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Reforming The Architecture of the International Monetary System: Managing The Impossible Trinity. Rakesh Mohan Michael Debabrata Patra Muneesh Kapur. Conference of the The BRICS & Asia, Currency Internationalization, and International Monetary Reform Hong Kong 10-11 December 2012.
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Reforming The Architecture of the International Monetary System:Managing The Impossible Trinity Rakesh Mohan Michael Debabrata Patra Muneesh Kapur Conference of the The BRICS & Asia, Currency Internationalization, and International Monetary Reform Hong Kong 10-11 December 2012
Presentation Outline • IMS – Performance Evaluation • IMS Early Warning: Review and Reform • Managing Capital Flows: Country-centric or Multilateral • Issues in reserve management • Stylized facts • Dominant Reserve Currency – Risks to IMS; Demand-Supply Dynamics • Currency Internationalization: the Way Forward? • Costs and Benefits • IMS and Central Banks • Central Bank Mandate(s) – Rethink? • Key Takeaways
What is the IMS? • Set of official arrangements comprising: • exchange arrangements and exchange rates • international payments and transfers relating • international capital movements; and • international reserves • What it is not • Mission creep • Shifting channels of contagion- This time will be different
IMS Performance – Evaluation • Increasing incidence of crises
IMS Performance Evaluation:Exchange and Payment Arrangements • Intermediate Solutions – managed floats; soft pegs • Current restrictions ebbing; capital restrictions well in evidence
IMF Surveillance –Review and Reform • Gaps in Surveillance – Response • Enhancing integration of multilateral macro-financial analysis: WEO & GFSR • introduction of Early Warning Exercise, Fiscal Monitor, Spillover Report, Pilot External Sector Report, and the G-20 Mutual Assessment Process • Improvements in bilateral surveillance – multi-country perspective: timeliness and readability • The Financial Sector Stability Assessment (FSSA, a major component of FSAP) made mandatory for 25 key countries • An Alternative approach: an India example • Ensured compatibility with best practices and enhanced the skill-sets within the financial sector, leading to significant capacity building • 4 independent advisory panels • Reports peer reviewed • Integrated Surveillance Decision • Why not amend Articles? • More multilateral less bilateral • Dealing with spillovers – dialogue; encouragement? • Flawed governance, flawed surveillance
Managing Capital Flows • Five challenges for collective action • Empirical evidence on beneficial effects of CAL weak • Danger of one-size-fits-all approach • Capital account management does not mean less openness – fully open capital account may not be desirable • Policies needed to counter externalities associated with cross-border flows • Even-handed treatment? • Advisory role for the IMF is the best option for now • Analysis of push and pull factors • Cross fertilisation of country experiences • Improve mapping • Capital controls legitimate part of policy toolkit
Issues in Reserve Management • Massive Reserve Accumulation • Reserve Accumulation vis-à-vis Other Metrics
Demand for Reserve Assets continues to rise… • Demand likely to outstrip supply of reserve currencies
Underlying Risks • Threats to IMS Stability • US debt sustainability and Triffin dilemma • Underpricing all Risks • Risks from policies towards domestic orientation in the US • Ability of US Dollar to meet future reserve currency demand?
Trends and composition of GDP • Growth has moderated over last six quarters • Sluggish industry growth • Services has also shown moderation in last 3 quarters
Inflation Persistence • February 2010 to November 2011 – Highly elevated inflation • Average Inflation 9.6 per cent • February 2012 to October 2012 - Sticky Inflation • Average Inflation around 7.6 per cent
Movement of Indian rupee vis-à-vis US dollar • Market-determined-movements two ways
Financial openness of India increasing Source: Lane and Milessi-Feretti Database
India’s Currency Invoicing • US Dollar is also the major currency for invoicing software exports with 76% share, followed by Pound Sterling (10%) and Euro (7%) in 2009-10.
Currency Internationalization Growing scope for EME Currency Internationalization…
…..Share of EME currencies in Fx turnover still negligible...
…US Dollar and Euro continue to dominate in Global Fx Derivatives Market…
Prerequisites… • Acceptability is key, comprising • Deep and liquid financial and foreign exchange markets • Full currency convertibility and an open capital account • Wide use in international transactions • Macroeconomic and Political stability
Cost and Benefits of Currency Internationalization • Reduces transaction costs • Reduces exchange rate risks • Access to international debt securities markets –domestic deepening • Complicates monetary management • Can hurt export competitiveness • Could make exchange rate more volatile • Exorbitant privilege or exorbitant risk • Systematic consequences Rush into currency internationalisation – repent at length
Key Takeaways • Enlightened IMS Governance is key • More representative legitimate and effective IMF • Regional arrangement and national reserves integral part of global safety net • Domestic stability, external stability and global stability – new impossible trinity • Dealing with spillovers critical • Managing Capital Flows – One size fits all or customised to country context? • Central banks mandate in reformed IMS – financial stability; self FSAP • Future demand-supply mismatches in reserve currencies –recipe for future shocks? • Currency internationalisation • EMEs in a still nascent continuum • Managed internationalisation is flawed and dangerous • Economic size, financial depth, openness, credibility, usability, - set a high bar Blending fundamentals with country experience will balance desirable with feasible