4.1 The 1990s have witnessed growing integration of goods
and financial markets across the globe. With growth in global trade in goods
and services outpacing growth in world output, the share of external trade in
output has increased further. Opening up of the services to international trade
and remittances flows have accelerated the integration process. The opening
up of the economy has implications for the conduct of monetary policy as well
as the monetary transmission mechanism. In particular, it has rendered economies
vulnerable to external demand and exchange rate shocks. This, in turn, has enhanced
the possibility of significant changes in trade and other current account flows
in a short span of time. This was reflected in the aftermath of the Asian financial
crisis when a number of economies in this region had to make substantial adjustments
in their current accounts.
4.2 A more serious challenge to conduct of monetary policy
emerges from the capital account. A distinctive feature of capital flows is
the greater volatility vis-à-vis the trade flows. Capital flows
in gross terms are much higher than those in net terms. Global capital flows
impact the conduct of monetary policy on a daily basis, imparting volatility
to monetary conditions. Along with the explosion in financial innovations and
the information technology revolution, this has led to the swift transmission
of market impulses across countries and a structural change in the process of
financial intermediation. All this has fundamentally altered not only the environment
of monetary policy formulation but also its instrumentality and operating framework.
Monetary policy formulation has become much more interdependent than before
across economies and has to factor in the developments in the global economic
situation, the international inflationary situation, interest rates, exchange
rate movements and capital flows (Mohan, 2004a). A stylised fact in regard to
many, if not most, emerging market economies (EMEs) is that their external borrowings
are usually denominated in foreign currency. Large devaluations not only lead
to inflation but can also cause serious currency mismatches with adverse impact
on balance sheets of borrowers (banks as well as corporates). A financial accelerator
mechanism can exacerbate these effects and threaten financial stability. Accordingly,
with the opening up of the economies and greater integration,monetary authorities
are no longer concerned with mere price stability. Financial stability has emerged
as a key objective of monetary policy.
4.3 A more recent challenge in monetary management in EMEs
has emanated from a significant increase in capital flows coupled with current
account surpluses which have led to large overall balance of payments surpluses
in these economies. In their efforts to maintain external competitiveness and
financial stability, the central banks in EMEs have absorbed the market surpluses.
Consequently, the foreign exchange reserves of the EMEs have nearly doubled
in the last seven years. The share of reserves held by EMEs in global reserves
has increased from 36 per cent in 1990 to 61 per cent in 2003, with Asian EMEs
accounting for much of the increase. The absorption of excess supplies by the
central banks has, however, implications for monetary expansion and the objective
of price stability. The central banks, therefore, face a trade-off: by preventing
nominal appreciation, they may ultimately endanger their primary objective of
price stability. Typically, central banks attempt to overcome the policy dilemma
by undertaking a variety of operations such as open market sales of government/own
bonds to neutralise the expansionary monetary effect arising out of their market
purchases. Such sterilisation operations, in turn, have their own limitations
and involve costs, especially if external flows are persistent. Globalisation,
thus, transforms the environment in which monetary policy operates, throwing
up a number of challenges. The foremost challenge is the progressive loss of
discretion in the conduct of monetary policy.
4.4 Like other EMEs, India too has witnessed a progressive
opening up of the economy. External sector reforms were a key aspect of the
structural reforms initiated in the early 1990s. While current account convertibility
was achieved in 1994, the Indian approach towards capital account liberalisation
has been one of caution. Trade openness of the economy has increased significantly.
There has been a sustained increase in capital flows and the balance of payments
has recorded large surpluses. Since 1993-94, balance of payments developments
have thus come to play a dominant role in the conduct of monetary policy. Net
capital inflows to India have been largely stable, reflecting a prudent approach
to capital account liberalisation with a focus on attracting stable capital
flows. Nonetheless, there have been brief episodes of volatility in capital
flows and these periods have been associated with volatility in the foreign
exchange market. Overall, however, the past decade has seen a significant increase
in capital flows and the balance of payments has posted surpluses. External
developments have thus been a key driver of money supply. A number of steps
were taken to manage the surplus conditions as well as periods of volatility
in order to retain discretion over the conduct of monetary policy so as to ensure
domestic macroeconomic and financial stability.
4.5 Against this background, Section I of this Chapter discusses
implications of globalisation on conduct of monetary policy. It undertakes a
critical assessment of recent trends in capital flows to developing economies
and examines factors that have led emerging economies in the recent years to
become net exporters of capital to the mature economies. Impact of increased
integration on business cycle synchronisation and implications of global macroeconomic
imbalances are addressed. The Section also discusses constraints imposed by
surges in capital flows on monetary management and the policy options, drawing
upon cross-country experiences. Section II assesses the Indian experience of
monetary management in an open economy context. It presents a brief overview
of the developments in India’s balance of payments to place in context the challenges
to monetary policy emanating from an open capital account. Policy responses
to manage capital flows during times of volatility as well as times of persistent
surpluses are highlighted. As sterilisation through open market sales has been
a key instrument, an empirical exercise is undertaken to examine dynamics of
the adjustment of monetary base and exchange rate in response to exogenous shocks
to net foreign assets. The Section also undertakes a discussion of the efficacy
of monetary measures in ensuring orderly conditions in the foreign exchange
market. Finally, an attempt is made to measure synchronicity of business cycles
in India with its trading partners to examine temporal changes in co-movement.
Concluding observations are in Section III.
I. GLOBALISATION AND MONETARY
POLICY
4.6 The 1990s have been marked
by a further pickup in domestic as well as external liberalisation in a number
of EMEs. Expansion in volume of world trade has continued to exceed the growth
in world output. Even as world output growth decelerated from 3.3 per cent during
the 1980s to 3.1 per cent during the 1990s, growth in volume of world trade
in goods and services accelerated from 4.5 per cent to 6.4 per cent over the
same period. Thus, between 1980 and 2003, while world output has doubled, world
trade has trebled. Global trade openness has increased substantially. After
showing some stagnation during the 1980s, trade openness - measured as the ratio
of global exports of goods and services to world output - jumped from 19 per
cent in 1990 to 25 per cent in 2003 (Chart IV.1). Apart from continuing trade
liberalisation during the 1990s, the higher order of expansion in international
trade can be attributed to three factors: (i) falling costs of trade; (ii) productivity
growth in tradable goods sector; and, (iii) increasing income per head. As a
country’s income rises, consumer spending shifts away from basic food and clothing
towards manufacturing goods which offers scope for product differentiation,
diversification and international trade. Quantitative analysis suggests that
the fall in relative prices of tradable goods (relative to non-tradables) and
the fall in tariffs are the key explanatory factors leading to increased trade.
For a sample of 10 developed economies, these two factors alone explain nearly
65 per cent of the increase in the ratio of imports to total final expenditure
(Dean and Sebastia-Barriel, 2004). While increased trade
is
beneficial to an economy, evidence suggests that trade flows can also be quite
volatile and economies may be required to make substantial adjustments in their
current accounts.
4.7 While trade flows continue
to be an important source of global transmission of shocks, a fundamental change
that has taken place in recent years is the movements in capital flows. In the
aftermath of the World War II, efforts to liberalise international trade in
goods made significant progress from multilateral negotiations through various
rounds of discussions under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade and subsequently,
under the World Trade Organisation. Liberalisation of trade in services has,
in particular, received a focus in the recent decades. In contrast the post-War
period till the early 1970s was largely characterised by capital controls. This
was, in turn, the outcome of the fixed but adjustable exchange rate systems
under the Bretton Woods system. With the collapse of this system in the early
1970s, flexible exchange rates permitted countries to start liberalising their
capital accounts. Initially, advanced economies opened up their capital accounts
and in the 1990s, a number of emerging economies opened up their capital accounts.
At the same time, it may be noted that while trade liberalisation is generally
viewed to be welfare improving, a similar unanimity does not prevail in the
case of capital account liberalisation.
4.8 Reflecting this progressive
opening up of capital accounts, capital flows to EMEs increased significantly
during the 1990s. As a consequence, it is capital flows that now influence exchange
rate movements significantly as against trade deficits and economic growth,
which were important in the earlier days. The latter do matter, but only over
a period of time. Capital flows, on the other hand, have become the primary
determinants of exchange rate movements on a day-today basis. Second, unlike
trade flows, capital flows in 'gross' terms which affect the exchange
rate can be several times higher than 'net' flows on any day. These
are also much more sensitive to what everybody else is saying or doing than
is the case with foreign trade or economic growth. Therefore, herding becomes
unavoidable (Jalan, 2003). Thus, the analysis of capital flows and their behaviour
- the volatility on account of the boom-bust pattern - becomes important for
the conduct of monetary policy.
4.9 The nature of capital flows
to EMEs has undergone significant shifts in the post-World War II period. In
the period till the 1980s, capital flows were mainly in the form of aid flows
and these were relatively stable. With external and financial liberalisation,
net capital flows to developing economies have increased rapidly. This step-up
was entirely on account of private capital flows, which increased from fairly
low levels - about US $ 15 billion per annum - during the 1980s to a peak of
almost US $ 166 billion by mid-1990s before dipping sharply in the aftermath
of the East Asian crisis and a recovery in the subsequent period (Chart IV.2).
As the Chart shows, the defining characteristic of private capital flows is
their volatility. Monetary authorities thus need to understand the nature of
these capital flows so as to make a distinction between enduring and volatile
components of capital flows. Within private capital flows, direct investment
inflows are relatively stable while portfolio and debt flows are highly volatile.
Even with the sharp reversals, net private capital flows averaged US $ 122 billion
per annum during the 1990s, eight times of that recorded during the 1980s.
4.10 Official flows on the other
hand, at US $ 23 billion per annum during the 1990s were lower than that of
US $ 26 billion per annum during the 1980s. Official flows were thus a fifth
of private capital flows during the 1990s. Total capital flows to EMEs, therefore,
moved in tandem with trends in private capital flows (Chart IV.3). While recent
trends in private capital flows suggest an increase in financial integration,
other indicators suggest that global financial markets are still not highly
integrated (Parry, 1998). Correlation of national savings and national investment
– the Feldstein-Horioka puzzle – remains very high, despite the significant
opening up of global
markets. However, it needs to be
stressed that absorption of capital flows has to be matched by an equivalent
current account deficit. This deficit cannot be too high on a sustained basis
and if it is so, it has to be turned into a surplus later on. In this backdrop,
high correlation between savings-investment is surely not a puzzle. Another
piece of evidence that international markets are not highly integrated emerges
from the substantial ‘home bias’ in the composition of investment portfolios.
The proportion of foreign investments in total investments is less than 10 per
cent in the case of the US and only 15 per cent in the case of Germany. Thus,
capital flows to EMEs may rise further if domestic savings-investment correlation
weakens over time or if residents increase the holdings of foreign assets in
their portfolios.
4.11 Another factor that can lead
to a sustained rise in capital flows to emerging economies emanates from the
evolving pattern of demographics and this could exacerbate the challenges to
monetary policy formulation over the longer term (Mohan, 2004a). In general,
economies pass through three stages of demographic transition: (i) high youth
dependency (large proportion of population in the 0-14 years group), (ii) rise
in working age population (15-59 years) relative to youth dependency, and (iii)
rise in elderly dependency (60+ years) relative to working age population. The
second stage is regarded as the most productive from the point of view of secular
growth since it is associated with the high rates of saving and work force growth
relative to the other stages.
4.12 According to estimates made
by IMF (2004), both savings and investment rates increase with an increase in
the share of working age population. More importantly, the increase in the savings
rate outpaces the increase in the investment rate and this increases the current
account balance. An increase in the share of elderly population, on the other
hand, has the reverse effect - both savings and investment rates decline, and
the current account balance deteriorates as the decline in savings exceeds that
in investment (Table 4.1). These results confirm that demographic factors have
a significant influence on current account balances through their effect on
savings and investment.
4.13 Over the next half-century,
the population of the world will age faster than during the past half-century
as fertility rates decline and life expectancy rises. Developed regions like
Europe, North America and Japan have been leading the process of population
ageing and are likely to be deep into the third stage of demographic transition.
Illustratively, according to estimates of IMF (2004), Japan’s current account
balance will deteriorate by around 2.5 per cent of its GDP between 2000 and
2050. These regions will switch to importing capital. On the other hand, high
performers of East Asia and China are in the second stage of the demographic
cycle. East Asia could increasingly become an important supplier of global savings
up to 2025; however, rapid population ageing thereafter would reinforce rather
than mitigate the inexorable decline of global saving. Increasingly, it would
be the moderate and the low performers among the developing countries which
would emerge as exporters of international capital. India is entering the second
stage of demographic transition and over the next half-century, a significant
increase in both saving rates and share of working age population is expected.
The regional pattern of global population ageing is, thus, expected to get reflected
in the magnitude and direction of international capital flows
Table 4.1: Macroeconomic Impact ofDemographic Changes
|
Item |
Savings/ |
Investment/ |
Current Account/ |
|
GDP |
GDP |
GDP |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
Impact of : |
|
|
|
Share of |
|
|
|
Working Age |
|
|
|
Population |
0.72 |
0.31 |
0.05 |
Share of |
|
|
|
Elderly |
|
|
|
Population |
-0.35 |
-0.14 |
-0.25 |
Note : Results
are based on panel instrumental variable regressions for a sample of 115
countries.
Source : World
Economic Outlook, IMF, September (2004).
|
with implications for the conduct of monetary policy. While current global imbalances are more due to the US macroeconomic imbalances, the pattern of capital flows that may emerge from demographic transition is likely to be of a more enduring nature.
4.14 The behaviour of the capital flows during the 1990s reveals that these flows can increase rapidly but can be highly volatile. Surges in capital flows and the associated volatility have implications for the conduct of monetary, exchange rate and foreign exchange reserve policies. Emerging market economies, thus, need to be equipped to deal with such volatility in order to ensure monetary and financial stability. A striking feature of the last 3-4 years is the two-way movement of capital between EMEs and mature economies. Notwithstanding the recovery in capital flows, emerging market economies, as a group, have become net exporters of capital to the mature economies since 2000. Three key factors explain the recent movement in capital flows (IMF, 2004). First, EMEs have recorded current account surpluses. As against a deficit of US $ 65 billion per annum during the 1990s, the emerging economies recorded a surplus of US $ 149 billion during 2000-03 (Chart IV.4). The emergence of surpluses reflected the adjustment process in response to the financial crisis in Asia and elsewhere. Countries that experienced crisis had to reduce domestic absorption and increase exports to generate a trade surplus. This process is quite visible in the East Asian countries which have seen a sharp turnaround in their current accounts – as high as 17.8 percentage points of GDP in case of Malaysia and 14.5 percentage points of GDP in case of Thailand (Table 4.2).
Table 4.2: Current Account Balances in Select
Economies |
(Per cent to GDP) |
|
|
|
Country |
1991-1996 |
1998-2003 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
China |
0.9 |
2.4 |
India |
-1.1 |
-0.1 |
Indonesia |
-1.3 |
0.5 |
Korea |
-2.3 |
3.1 |
Malaysia |
-6.4 |
11.4 |
Philippines |
-3.8 |
4.6 |
Thailand |
-6.4 |
8.1 |
Mexico |
-4.2 |
-2.8 |
Source : International Economic Trends, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, July (2004). |
4.15 Countries affected by the crisis were also forced ‘external deleveraging’, i.e., a reduction in their external liabilities which also explains the pattern of capital outflows since 2001. This process which started in 1997 is still ongoing in some countries. Although non-crisis countries also exhibited some adjustment, the burden was mainly borne out by the crisis countries. The crisis-countries witnessed an average outflow of US $ 48.5 billion per annum during 2000-03 as compared with an average annual outflow of US $ 45.8 billion by non-crisis countries. The order of correction is better gauged when outflows are scaled by GDP; the outflows in the former group of countries at 2.8 per cent of their GDP were more than three-times of that recorded by non-crisis countries (0.9 per cent of GDP) (Table 4.3).
4.16 Second, global imbalances - large US current account deficit - also explain the reverse capital movements from EMEs. Third, the movements in capital flows reflect the accumulation of reserves to maintain a competitive exchange rate as well as self-insurance. Reflecting all these factors, foreign exchange reserves of the developing countries increased by US $ 1256 billion between December 1996 and June 2004 (Table 4.4). Concomitantly, net foreign assets have emerged as a key driver of reserve money (Table 4.5).
4.17 The need for reserves as self-insurance emanates from the volatile nature of the capital flows. It also reflects weakness in the existing international financial architecture (Reddy, 2003). Capital inflows can reverse quickly, leaving the country exposed to a liquidity crisis. In this context, the distinction between push and pull factors becomes important. While ‘push’ factors attribute capital flows to conditions in creditor countries, the ‘pull’ factors refer to conditions in debtor (recipient) countries. The former help explain the timing and
Table 4.3: Net Capital Flows to Emerging Markets |
(US $ billion) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Item |
1996 |
1997 |
1998 |
1999 |
2000 |
2001 |
2002 |
2003 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
9 |
All EMEs |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net Inflows |
74.4 |
47.3 |
104.2 |
5.2 |
-99.1 |
-49.9 |
-90.5 |
-137.7 |
|
(1.3) |
(0.8) |
(1.7) |
(0.1) |
(-1.6) |
(-0.8) |
(-1.4) |
(-1.9) |
Net Non-resident Inflows |
274.9 |
334.9 |
255.7 |
211.8 |
192.8 |
132.9 |
150.0 |
243.4 |
Net Resident Inflows |
-200.5 |
-287.6 |
-151.5 |
-206.6 |
-291.9 |
-182.9 |
-240.5 |
-381.1 |
Crisis Countries |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net Inflows |
53.6 |
64.8 |
18.7 |
-21.6 |
-33.9 |
-30.4 |
-57.6 |
-72.0 |
|
(2.4) |
(2.9) |
(1.0) |
(-1.3) |
(-1.9) |
(-1.8) |
(-3.7) |
(-3.9) |
Net Non-resident Inflows |
138.8 |
128.9 |
76.2 |
50.8 |
48.6 |
-6.3 |
13.7 |
35.8 |
Net Resident Inflows |
-85.2 |
-64.1 |
-57.5 |
-72.4 |
-82.5 |
-24.1 |
-71.4 |
-107.8 |
Non-crisis Countries |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net Inflows |
20.9 |
-17.5 |
85.5 |
26.8 |
-65.2 |
-19.5 |
-32.8 |
-65.8 |
|
(0.6) |
(-0.4) |
(2.1) |
(0.6) |
(-1.4) |
(-0.4) |
(-0.7) |
(-1.2) |
Net Non-resident Inflows |
136.2 |
206.0 |
179.5 |
161.0 |
144.2 |
139.3 |
136.3 |
207.6 |
Net Resident Inflows |
-115.3 |
-223.5 |
-93.9 |
-134.2 |
-209.4 |
-158.8 |
-169.1 |
-273.4 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Note : 1.
Crisis countries include Argentina, Brazil, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines,
Russia, Thailand and Turkey.
2. Figures in brackets are percent to GDP.
Source : Global Financial Stability Report, IMF, September (2004).
|
magnitude of new capital inflows and the latter explain the geographic distribution of capital inflows. According to Calvo, Leiderman and Reinhart (1994), low US interest rates - hence, push factors - were dominant in explaining capital flows to Latin America in the early 1990s. Similarly, in the most recent episode of capital flows to the EMEs since early 2000, push factors appear to be playing a key role. According to estimates by Ferruci, Herzberg, Soussa and Taylor (2004), almost two-thirds of the compression
Table 4.4: Total Reserves Minus Gold |
|
|
|
|
(US $ billion) |
Area/Country |
Dec- |
Dec- |
June- |
Variation @ |
|
1996 |
2003 |
2004 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
|
|
|
|
|
All Countries |
1647 |
3156 |
3463 |
1816 |
Industrial Countries |
789 |
1219 |
1349 |
560 |
Japan |
217 |
663 |
808 |
591 |
Europe |
89 |
252 |
272 |
183 |
United States |
64 |
75 |
72 |
8 |
Developing Countries |
858 |
1938 |
2114 |
1256 |
Asia |
495 |
1248 |
1385 |
890 |
China,P.R.: Mainland |
107 |
408 |
475 |
368 |
Taiwan Prov.of China |
88 |
207 |
230 |
142 |
Korea |
34 |
155 |
167 |
133 |
China,P.R.:Hong Kong |
64 |
118 |
121 |
57 |
India |
20 |
99 |
115 |
95 |
Singapore |
77 |
96 |
102 |
25 |
Russia |
11 |
73 |
84 |
73 |
Mexico |
19 |
59 |
60 |
41 |
Brazil |
58 |
49 |
50 |
-8 |
Malaysia |
27 |
45 |
54 |
27 |
|
|
|
|
|
Note:
@ Variation between June 2004 and December 1996.
Source:
International Financial Statistics (CD-ROM), IMF.
|
in bond spreads between October 2002 and early 2004 can be attributed to push factors alone - in particular, the fall in the US short-term interest rates since 2001. This implies a need for caution by EMEs in borrowing too heavily during times of benign external financing environment, as a reversal in credit conditions is more often than not beyond the control of the borrower. Therefore, it would be more apposite if central banks attempt to hold these volatile flows into their reserves. The precautionary demand for reserves has increased, especially in the period after the Asian financial crisis. Aizenman, Lee and Rhee (2004) found that trade openness - the conventional explanatory variable - is no longer a significant factor in explaining international reserves after the crisis. In contrast, financial openness indicators and volatility of export receipts appear to be a significant factor in explaining the reserve accretion (Table 4.6). Precautionary demand for reserves by EMEs apparently outweighs the costs associated with reserve build-up. The overall experience is that capital flows are characteristically volatile, both in terms of longer term waves and even more so in the short term. The longer term waves influence monetary policy thinking during each era, whereas the short term volatility has to be mitigated through day to day monetary policy operations. Monetary authorities, therefore, need to decide as to whether capital flows are durable or reversible. In case, flows are perceived to be reversible, authorities need to be prepared through building up foreign exchange reserves.
Table 4.5: Ratio of Net Foreign Assets to Reserve Money
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(Per cent)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Country
|
1990
|
1996
|
2000
|
2001
|
2002
|
2003
|
1
|
2
|
3
|
4
|
5
|
6
|
7
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Australia
|
127.9
|
56.1
|
124.7
|
116.8
|
115.8
|
138.4
|
Brazil
|
81.7
|
140.7
|
113.7
|
103.0
|
68.1
|
80.8
|
Chile
|
652.4
|
537.4
|
450.8
|
453.6
|
490.5
|
447.9
|
Colombia
|
131.3
|
140.3
|
189.2
|
205.5
|
220.4
|
189.9
|
Mexico
|
99.5
|
140.1
|
130.7
|
127.0
|
128.8
|
138.0
|
China,P.R.: Mainland
|
12.8
|
35.6
|
41.1
|
47.6
|
49.5
|
56.4
|
India
|
11.9
|
44.5
|
65.8
|
74.0
|
98.3
|
117.9
|
Indonesia
|
143.0
|
164.3
|
188.0
|
168.0
|
163.3
|
154.6
|
Korea
|
78.3
|
109.5
|
430.5
|
434.4
|
409.0
|
476.2
|
Malaysia
|
149.0
|
109.6
|
273.7
|
292.1
|
307.9
|
373.6
|
Pakistan
|
13.2
|
19.3
|
25.2
|
42.5
|
79.9
|
90.6
|
Philippines
|
40.3
|
91.3
|
189.8
|
228.7
|
210.5
|
209.5
|
Singapore
|
438.9
|
592.4
|
753.9
|
698.6
|
714.9
|
790.2
|
Thailand
|
194.1
|
215.5
|
206.4
|
203.3
|
227.7
|
179.4
|
Czech Republic
|
…
|
108.3
|
103.2
|
104.0
|
276.8
|
247.5
|
Hungary
|
1141.7
|
243.9
|
225.5
|
213.5
|
149.8
|
156.1
|
Poland
|
55.3
|
153.2
|
234.0
|
166.7
|
184.9
|
193.3
|
Russia
|
…
|
62.4
|
113.8
|
122.1
|
127.9
|
122.8
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
… : Not Available
|
Source :
International Financial Statistics (CD-ROM), IMF.
|
4.18 As the preceding analysis shows, monetary authorities
are required to take cognisance of external developments on their domestic economy.
In this context,one issue is: whether ex ante coordination of monetary
policies would be useful? Obstfeld and Rogoff (2002) argue that, even in a world
with significant economic integration, the welfare gains from international coordination
are likely to be quantitatively small in comparison to gains from domestic stabilisation
policy. Their result is, however, contingent upon the premise that domestic monetary
policy rules will improve over time and that international markets will become
complete over time. Clarida, Gali and Gertler (2002), on the other hand, argue
there may be benefits from coordination. An ex post empirical assessment
of monetary policy for 14 OECD countries suggests that monetary policy interdependence
has increased (Bergin and Jorda, 2004). There is some evidence of increased business
cycle synchronisation, at least for advanced economies (Box IV.1).
Exchange Rates
4.19 The experience of living with capital flows since the
1970s has fundamentally altered the context of monetary policy. In particular,
there is a dramatic shift in the still unsettled debate on the determinants
of the exchange rate and the choice of the appropriate exchange rate regime,
although the weight of opinion is clearly in favour of a flexible regime. According
to conventional wisdom, it was trade flows which were the key determinants of
exchange rate movements. In more recent times, the importance of capital flows
in determining the exchange rate movements has increased considerably, rendering
some of the earlier guideposts of monetary policy formulation possibly anachronistic.
On a day-to-day basis, it is capital flows which influence the exchange rate
and interest rate arithmetic of the financial markets. Capital flows have
Table 4.6: Reserve Adequacy Indicators |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(Per cent) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Country |
|
|
Outstanding Reserves |
Ratio of Foreign Exchange Reserves to |
Spreads *Reserves |
|
|
|
(US $ Billion) |
|
|
|
to GDP |
|
|
|
2003 |
GDP |
Short-term Debt |
Bank Deposits |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1 |
|
|
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Brazil |
|
|
49.1 |
9.9 |
1.8 |
34.9 |
0.45 |
China |
|
|
408.2 |
28.9 |
14.2 |
… |
0.17 |
India |
|
|
98.9 |
17.2 |
6.4 |
31.1 |
… |
Indonesia |
|
36.2 |
17.4 |
1.5 |
34.4 |
… |
Korea |
|
|
155.3 |
25.7 |
3.4 |
34.7 |
0.19 |
Malaysia |
|
44.5 |
43.2 |
5.4 |
46.2 |
0.43 |
Mexico |
|
|
59.0 |
9.4 |
2.2 |
39.3 |
0.19 |
Philippines |
13.5 |
17.0 |
1.6 |
34.5 |
0.70 |
Russia |
|
|
73.2 |
16.9 |
3.1 |
77.4 |
0.43 |
Thailand |
|
42.1 |
29.5 |
2.1 |
32.0 |
0.20 |
... : Not Available |
|
|
|
|
Note:Spreads
are EMBI Global spreads as of December 31. The last column, therefore,
provides
an estimate of the opportunity cost of reserves.
Source : Global
Financial Stability Report, IMF, September (2004).
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Box IV.1
Business Cycle Synchronisation
Forces of globalisation have led to substantial increases in
international trade as well as financial flows during the 1990s. Private capital
flows (net) to the EMEs during the 1990s were eight times of that during the
1980s while growth in trade has outpaced growth in output. An issue in this
context is whether increased integration has led to a larger degree of synchronisation
of business cycles across countries. A global shock - say, an increase in global
oil prices - will affect all countries simultaneously. As regards country-specific
shocks, a number of forces are at work - some tend to increase co-movement while
others reduce co-movement (Brooks, Forbes, Imbs and Mody, 2003). For countries
quite open to external trade, economic developments in their partner countries
can get transmitted through exports and imports and this is expected to increase
the co-movement of output across countries. Enhanced financial integration,
on the other hand, allows countries to smoothen their consumption through borrowing
and lending in international markets. This can weaken the output co-movement.
Financial integration can, however, lead to an increase in output co-movement
through demand-side effects. Illustratively, if investors from different countries
have a significant fraction of their investments in a particular stock market,
then large movements in that stock market can induce wealth effects across countries
and hence output co-movement (Kose, et al., 2003). Furthermore, due to
herd behaviour, capital flows move in similar patterns across countries which
can also increase co-movement. Finally, trade as well as financial integration
allows countries to specialise in industries in which they have a comparative
advantage. This can result in more vulnerability to industry- or country-specific
shocks but reduce cross-country output movements. A diversified structure of
export destinations tends to weaken the co-movement of business cycles (Anderson,
Kwark and Vahid, 1999). In view of various offsetting factors at work, the net
impact of trade and financial integration on business cycles synchronisation
remains uncertain in theory and, therefore, it becomes an empirical issue to
gauge the net effect (Chart IV.5).
Baxter and Kouparitsas (2004) find that variables such as bilateral
trade between countries, total trade in each country, sectoral structure, similarity
in export and import baskets are significant determinants of business cycle
co-movement when considered in isolation. Amongst these variables, however,
only bilateral trade is a 'robust'1 determinant of co-movement.
Greater similarity in industrial structure is not found to be 'robust',
in contrast to findings of Imbs (2003).
As regards temporal trends in co-movement of output, most studies
find evidence that synchronisation has increased in the case of advanced economies,
reflecting faster cross-border transmission of shocks (Kose, et al.,
2003; Bordo and Helbling, 2003). Some studies, however, suggest that synchronisation
during the 1980s and the 1990s was broadly unchanged from that in the 1960s
and the 1970s, mainly due to common international shocks themselves being smaller
(Stock and Watson, 2003).
As regards emerging economies, evidence does not suggest any
increase in output co-movements - rather, there appears to be a decline in output
correlations (Kose, et al., 2003). Cross-country consumption correlations
also showed no increase during the 1990s. The empirical evidence, therefore,
suggests that developing countries were unable to gain from the benefits of
international risk sharing. Business cycles synchronisation in the Asia-Pacific
region is more by way of similar structural features such as technological know-how
and manufacturing structure than by way of trading linkages (Crosby and Voss,
2002).
According to IMF (2001), although transmission channels have
intensified due to globalisation, there is no global cycle. Country-specific
shocks such as German unification and the bursting of the Japanese asset price
bubble have interrupted integration trends. Lack of bilateral data complicates
the analysis of transmission channels over time. Therefore, it is difficult
to decide whether increased correlations were the result of tighter transmission
channels or of more frequent common shocks. Cultural similarity and institutional
factors such as accounting standards, legal systems, common language and receptiveness
to new technologies have a relatively significant impact on growth correlations
rather than the traditional transmission channels such as similarity of monetary
policy, integration of long-term bond markets and common industry structure
(Otto et al., 2001).
To conclude, the empirical evidence suggests that the co-movement
between business cycles has increased in recent years. Thus, economic developments
abroad now have a larger degree of influence on the domestic economy. Monetary
authorities, consequently, need to devote more attention to global economic
developments in framing their forecasts of inflation and output. Furthermore,
the financial stability objective assumes greater importance due to threats
of contagion and herding.
1 The authors define a variable to be 'robust' if it has a significant
coefficient in a regression when all other potential explanatory variables
are also included.
been observed to cause overshooting of exchange rates as market participants
act in concert while pricing information (Chart IV.6). (Jalan, 2003; Mohan,
2004a).
4.20 For more open economies, sharp movements in the exchange
rate can have significant effects on domestic inflation as well as on domestic
balance sheet in view of liability dollarisation. This raises the issue of appropriate
monetary policy response to exchange rate movements. Three alternative views
exist on this issue (Ho and McCauley, 2003). According to the first view - the
strict constructionist view - monetary policy should respond to the exchange
rate only to the extent that it affects inflation. The second view - flexible
inflation targeter view - holds that exchange rate can also be a legitimate
policy objective alongside inflation and output targets.
4.21 The third view - Singaporean view - believes that for
a sufficiently open economy, stabilising inflation requires close management
of the exchange rate. Managing the exchange rate, in this view, is not an objective
by itself but a means to achieve the objective of low inflation. As EMEs are
more exposed to the influence of the exchange rate, they may be required to
accord a bigger role in policy assessment and decision-making. Although a real
depreciation of the exchange rate may be helpful for external competitiveness
and growth, it also increases the vulnerability from factors such as high exchange
rate pass-through and liability dollarisation. There is, thus a 'fear of
floating' (Calvo and Reinhar t, 2002) although there is some evidence that
exchange rate pass-through to prices has generally tended to decline during
the 1990s (see Chapter V). Empirical evidence suggests that not only EMEs but
even industrial economies also keep an eye on the exchange rate and often intervene
in the foreign exchange market. Out of a sample of 18 countries (emerging as
well as industrial countries) studied by Ho and McCauley (op cit.), 12
countries intervened in the foreign exchange market, above and beyond the impact
of exchange rate on inflation.
4.22 That even industrial economies are quite concerned with
exchange rate is amply illustrated by the recent experience of New Zealand.
According to the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (2004), 'the amplitude of
the New Zealand exchange rate cycle has long been a concern. The exchange rate
varies to a far greater extent than the underlying economic situation warrants.
…Excess exchange rate variation makes engaging in business more difficult, reducing
investment and thereby restricting the opportunities for New Zealand in growth.
Excessive exchange rate variability can also make the Bank’s task of achieving
and maintaining price stability more difficult, potentially leading to unnecessary
output, inflation and interest rate variability. … As inflation has been brought
down and stabilised around the world and as a result economies have become more
stable overall, exchange rate cycles have not noticeably diminished'. Therefore,
the Reserve Bank of New Zealand whose extant stance was to use foreign exchange
reserves to 'intervene only if the foreign exchange market became disorderly'
recommended, in March 2004, that as one of its monetary policy tools, 'it
should have the capacity to intervene in the foreign exchange market to influence
the level of the exchange rate'.
4.23 The above discussion suggests that monetary authorities
cannot ignore movements in exchange rates, at least in EMEs. This raises the
issue: whether monetary policy reaction functions such as Taylor-type rules
should be augmented to include exchange rates. According to Ball (1998), the
policy instrument for an open economy should be a monetary conditions index
(MCI). MCI is a weighted average of the short-term interest rate and the exchange
rate. The underlying assumption of the MCI is that higher interest rates and
an appreciation of the exchange rate are qualitatively equivalent, i.e.,
for an open economy, if the exchange rate were to appreciate, the interest rates
should be lowered and vice versa to keep output growth and inflation
at their desired trajectory. The use of the MCI as an indicator of market conditions,
however, may be misleading since it depends upon the nature of the shocks to
the exchange rates (Mishkin, 2001). Illustratively, in the presence of cost-push
shocks, the interest rate needs to increase - and, not decrease - in combination
with exchange rate appreciation to stabilise inflation expectations (Detken
and Gaspar, 2003). Notwithstanding this debate on the usefulness of MCI, exchange
rate movements remain a source of concern to the policy authorities in emerging
markets.
4.24 For the majority of developing countries which continue
to depend on export performance as a key to the health of the balance of payments,
exchange rate volatility has had significant real effects in terms of fluctuations
in employment and output and the distribution of activity between tradables
and non-tradables. In the fiercely competitive trading environment, where countries
seek to expand market shares aggressively by paring down margins, even a small
change in exchange rates can develop into significant and persistent real effects.
The heightened exchange rate volatility of the era of capital flows has had
adverse implications for all countries except the reserve currency economies.
The latter have been experiencing exchange rate movements which are not in alignment
with their macro imbalances and the danger of persisting currency misalignments
looms large over all non-reserve currency economies (Mohan, 2004a).
Global Macroeconomic Imbalances
4.25 On the positive side, globalisation has contributed to
sustained lowering of inflation as well as inflation expectations during the
last two decades (see Chapter V). At the same time, globalisation appears to
hold a threat for future inflation. One such threat emerges from the US twin
deficits. Fiscal as well as current account deficits in the US, at present,
are close to 5 per cent of GDP. This order of current account deficit being
run by the US would probably not have been funded in the past as readily as
it is today. It is the increased degree of financial globalisation that has
permitted the financing of such a large order of US current account deficit.
However, such a large deficit may not be sustainable and, at some point of time,
the US current account deficit has to narrow. As observed by Obstfeld (2004),
unusually large current account deficits 'should remain high on policymakers’
list of concerns, even for the richer and less-constrained countries. Extreme
imbalances signal the need for large and perhaps abrupt real exchange rate changes
in the future, changes that might have undesired political and financial consequences,
given the incompleteness of domestic and international capital markets'.
The threat to global inflation emerges from the adjustment dynamics that might
accompany the reduction in the US current account deficit (Box IV.2). Depreciation
of the US dollar would increase external demand and this would put upward pressure
on aggregate demand and inflation. The concomitant monetary tightening in the
US can have serious implications for the sustainability of growth not only in
the US but in several developing countries. According to Ferguson (2004), however,
the correction of the US current account deficit, if properly managed, need
not lead to undue distress. 'To minimise the harmful effects, there is
a need for a coordinated and cooperative approach. The current account deficit
in the US is, to a large extent, a manifestation of its large saving-investment
gap which widened to a high level of 5.3 per cent in 2003. The US, therefore,
will have to try to curb household and government borrowings and strengthen
national savings. The Euro area continues to depend largely on external demand.
It, therefore, will need to pursue some structural reforms, especially in the
labour policies, to boost domestic demand. Japan also needs to continue to take
some concrete measures to strengthen its financial system and reduce huge fiscal
imbalances' (Mohan, 2004b).
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