went from being the darling among emerging markets to a shattered economy.  The author suggests that much of the damage may have been self-inflicted, but that it was greatly helped along this path by policy decisions and interference by the IMF, the US Treasury, and the financial markets and banks.  These policies helped keep Argentina on an unsustainable path for too long before switching to a wrenchingly painful policy about face.

Argentina came out of the ruinous inflation of the late-1980s by adopting a rigid convertibility scheme of 1 U.S. dollar per 1 Argentine peso and committing to maintain that convertibility.  (In some ways, this action might be likened to going on a gold standard.)  The selection of the dollar for convertibility was odd because there was little tie between the two economies; that would mean that Argentina had fewer means of acquiring dollars as foreign reserves.  In the early 1990s, the economy took off with 10% annual growth and low inflation.  It cannot be said, however, that these were the necessary result of convertibility.  Worse, Argentina did little to change its fiscal policies; it ran deficits of significant size.  Because it was issuing so much debt, its weight in international indices for investment grew (a perverse aspect of indices such as EMBI) and that attracted foreign funds, sometimes justified on the grounds that the very marketability of so much debt was itself a sign of economic strength.

The crises of the mid-90s, in Mexico, Thailand, South Korea, and, worst of all, Russia, shook financial markets.  At this point, the IMF began to prepare for the end of peso convertibility, but Argentina would not budge.  The denouement comes to IMF loans trying to save the situation, the U.S. Treasury changing course to a tougher position, the flight of foreign capital, the uneven adoption of austerity that only slowed economic growth so as to make Argentina's debt burden more unsustainable, and the sudden withdrawal of IMF support.  The financial system collapsed as convertibility was only then ended. 

In sum, unwise policies were held onto for too long.  The global financial forces were too accommodating of the situation and abetted the maintenance of policies such as convertibility and fiscal looseness for longer than was wise.  When the international accommodation ceased, it came at the worst time and too swiftly.  The result was the sufferings of millions.

This book is recommended for its readability and the relevance to other bubbles.



No comments:

Post a Comment