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Small States and Financial Fragility. Rainer Kattel Institute of Public Administration Tallinn University of Technology, Estonia. Concepts. Small states are weak links in diverse international linkages Financial fragility:
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Small States and Financial Fragility • Rainer Kattel • Institute of Public Administration • Tallinn University of Technology, Estonia
Concepts • Small states are weak links in diverse international linkages • Financial fragility: • Minsky/Kregel: companies and countries can have following financing positions: hedge, speculative, Ponzi • Techno-economic paradigms: from mass production to modularity
Financial fragility, origins • Financial fragility has essentially one origin and two additional factors enforcing/alleviating it: • Origins: all business models are speculative financing positions • Minsky: permanent stability is impossible as successful business models (innovations) engender systemic lowering of margins of safety
two factors • First, businesses innovate in the hope to become hedge financing position (securitization, product eg iphone, business model eg skype, marketing to sell mortgages, assembly production) • Second, public policies and regulations (exchange rates, labour laws, banking regulations) intend to finance sustainable growth (undervalued exchange rate, low inflation, flexible labour markets) • Financial stability or fragility results from the interplay of these both factors and international context and country’s level of development: they determine how and in what companies innovate
How can small countries avoid fragility? • Small states are by definition prone to fragility as cushions of safety low • Two ideal typical strategies: • Type A is Nordic economy in post WWII • Type B is Baltic economy in 1990s-2000s
Type A • Resource based exports, diversification into industry (scale economies in mass production) • Exchange rate / capital controls; devaluations / wage negotiations • welfare state, active labour market, regional labour markets, NMT • hedging long-term development and innovation in increasing returns industries with strong linkages to local economy, getting the paradigm right
Type B • Macro-economic stability, currency peg and FDI • Modularity in production (outsourcing, lack of increasing returns+learning), regional uneven integration • Weak labour and social partners • Inputs for exports and private borrowing in foreign currency, huge current account deficits • Hedging short-term consumption and real-estate booms • Crisis inevitable because Type B is a Ponzi scheme
Conclusion • Type A fit perfectly TEP • Type B fully misunderstood TEP • Lessons for small states: • flexibility to respond to speculative positions; regulations, procurement to create lead markets; industry associations to socialize risks of development projects; regional trade etc agreements, technical know-how creation; macro+fiscal policy help to socialize long-term R&D risks