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How to Manage Globalization? What must be the Role of Europe?. Joseph E. Stiglitz Aix en Provence July 5th, 2002. Views before September 11, Enron, Argentina:. Globalization increased openness to trade and capital flows provided the best promise for growth Free markets American style
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How to Manage Globalization? What must be the Role of Europe? Joseph E. Stiglitz Aix en Provence July 5th, 2002
Views before September 11, Enron, Argentina: • Globalization • increased openness to trade and capital flows • provided the best promise for growth • Free markets • American style • provided the best economic system • The New Economy brought unprecedented prosperity • End of the Business Cycle
Since the beginning of the millennium (I) • American recession and global slowdown: • Business cycle had not been repealed • Bursting of Tech Bubble • The New Economy had been partly hype • Enron Scandal • America had preached good “accounting” but practice deficient • Corporate Governance was a problem everywhere • Political interference in setting standards, bail-outs (LTCM) • Without good information, resources misallocated • California Electricity Scandal • Deregulation again failed • Markets had been manipulated
Since the beginning of the millennium (II) • September 11 • Globalization had facilitated not only the flow of goods and services across borders • US policy on secret offshore banking centers had facilitated financing terrorists • Argentina • Failure of sixth major bail-out • IMF hadn’t learned the lessons of East Asia—contractionary policies worsen economic downturns • Privatization had contributed to crisis • Fixed exchange rate system had contributed to crisis • Throughout the region, countries are asking • Why does U.S. advocate expansionary fiscal policy when it has recession, but contractionary fiscal policies in developing countries? • Has globalization failed us? Has reform failed?
Since the beginning of the millennium (III) • More general dissatisfaction with globalization • IMF failed to fulfill its mandates • Trade Agenda imbalanced • Rules of the game set by North for North –or for special interests in the North • Problems are exacerbating American Unilateralism • Incongruity between America’s free trade—free market rhetoric and practice • Steel tariffs • New farm bill • Airline bail-out
The Risk Going Forward • Swing of the Pendulum to the other extreme
My perspective (I) • Globalization can be a powerful positive force • Globalization of knowledge • Globalization of civil society • Greatest successes in countries of East Asia which took advantage of globalization, But on their own terms • Markets are essential for economic growth • But markets need to be regulated • Balance between excessive and insufficient regulation • Find the right regulatory framework
My perspective (II) • Key problem is governance of globalization • Just at time when we need international institutions most, there is least confidence • Undemocratic (in the broad sense of term) and non-transparent • Allowing undue influence of special interests • Disproportionate role of U.S.—only country with veto power at IMF • Of special concern when U.S. pursues unilateralist polices • Pursuing unbalanced “Washington consensus” doctrines • A global financial system prone to crisis • Reluctance to address key policy issues, such as bankruptcy, in effective way
The Way Forward • Not to abandon international institutions, but to reform them • Key question for Europe: • How should it deal with the U.S.: the role of global consensus building versus hard bargaining • How can it present a united front to counterbalance U.S. while respecting diversity of views and interests • Aspiration: • Global system which works, and not only for the few in the more advanced countries, but for everyone in all of the countries.