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Towards a New Development Paradigm What does a responsible financial system look like? . Aniket Bhushan Researcher- Finance for Equitable Growth Korea University July 8, 2010. About The North-South Institute. Canada’s oldest research institute on international development (35yrs)
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Towards a New Development ParadigmWhat does a responsible financial system look like? AniketBhushan Researcher- Finance for Equitable Growth Korea University July 8, 2010
About The North-South Institute • Canada’s oldest research institute on international development (35yrs) • Research for a fairer world • Independent policy analysis & dialogue, emphasizing southern partners & perspectives • Thematic areas: • Finance for Equitable Growth • Trade, Natural Resources • Employment and Migration • Peacebuilding and conflict prevention • Governance and Effective Development
Introduction • Why should we be concerned about crisis, policy responses and the changing dynamics of global economic governance? • What failed and why? Story of three imbalances • A New Development Paradigm: what a responsible financial system looks like
Widest Engagement of Civil Society • Financial markets serve real economy (not other way round) • Markets without democratic oversight are inherently prone to exaggerations (bubbles & collapses): gains privatized, risks socialized • Finance & economics is ultimately political • Economic, political, social, environmental interconnectedness
E. Asia’s experience • This crisis goes back to last crises episode • Asian crisis experience (late 90s) enough to warrant high degree of attention to reform debates & G20 • But key differences: • Shift in balance of global economy from West to Asia • Emerging economies well prepared, vindicated • Asia’s leadership role & influence on global reform never more important • BUT: cannot be restricted to official/commercial interest. Informed civil society engagement critical
Interaction of Three Imbalances • Financial imbalances • Capital/assets (leverage) • Short/long-term (mismatches) • Pro-cyclical • Macroeconomic imbalances • Chronic deficits, savings surpluses • Incoherent monetary adjustment & currency system • Real, political economy imbalances • Widening income inequality, unprecedented debt levels (not since great depression) • Regulator/regulated (capture)
Understanding the Development Model Banker and consumer of last-resort: US/W Europe Free-floating, capital-liberal interest rates target Emerging market: capital attractive Export competitive: China, E.A, Jap, Ger, Managed-float, managed cap opening; int rates + Informal pegs, cap ambiguous, wider policy tool-kit Aid, other transfer (remit, tourism), poor resource-rich Formal pegs, monetary unions;
Limits of Development Paradigm • Narrow market efficiency paradigm • Excessive reliance on overextended households in advanced economies to support global demand • Excessive reliance on USD as store of purchasing power and incoherent monetary system • Excessive reliance on unrestricted private capital flows to smooth imbalances • An international financial architecture (IFIs) that lacks credibility, democracy, influence over policies of major advanced countries
Why a “development” crisis and Towards a New Development Paradigm • Aid levels decline/stagnate in donor crises • Small revenue impact has big social impact • Food, fuel crisis received little attention: LIC no real voice in key global debates • LIC, LMIC more open than ever before: trade linkages • Capital flight makes poorest regions (SSA) net creditors Therefore: • Articulating the purpose of the financial system • Financial regulation • Macroeconomic adjustment and monetary system
What does a Responsible Financial System Look Like? • Basic retail function: turning savings into productive investment; turning short term into long-term; meeting liquidity needs of households, govts, businesses • Behavioural function: creating incentives to move change in direction of sustainable (environmentally and socially stable) growth. Shifting bias –short speculative to long-term productive investment • Balanced interconnectedness: different needs in different contexts. Poorest most affected. Meeting developmental commitments (MDG)
New Development Paradigm • Financial system must foster growth with equity: imbalanced growth breeds instability. Different countries will have diff balance of domestic/external orientation (pace, desire for liberalization). Investment in social safety, human capital, harnessing productive capacity in emerging/developing regions • Desirable financial innovation: in service of long-term change • Not just regulation: regulators must get the definition of ‘efficiency’ right; tools only good if used • Not institutions, but markets: no individual institution can be more imp than the underlying market • Clear state-role: stabilizing force in financial system; map the market genome; regulation vs. structuring (e.g. securitization) • Cross border regulation: weakest link; we do not have “global financial regulation” all we have is minimum standards
New Development Paradigm • Broader view of stability: cannot be limited to price stability. Containing asset bubbles, speculative volatility (graduated capital gains taxes, margins etc.). Pragmatism over dogmatism • More coherent monetary system: interconnected global economy needs to move beyond sys dominated by nationally based reserve/trade currencies (inherently unstable) • Building on Special Drawing Rights (SDR) • Financing facility for countries lacking fiscal space: going against the cycle • Protection vs. protectionism, recognizing importance of preserving systemic integrity: capital controls, curbs on asset bubbles, regional & multilateral swap arrangements • New revenue raising mechanisms to finance public goods: Currency Transaction Taxes