96199_Asia_Press_Ad_DPS
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Cambodia – since 2005
Philippines – since 1990
China – since 1986
Singapore – since 1974
Hong Kong – since 1972
South Korea – since 1978
India – since 1984
Taiwan – since 1980
Indonesia – since 1970
Thailand – since 1985
Japan – since 1969
Vietnam – since 1993
Malaysia – since 1971
Credits Words into Action Delegate Publication for The International Monetary Fund and World Bank Group Boards of Governors Annual Meetings Suntec Center, Singapore, 11th-20th September, 2006 Published by Faircount Ltd European Headquarters 5 Ella Mews, Hampstead London NW3 2NH United Kingdom Tel: + 44 (0)20 7428 7000 Fax: +44 (0)20 7117 3338 email: publisher@faircount.co.uk North American Headquarters 701 North Westshore Blvd. Tampa, Florida 33609 USA Tel: 1 (813) 639 1900 Fax: 1 (813) 639 4344 e-mail: publisher@faircount.com Publishers Peter M. Antell Ross W. Jobson Associate Publisher David Woods Editor Philippe Legrain Authors Manu Bhaskaran Diane Coyle Simon Cox Geoff Dyer Barry Eichengreen Bethan Emmett Duncan Green Philippe Legrain Simon Long Johan Norberg Nouriel Roubini Jeffrey D. Sachs AnnaLee Saxenian Mark StGiles Guido Schmidt-Traub John Williamson
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Photography: Corbis, IFRC, IMF, OnAsia, Oxfam, Panos, Still Pictures, World Bank Group Printed in Singapore ŠCopyright 2006, Faircount Ltd. All rights reserved. Reproduction of editorial content in whole or in part without written permission is prohibited. Faircount Ltd does not assume responsibility for the advertisements, nor any representation made therein, nor the quality or deliverability of the products themselves. Reproduction of articles and photographs, in whole or in part, contained herein is prohibited without express written consent of the publisher, with the exception of reprinting for news media use.
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Words into Ac tion
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The pursuit of perfection
Foreword
Publisher’s foreword Publications in the Words into Action series have a well established record, not just for documenting major events and conferences, and the policies & initiatives evolving from them that aspire to improve the lives of many of the world’s population, but also for providing some of the most respected commentaries by world-renowned writers on the major development, finance, and sustainability issues. The United Nation’s World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg, the International Conference for Renewable Energies in Bonn, the World Water Forum in Mexico, and the Beijing International Renewable Energy Conference are amongst the major meetings whose organisers have worked with the Words into Action team to produce publications for their events. We hope that the fact that these publications are found on the desks and in the briefcases of world leaders, Ministers of State, Heads of NGO’s, CEO’s of corporations, and members of the media is recommendation enough for their content and reputation. As publishers of this Delegate Publication for the International Monetary Fund and World Bank Annual Meetings, the Words into Action team feels especially proud to have the publication distributed at such an important meeting. It would be difficult to overemphasize the significance of the roles of the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the other development banks and organisations with which they work. Together, they are in a position to do more good for more people than perhaps any other institutions in the world. Upon their decisions depend not just the livelihoods, but the very lives of millions of human beings, and their security both financial and physical. This publication will play its own small part in communicating some of the issues that will be under discussion in Singapore and we hope that you will agree that it does so intelligently, impartially, and reasonably and that it makes a positive contribution to the process.
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Words into Ac tion
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Foreword
IMF strategy tries to set the framework for the future direction of the institution, and certainly the motivation behind putting forward a strategy is related to what we see as the needs of the member countries in the 21st century. Specifically, I mean the effects of globalization in all member countries, not only emerging and low income countries, but also developed economies. This Medium-Term Strategy will be part of the discussions, specifically in some of the issues like surveillance and quotas, in Singapore. The strategy covers all the areas of foreign activities. It proposes changes in the way we conduct bilateral surveillance, individual surveillance for member countries, known as Article IV Consultations. It also covers changes in the way we address global surveillance beyond our traditional or economic outlook. It presents changes in our approach to preventing and dealing with financial crisis in emerging economies. It refocuses our activities in low-income countries, and it also produces changes in our own governance, both in terms of streamlining our institution, and having a more medium-term budgetary objective. It also has regard for the institution’s need to reflect the changes in the global economy, and introduce changes in the quotas and, for example, participation of member countries. Surveillance is probably the core mandate of the Fund. We are proposing important changes, both in the policies and practices of surveillance to make it more effective, and at the same time helping member countries to tackle some of the most important problems they are facing. RODRIGO DE RATO Y FIGAREDO Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund Rodrigo de Rato took office as Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund in 2004. Before that, he was Vice President for Economic Affairs and Minister of Economy for the Government of Spain, as well as Governor for Spain on the Boards of Governors of the IMF, the World Bank, the Inter-American Development Bank, the European Investment Bank, and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development. He also represented the EU at the Group of Seven Finance Ministers meeting in Ottawa, Canada, in 2002, when Spain held the EU Presidency. He was also in charge of foreign trade relations for the Government of Spain, and represented Spain at the World Trade Organization’s ministerial meetings in Seattle, United States, in 1999; in Doha, Qatar in 2001; and Cancún, Mexico, in 2003. He was a member of Spain’s parliament from 1982 to 2004. Mr. de Rato holds a law degree from the Universidad Complutense in Madrid, a Master of Business Administration from the University of California at Berkeley and a PhD in Economics from the Universidad Complutense. In his address to the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Japan in Tokyo, Rodrigo de Rato delivered the following remarks (abstracted)
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One of these changes, Multilateral Consultations, refers to the global economy. We will not only address consultations at bilateral levels with member countries, but we will start looking at global issues having multilateral settings in which different economies will get together with the Fund to discuss global issues. We believe that narrowing global balance of payment imbalances is key for maintaining robust global growth. Another element of the Medium-Term Strategy regarding surveillance is going to be a more focused approach by the Fund on financial sector issues and we must make sure the importance of these are systemically reflected in the work of the institution. This effort of making the Fund more knowledgeable and more relevant in financial markets, understanding its consequences on macroeconomic and monetary policy, will take many forms. Another element of the Fund’s Medium-Term Strategy, is the question of a fair and comprehensive representation of members. I believe it is now time to recognize the rise in economic weight of a number of other countries—including some of the largest emerging market economies, some in Asia. In doing so, we will have to increase their relative quotas and voting shares. I envisage tackling the issue in a two-year program of action, beginning with some key decisions in Singapore. I would also want our members to agree in Singapore to move during the next two years on more fundamental changes, including a further round of ad hoc quota increases for underrepresented members following a review of the formula that we use to calculate the quotas, making it more transparent and more relevant, and also to make rebalancing a permanent feature of any future general quota increase. They will also include measures to protect the voice and representation of low-income countries that continue to borrow from the Fund, but have only a limited share in the Fund voting. There are other aspects of this Medium-Term Strategy, where changes are progressing more gradually, but which are also very important. For example, we are revisiting the instruments that we have to help prevent and respond to crisis in emerging market countries. At present, not many of our emerging market countries’ members are borrowers from the Fund. This is partly a reflection of good conditions in the global economy and financial markets, and also clearly partly of improved economic management in emerging market countries. But we need to make sure that if world financial conditions worsen we have the tools we need to support emerging economies. Another example of other activities in the Medium-Term Strategy is certainly our commitment to lowincome country members, and the international effort to reduce poverty. Our work is to improve our effectiveness by focusing our efforts more sharply on the areas of responsibility, macroeconomic and financial issues, in which we believe we have a comparative advantage, and also to have a cooperative approach with development banks, starting with the World Bank, to face what is really an important challenge for many low-income countries to meet the Millennium Development Goals. Rodrigo de Rato, August 3, 2006
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Foreword
The World Bank encompasses The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development and The International Development Agency, IBRD and IDA, which were the two original elements of The World Bank Group. It’s worth emphasizing that we are a group - sometimes people think it is just The World Bank. There is also the private sector arm, The International Finance Corporation; they have just celebrated their 50th birthday and the 50 billion dollars worth of commitments made over those years, 6 billion dollars of which were made in the last fiscal year. It’s a measure of how the importance of the private sector in development has grown over that half a century. Indeed, we meet at a time when private capital flows are becoming perhaps the most powerful force for development. The basic structure of financing for developing countries has been transformed over the last 20 years. For every dollar now in official development assistance to developing countries, there are more than $4 in cross-border private investment from rich to poor countries. A significant portion of these flows are coming from institutional investors. In the last 10 years, pension funds, foundations, and endowments have increased investments in emerging markets from nearly 10% of total assets 10 years ago, to more than 16% today, and that 16% now represents more than one trillion dollars in investments. There are some similar fascinating trends unfolding in the global economy: many developing countries are rapidly building up very large foreign reserves. These vast reserves, totaling more than 2 trillion dollars today, could help unlock private sector led investment. It’s not only investments from developed countries to developing countries, but what we call South-to-South foreign investment that is growing, and growing roughly 5 times faster than investment from North-to-South. While it’s still relatively small, South-to-South flows more than tripled from 14 billion dollars in 1995, to 47 billion dollars in 2003.
PAUL WOLFOWITZ President of the World Bank Group Paul Wolfowitz was appointed to his current office in 2005. In the previous thirty years, he has served under seven Presidents of the United States and in a variety of capacities as a public servant, an educator and as an ambassador in the developing world. In government, Mr. Wolfowitz was Ambassador to Indonesia for three years, head of the U. S. State Department’s Policy Planning Office for two years, and Assistant Secretary of State for East Asia and Pacific Affairs for three-and-a-half years, where he worked directly with the leaders of more than 20 countries. He has served as Under Secretary of Defense for Policy - also collaborating on the U.S. administration’s nuclear arms reduction initiative – and for four years as Deputy Secretary of Defense. He has also held posts as Dean and Professor of International Relations at the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies of The Johns Hopkins University, as a lecturer in political science at Yale University, and has written widely on foreign policy, diplomacy, and national security, and was a member of the advisory board of Foreign Affairs. Mr. Wolfowitz majored in Mathematics at Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, and earned a Ph.D in Political Science at the University of Chicago. In his address to the International Corporate Governance Network (ICGN) Conference in Washington, Paul Wolfowitz delivered the following remarks (abstracted)
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There are other staggering statistics that are not such happy ones. Today, there are more than 1 billion people worldwide living on less than a dollar a day - our definition of extreme poverty - and another 2.6 billion people around the world, nearly half the population of this planet, who live on less than $2 a day, the official definition of poverty. For development institutions like The World Bank Group, the surge in capital flows represents both an opportunity and a challenge in our efforts to help developing countries achieve growth, combat poverty and give the poor people of the world those chances in life which we take for granted. It’s true that vast amounts of international capital are potentially available to help developing countries grow, create jobs and provide opportunities for their people to escape poverty, but to access that capital, to attract investors, developing countries - especially the poorest ones - need to improve their investment climates and ensure that these resources, private and public, are managed in a transparent way. That’s absolutely vital for harnessing the entrepreneurial energy of the private sector. Today the private sector accounts for 90% of jobs in the developing world, and ultimately it will be these jobs that offer the most promising path out of poverty. So, I believe the challenge of corporate governance is really about the broader challenge of creating an investment climate in developing countries in which the private sector can thrive. Corporate governance is one essential component of building a healthy investment climate and boosting investor confidence. We know that companies with well-defined shareholder rights, solid control environments, high levels of transparency and disclosure and an empowered board of directors, have no trouble attracting investors and lenders. Studies have shown over and over again that well-governed companies perform better. A World Bank study shows that US mutual funds were more likely to invest in emerging markets with strong shareholder rights, legal frameworks and accounting policies. One study of S & P 500 firms over a two year period shows that companies with either strong or improving corporate governance perform better by 19% than those with poor or deteriorating corporate governance. So it should come as no surprise that when institutional investors want to invest in developing countries, they will turn to well governed companies. Within developing countries, governments are also starting to pay more attention to corporate governance. To attract domestic and international investors, India unveiled a new set of major corporate governance reforms early this year for its public companies. And in Mexico, a new law introduced a series of reforms to raise corporate governance standards and to improve investor protection. Enforcing strong corporate governance standards not only improves the company’s performance, it also helps guard against corruption by encouraging greater transparency, disclosure of information and independent oversight. When corporate governance standards are weak or absent, it creates an opportunity for abuse and for the misuse of power in corporate practices. Corruption is one of the biggest obstacles to development today and it can undermine private sector growth, especially in the poorest countries. It drains resources and discourages investment; it benefits the privileged and robs the poor. Corruption though, isn’t just a disease of developing countries. In every corrupt transaction, there are at least two parties involved - a bribe giver and a bribe taker. Where most multinationals and their affiliates bring good corporate practice to developing countries, there certainly are cases where they have tried to bribe governments for large procurement contracts or for influence in policy making. We must not let a few bad players undermine the high corporate standards set by most firms. We must also recognize that taking responsibility for cleaning up our own laundry empowers leaders and the growing number of leaders in developing countries who are taking on these issues themselves. The World Bank Group has made a strong commitment to battling corruption and we recognize that better corporate governance can be a very effective tool for that agenda. It will not rule out corruption completely, but it can protect investors against the abuse of corporate assets for personal gain through better internal controls, through disclosure of rules and through strong codes and ethics. Paul Wolfowitz, July 6, 2006
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Contents 06
Forewords
Global Economy and International Finance
18
34
48
Mind the gap By Nouriel Roubini Safe to return? By John Williamson Submerging markets? By Barry Eichengreen
Focus on Asia
60
72
84
96 99
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Indiaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s soft spot: Can it let China do the hard stuff? By Simon Long Restructured and resilient By Manu Bhaskaran In the shadow of the dragon By Geoff Dyer Schedule of Annual Meetings, 2006 The new Argonauts By Anna Lee Saxenian
C
M
Y
CM
MY
CY CMY
K
Contents Development Agenda
112
120
130
142
Hitting the target Jeffrey D. Sachs and Guido Schmidt-Traub Spanning the digital divide By Diane Coyle â&#x20AC;&#x153;Our Heroesâ&#x20AC;? By Philippe Legrain The missing link By Johan Norberg
Reforming Global Governance
154
164
174
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Fixing the Fund By Simon Cox In the public interest By Bethan Emmett and Duncan Green First off the mark By Mark St Giles
Words into Ac tion
M
focus
2
Getting you there.
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Global Economy and International Finance
Mind the gap The growing imbalances in the global economy are dangerously unsustainable, yet countries are recklessly failing to tackle them. It is time for the IMF to take the lead.
T
he vigorous debate about the
extra debt – and are instead caused by a
global current-account imbalances
“global savings glut” triggered by developing
is reminiscent of Akira Kurosawa’s
countries saving too much. Three: others
Rashomon. In that classic film, a terrible
argue that the imbalances are largely due
crime occurs in a forest, and while the
to a global investment drought rather than
five characters agree that something
a savings glut. Four: in the Bretton Woods
serious has happened, each has a different
II hypothesis advanced by Michael Dooley,
interpretation of what happened, why,
David Folkerts-Landau and Peter Garber,
and who is at fault. Likewise, the facts of
China and other emerging markets are
the global imbalances are generally not
causing the imbalances by keeping their
disputed: (nearly) everyone agrees that
currencies artificially low so as to boost their
they are large and growing, with the US
export-led growth. Five: the imbalances
saving less than it invests and spending
are caused by China’s excessive saving,
more than its income – and thus running a
owing not to its exchange-rate policy
NOURIEL ROUBINI
current-account deficit – while most of the
but to the structure of its financial and
is Professor of Economics at the
rest of the world saves more than it invests
economic systems. Six: Richard Cooper
Stern School of Business, New
and spends less than its income, and thus
argues that the imbalances are caused by
York University and co-founder
runs a current-account surplus. But in this
demographics and low productivity growth
and Chairman of Roubini Global
contemporary Rashomon saga, there are
– Japan, Europe and China need to save a
Economics LLC, a web-based
at least ten competing interpretations of
lot because they are ageing very fast, while
economic consultancy. He is a
what is causing the imbalances, and what
low productivity growth in Japan and Europe
senior academic researcher in
(if anything) should be done to remedy them.
exacerbates this need. Seven: housing bubbles in the US and a handful of other
international macroeconomics and has had broad policy experience
Interpretation one: many blame the global
countries, caused in part by easy money,
in the US government. His latest
imbalances on the US’s twin budget
are responsible for the imbalances, because
book (co-authored with Brad
and current-account deficits. Two: Ben
they have increased investment (in housing)
Setser), Bailouts or Bail-ins?
Bernanke, Alan Greenspan’s successor
while leading to a consumption boom,
Responding to Financial Crises in
as chairman of the US Federal Reserve,
and hence reduced saving. Eight: financial
claims the imbalances have little to do
globalisation is the explanation, because
with the US’s fiscal deficit – because the
as investors are diversifying their portfolios
world is Ricardian, that is, consumers and
and investing more of their funds abroad,
companies offset an increase in government
foreigners’ demand for US assets is greatly
borrowing by saving more, in anticipation of
increasing. Nine: Ricardo Hausmann and
the future tax rises needed to be pay off the
Federico Sturzenneger argue that the US
Emerging Markets, was published by the Institute for International Economics in 2004.
18 |
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current-account deficit is a statistical illusion, because “dark matter” – the intangible value of US-owned foreign assets – is not measured correctly. Ten: the oil exporters are to blame, because they are saving rather than spending their huge windfall gains from rising oil prices. While there is some truth to each of these stories, a lot of nonsense and misguided arguments also cloud the debate. This is not merely academic: it is vitally important for the future of the world economy that the causes of the global imbalances are correctly identified and the appropriate policy changes made. Are the imbalances sustainable for a long time, and likely to unwind in a slow and orderly manner? Or are they unsustainable, and liable to unravel suddenly, risking a global recession? If so,
Oil exporters do account for part of the recent increase in the global imbalances, but they are not the main factor behind it.
how should countries rectify their behaviour so as to try to reduce them in an orderly
collapse in investment. In the 1990s, the US
fashion?
borrowed from abroad to invest in new real capital; since then, it has been borrowing to
Who is telling the truth?
finance its fiscal deficits, foreign wars and
Interpretation one – the twin-deficits story
lack of private savings. The pattern of capital
– is the most plausible explanation for the
inflows matches this story: in the 1990s,
growth of the global imbalances, at least
there was a large net inflow of FDI and
from 2000 to 2004. In the 1990s, the US
equity investments to the US; since then,
current-account deficit was caused by an
there have been large net outflows, offset by
investment boom which outstripped the
a massive accumulation of US debt, mostly
increase in national savings arising from the
Treasuries, by foreign central banks.
country’s sharp fiscal improvement. But after the tech bust, national investment fell by
Since 2005, matters have changed a
4% of GDP between 2000 and 2004. Had
little. The US current-account deficit has
US national savings remained unchanged,
continued to widen, while the fiscal deficit
the current account would have improved
has shrunk somewhat. Since last year, an
by 4% of GDP; instead, the deficit widened
excess of savings in China and oil-exporting
by another 2% of GDP. Why? Because
countries has helped keep long-term US
US fiscal policy swung from a surplus of
interest rates low – thus explaining the
2.5% of GDP in 2000 to a deficit of 3.5%
now infamous “bond-market conundrum”
of GDP in 2004 – a deterioration of 6% of
– and fed the housing (and associated
GDP, which exactly mirrors the widening of
consumption) bubbles. This, in turn, has led
the current-account deficit adjusted for the
to a further reduction in US private savings,
➣ Words into Ac tion
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Global Economy and International Finance
➣ with household savings actually turning
Japan, Europe and China need to save a great deal because their populations are ageing: low productivity growth in Japan and Europe exacerbates the problem.
Demographic trends in Europe, Japan
negative. It is true, then, that excess savings
and China combined with low productivity
in a few countries have swollen the global
growth in Europe and Japan imply that part
imbalances since last year, but Bernanke
of these global imbalances is structural
overstated his case by referring to a “global”
rather than cyclical – and thus more
savings glut (interpretation two). If anything,
sustainable (interpretation six). But the
in fact, we are experiencing a – possibly
view that the imbalances are entirely due
temporary – global investment drought
to demographics is far-fetched. For a start,
(interpretation three). Investment rates in
while China may have an ageing problem,
East Asia have never recovered since the
its productivity growth is huge, so it does
1997-98 crisis, while they have also been
not need to save as much as slow-growing
low in slow-growing Europe and Japan for
Europe and Japan. Also, although Europe
quite a while.
and Japan may require a structural currentaccount surplus for demographic reasons,
The Bretton Woods II story (interpretation
in practice, the eurozone’s current account
four) is a variant of the Bernanke savings
is broadly in balance.
glut argument where the excess savings are caused by the mercantilist exchange-
Easy money and other financial-sector
C
rate policies of China and other developing
factors which have led to a housing boom
M
countries. It therefore has some truth to it.
are a more promising partial explanation of
Y
But the Panglossian view of its proponents
the global imbalances (interpretation seven).
that the global imbalances are optimal and
Along with the US, the countries with large
MY
sustainable for decades is wishful thinking.
current-account deficits include Turkey,
CY
Inevitably, if the US continues to run current-
Hungary, Australia, New Zealand, Iceland
account deficits of some 7% or more of
and Spain. All have experienced a housing
GDP, its external liabilities will eventually
boom, which has led to a rise in residential
become unsustainably large, triggering a
investment and a fall in private savings, as
collapse of the dollar and a global recession.
households who feel richer because the
CM
CMY
K
value of their home has increased spend
20 |
Words into Ac tion
China’s excess saving is in part to structural
more – both of which swell the current-
factors which hamper consumption
account deficit. These countries also display
(interpretation five). Because the country’s
other common features: an overvalued
social safety net is threadbare, Chinese
currency, a credit boom and a potentially
households need to save for education,
dangerous accumulation of external
health care, old age and possible
liabilities. This year, as opportunities for yield
unemployment. Weaknesses in its financial
carry trades – borrowing in countries with
system – the lack of a sound consumer-
low interest rates, notably Japan, in order
credit system and constraints in the way
to invest in countries with higher investment
housing is financed – also force households
returns – have been unwinding, all of these
to save too much. Structural reforms
countries (save for Spain, which is in the
– which China plans to implement in the
eurozone) have experienced pressures on
next few years – are needed so as to reduce
their currency, in some cases quite severe.
the economy’s reliance on net exports and
The danger is that as interest rates are
investment for its long-term growth and
raised to control inflation, their housing
boost the role of private consumption.
bubbles could burst, causing investment to
➣
C
M
Y
CM
MY
CY
CMY
K
Global Economy and International Finance
➣
fall and savings to rise, restoring balance
It is often claimed that financial globalisation,
to their current accounts – by provoking
the reduction in home bias and the large
a recession.
foreign demand for US assets, explains the global imbalances (interpretation eight).
Paradoxically, the recent flight of capital
But this is incorrect. Financial globalisation
from emerging-market economies with
cannot explain changes in global savings
large current-account deficits has led to a
and investment (leading to current-account
temporary appreciation of the US dollar, as
imbalances), because these depend on
investors fleeing risky assets are seeking
other factors. In any case, a diversification
the safety of US Treasuries. But seeking
of portfolios and a reduction in home bias
refuge in the country with the biggest
do not imply current-account deficits:
current-account deficit is a temporary and
cross-border transactions of domestic
unsustainable outcome. Eventually, the
and foreign assets can lead to any level of
dollar will again be pushed down by bearish
diversification and reduction in home bias
forces both structural (its large current-
without changing net positions, that is, with
account deficit) and cyclical (shrinking
zero current-account deficits. What’s more,
interest-rate and GDP growth differentials
in the past five years returns on US equities
between the US, and Europe and Japan).
have been significantly lower than those
Even the dollar cannot defy the laws of
on foreign ones. Foreigners are no longer
M
gravity forever.
rushing to buy US shares; on the contrary,
Y
C
net, they are pulling their money out of
“Because the US is an advanced economy which has never defaulted on its external debt and whose currency is still the world’s main reserve currency, its deficit may be sustainable for longer.”
CM
US equities.
MY
CY
While financial globalisation is not causing
CMY
the global imbalances, it may make the
K
US current-account deficit easier to sustain for longer. Because the US is an advanced economy which has never defaulted on its external debt and whose currency is still the world’s main reserve currency, its deficit may be sustainable for longer. But even the US cannot pile up foreign debt ad infinitum. The “exceptional privilege” argument – that, because the US is able to borrow in its own currency, it can reduce the real value of its external liabilities through a persistent dollar depreciation – involves a basic conceptual fallacy. While you can fool all of the people some of the time (via an unexpected depreciation) and some of the people all of the time (the handful of central banks which do not care about the return on their dollar assets), you cannot fool all of the
The threat of trade wars in 1987 led to a stock market crash.
22 |
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people all of the time. If investors expected
➣
C
M
Y
CM
MY
CY
MY
K
Global Economy and International Finance
temporarily been low. Also, tax arbitrage
“The global imbalances have a number of causes and can only safely be unwound if several countries take action.”
driven by high US corporate tax rates leads US firms to report more of their profits abroad, while foreign firms operating in the US do the reverse. Moreover, even if dark matter did exist and the US was a net creditor, this would neither imply that the US current-account was in balance,
➣
a necessary dollar depreciation – even a
nor that it could run a trade deficit of 7% of
modest 4-5% per year – the return on US
GDP forever. It would only mean that the
assets should adjust upwards to offset
current-account position that eventually
this expected fall in the US dollar. The US
stabilises the US’s net external liabilities
would therefore not be able to reduce the
would be a small deficit (perhaps 1% of
real value of its foreign liabilities through a
GDP at most) rather than a small surplus
persistent dollar depreciation.
– and reducing the trade deficit from 7% of GDP to 1% of GDP still implies a huge, and
As for the supposed “dark matter”
painful, adjustment.
(interpretation nine), it seems more like a “black hole” once one considers the
Oil exporters do account for part of the
evidence. The fable goes as follows: if the
recent increase in the global imbalances
US were truly a net debtor (to the tune
(interpretation ten), but they are not the
of over $2.5 trillion, according to official
main factor behind it, nor will the recycling
figures), net factor income payments should
of petrodollars provide continued cheap
be negative (if the returns on US-owned
and easy financing for US current-account
foreign assets are on average equal to the
deficits. So far, the US has reacted to
return on the US’s foreign liabilities). But US
the oil shock as if it were temporary,
net factor income payments have remained
maintaining its high level of consumption
positive, even after America formally became
and reducing its savings in the face of the
a net debtor in the late 1980s. US-held
loss of real income that higher oil prices
foreign assets must therefore have some
entail. This, in turn, has swollen its current-
intangible extra value – such as superior US
account deficit. Oil exporters have also
technology, skills or financial intermediation
behaved as if the shock were temporary,
– which explains this paradox. In which
and saved most of their oil windfall. Yet
case, the US is not actually a net debtor, nor
this shock is now semi-permanent – it has
is it even running a current-account deficit
already lasted several years – so the US might do well to copy Europe and Asia,
24 |
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This is nonsense. For a start, net factor
where lower consumption has taken some
income is rapidly shrinking, and will
of the strain. Note that all of this implies
become negative in 2006. The reason why,
that the net increase in oil exporters’
despite being a net debtor, the US has
savings has not been fully matched by
earned more on its foreign assets recently
a drop in oil importers’ savings, so that
than it has paid out to its foreign creditors
overall the oil shock has not led to a large
is because while its foreign holdings are
increase – or glut – in global savings and
mainly equities and FDI, its liabilities are
cannot account, as some claim, for most
mainly bonds – and US interest rates have
of the fall in global long-term interest rates.
Inevitably, oil exporters will eventually start to spend more of their oil windfall – and when they do, this will hurt the US in several ways. OPEC countries have traditionally had a greater propensity to spend on European and Japanese goods than on US ones, while they have so far favoured dollar assets over euro- or yen-denominated ones. When they do finally spend more, this will push down the dollar as demand for US assets is switched into demand for European and Asian goods. The oil exporters are also likely to diversify out of dollar assets when the dollar starts to fall, while the anti-Arab protectionism displayed in the Dubai Ports World case may accelerate their sale of dollar assets. The US is fortunate that China and other countries that are holding down their currencies are, so far, willing to subsidise American consumption and housing by selling their goods to the US on the cheap as well as by lending it so much that US interest rates are much lower than they would otherwise be. But if China responded to US protectionist threats by reducing its purchases of Treasuries and allowing its currency to rise before the US has tackled its savings drought, US import prices would soar and interest rates spike up, risking recession. These growing global imbalances do indeed create a “balance of financial terror”, as Larry Summers aptly put it.
What to do? The global imbalances are clearly dangerous and unsustainable. But they have a number of causes and can only safely be unwound if several countries take action. There is a growing, if shaky, international consensus, at least rhetorically, on who needs to do what. The US must address its twin savings deficit – its large budget deficit and its low level of private savings; this implies reversing
➣
Oil exporters need to let their pegged currencies appreciate and start spending more of their windfall gains on consumption and investment in extra production.
Words into Ac tion
| 25
Global Economy and International Finance
➣
some tax cuts that the US cannot afford
money, it is not wholly impotent. It should be
to make permanent. China and the rest of
more assertive, by naming and shaming the
the Bretton Woods II periphery in Asia must
culprits in this saga. As each country seeks
let their currencies appreciate and adopt
to pass the buck, the twin spectres of trade
structural reforms which stimulate domestic
and asset protectionism are rearing their
consumption at the expense of net exports.
heads.
Europe and Japan must accelerate structural reforms that will increase investment,
Next year, the US current-account deficit
productivity and growth, thus reducing their
may top $1 trillion, and rising. Eventually,
external surpluses. And oil exporters need
such an accumulation of foreign liabilities will
to let their pegged currencies appreciate
become an unsustainable Ponzi scheme,
and start spending more of their windfall
which implies an ever-expanding ratio of the
gains on consumption and investment in
US’s foreign liabilities relative to its GDP.
extra oil production. Each region requires a combination of expenditure-switching policies
Last year, even though the conditions for the
(via changes in relative prices triggered by
private sector to finance the US deficits were
currency movements) and policies that
almost perfect – the Fed was tightening
involve a change in the level of expenditure
while the ECB and the Bank of Japan were
(for the US, a reduction in spending relative
on hold; the US economy was growing
to its income; for other regions, an increase)
much faster than Europe’s and Japan’s; the
in order to achieve an orderly global
Homeland Investment Act heavily subsidised
rebalancing. Without an offsetting rise in
the repatriation of US profits abroad; and
foreign spending (and fall in foreign savings),
the dollar was rising, providing capital gains
a big fall in the US dollar and an increase in
to foreign holders of US dollar assets – only
US private and public savings could lead to
half of the current-account deficit of some
a global slowdown. The burden of global
$800bn was financed by private investors,
rebalancing must be shared.
the rest being supplied by foreign central banks.
“As each country seeks to pass the buck, the twin spectres of trade and asset protectionism are rearing their heads.”
This year, with the deficit set to exceed $900bn, conditions are much less favourable. The Fed will eventually stop tightening, while the ECB and Bank of Japan are only starting to do so; US growth is slowing while Europe’s and Japan’s is
28 |
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But there is a big gap between the rhetoric
rising; the Homeland Investment Act has
of what should be done and the reality
expired; and the returns on US equities and
of what is actually being done. It is time
housing are flat or negative. While the US’s
for the organisation charged with global
financing needs are larger, foreign investors
economic and financial stability to act. The
will be less willing to hold US dollar assets
IMF has been assigned the role of impartial
than last year. So, unless foreign central
“referee” in seeking an orderly resolution to
banks are willing to increase – relative
the global imbalances. But although it has
to the massive amounts of 2005 – their
little enforcement power, or even leverage,
accumulation of dollar assets, the dollar will
over sovereign countries that do not owe it
fall and US interest rates will rise.
➣
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Global Economy and International Finance
demand for US dollar assets will fall sharply as capital losses on holdings of dollar assets accumulate. Like Alice in Wonderland who had to run faster to stay in the same place, the continued financing of the US deficits without a dollar and interest-rate hard landing depends on a pyramid scheme. Foreign central banks must accumulate dollar assets at ever-increasing rates year after year, despite the prospect of huge capital losses on their dollar assets once the US currency inevitably starts to fall. This Ponzi game cannot, and therefore will not, continue. Many factors may cause investors to realise that the Emperor has no clothes and unravel the Bretton Woods II system of “vendor financing” to the US. They include: the So long as Asian currencies are not rising against the dollar, it makes sense for private investors to finance the US deficit.
Fed stopping its tightening cycle; a sharp US economic slowdown; foreign central banks diversifying their reserves, as they are starting to do; anti-Chinese protectionism
“In an increasingly imbalanced global economy, the risks of a hard landing are rising: the world urgently needs to start tackling the imbalances.”
triggering a sharp fall of the dollar and greater diversification out of dollar assets (much as the threat of trade wars in 1987 led to a stock market crash); an episode of systemic financial risk having its source in the US; a Chinese currency revaluation followed by a similar appreciation of a wide
➣
If central banks accumulate foreign reserves
range of Asian currencies; or challenges to
at a slower pace than in 2005 (let alone
US power in the Middle East or North Korea.
dump their existing stocks of such assets),
30 |
Words into Ac tion
private investors will be unwilling to fill the
In an increasingly imbalanced global
gap. Private demand for dollar assets is
economy, the risks of a hard landing are
complementary to, not a substitute for,
rising. The world urgently needs to start
public demand. So long as Asian currencies
tackling the global imbalances. All major
are not rising against the dollar, it makes
countries and regions need to assume their
sense for private investors to finance the
responsibilities and act soon, so that the
US deficit, because the returns of carry
finale of this contemporary Rashomon saga
trades – for instance, borrowing at 0% in
is less acrimonious and painful than the
Japan to invest at 5% in US assets – are
ending of Kurosawa’s masterpiece. Time
large and the currency risk close to nil. But if
is running out; we must move from debate
central banks intervene less and allow their
to action, starting here at the IMF annual
currencies to appreciate somewhat, private
meeting in Singapore.
■
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Global Economy and International Finance
Safe to return? Nearly a decade after the Asian financial crisis, developing countries remain wary of global capital markets. But an Asian capital market could lead the way in issuing new growth-linked bonds that are less risky for emerging-market borrowers.
I
t is nine years since the IMF/World Bank
entrepreneurial attitudes and a good
annual meetings were last held in East
education system, but it also requires lots
Asia. Those Hong Kong meetings were
of investment. Meanwhile, many developed
held during a lull in the financial crisis that
countries should be saving more than they
was ravaging the region. Partly at least to
can profitably invest, in part to build up
prevent a recurrence, virtually every country
assets for the coming explosion in their
in the region has since built up its reserves
retired population. The world would benefit
to a level where a new crisis is, at least for
from arrangements that facilitate a flow
now, inconceivable. But everyone knows
of capital from developed to developing
that this insurance is expensive. One of
countries. That means real capital flows,
the main benefits of international capital
transferred via current-account deficits,
flows is negated if a country that receives
not having reserve changes provide the
a capital inflow feels obliged to build up its
counterpart to capital inflows. Large capital
reserves to cover a subsequent outflow. If
flows to emerging markets would also
JOHN WILLIAMSON
the international capital market is ever again
help attenuate the pressure for large-scale
is a Senior Fellow at the Institute
to fulfil its potential of reallocating resources
migration.
for International Economics in
to parts of the world where the return on investment is highest, countries need to
Several things can be done to facilitate
was chief economist for South
be given the confidence to use their capital
this process. Potential capital-importing
Asia at the World Bank. In 2001
inflows to finance current-account deficits.
countries need to manage their economies
Washington, DC. In 1996-99, he
in ways unlikely to cause investors to
he served as project director for the UN High-Level Panel on
Looming demographic and development
panic. They need to maintain low rates of
Financing for Development (the
trends make this task especially important.
inflation and a sound fiscal position, adopt
Over the next 50 years, virtually all
modern methods of economic management
at a number of prestigious
population growth will occur in parts
(involving flexible exchange rates and inflation
universities and published
of the world that are now labelled as
targeting), allow automatic fiscal stabilisers
developing countries, while most of the
to work, avoid large currency mismatches
currently developed countries are likely to
in their asset/liability positions, borrow in
experience a gradual population decline.
forms that do not impose the risk of sudden
Moreover, many (with luck, most) developing
large demands for repayment, and avoid a
countries â&#x20AC;&#x201C; and certainly most in East Asia
reputation for corruption. The worldâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s major
â&#x20AC;&#x201C; seem likely to develop. Undeniably, this
economies need to maintain a healthy rate
requires good institutions, a work ethic,
of growth and avoid crises and recessions.
Zedillo Panel). He has taught
widely on international monetary issues, most recently Curbing the Boom-Bust Cycle: Stabilizing Capital Flows to Emerging Markets (Institute for International Economics).
34 |
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It would help if groups of capital-importing countries could create regional capital markets, in part because this would enable regional surplus countries to satisfy a part of the needs for capital, and also because it would reassure investors that unexpected changes in the rules of the game by debtors would be resisted by peers as well as outside lenders. The international financial institutions need to create mechanisms, such as the IMF’s proposed arrangements for high-access contingency financing, which will give confidence to debtor countries that in the event of a withdrawal of funds for reasons other than their own irresponsible policies they would be able to draw as quickly on liquid facilities as they can currently mobilise their reserves. Finally, the international capital market needs to play its part in creating and lending through instruments that do not pose the threat of imposing sudden large demands for
If, during the 1997 crisis, Thailand’s Borensztein bonds had carried a coupon of 7% when the growth rate was 5.5%, it would have made debt service only some 2%.
repayment unrelated to the debtor’s actions. relative to the reserves held by the debtor I will focus principally on what types of
countries that are unconditionally available
instruments would be best suited to
to make payments. (Hence the popular
minimise the risk of sudden demands being
recommendation that countries should keep
made on a country’s payments capacity
reserves at least equal to their level of short-
at inappropriate times. Introducing and
term debt.) Debt is particularly dangerous
making use of such instruments will require
if it is denominated in foreign currency,
supportive actions by both emerging-
for then a crisis that reduces the value of
market borrowers, which need to issue their
the domestic currency – as they tend to
instruments in the appropriate form, and
– will automatically increase the domestic-
lenders, which need to recommend that
currency value of debt, and thus the burden
their clients buy appropriate instruments.
of servicing it.
Some forms of debt are best avoided
This simple analysis points immediately to
Financial crises such as the one in 1997
ought to avoid: short-term loans and
arise when a large number of creditors
foreign-currency-denominated ones.
two kinds of debt that developing countries
seek immediate repayment of their loans. For this to be possible, a large number of
Of course, some debts are naturally short-
short-term loans must be outstanding. For
term, such as trade credit. Foreign banks
it to be dangerous, the value of the short-
could hardly be expected to make a five-
term loans outstanding has to be large
year loan for imports that are due to be
➣ Words into Ac tion
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Global Economy and International Finance
“Potential capital-importing countries need to manage their economies in ways unlikely to cause investors to panic.”
make short-term loans because then they can tell their regulators that they have a balanced short-term position, even if this is based on a fallacy of composition, because not all banks could simultaneously liquidate their assets. Investment banks sometimes recommend their clients to invest in country X, but only in assets of less than six-months’ duration, because they believe that no crisis is likely to occur within six months. Such investments are useless to a developing country – except perhaps one nearing a crisis, but then such finance would not be available – because prudence demands that they be matched one-for-one by higher reserves. The only ways of avoiding such a burden are through exchange controls that prohibit shortC
term loans other than for trade credit, or M
by reducing short-term domestic interest Y
rates below the foreign rate. As countries CM
develop, the latter will become a real MY
possibility, but until then there is much to be CY
said for retaining some capital controls. CMY
K
The other problem arises from currency Loans denominated in a foreign currency are likely to increase in domestic-currency (and therefore real) value when the domestic currency depreciates, as it normally does when a country encounters economic difficulties.
mismatches. Loans denominated in a foreign currency are likely to increase in domestic-currency (and therefore real) value when the domestic currency depreciates, as
➣
sold within three months. Trade credits are
it normally does when a country encounters
naturally short-term, and are normally rolled
economic difficulties. A part of the literature
over as a matter of course. But in a crisis,
argues that lenders are simply not prepared
banks may try to cut the trade credits that
to lend in the currencies of most emerging
they supply to a country, and occasionally
markets, because the countries suffer
countries have tried to negotiate with their
from “original sin”. This seems to me far
banks to maintain aggregate trade credit
too defeatist. Once, investors had little
lines unchanged. It is difficult, though, to
confidence in the monetary and statistical
envisage any pre-commitment to that effect.
authorities of most emerging markets, so if
One probably has to accept that banks may
those countries wanted to borrow abroad
try to curtail trade credit in a crisis, and any
they had to do so in foreign currency. But
attempts to modify that will have to be ad hoc.
nowadays, many emerging markets are capable of borrowing on the international
36 |
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But other forms of short-term debt could
market in loans denominated in their own
be avoided. For sure, banks prefer to
currencies (as recent local-currency loans
➣
Global Economy and International Finance
It was 1997 when the IMF/World Bank annual meetings were last held in East Asia, during a lull in the financial crisis that was ravaging the region.
“Bank regulators could make it clear that they wished the banks subject to their supervision to maintain a balanced currency position.”
a real depreciation of the local currency in a crisis the borrower does not risk suddenly finding the burden of debt servicing has increased just when it is least capable of paying it. At the same time, the lender has the reassurance of knowing that the
➣
issued by countries such as Brazil and
borrower is unable to inflate away the real
Colombia show). Even when international
value of its debts.
markets do not have enough confidence
38 |
Words into Ac tion
in local monetary authorities to make long-
One measure needed to promote a shift to
term loans at reasonable interest rates, they
local-currency financing is simple: sovereign
may well have sufficient confidence in the
issuers need to be willing to issue local
integrity of their statistical services, and thus
currency debt, and overcome their fear
be prepared to make loans indexed to the
of “original sin”. But of course much debt
local price level. These are still denominated
is private, and this cannot be converted
in the local currency, so that in the event of
to local-currency form simply by the will
currency position. Of course, there is still a danger that enterprises that sell in the domestic market borrow foreign exchange in search of a lower interest rate, and thus expose themselves to currency risk, but regulators could also require that their clients guard against this (or suffer penalties such as higher reserve requirements). The other possibility is taxation. Payments of interest, and/or receipts of interest, on loans denominated in foreign exchange could be taxed at a higher rate than interest on domestic-currency loans. This would not involve the prohibition of foreign-currency loans, but it would create an incentive for borrowers and lenders to use such loans only where they perceived a compelling reason for not using the domestic currency.
Link bonds to growth instead Short maturities and foreign-currency denomination are the two features of standard loans that have been most conspicuous in past crises, and it would therefore be sensible to avoid them in the future. But once one begins to think of financial engineering that would be ex ante in the interest of both borrower and lender, at least one other possibility leaps to mind. of the sovereign. Issuing local-currency
This is sovereign borrowing through growth-
sovereign debt might help – for example,
linked (sometimes referred to as GDP-
by establishing a yield curve – but it is
linked) bonds.
unlikely to be sufficient. Hence it is natural to ask what other policies might help to
Growth-linked bonds involve a yield that
encourage private companies to issue debt
varies according to a country’s rate of
denominated in the local currency,
growth. They could take several forms. They could be for any maturity, though it is most
Apart from the heavy-handed tool of
natural to think of them being used for fairly
administrative direction, which few
long-term loans, since otherwise the return
economists would wish to use unless there
to the lender (and therefore the cost to the
seemed no feasible alternative, there are at
borrower) is unlikely to vary much from
least two possibilities. One involves bank
what the market would otherwise require.
regulation. Bank regulators could make it
But in the longer term, our foresight is very
clear that they wished the banks subject
imperfect, so that an instrument whose
to their supervision to maintain a balanced
return varies with actual outcomes could ex
➣ Words into Ac tion
| 39
➣
Global Economy and International Finance
➣
post yield substantially more (or less) than
bonds could be denominated either in
the principals expected ex ante. Because
the domestic currency or in a foreign one.
the yield would vary depending upon the
However, there would be strong advantages
borrower’s ability to pay, the likelihood of
in domestic-currency denomination. This
default would be lower than with a plain
would give the borrowers the advantages
vanilla loan. Only in bad states of the world
discussed above, of avoiding an increase in
would the borrower have to pay less, but
their debt burden just when circumstances
this could help persuade a debtor not to
are most difficult. Also, growth (both nominal
default if its payments were automatically
and real) is in the first instance measured
reduced at times when it confronted
in terms of the domestic currency. It would
difficulties. Lenders would expect those
therefore be relatively simple and completely
low returns to be compensated by the high
unambiguous to calculate the debt service
payments that would accrue to them in
implied by the contract.
good states of the world. And by holding a diversified portfolio of these assets issued
The third dimension of designing a growth-
by a number of countries, lenders would
linked bond is the most interesting, because
be able to reduce the expected variability
it raises completely novel issues. Even if
in their returns over time. If many countries
we have agreed that we are talking about
issued such bonds, one would expect
(say) a 30-year instrument with a domestic-
lenders to be able to diversify away most
currency denomination, we may think of
of their risk.
an instrument that promises to pay a given proportion of GDP each year, perhaps with
Growth-linked bonds could also differ as
a higher proportion in order to amortise the
to the currency in which the bonds are
instrument in the final year (or a number
denominated and growth is measured.
of concluding years), as proposed by
Like plain-vanilla bonds, growth-linked
Robert Shiller. Or, we might design an instrument that promises to pay (in addition to amortisation) a base rate if growth is (say) equal to the average over the past 10 years, plus or minus 1 percentage point (say) for every percentage point that the real growth rate exceeds or falls short of that past average growth rate, as proposed by Eduardo Borensztein. For example, a country that has grown at an average rate of 3% in the past and has been accustomed to borrowing at 7%, might offer an instrument that paid 7%, plus or minus the difference between measured growth and 3% (so that in a year when its growth was 5% it would pay 9% and in a year when real GDP stagnated it would pay only 4%). If it found no lenders on those terms, the
Like plain-vanilla bonds, growth-linked bonds could be denominated either in the domestic currency or in a foreign one.
40 |
Words into Ac tion
country would have to raise the base offer to something more than 7%, but one would
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Global Economy and International Finance
the debtor is obliged to pay depends upon
“A regional capital market would neither preclude nor guarantee the issue of long-term or growth-linked instruments.”
performance. Clearly, though, they are not equities either, because they do not give a right to residual ownership if management fails. My guess is that if they take off they will soon be recognised as a new asset class. Investors who believe they have a knack for forecasting how fast different countries will
➣
expect this premium to be small where
grow will find these assets attractive. In the
lenders have an opportunity of diversifying
long run, borrowers may not have to pay a
their risks away.
premium to borrow in this way, although it would be sensible for them to be prepared
What are the main differences between
to pay somewhat more in order to reduce
these two instruments? Most obviously, the
their risk profile.
Shiller bonds are inflation-indexed whereas Borensztein ones are not. (A doubling of inflation doubles the nominal yield of the former, and leaves its real amortisation unchanged, but leaves the nominal yield and amortisation of the latter unchanged.) This is surely an advantage of the Shiller specification. However, the Borensztein version is far more sensitive to changes in the growth rate. Consider Thailand during the 1997 crisis. Suppose that its Borensztein bonds had carried a coupon of 7% when the growth rate was 5.5%, as it was in 1996 before the crisis. This would have made debt service only some 2% in 1997 (when growth was slightly negative) and zero in 1998 (when growth was strongly negative), whereas a Shiller bond’s yield would have fallen trivially in 1997 and by only 8% in 1998. This greater sensitivity to changes in the growth rate seems to me an advantage for the Borensztein variant. In any event, although both are “growth-linked”, these bonds are very different securities. It is interesting to speculate about some of the other consequences of introducing growth-linked “bonds”. For a start, it is not clear that they are “bonds” at all. A contract says what a bond will yield, whereas these instruments are equity-like in that how much
42 |
Words into Ac tion
Sceptics always ask whether countries
points by lying about how little their country
would not cheat and announce lower growth
had grown. Furthermore, investors do not
figures in order to reduce their debt-service
fret about countries under-estimating their
payments. Since the increase in debt
inflation numbers in order to save interest
service-payments is unlikely to be more
on inflation-linked bonds. Above all, this is
than a small part of an increase in growth,
surely an issue where financial markets could
there need be no fear that countries would
be relied on to discipline any rogue countries
seek to reduce their growth in order to
that might consider manipulating their
reduce their interest bill. The more realistic
published growth rates in order to reduce
danger is that countries might lie about their
their interest bill. A country that acquired a
growth rate. But finance ministers usually
reputation for doctoring its growth rate so as
take pride in announcing higher, not lower,
to reduce its interest payments would before
growth, and it seems rather unlikely that they
long be forced to sell growth-linked bonds at
would anticipate gaining political brownie
a higher premium. â&#x17E;Ł
Since the East Asian crisis of the 90â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s virtually every country in the region has built up its reserves to a level where a new crisis is, at least for now, inconceivable.
Words into Ac tion
| 43
Global Economy and International Finance
â&#x17E;Ł An Asian capital market?
A regional capital market would neither
One of the financial initiatives currently
preclude nor guarantee the issue of long-
under way in East Asia involves an attempt
term or growth-linked instruments. One
to build a regional capital market. In
would not expect central banks to want to
addition to attracting private investors, it is
place their reserves in such instruments,
envisaged that countries will invest a part
but a number of countries are now realising
of their reserves in liabilities issued by other
that their asset accumulation has already
regional countries. Of course, this will only
exceeded prudent estimates of the need
reduce the volume of dollar assets that the
for reserves and that the balance should
countries of the region collectively have
be invested to make money. These assets
to buy to the extent that some countries
might well take longer-term and growth-
(presumably those that issue the liabilities)
linked forms. A regional capital market would
adjust their current-account positions, but
enable Asia to start issuing such instruments
they would be in a position to do this as a
internationally even if traditional creditors in
result of the larger capital inflows.
the developed countries resist this move. My guess is that some of the less hidebound
There is a danger that any such regional
moneymen from the developed countries
capital market would operate in excessively
would soon be attracted to what had initially
traditional instruments. If creditors were
been planned as an Asian regional market.
only willing to buy short-term, dollar-
Prudent governments unable to borrow long-term at fixed rates should not rely exclusively on domestic-currency debt.
44 |
Words into Ac tion
denominated, plain vanilla bonds, it
The whole world, North and South, old
is difficult to see that much would be
industrial countries and emerging markets,
accomplished by having the intermediation
share an interest in reviving large capital flows
occur in Singapore rather than Wall Street.
to developing countries. While it is important
But it does not have to be that way. The
to prevent these flows getting out of hand
most likely modification of conventional
and generating a new crisis, the current
arrangements would involve the issue of
problem is to re-establish the direction of
bonds denominated in local currencies,
flows that prevailed prior to the 1997 crisis.
or a basket of local currencies, rather
This will only happen if emerging markets
than the dollar. The Asian Development
are convinced that a revival of capital inflows
Bank has been advocating the creation
does not threaten them with a new crisis.
of a local-currency basket that could be
Several conditions would help nurture such
used to denominate loans. Such a basket
a conviction, but one of the most important
would go part of the way towards satisfying
is to develop new instruments that carry less
the objectives that it was argued above
risk of provoking crisis. This implies longer-
would be furthered by local currency
dated debt, avoiding denominating loans
denomination: the basket would depreciate
in the currencies of creditor countries, and
in the event of a renewed regional crisis,
developing a market for growth-linked bonds.
but the depreciation would be modest if a
An Asian regional capital market would not in
crisis were confined to just one country. It
itself guarantee that instruments would take
is therefore to be hoped that any regional
this form, but it would give Asia the power
capital market would be open to the issue
to decide for itself whether to issue such
of instruments denominated in the national
instruments rather than also having to rely
currencies as well as a regional basket.
on the goodwill of Wall Street. â&#x2013;
Financial bridges The IMF/World Bank meetings present a rare opportunity for financial institutions to engage with key global financial decision makers in a concentrated environment. “They provide an excellent opportunity for us to meet senior representatives of our public and private sector clients and to review new business opportunities across the Arab Bank Group”, says Phillip Monks, CEO of Europe Arab Bank plc, the recently launched wholly owned subsidiary of the Arab Bank Group - established to handle the Bank’s operations in the countries of the European Union. “This year’s event will provide Singapore and its ASEAN neighbours with a unique opportunity to showcase their economic resurgence and growth as major financial forces in the international marketplace and will act as a spur to regional and global trade.” Arab Bank, a 76-year-old Jordan-based operation, quoted on the Jordanian stock exchange has a regionally unparalled worldwide network and has developed strong and long-standing relationships with global financial institutions. Its shareholders, as well as the founding Shoman family, include the governments of Saudi Arabia and Jordan, while the Prime Minister of Lebanon is a former board member. The bank is the local equivalent of a Barclays or RBS in the Middle East and North Africa. Arab Bank plays a major role in financing strategic projects in the MENA region, in areas such as power generation, desalination, petro-chemicals, aluminium, telecommunications and other infrastructure projects. A significant increase in shareholders equity through a new public offering, the first since 1964, as well as the capitalisation of the 2005 income is underpinning Arab Bank’s aim to enhance its strategic positioning and to augment its earning power. Arab Bank is extending its geographical coverage, widening its distribution channels and diversifying the Bank’s services and financial products, especially in the areas of private banking, treasury and project financing. A major milestone in achieving this objective was the creation of Europe Arab Bank plc (EAB).
“Arab Bank has an enviable brand reputation in the Middle East and it is this that it wants to leverage with its new venture.” says the CEO, Phillip Monks, “This new operation provides a commercial financial bridge between the Middle East and Europe. I talked to clients and they recognise the capability Arab Bank has in the Middle East. They are looking for a capable world-class European subsidiary of a local bank to help them in Arab Bank’s home markets. When you look at all the wealth that’s being generated Europe provides a good investment home for Arab investors.” says Monks “At the same time” he continues, “EAB can help people who haven’t been involved in the Middle East and North Africa by using its expertise to show them the opportunities in the region. We want our bank to be a European gateway to the Arab and North African worlds.” EAB plc, which was given a licence in May by the Financial Services Authority in London to begin operations, has its main offices in Arab Bank’s premises in Moorgate, in the heart of the City, just a short walk from the Bank of England. The new concern is being gifted €500m by its parent, with the firm instruction to go out and make itself the bank of choice for private and corporate clients operating across the European – MENA axis. The EU currently conducts some $250bn of trade with the Middle East every year.
Monks joined Arab Bank in December last year after a career with Barclays in a wide variety of posts, including running corporate banking operations in the UK regions, private banking in Switzerland, and being in charge of Gerrard Investment Management, Barclays private wealth management operation, which looks after more than £12bn for its clients. It is, Phillip Monks says, “an opportunity few bankers ever get - the chance to lead the start-up of a fully fledged multi-national full-service banking operation.” Arab Bank’s chairman, Abdel Hamid Shoman, grandson of the bank’s founder and “an absolutely fascinating character,“ Mr Monks says, “asked me, more or less, ’How do you fancy running your own bank?’“ It is Shoman’s vision, Monks says, which is the primary driver behind the launch of Europe Arab Bank, to distinguish Arab Bank as more than just a regional player. “I quizzed him hard on what he meant,“ Mr Monks says, and he came away enthused with Shoman’s plans to transform Arab Bank’s European business into a world-class operation. Europe Arab Bank “also provides the vehicle for the Arab Bank Group to assess further corporate activity“. There is the opportunity too, at some unspecified time in the future, to raise more capital through the markets.
Phillip Monks Chief Executive Officer, Europe Arab Bank plc
Much of Arab Bank’s subsidiary undertakings such as back office operations in Frankfurt, Paris, Rome, Vienna and Madrid, are now being folded into London under the Europe Arab Bank brand. There will be some new hiring’s – “you need to look at getting the best people you can possibly afford,“ Mr Monks says. “This is fundamentally a growth strategy. You have to seek out the best people for the job. The final result will be a European bank aligned to a fantastic franchise in the MENA region and people who have real local knowledge and deep industry expertise in most sectors relevant to trade between Europe and MENA. The new bank’s logo, which is now on all the windows of the Moorgate Street offices, is a minimalist rendering of the three linked ’medallions’ used by Arab Bank, designed for a more modern feel in line with the aspirations for the bank. As well as this modern image,
“we are deliberately trying to create a multi-cultural and multi-racial environment,“ Mr Monks says. Although Europe Arab Bank is 100 percent owned by its parent, “we are legally independent and regulated“ Monks says. At the same time, the chairman of the Europe Arab Bank board is Abdel Hamid Shoman, chairman of Arab Bank itself. He is ambitious for the bank and “I can tell you that Chairmen in an Arab bank are no less demanding than they are across the world,“ he says with a smile. There is, he says, “a sense of patience and impatience in equal measure,“ a desire to deliver results as soon as possible off the platform being built at Europe Arab Bank, while at the same time creating something that will last: “
The support from Arab Bank’s big shareholders for the new venture is “hugely exciting“, he says, and he has “buy-in“ from the staff who are being transferred into Europe Arab Bank for what he wants to achieve. At the same time there is a growing queue of people who have heard about what is happening and would like to be part of it. “The organisational change just gives you the foundation to build the bank you want to build.“ Future steps include achieving an “A+“ rating from the financial rating institutions. There is no doubting Mr Monks’ zest for the task ahead. “Entrepreneurialism and banking aren’t two words normally seen hand in hand,“ he says. “But anyone who comes in here now can be handed the opportunity to be involved in shaping the biggest banking start-up in Europe.“
Monks is full of enthusiasm for the Middle East and its opportunities: “It’s a fascinating, invigorating place to work.“ Arab Bank Group is in the vanguard of the banking industry, both regionally and internationally. The Group has an enviable worldwide presence, including branches in Singapore, China and a wholly owned subsidiary business in Australia. The creation of its new European Operation further strengthens the group’s ability to meet the challenges of the future in servicing the financial needs of people who are involved in trading in Middle East and North Africa, wherever they are domicile.
Europe Arab Bank Moorgate office
Global Economy and International Finance
Submerging markets? Emerging markets have thrived in the years of easy money and economic boom. But as interest rates rise, they are increasingly vulnerable to a downturn in global growth.
E
merging markets have been awash
than at any time since the breakdown
with liquidity for several years.
of the Bretton Woods System some 35
In 2005, net capital inflows to
years ago, according to the IMF’s spring
developing countries hit a record-high, of
forecast. As a result, corporate profits are
nearly $500bn, for the second year running.
overflowing – and with emerging economies
These funds came from private investors
notching up growth of over 5% for the
– net official financing was negative, that is,
fourth year running, they are an obvious
developing countries repaid more than they
place to reinvest these funds. High oil and
borrowed from rich-country governments
commodity prices have also heightened the
and the international financial institutions
allure of countries that export energy and
last year – and were spread broadly across
raw materials.
different forms of debt and equity in a large BARRY EICHENGREEN is George C. Pardee and Helen N. Pardee Professor of Economics and Political Science at the University of California, Berkeley. He is also a Research Associate of the National Bureau of Economic
number of recipient countries. Not since
But this happy era is now coming to a
the first decade of the 20th century has so
close. Already, the US Federal Reserve
much foreign capital flowed to so many
has sharply raised interest rates, while the
emerging markets. Unfortunately, though,
European Central Bank (ECB) and Bank of
the favourable financial conditions and
Japan have also started to tighten, albeit
robust global growth that have given rise to
more slowly. Suddenly, global liquidity is no
this happy era appear to be turning sour.
longer so abundant. As a result, investors’ appetite for risk has declined since the
Research and a Research Fellow of the Centre for Economic Policy Research. In 1997-98
spring meetings of the IMF and World Bank
– interest rates have been exceptionally
in April. What’s more, monetary tightening,
he was Senior Policy Adviser at
low. Portfolio managers expected to match
high energy prices and capacity constraints
the International Monetary Fund.
historical returns have, in effect, been
are casting a shadow over prospects
He has published widely on the
forced to invest in emerging markets – the
for US growth. And while China may be
history and current operation of the
only markets still offering sufficiently high
maintaining its extraordinary double-
international monetary and financial
yields – and have funded their positions
digit growth rates for now, the faster its
system, most recently Global
by borrowing at low interest rates in the
economy grows the more investors fret
advanced markets. Meanwhile, the world
about the possibility of a hard landing.
economy is set to grow faster this year
Emerging markets could thus soon face a
Imbalances and the Lessons of Bretton Woods (MIT Press, 2006).
48 |
Until recently, global – and in particular, US
Words into Ac tion
lethal combination of higher interest rates and slower global growth. Worse, the collapse of the WTO’s Doha Round makes it unlikely that world trade will continue to grow faster than incomes. The pattern of global imbalances – a disturbingly large US current-account deficit matched by large Asian surpluses – creates further uncertainty, not to mention the volatile geopolitical situation.
Blessed are the prudent Although the future is, of course, unpredictable, the risks to emerging markets are certainly different than in previous periods of volatility. For one thing, the financial effects will be more selective. Prudent emerging economies, such as Mexico and Venezuela, that have already funded their borrowing requirements for 2006 and beyond are in a much stronger position than profligate ones, such as Hungary, Turkey and South Africa, which have big current-account deficits and correspondingly large financing needs. Prudent governments have taken advantage of cheap and plentiful external finance to strengthen their financial positions. They have stockpiled reserves and pre-funded their borrowing needs; some have even
Countries such as Brazil have traditionally experienced instability when the demand for their foreign debt has declined.
capitalised on investors’ appetite for their domestic debt securities to eliminate their
But if international investors’ tolerance for
foreign-currency debts. Since these prudent
risk continues to fall, profligate economies
economies do not have to borrow to roll
could find that the inflows financing their
over maturing debts or finance current-
current-account deficits – which are now
account deficits, they are less susceptible to
approaching 7-8% of GDP in some cases
a shortfall of foreign funds. Having stockpiled
– dry up abruptly. Although they may buy
reserves, they have more scope to prevent
some time by spending their currency
their currency collapsing if foreign investors
reserves, they will eventually have to
draw in their horns. And even if their
dramatically improve their trade balance.
exchange rates do weaken, their banking
In the short term, that requires an import
systems will not collapse because their
squeeze, through a rise in interest rates
currency mismatches are better managed.
that curbs consumption and investment
➣ Words into Ac tion
| 49
Global Economy and International Finance
If Asian central banks grow reluctant to accumulate more US bonds, the dollar could fall sharply, pushing up import prices and forcing the Fed to raise interest rates further.
➣
– resulting, more likely than not, in a
Diversify your borrowing
recession. In turn, this implies a rise in
That the risks have changed heightens
nonperforming loans and problems for
the danger of fighting the last war.
banking systems. Eventually, the currency
Countries such as Brazil have traditionally
depreciation that occurs as foreign investors
experienced instability when the demand
reduce their purchases of domestic
for their foreign debt has declined. When
securities will boost exports, but that takes
their currency has weakened, they have
time – and the interim could be painful.
been smashed by the increased cost of servicing their dollar-denominated debt. To
The past few months suggest that investors
avoid this, they have taken advantage of
can distinguish between countries’ differing
the good times to exchange virtually all of
circumstances. As investors’ appetite for
their dollar debt for securities denominated
risk has declined, countries with large
in local currency, floating these on domestic
current-account deficits have suffered
markets and selling them to both local and
most. Surplus countries such as Mexico
foreign investors.
and Brazil, which were susceptible to such
50 |
Words into Ac tion
changes in sentiment in previous periods,
But much of this debt is short-term or at
have remained largely immune. The risk of
floating rates. Although long-term issuance
financial instability is by no means gone, but
is growing, investors remain wary of tying
it appears to be much greater for profligate
up their funds at fixed rates for long periods.
emerging economies than for prudent ones.
So, if global interest rates spike up – which
➣
Global Economy and International Finance
➣
could happen if foreigners grow more reluctant to finance the US current-account deficit – so too will the cost of servicing this debt. Dollar-denominated debt may be out of fashion, but prudent governments unable to borrow long-term at fixed rates should not rely exclusively on domestic-currency debt. Rather governments with big debts should spread their risks by issuing a diversified portfolio of securities denominated in both foreign and domestic currency. Does this mean that countries in external surplus with light debt loads can relax? Hardly. For them, the main risk is that a global slowdown will depress export growth. By some measures, the US and China have together accounted for some two-thirds of global growth in recent years. But if growth in the US and China slows, so will developingcountry exports of goods and primary commodities to their respective markets.
“Governments with big debts should spread their risks by issuing a diversified portfolio of securities denominated in both foreign and domestic currency.” and Peru, and exporters of capital goods, such as South Korea, will be hit hardest. However admirable some developing countries’ budget and current-account
A happy ending?
surpluses may be, their restrictive policies
The happy scenario is one in which slowing
make them dependent on exports as a
growth in the US and China is offset by
source of demand. If the US slows, Mexico
accelerating growth in Europe and Japan.
and East Asia, in particular, will suffer. Nearly
Global imbalances decline gradually
80% of Mexico’s exports go to the US, while
towards more sustainable levels, with the
Asian countries – especially small, highly
US consuming less while Europe and Japan
open economies such as Singapore and
consume more. The world economy keeps
Taiwan – also rely heavily on the US market.
motoring along, and emerging markets
Asian countries that specialise in producing
escape collateral damage.
consumption goods – consumer electronics,
52 |
Words into Ac tion
for example – will be hit hard by softening
Unfortunately, there are several less rosy
US demand. If China slows, exporters of
alternative scenarios. First, there could
raw materials and energy, such as Indonesia
be a hard landing in the US. US growth is
Consumer spending has increased dramatically in China, but efforts to prevent the economy overheating could depress its growth too much.
heavily dependent on consumer spending
markets are not sophisticated enough to
– and if the housing market softens further,
permit this. Also, China’s reluctance to see
consumer confidence will suffer. It also
its currency fluctuate more freely against the
depends on foreign investors, notably Asian
dollar heavily constrains its ability to alter its
central banks – and if they grow reluctant
interest rates independently. So the Chinese
to accumulate more US bonds, the dollar
authorities must rely on blunt instruments,
could fall sharply, pushing up import prices
such as raising reserve requirements and
and forcing the Fed to raise interest rates
instructing the banks to lend less, to slow
further. Rather than a gradual deceleration,
the breakneck speed of investment. Since
the US could experience an abrupt slump.
their efforts have been ineffective so far, they may be tempted to resort to more extreme
Second, efforts to prevent the Chinese
measures – but if they overdo it, investment
economy overheating could depress its
could collapse, and with it Chinese growth.
growth too much. Whereas in advanced financial systems, the central bank can fine-
Third, Europe and Japan could fail to pick
tune credit conditions and demand growth
up the slack. The prospect of structural
by tweaking lending rates, China’s financial
reforms inevitably increases the uncertainty
➣ Words into Ac tion
| 53
Global Economy and International Finance
“The happy scenario is one in which slowing growth in the US and China is offset by accelerating growth in Europe and Japan.”
which limits potential growth. At best, Europe and Japan will be lucky to grow by 2% a year. If one of these three events occurs – a hard landing in the US or China, or continued slow growth in Europe and Japan – the result will be a global slowdown. If two or more happen, this would almost guarantee a global recession, with exportdependent emerging markets suffering disproportionately. If the problem originates in the advanced economies and China, the solution must be found there too. The US could address the roots of its twin deficits by letting President Bush’s tax cuts expire. With less fiscal stimulus, there would be less need for monetary tightening to counter inflation, and less downward pressure on the housing market. If the dollar falls sharply before these adjustments are undertaken, the Fed could avoid overreacting. Weaker domestic demand would at least partially offset the inflationary effects of higher import prices. The Fed should avoid battering the economy with higher interest rates when activity is already on the way down.
China’s reluctance to see its currency fluctuate more freely against the dollar heavily constrains its ability to alter its interest rates independently.
➣ faced by European consumers, while the
Europe and Japan should also avoid excessive monetary tightening. With luck,
size of government debts and deficits limits
the Bank of Japan understands that it will
the scope for fiscal stimulus. And with euro-
take some years to raise interest rates
zone inflation above its target range, the
to world levels. If Europe finally begins to
ECB is reluctant to apply monetary stimulus.
make progress on fiscal consolidation, there
Germany has been able to grow by
would be more scope for the ECB to relax.
exporting, but if the world economy slows
And if the dollar does fall sharply, European
this last source of demand will disappear
exporters would face stiffer competition,
too. Japan, for its part, will be battling the
and therefore need a more accommodating
headwinds of rising interest rates, as its
monetary policy that prevents the euro from
central bank seeks to move from a zero-
rising excessively.
interest-rate policy to levels comparable to
54 |
Words into Ac tion
those of the Fed and the ECB. What’s more,
China, for its part, would be able to manage
both economies have ageing populations,
its economy more effectively if could adjust
➣
Global Economy and International Finance
China needs to develop its financial system to make it easier to fund higher consumer spending and increased public expenditure on healthcare, education and rural infrastructure.
➣ interest rates more freely – which, in turn,
by letting their currencies rise, while
requires a more flexible exchange rate.
supporting domestic demand by raising
As its exposure to international capital
public spending, but they are unlikely to
markets increases, China cannot enjoy
do either unless China does so first. Latin
monetary autonomy if it insists on keeping
America has little scope for using fiscal
its exchange rate against the dollar stable.
policy, given its high public debts and
It also needs to develop its financial
chequered fiscal history.
system to make it easier to fund the higher consumer spending and increased public
Since the turn of the century, most emerging
expenditure on healthcare, education and
markets have embraced the conventional
rural infrastructure that would reduce the
wisdom that says: avoid budget deficits,
economy’s excessive dependence on
run current-account surpluses and keep
export demand.
your currency competitively valued in order to promote export growth. This strategy of
56 |
Words into Ac tion
But what about emerging markets other
tying their fortunes to world markets has
than China? For the most part, they
served them well in the years of easy money
must just sit tight and hope that they are
and global boom. But if the world economy
lucky. Asian countries could reduce their
now turns sour, the future could be much
dependence on uncertain world markets
less rosy. ■
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N
Focus on Asia
India’s soft spot: Can it let China do the hard stuff? India’s prowess in IT services is remarkable, but it also needs Chinese-style labour-intensive manufacturing to develop.
T
The danger is that it makes it seem
few years as a global economic
less urgent for India to tackle the many
force to be reckoned with seems
constraints that have limited investment
neatly complementary to China’s rise a
in manufacturing industry. Unless those
decade or more earlier. While China has
constraints are removed, India will find it
come to dominate markets in low-cost
almost impossible to create the employment
manufactured goods, India is pre-eminent
opportunities it will need as its population
in the fast-growing new business of
continues to outgrow most of the rest of
“outsourced” services – most famously,
the world, and, especially, China itself. Just
software development and call-centres.
as China is emerging as a competitor in
This has given rise to an appealing notion:
India’s chosen niche of services, so India
that India can achieve prosperity without
needs to fight for market-share in products
experiencing the boom in manufacturing
such as consumer electronics, textiles and
that has been the route out of poverty for
garments. That is a daunting challenge.
SIMON LONG is the South Asia
every other successful emerging economy.
But to give it up as impossible, which
correspondent for The Economist,
China and India can carve up the “hard”
many Indian manufacturers argue is the
and “soft” parts of the global economy
only option, is to forget that most of the
between them, and India’s road to middle-
obstacles in the way of Indian manufacturing
Economist, he worked for the
income status can somehow bypass the
have been put there by government, and so
BBC World Service as a journalist
sweatshops and smokestacks that have
can be removed.
and has been based in Delhi since 2002. Before joining The
in London, Beijing and Hong
disfigured China’s eastern seaboard. Sadly,
Kong, and as an investment
the idea that services alone can propel
IT is not enough
India’s growth is flawed; to the extent that
The justified pride that India takes in its
it begins to influence not just public debate
information-technology (IT) prowess, and the
but policymaking (which, mercifully, it has
“outsourcing” boom it has helped spawn,
not yet), it is also dangerous.
cannot disguise its irrelevance to the vast
banker. He studied in Cambridge, Boston, Beijing and Nanjing.
60 |
he emergence of India in the past
Words into Ac tion
mass of Indians. In 2005, IT and “BPO”
This may be true in terms of export
(“business-process outsourcing”) generated
revenues. But the industry will still not
$36bn in revenues, or nearly 5% of GDP. But
provide large numbers of jobs – the
the entire industry employed only around
NASSCOM projections suggest that by
1.3m people – a mere 0.25% of India’s
2010, the industry will still employ fewer than
workforce. On the justifiably bullish projections
3m people. In this context it is hard to take
of the Indian industry’s lobbying group,
seriously the notion that India can somehow
NASSCOM, and its consultants, McKinsey,
skip a development phase and jump straight
IT/BPO will contribute 7% of GDP by 2010,
to a post-industrial, IT-services-led economy.
➣
and 17% of the growth in India’s economy between 2004 and 2010. As McKinsey’s Noshir Kaka interprets these forecasts: “This industry can do for India what automotives did for Japan, and oil for Saudi Arabia” – or, by extension, what labour-intensive
“Unless the many constraints that have limited investment in manufacturing industry are removed, India will find it almost impossible to create the employment opportunities it will need.”
manufacturing for export did for China.
As agriculture’s share in the Indian economy has slowly shrunk, it is not industry that has grown, but services.
Words into Ac tion
| 61
Focus on Asia
➣ That it has any currency at all stems from
employing more than ten people) has
what seems an odd phenomenon: as
actually shrunk marginally since India
agriculture’s share in the Indian economy
launched its reforms in the early 1990s.
has slowly shrunk, it is not industry that
The total is still barely more than 6m. A
has grown, but services.
further 42m or so work in the “unorganised” sector. But this is still a tiny number
According to estimates by the Reserve
compared with the 160m or so Chinese
Bank of India, the central bank, agriculture’s
manufacturing workers.
share of Indian GDP shrank from 22.2% in the financial year ending in March
Even if one assumes that, for every person
2004 to 19.7% two years later. Industry’s
directly employed in IT/BPO, three or
contribution remained unchanged, at
four find work to support their needs, in
19.5%, while services’ increased from
transport, retail, domestic services and so
58.3% to 60.9%. In China, by contrast,
on, that is still not enough to provide jobs
“primary industry”, i.e. agriculture, made
for all that need them. India’s workforce is
up 13.1% of GDP in 2004, industry 40.8%,
set to grow by around 71m in the next five
and construction and services 46.1%.
years – around a quarter of the world’s new workers. This “demographic dividend” is
Research by Jim Gordon and Poonam
one of the main reasons why many people
Gupta of the IMF shows that, although
are so optimistic about India’s prospects
services make up a somewhat bigger share
– demography will, as in China, help raise
of its economy than is usual for a country
the level of private savings, from about 29%
at its stage of development, India is far from
now, to 34% over the next five to seven
being a total oddity in this respect. Rather,
years. This will provide the economy with
it is China that is peculiar in having such a
a source for the investment it so badly
stunted services sector. This may be a relic
needs. So, almost by default, it is argued,
of the old Stalinist model with its emphasis
economic growth will continue to match the
on heavy industrialisation and collectivisation
annual rate of close to 8% it has achieved
in the countryside. Or it may simply be
over the past three years, much higher than
faulty data in the reformed economy: the
the 6% it has averaged since the beginning
underreporting of China’s informal sector.
of the 1990s.
Jobs for the boys and girls
But, as Shankar Acharya, a former
The high share of services in India’s
government economist, has pointed out,
economy does not mean it is becoming
nearly 60% of these extra workers will
a nation of software engineers and call-
be seeking jobs, initially at least, in “four
centre workers. India is still primarily a
populous, slow-growing northern states,
nation of farmers – agriculture accounts
with weak infrastructure, education systems
for around 57% of total employment. It is
and governance.” One likely consequence is
slowly turning into a nation of shopkeepers
an increase in internal migration; another, in
(there are an estimated 15m retail outlets),
the absence of more job-creating industries,
security guards and other low-end service
is social tension.
providers – but not of factory workers. The It is China that is peculiar in having such a stunted services sector.
62 |
Words into Ac tion
number of workers employed in “organised”
In China, too, of course, the absorption
manufacturing (i.e., in theory, in enterprises
of excess agricultural labour has created
friction – notably in the form of widespread if scattered protests over the forced acquisition of agricultural land for industrial
“In both countries, many farms are too small and farmers too poor to invest in inputs.”
development. But tens of millions of farmers’ children have found work in factories. In China, reform started in the late 1970s with the explosive burst of energy that came with
many are on the move. In China the number
the dismantling of the old rural collectives
of migrant workers is estimated at anywhere
and communes. The “responsibility”
between 100m and 150m, despite a
system, in effect returning land to individual
restrictive registration system (“hukou”).
farmers, boosted rural incomes, spurred
India has comparatively few – about 11m
mechanisation and freed tens of millions
in 1999-2000, according to national surveys.
to work in new “township and village”
It has not embraced either mass labour
industries. India has no hope of such a one-
mobility or urbanisation on the scale seen
off miracle. But if it is to raise growth rates
in China.
to something approaching China’s, it has to move people from the land into factories.
The Chinese model The lack of mass migration in India also
At present, roughly 70% of Indians live
reflects poor levels of basic education and
in the countryside, compared with 60%
the lack of job opportunities. That is partly
of Chinese. Both countries face similar
explained by the barriers to investment,
agricultural problems. After big surges in
which the government is pledged to lift.
yields, productivity has stagnated, albeit
When India’s prime minister, Manmohan
at much higher levels in China than in India.
Singh, speaks of following “the Chinese
➣
In 2001, China produced 6,350 kilos of rice per hectare of paddy, and 3,823 kilos per hectare of wheat, compared with 2,964 kilos of rice and 2,742 of wheat in India. Both have distorting price and subsidy regimes that favour excessive grain production. In both countries, many farms are too small and farmers too poor to invest in inputs. Access to rural credit is poor. Land has been degraded, water is scarce – less than one-third of Indian farmland is irrigated, and less than half of China’s – and in many places groundwater has been extracted to unsustainable levels. There is mounting competition with cities and industry for land and resources. Already, many farmers are idle much of the year. From fertile, labour-surplus places such as Sichuan in China, and Bihar in India,
India is still primarily a nation of farmers – agriculture accounts for around 57% of total employment.
Words into Ac tion
| 63
Focus on Asia
The number of workers employed in “organised” manufacturing has actually shrunk marginally since India launched its reforms in the early 1990s.
➣
model”, that is what he means. China’s
India was prey to the global panic at the lifting,
single-minded success in becoming the
at the end of 2004, of the quotas governing
world’s workshop is well known. Mr Singh
imports to America and Europe under the
and his advisers point to areas like textiles
Agreement on Textiles and Clothing. There
and clothing and food-processing as the
were forecasts that China might snatch as
way forward.
much as half of the big quota-constrained markets, damaging the prospects not just
64 |
Words into Ac tion
According to the Ministry of Commerce,
of those countries’ own textile and garment
food processing in India adds just 7% to
workers, but those of workers in other
the value of agricultural output, compared
exporters, such as India. Yet this is a business
with more than 40% in China and 60% in
that relies on Indian strengths – cheap
Thailand. As Mr Singh puts it, this is one
labour, a domestic supply of both cotton and
area, promising large numbers of jobs,
manmade fibres and a long textiles tradition.
where “we have barely scratched the
Pessimists fear that Chinese competition
surface.” Much the same could be said
will eat into India’s existing market share.
of textiles and clothing, even though the
Optimists see the industry as an important
industry is one of India’s most important.
engine of job-creation.
➣
C
M
Y
CM
MY
CY CMY
K
Focus on Asia
➣
The evidence so far is with the optimists,
sensible diversification of procurement
if only just. Last year, exports of garments
risks. The Confederation of Indian Textile
to America rose by 26% and to Europe by
Industry (CITI), a lobby group, forecasts
about 20%. Globally, Indian exports reached
that the industry can by 2010 generate
about $7.5bn last financial year, out of total
$40bn in annual exports and provide 12m
textile exports of $17bn. Impressive though
additional jobs (from about 35m now, i.e.
that sounds, it is sobering to contrast
the vast majority of jobs in “unorganised”
it with China’s performance: $107bn of
manufacturing).
textiles exports last year, including $40bn of clothing, despite the imposition of
Non-industrial policy
“safeguard” quotas on some items.
Liberal economist that he is, Mr Singh says he does not believe in having an “industrial
For many global retailers, India has become
policy”. The difficulty he faces is that he has
the favoured second-choice textile supplier:
inherited an anti-industrial policy. That India
a useful defence against renewed sanctions
has flourished in the new service industries
imposed on Chinese exports, and a
is in large measure a consequence of those industries’ emergence at a time and
“Harder to fix is the tax system, which suffers from widespread evasion of direct taxes, and a proliferation of confusing indirect ones.”
in a way such that the government was less able to interfere and strangle them. Manufacturing industry has been less lucky. Unlike the IT industry, it cannot build almost all its own infrastructure, the shortcomings of which remain the biggest single obstacle it faces. There is also, however, a complex web of government policy that hinders the rise of labour-intensive manufacturing. Some impediments are already vanishing, as the relics of the “licence raj” are dismantled. Every year, for example, more products are released from the rules “reserving” their production for small businesses, and hence discouraging the economies of scale that international competitiveness often demands. Harder to fix is the tax system, which suffers from widespread evasion of direct taxes, and a proliferation of confusing indirect ones. A 2002 study by McKinsey for the Confederation of Indian Industry found that India’s cascading import duties, excises,
The Confederation of Indian Textile Industry (CITI), a lobby group, forecasts that the industry can generate $40bn in annual exports and provide 12m additional jobs by 2010.
66 |
Words into Ac tion
sales taxes and octroi (a tax on goods in transit) accounted for nearly half of a
roughly 30% price disadvantage suffered by manufacturers compared with their Chinese counterparts. Since then, in 2005, most of India’s states have introduced a harmonised value-added tax, and a transition to a national goods-and-services tax has been announced. But the lack of a single common market in India causes unnecessary delays and expense for industry. The Chinese experience is encouraging. Before 1994, its tax system suffered many of India’s current woes: cascading state and municipal sales taxes, state-border taxes, excise duties and levies. Since then, there has been a single VAT, levied at 17% on most manufactured goods in all provinces. It provides a steady one-third of government
India is pre-eminent in the fast-growing new business of “outsourced” services, such as software development.
tax revenues. Import tariffs have fallen from
state government. This deters employment
10% of government tax revenues in 1985 to
and encourages the substitution of capital
around 5% now, and direct corporation and
for labour. One campaigner for labour-
income taxes from around one-third to 15%.
law reform cites the example of a firm that bought machines rather than give
Properly implemented, India’s tax reforms
permanent employment to 16 tea-boys.
could have a similar impact. They will also speed up freight, as lorries no longer have
Labour-law reform, despite its obvious
to stop at state borders. VAT should also,
benefits, has always been politically difficult,
in theory, be less prone to evasion, and,
and is an especially big challenge for Mr
eventually increase government revenues.
Singh’s government, which relies on the
That should also help the government cut
parliamentary support of Communist
customs duties, which at present account
parties, which in turn are beholden to the
for about one-sixth of its tax revenues.
trade unions. In effect, this means that the
India’s average import-tariff rate, close to
interests of the unemployed and even of
20%, is nearly double China’s.
most workers in the “unorganised” sector are held hostage to the tiny minority of some
Another big obstacle to labour-intensive
30m, or around 7%, who are in “organised”
manufacturing in India is a restrictive labour-
employment.
law regime. In the garment industry, for example, exporters habitually cite this as
Indian bureaucracy also continues to
their biggest headache. The most notorious
slow things down. According to a World
bugbear is Chapter 5B of the 1947 Industrial
Bank “Investment Climate Assessment”,
Disputes Act, which, in establishments with
published in November 2004, after a
more than 100 workers, bans the laying-off
survey of private Indian firms, it took 89
of employees without the permission of the
days to secure the clearances needed to
➣ Words into Ac tion
| 67
Focus on Asia
If India is to raise growth rates to something approaching China’s, it has to move people from the land into factories.
➣
start a business in India, compared with
of Tibet. It was taken as a symbol of the
41 in China. Insolvency procedures take
healing of the wounds opened by the Sino-
10 years, compared with 2.4 in China.
Indian war of 1962, and of the potential
Although the number of tax and regulatory
for economic co-operation. As so often
inspections endured by Indian businesses
in Sino-Indian relations, the symbol was
was lower than in China, the percentage
more powerful than the substance. In this
of senior management time spent dealing
instance, it transpires that the re-opening is
with government was higher: 11.9% against
for very limited times and for “border trade”
7.8%.
only – i.e., not for transit trade. It will make some difference to the lives of those near
Chindia Inc?
the border, but hardly impinge on Sino-
In a curious little ceremony in late June, India
Indian trade as a whole.
and China, with much hoopla, reopened an
68 |
Words into Ac tion
historic border-trading post at Nathu-La,
This is growing fast. Two-way merchandise
on the border between the Indian state of
trade, at about $20bn in 2005, has
Sikkim and China’s “autonomous region”
increased ten-fold since 1999. Just a few 273 275 280
285 290
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Focus on Asia
“Chinese firms are trying to expand in India, though some are finding their way blocked by the concerns of the Indian security services.”
➣ years ago, many Indian businesses viewed
investing in China, either by building their
China as a competitive menace that was
own plants, or by acquiring Chinese outfits,
about to destroy them through the use
as has Bharat Forge, the world’s second-
of an undervalued exchange rate, free or
biggest maker of automotive forgings.
subsidised land, and unlimited access to
Similarly, Chinese firms are trying to expand
credit. Now, it is more often seen as a land
in India, though some are finding their way
of opportunity.
blocked by the concerns of the Indian security services.
Nevertheless, there remains a huge imbalance in the trading relationship. This is
However, the idea that somehow Indian
not so much in the direction of trade, which,
software skills can team up with Chinese
on India’s figures, shows a small Chinese
“hardware” to produce a world-beating
surplus, as in its relative importance. China
“Chindia” combination so far seems
is now India’s second-most important
fanciful. Indian software firms have no
trading partner, and its biggest source of
option but to expand fast in China,
imports, 7.3% of the total in 2005. India,
because their multinational clients demand
however, accounts for less than 1% of
it. But they know that, in the long run,
China’s overall trade. This is a symptom
China is a big potential competitor.
of the two countries’ relative weight in
Correspondingly, among some Chinese
the world economy. In each of the past
policymakers, India’s rise is being viewed
four years, China’s total foreign trade has
with a certain edginess. They have noticed
increased by an amount greater that the
that the emergence of China as a lower-
total of India’s foreign trade.
cost competitor was a proximate cause of South-East Asia’s financial crisis in 1997.
Agriculture’s share of Indian GDP shrank from 22.2% in the financial year ending in March 2004 to 19.7%.
70 |
Words into Ac tion
This imbalance is accompanied by
Looking around for the source of such a
continued Indian nervousness – in official
threat to China’s present dominance, India
circles, at least – about China’s long-term
seems the obvious candidate. It is not,
intentions. This is one reason for scepticism
because of the many difficulties, outlined
about some of the rosier claims for Sino-
above, faced by Indian manufacturing. But
Indian economic co-operation. There
it should be, and probably needs to be, as
clearly is scope, and an agreement to work
China grows richer and ages, and a young
together in some energy projects may
India grows up looking for work in the
bear fruit. Some Indian manufacturers are
global economy.
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Focus on Asia
Restructured and resilient Singapore’s economy has reinvented itself again – and now the good times look set to last.
F
ifty years ago, it was a scruffy,
deaths per 1,000 live births, can expect to
politically unstable and poverty-
live 78.1 years. And the fruits of economic
stricken city. Now, it is a thriving First
success are widely shared: over 90% of
World nation and a development model.
households, for instance, now own their
Singapore is a stunning success – all the
homes (see chart 2).
more so considering that it is blessed with few natural resources and has had
A country of only 4.5m people, a mere
to overcome huge political and economic
0.07% of the global population, Singapore
hurdles. In the past decade alone, the
accounts for 2% of world exports. Its
Asian financial crisis, the rise of China and
seaport is the second-busiest in the world,
the dotcom bust have severely tested the
while its airport ranks ninth in terms of cargo
city-state’s resilience. Yet Singapore has
handled. It is also an important oil-refining
reinvented itself and its economy is booming
centre as well as a major Asian financial hub,
again. What, then, is the secret of its
while the government continues to look for
success – and can it be sustained?
opportunities to direct the economy towards
MANU BHASKARAN is head of economic research for Asia
new high-growth industries. Few countries can match Singapore’s
Group. He is also an adjunct
has grown by an average of 7.9 % a year
Prudent, pragmatic and politically stable
senior fellow of the Institute of
since 1960. Its performance has remained
Singapore has thrived in large part because
Policy Studies in Singapore.
vigorous in recent years (see chart 1), with
its government has been better at getting
living standards (as measured by GDP
the basics right than its competitors and
per person adjusted for differences in
neighbours have. Its economy has therefore
purchasing power) rising by an average of
offered relatively high returns to both foreign
5% a year since the 1980s to $34,000 in
and domestic investors.
and a partner at the Centennial
record of economic growth: its real GDP
2005. Singapore is now richer than Japan
72 |
Words into Ac tion
($30,400) and almost as prosperous as the
These basics include sound economic
United States ($42,100). Its people are living
policies – such as fiscal prudence, monetary
longer and healthier lives – newborns, who
stability, an open economy, an investor-
face an infant mortality rate of only 2.29
friendly regulatory framework, a high savings
rate and a well-regulated financial sector – as well as clean government and socially inclusive policies which, by ensuring that the benefits of growth accrue to all sections of the population, have guaranteed political stability. What’s more, throughout its 47
CHART 1* Stable and healthy growth % y/y
Real GDP Growth
10.0
SG
World
Developing Countries
8.0 6.0
years of self-government, Singapore has been quick to adapt to changes in the global environment.
4.0 2.0 0.0
A glance at the economic fundamentals
1980-1990
shows how well-managed the economy
1990-1996
1997-1998
1999-2005
has been. Since the early 1980s, the government’s budget has generally remained in surplus (see chart 3). Except for a brief period in the 1970s, inflation has been kept low; it has remained below 3.5% since the early 1990s (see chart 4). The
CHART 2* High house ownership achieved %
exchange rate has been carefully managed, delivering a steady appreciation over time
House Ownership
100.0 80.0
(see chart 5). And the national savings rate has been exceptionally high (see chart 6).
60.0 40.0
Singapore’s leaders have not only pursued enlightened economic policies. They have
20.0 0.0
also been careful to build the political
1970
consensus needed to sustain this benign
1980
1990
2000
2005
policy regime by ensuring that the benefits of economic growth are widely shared. A major plank of this approach has been the home ownership scheme, which has been a huge success. Since virtually all households now own their homes, most of the population feel that they have a stake in the economy, thereby boosting social cohesion.
CHART 3** No deficits, mainly surpluses SGD mn 25000
Fiscal Balance
20000 15000
Singapore is renowned for its clean
10000
government and its lack of corruption
5000
more generally. Equally importantly, the
0
government has been careful not to
-5000
allow vested interests to influence policy,
1963 1968 1973 1978 1983 1988 1993 1998 2003
so that this serves to bolster economic development rather than line the pockets of a handful of influential businessmen. Trade unions have been co-opted into a
➣
*Source: Collated by Centennial Group using DOS, CEIC & WEO databases **Source: Collated by Centennial Group using IFS database
Words into Ac tion
| 73
Focus on Asia
â&#x17E;Ł
CHART 4* Inflation contained % y/y
to push through policies that support longterm development, while being permitted
Inflation
25.0
partnership with government and employers
to engage in a variety of activities, including running businesses, which have allowed
20.0
them to deliver real benefits to their
15.0
members.
10.0
A core element of the political part of getting
5.0
the basics right has been the principle
0.0 -5.0
of meritocracy. By and large, whether in 1961 1966 1971 1976 1981 1986 1991 1996 2001
education, government service or politics, the route to glory has been through merit and performance. In economic policy, the emphasis has been on delivering long-term
CHART 5** Controlled exchange rate Exchange Rate
benefits for all even at the cost, sometimes, of short-term losses for some people, rather SGD/USD
120.0
Nominal Exchange Rate
3.00
110.0
SGD/USD
than on populist quick-fixes.
2.50
While Singapore is rightly known as a highly
100.0
2.00
open economy that is friendly to investors
90.0
1.50
and multinational companies, it has not
80.0
1.00
subscribed to a policy of laisser-faire. It has
70.0
0.50
instead adopted its own pragmatic approach
60.0
0.00
to state intervention and regulation.
1975 1978 1981 19841987 1990 19931996 1999 2002 2005
State enterprises have played an important role in the countryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s development. While avoiding burdening domestic firms with controls and licensing requirements,
CHART 6** High saving rate % 60.0
policymakers have used governmentlinked companies (GLCs) and other forms Saving Rate
of state intervention to further economic development. GLCs have played a crucial
50.0
role in domestic banking, telecoms,
40.0
infrastructure services (the port, airport,
30.0
airline and shipping line), construction (public
20.0
housing) and the marine sector (shipbuilding
10.0
and repair). Even today, they generate
0.0
around 12% of GDP. 1980 1983 1986 1989 1992 1995 1998 2001 2004
*Source: Collated by Centennial Group using IFS database ** Source: Collated by Centennial Group using IFS and EIU databases
Strong regulation has also been key. For example, the banking sector was once tightly regulated, with high capital-adequacy requirements, stringent ownership rules and
74 |
Words into Ac tion
â&#x17E;Ł
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Focus on Asia
â&#x17E;Ł
intrusive supervision. Other sectors such as
their homes and more recently to use part
urban zoning, the media and utilities were
of them to purchase financial assets such as
also fairly closely regulated.
equities and unit trusts.
Meanwhile, the mandatory savings scheme,
Together, this underlying pragmatism and
the Central Provident Fund, was used to
sound policy regime have created an
channel a big share of household savings
incentive structure that stimulates economic
to favoured industries. People have since
growth. Businesses have an incentive to
been allowed to use their savings to buy
create wealth rather than lobby government for special favours. Workers have an incentive to be flexible and make short-term sacrifices in working conditions so as to win larger wage increases and better job security over time. Households have an incentive to save in order to buy their own homes. Students have an incentive to choose the right courses and work hard rather than rely on quotas or other political interventions to secure good jobs and incomes. Business has thrived in this favourable policy environment. At a time when most developing economies were hostile to multinational companies, Singapore welcomed their investment with open arms. Foreign firms brought with them superior technologies, management skills, distribution channels and access to export markets which a developing economy such as Singapore could not otherwise have tapped, enabling it to leapfrog into world-class manufacturing. Investment by multinational companies made the manufacturing sector a major driver of economic growth and it continues to lead the economy today. Singapore has also benefited greatly from being a competitive provider of a range of services to its regional hinterland. Because of its successful basic policies, its port, airport, trading hub and financial centre have been well placed to provide the rapidly growing
Few countries can match Singaporeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s record of economic growth: its real GDP has grown by an average of 7.9 % a year since 1960.
76 |
Words into Ac tion
South-east Asian region with transport, telecoms, trading and financial services,
â&#x17E;Ł
Focus on Asia
➣
many of which have been highly profitable
In the mid-1990s, China emerged as a
and generated high employment growth.
major competitor to Singapore’s hinterland, South-east Asia, forcing restructuring and
Housing and construction have also
policy changes, the need for which was not
contributed to economic growth through
immediately appreciated. Meanwhile, Japan’s
the government’s massive public-housing
economy was mired in deflation, with its
programme and its emphasis on building
financial institutions teetering on the brink of
world-class infrastructure. Tourism has
collapse. Japanese trade, investment, bank
been important too, generating benefits
lending and other activities in the region
for labour-intensive sectors such as hotels,
decelerated sharply. Singapore, which was a
restaurants and transport services.
major hub for such activities, suffered too.
Restructuring for the 21st century
In 1997, the devaluation of the Thai baht
By building on these sound foundations,
led to political upheaval and deep economic
Singapore had by the mid-1990s achieved
recession in many neighbouring countries.
an income per person of $21,000, close
And just as the region was recovering from
to that of a developed economy. Having
these shocks, it also had to deal with the
largely closed the gap with the First World,
aftermath of the bursting of the technology
the economy was poised to slow, since
bubble, which reduced demand for the
opportunities for catch-up growth were
region’s information-technology-related
rapidly diminishing. But unfortunately, the
exports, along with the post-9/11 upsurge
economy was also rocked by a series of
of terrorism in the region and the SARS
external shocks which dampened growth,
epidemic.
unleashed a regional financial crisis which
raised unemployment and caused deflation, testing its resilience to the limit.
Singapore’s policymakers reacted vigorously to these challenges, implementing radical policy changes that have helped to put the economy back on a dynamic growth track. Two key aspects of these responses highlight the core strengths that drive Singapore’s economy. For a start, Singapore’s policymakers were not caught completely off-guard by the succession of crises in the mid-to-late 1990s. In 1996 the government had already acted to deflate a property bubble, thus preventing Singapore’s real-estate sector from overheating as much as others in South-east Asia did and limiting the eventual damage from the bubble bursting. Singapore’s leaders were also already
Educational reforms were introduced to make up for deficiencies in human-capital development.
78 |
Words into Ac tion
contemplating the need for fundamental and
comprehensive policy reforms in response to the rise of competitors such as China. In late 1996, before the Asian financial crisis broke, Singapore’s prime minister and then senior minister began to articulate the case for fundamental and if necessary painful
“Singapore has also benefited greatly from being a competitive provider of a range of services to its regional hinterland.”
reforms. When the crisis hit, policymakers had already prepared the ground for muchneeded reforms.
The government holding company, Temasek Holdings, was shaken up, leading
From 1997 on, even as the Asian crisis
to the strengthening of GLCs through
was wreaking havoc around the region and
consolidation, the sale of non-core assets,
slowing Singapore’s economy, policymakers
improved capital management and foreign
began introducing sweeping – and
acquisitions.
sometimes taboo-breaking – reforms. Educational reforms were introduced to The government embraced deregulation
make up for deficiencies in human-capital
with gusto. In banking, capital-adequacy
development, with the aim of attracting
requirements were eased as were many
talent from the region in order to capture
other restrictions. The sector was thrown
a bigger slice of the world education
open to much more foreign competition,
market. Resources were poured into more
and the dominant government-owned bank,
and better universities, polytechnics and
DBS Bank, began to restructure in ways
vocational colleges. Foreign universities
that forced other banks to change as well,
were encouraged to establish full-fledged
by merging, for instance. Major changes
campuses in Singapore.
were also instituted in telecoms, energy and media, and a big effort was made to reduce
The government has also placed major
red tape that inhibited entrepreneurship.
bets on new growth sectors, such as pharmaceuticals, biotechnology and high-
Corporate and personal tax rates were
end electronics. Government investments
cut to a maximum of 20% each in order to
in infrastructure support, coupled with
attract businesses and boost Singapore’s
generous fiscal incentives, aim to stimulate
role as a “talent capital”. The taxation
growth in these strategically chosen
of dividends, interest and other income
industries and alleviate the strain on
was also reformed to encourage the
traditional sectors, such as manufacturing,
development of the financial sector. As a
which are facing increasing low-cost
result, Singapore now has one of the most
competition from developing economies in
competitive tax regimes in the world.
the region.
The restrictions on the internationalisation
The government has also eased restrictions
of the Singapore dollar were eased
on gambling with the aim of encouraging
considerably and the central bank’s
the development of casinos that attract
exchange-rate policy was made more
foreign tourists. Substantial investments are
transparent in order to reduce uncertainty
also being made to upgrade and enhance
and thus make policy more effective.
existing tourist attractions and centres, such
Since virtually all households now own their homes, most of the population feel that they have a stake in the economy, thereby boosting social cohesion.
➣ Words into Ac tion
| 79
Focus on Asia
CHART 7 Very high profit-GDP ratio %
CHART 6** Not delivering superior returns anymore?(1) %
Profits-GDP Ratio
52.0
6.0
50.0
Singapore Premium
4.0
48.0
2.0
46.0 44.0
0.0
42.0
-2.0
40.0 1995
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
-4.0
Source: Collated by Centennial Group using BEA Database and Yearbook of Statistics Singapore 2005-6 (1) Singapore premium is computed as the difference between the US return on capital employed in Singapore and the developing Asia average.
➣
as Sentosa Island and the Orchard Road
of President Yudhoyuno, Indonesia is
tourism belt.
overcoming the residual damage from the political and economic crises that had
Last but not least, a major effort is
plagued it since 1997 and is now poised to
underway to enhance the competitive
enjoy faster growth. Malaysia is also likely
position of Singapore’s port and airport
to enjoy renewed growth as the Abdullah
hub in response to growing challenges
government’s efforts to reform the economy
from regional competitors. The aim is to
and governance produce results. Within
enhance integration through the use of IT,
Singapore’s domestic economy, the long
and to develop a critical mass of logistics
decline in the housing and construction
professionals in order to ensure sustained
sectors is now over, laying the foundations
growth in the capacity and connectivity of
for renewed growth.
Singapore’s port and airport systems. As a result, the past three years have seen
Built to last?
strong growth which can, I believe, be
So far, so good. These ambitious reforms
sustained. The Centennial Group forecasts
have allowed Singapore to weather the
that Singapore can grow by nearly 6% a
storm and to take advantage of a recent
year between now and 2010 and by around
improvement in regional conditions. As
4% a year in the subsequent five years, no
Japan’s economy finally recovers, Japanese
mean feat in an advanced economy such
banks are stepping up their activities in
as Singapore.
the region and often using Singapore as a base to do so. As a major regional hub,
But while the prognosis is generally
Singapore stands to benefit from increased
positive, some weaknesses remain. While
flows of Japanese goods, foreign direct
Singapore’s foreign- and government-owned
investment, foreign portfolio flows, bank
companies are doing well, its domestic
lending and tourists in the region.
private sector remains weak. Studies show that privately owned local companies
80 |
The regional hinterland economies are
generally have lower rates of return on
also recovering. Under the leadership
capital than foreign-owned ones. The lack
➣
Words into Ac tion
1408
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1408-SYMconsultingAdv(HEAD).indd1 1
8/17/06 4:45:39 PM
Focus on Asia
Its competitive position is based on the economy’s ability to deliver superior relative returns, but as chart 8 illustrates, the return on capital employed of US-owned firms in Singapore is now lower than the average return of US companies in developing Asia.
A rosy future The future looks bright for Singapore. Prospects in several sectors look particularly promising. In manufacturing, high-end electronics such as wafer fabrication and semiconductor-related activities are likely to prosper. The offshore marine sector – rig-building and related activities – is also set to boom. With financial reforms making Singapore more competitive and A country of only 4.5m people, a mere 0.07% of the global population, Singapore accounts for 2% of world exports.
➣
with renewed growth in the region, a whole range of financial activities – such as capital-
of a strong corporate sector is a structural
market-related support services, wealth
weakness which makes Singapore overly
management, regional loan syndication and
dependent on multinational companies.
structured products catering to regional
It is also contributing to an unwelcome
demands – are likely to do well. The new
rise in income inequality, because the
integrated resorts being built are likely to
ratio of profits to GDP is unusually high in
boost tourist revenues. Last but not least, the
Singapore (see chart 7), with a considerable
new high-value-added service activities, such
fraction of this high profit share going to
as consulting and the creative industries,
foreign companies.
spawned by the deregulation of recent years are likely to continue to grow fast.
The government may also loom too large in Singapore’s economy. With a big share
But Singapore cannot afford to rest on its
of the domestic corporate sector, national
laurels. In the years ahead, fresh reforms
savings and land ownership concentrated
will be needed to tackle the issues that I
in government or quasi-government hands,
highlighted, such as over-centralisation and
economic decision-making may be over-
the erosion of the “Singapore premium”.
centralised. While in economies where
But as recent history shows, the policy elite
decision-making is diversified, mistakes
has the courage and determination to break
typically cancel out and risk is thereby
taboos and make painful but necessary
managed, in Singapore too much economic
reforms, and I am confident that they will
decision-making may be concentrated in
continue to serve Singapore well in future.
government hands, raising the risk that
So long as Singapore continues to get
correlated errors could unsettle the economy.
the basics right while pursuing its goals pragmatically and adapting to changing
82 |
Singapore’s capacity to deliver superior
circumstances, the economy should continue
returns may also be coming under pressure.
to deliver greater prosperity for all.
■
Words into Ac tion
unile
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unilever ad [final].indd 1
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17/8/06 17:33:12
Focus on Asia
In the shadow of the dragon Despite worries that China’s rise would eclipse south-east Asia’s success, the region’s businesses are learning to adapt profitably.
C
hina’s roaring economy
expansion: every country in the region grew
continues to strike fear among
by over 5% last year, with the exception
businesspeople in south-east Asia.
of Thailand, which notched up growth of
Many of the region’s “tiger” economies have
4.5%. What’s more, the Philippines’ trade
built their success on the manufacture of
with China has been in surplus over the past
basic consumer goods, such as clothes
three years, while Thailand’s exports to China
and electronics, which China can now
have risen by a third over the same period.
generally produce more quickly and cheaply. Even wealthy Singapore has felt
This is perhaps not so surprising. Even if
the pinch: having specialised in attracting
China were indeed more competitive than
foreign direct investment from companies
south-east Asia in all economic activities,
looking to expand in Asia, the city-state
the principle of comparative advantage
has seen multinationals shift their regional
dictates that it would specialise in those
headquarters to China. Indeed, for a time it
industries where its relative productivity was
seemed to the region’s anxious executives
greatest. But in fact, of course, China is not
as if China’s super-competitive companies
competitive across the board. The trick for
Shanghai Correspondent.
might sweep all before them. But while
south-east Asian companies has been to
He has previously been a
the challenge from China remains potent,
find the gaps – and then try to fill them.
GEOFF DYER is the FT’s
correspondent in Brazil, as well
the country’s growth is also opening up
as covering the healthcare and
new opportunities for south-east Asian
Fuel for China’s growth
pharmaceuticals sector for the
businesses – and, increasingly, they are
One obvious opening is to sell China
grasping them.
products that it desperately needs but
paper, based in London.
cannot provide for itself – such as raw
84 |
Words into Ac tion
A glance at the statistics confirms that
materials and energy. South-east Asia does
south-east Asia’s economies are bouncing
not enjoy as neat a fit with China as does
back from their recent difficulties, not least
Latin America, which supplies China with
the financial crisis of 1997 and the SARS
vast quantities of copper, iron ore, oil and
outbreak in 2003. Despite competition
soya beans. But some countries in the
from China and the burden of higher oil
region are benefiting from China’s near-
prices, 2005 was the third year of sustained
insatiable demand for raw materials.
One reason why CNOOC, the Chinese oil company, last year made its controversial and ultimately unsuccessful bid for Unocal was to get hold of the US company’s stake in the Yadan natural gas project in Myanmar. Take palm oil, which is used in detergents
group, the parent company of Asia Pulp &
and soaps, and potentially as a biofuel.
Paper, has set up a joint venture with Citic, a
China’s growing interest in biofuels as
Chinese conglomerate, to develop a $500m
a means of meeting some of its vast
palm-oil project with a projected annual
energy needs has provided a big boost
capacity of 1.5m tonnes.
for plantations in Indonesia and Malaysia, the world’s two largest palm-oil producers.
Some developments have caused
China’s imports of palm oil rose by 19% last
controversy, however. Last year, the
year, to nearly 3m tonnes, and the abolition
Indonesian and Chinese governments
this year of its quotas on palm-oil imports is
signed a memorandum of understanding on
likely to spur more trade. An EU requirement
a $7.5bin plan to establish a huge palm-oil
that all fuels contain some biofuel by 2010
plantation on the island of Borneo. To make
has provided a further fillip. In the past six
room for the plantation, a section of tropical
months alone, some 800,000 tonnes of
rainforest would have to be cut down. But
new biofuel capacity has been planned in
the plans were attacked by environmentalists,
south-east Asia. In Indonesia, the Sinar Mas
who labelled the end-product “cruel fuel”.
➣ Words into Ac tion
| 85
Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Inc.
An interview with Nobuo Kuroyanagi President & CEO, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Inc. Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (MUFG)
corporate customers require in commercial
has started on the right track. In its pre-
banking, trust and custody services, and
merger incarnation as MTFG, it improved
the securities business. The next phase is
its average return on capital from 16.1% in
to firmly position ourselves as a leader in
2004 to 25.5% in 2005, while reducing its
international business where we already
non-performing loans to 2.3% of the total.
have global reach. In particular, we feel that,
With the merger of the respective holding
as an Asian bank, our customers expect us
companies of Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi
to help them grow their business in Asia.
(BTM) and UFJ Bank to create MUFG
Therefore, we are committing resources to
in October 2005, followed by the merger
significantly expand our service capabilities
of their subsidiary banks in January 2006,
throughout Asia. We also plan to strengthen
it has managed to increase pre-tax profits
our position in other regions where we
by 129%. Its tier 1 capital has grown to
already have significant investments.
$63.9bn, which has lifted its global tier the top 1,000 world banks as ranked by
What role do you see MUFG playing in Asia?
The Banker magazine.
We have historically supported our
1 ranking from 7th to 5th place among
Japanese corporate customers as they
Whatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s next?
expanded their business overseas, and
Well, we are quite pleased with these
Asia is no different. Our Japanese corporate
improving trends, but we are far from
customers continue to invest in a variety
finished with our strategic plan to expand
of Asian countries so our branch network
internationally and improve our global
is being expanded throughout Asia to meet
competitiveness. In order to be competitive
our customersâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; banking requirements.
globally, one must have a solid domestic
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base. We are now clear market leaders
We also provide financing to local Asian
in Japan, so that phase is successfully
companies, as well as to subsidiaries of
completed by the merger of BTM and
multinational companies located in Asia.
UFJ. We must also have a sound financial
As with our Japanese corporate customers,
base. And that too has been achieved,
we proactively help our Asian clients to
as the significant reduction in the non-
develop new markets in the region. For
performing loans (NPL) ratio and our solid
example, we helped a major beverage
capital base show. Product-wise, we can
company from the Asean region that was
now offer everything that our retail and
entering the Chinese market by arranging
financing in Chinese Yuan, thus allowing
Our strategy is quite simple. We aim to
it to avoid the exposure to foreign-exchange
grow by helping our customers to expand
risk it would have incurred had it borrowed
their business successfully. That has always
in US dollars. The company not only
been our philosophy and it will continue
appreciated our bank’s ability to provide
to be the pillar of our bank’s strategy.
local-currency financing, but also our vast will be able to support their expansion
Are you optimistic about Asia’s future?
throughout greater China.
Yes, I am. While the situation varies from
branch network in mainland China, which
country to country, Asia as a whole has In addition, our bank has been engaged
growing intra-regional trade as well as
in banking business in Asian countries
expanding domestic consumer markets,
for over a century to support the local
tremendous human talents, a good work
economic growth, which is quite important
ethic, high technology, plenty of capital and
for maintaining stability in the region.
natural resources. China should continue to grow strongly: we expect China’s GDP
We have been trying to help conclude
growth to be around 9.6% in 2006, only
various bond transactions as part of the
a fraction less than the 9.9% recorded last
Asian Bond Markets Initiative in cooperation
year. India’s economy is also expected
with local governments and public financial
to maintain solid growth, driven by strong
institutions. Thus, MUFG has been
domestic demand. We expect India’s GDP
contributing to the reform and development
growth to be 7.3% in 2006.
of financial markets in Asia. For example, bonds issued by an Indonesian company
What about the outlook for Japan?
in which a Japanese firm has a majority
We expect the pace of growth to slow
ownership, with a secondary guarantee
in the second half of fiscal 2006 due to
from the Japan Bank for International
the slowdown of overseas economies, a
Cooperation. We will continue to work in
stronger yen and rising raw material costs.
areas such as securitisation, syndicated
However, the underlying expansionary trend
loans and project finance to help raise the
should continue, with export growth likely to
level of sophistication and competitiveness
remain strong and capital investments firm.
of financial markets in Asia.
There is a structural change in that primary
we recently guaranteed the corporate
support of economic growth in Japan is In order to deliver the wide array of services
gradually shifting from the corporate sector
and products that our customers require,
to the household sector due to increases
we work closely with local banks in Asia
in employee compensation, retirement
as well as government organisations and
payments and interest income. All in all,
government-owned institutions. We are
we are forecasting real GDP growth of 2.2%
always interested to talk to local banks to
for fiscal 2006.
exchange information and introduce our customers to each other, which may result in new business.
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Focus on Asia
➣ They alleged that the real aim was to obtain
large importer of food, as the new middle
the rare hardwoods that would be cut down
classes splash out on a more exotic diet.
to make way for the plantation, which could
South-east Asian tropical-fruit producers
be used to build furniture and line floors
have found a ready market for their
in the apartments of China’s burgeoning
mangoes, melons and lychees. And although
middle-class. The Indonesian press recently
home-grown rice is a Chinese staple, China’s
reported that Chinese investors had pulled
new city-dwellers are developing a taste
out of the project.
for “fragrant” rice from Thailand. The Chia Meng Group, one of Thailand’s biggest rice
With energy in mind, China has been
producers, is opening a distribution centre in
assiduously building up ties with Myanmar,
China and hopes to export 600,000 tonnes
where it accounted for over four-fifths of
to the country this year.
foreign investment last year. In January,
South-east Asian tropical-fruit producers have found a ready market in China for their mangoes, melons and lychees.
PetroChina signed a preliminary deal to
China’s manufacturing sector might be
buy gas from the Shwe field in the Bay
advancing in leaps and bounds, but many
of Bengal, while a Chinese and Thai
of its service industries remain under-
consortium is to build a $1.4bn hydropower
developed, opening up opportunities for
plant on the Salween River. One reason
south-east Asian companies. Take finance.
why CNOOC, a Chinese oil company, last
China’s financial system, which is dominated
year made its controversial (and ultimately
by several large state-owned banks, is
unsuccessful) bid for Unocal was to get hold
highly rigid, with credit allocated to people
of the US company’s stake in the Yadan
with political connections rather than good
natural gas project in Myanmar.
business plans, while its capital markets remain shallow. It does not provide well
In the Philippines, the Nonoc nickel
for the new generation of private Chinese
complex, which has among the largest
companies; bankers estimate that as many
nickel reserves in the world but has been
as 50,000 businesses may be looking to
idle since the 1980s, may soon reopen
raise new equity capital.
thanks to Chinese money. Jinchuan and Baosteel, China’s largest producers of
Singapore, in particular, has tried to help
nickel and steel respectively, have signed
fill this gap. Earlier this year, the Singapore
a preliminary agreement with Philippine
Exchange (SGX) notched up its 100th IPO
Nickel Corporation to invest $1bn in the
by a Chinese company. Chinese firms now
facility so that it can resume production.
account for some 15% of the companies
Meanwhile, China’s Citic Group is investing
listed on the market. SGX – which refers to
in a $490m project to improve the transport
itself as “an Asian gateway” – has begun
infrastructure for Indonesia’s coal industry.
offering corporate-governance courses to
Jakarta hopes to receive around $30bn
companies in mainland China that have
in investment from China over the next
aspirations to float. Sometimes known
decade, mostly energy-related.
as “dragon chips”, most of the Chinese companies are small or medium-sized,
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Feeding and servicing the masses
although five have a market capitalisation
Once obsessed about agricultural self-
subsidiary of COSCO, the state-owned
sufficiency, China has recently become a
shipping group.
greater than $1bn, the biggest being a
But it is not all plain sailing. In 2004 SGX was rocked by the collapse of China Aviation Oil (Singapore), a state-owned oil-trading group which was the biggest stock on SGX until it was brought down by a derivatives-trading
“A glance at the statistics confirms that south-east Asia’s economies are bouncing back from their recent difficulties.”
scandal. And despite SGX’s success in attracting smaller Chinese companies, Hong Kong has become the market of choice for large Chinese companies wishing to list their
many Taiwanese entrepreneurs who have
shares, as the recent $12bn IPO for Bank of
prospered in China over the last decade
China highlighted.
are another important customer group.
Private banking has also become a lucrative
A recent survey by consultants PwC
niche for Singapore. Thanks to its booming
concluded that the city-state had become
private sector, China now has around
“the preferred choice in Asia for wealth
300,000 millionaires, according to Merrill
management” thanks to its strict bank-
Lynch, the US investment bank. Many of
secrecy laws and a tax regime that is
these new rich want to keep their wealth
favourable to non-residents. With an eye
offshore, given the paucity of investment
on Chinese (as well as Indian) clients,
opportunities at home and fears about
around 30 private banks have set up
arbitrary government decisions. The
operations in Singapore. Banking assets, ➣
Chinese travellers are placing new demands on the tourism sector.
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Focus on Asia
“South-east Asian companies are also prospering in sectors of the Chinese economy where local companies have been slow to raise their game.”
➣ which are growing at 15% a year, now top $150bn, and Singapore is home to Credit Suisse’s largest unit outside of Zurich. Tourism is also benefiting from China’s rise. Only in 1997 did the Chinese government first allow its citizens to make leisure trips abroad, yet in recent years the number of such visits has grown dramatically, with 31m foreign trips made last year. Admittedly, most are day-trips to neighbouring countries, such as Russia or Macao. But China’s south-eastern neighbours, notably Vietnam and Thailand, have also profited handsomely. The World Tourism Organisation forecasts that by 2010 the Chinese will make 50m foreign trips a year, rising to 100m by 2020. Chinese travellers are placing new demands on the tourism sector. Just as in the 1980s tourism companies had to adjust to the arrival of Japanese visitors, hotels have had to hire Mandarin-speaking staff, prepare breakfast menus that appeal to the Chinese and introduce Chinese-language television channels to cater for their new guests. Singapore is competing to lure Chinese gamblers away from whom Macao’s highly lucrative casinos by giving the go-ahead for the first casino in the city-state, overturning a five-decade-long ban on gambling. The casino – which is to be built by Sands International, the Las Vegas casino group – is set to cost $3.2bn, making it the most expensive in the world. Singapore is also considering bids for a new casino resort on Sentosa Island. One of the interested consortiums – which includes Kerzner International, a resort and casino operator,
China can now generally produce consumer goods, such as clothes and electronics, more quickly and cheaply than many of the region’s “tiger” economies.
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and CapitaLand, the Singapore property group – proposes to hire Frank Gehry, best-known for the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, to design the building. ➣
Focus on Asia
Computer component production and assembly work has seen major relocations to China.
➣
If you can’t sell there, invest there
on its investments – which have averaged
China’s rapid growth also provides
has decided to invest heavily in China.
investment opportunities for companies in
Notably, it spent $4.5bn last year on
the region, and those from Singapore have
5% stakes in both Bank of China (BoC),
been the most enterprising. Singapore has
the country’s second-biggest bank, and
plenty of experience of investing in China,
China Construction Bank, the third-largest
although not always successfully. In 1994,
– although it was forced to scale back its
the government invested several billion
initial plans to take a 10% holding in BoC
dollars in a new industrial park in Suzhou,
following a nationalist backlash against
a city an hour inland from Shanghai, but
foreign investment in the financial sector.
the early years of the project were marred
It also has a stake in the smaller Minsheng
by ill-feeling, with former prime minister
Banking Corporation.
only 3% a year over the past decade – it
Lee Kuan Yew accusing the local Chinese government of “municipal shenanigans” for
Temasek subsidiaries have been active
promoting a different industrial park nearby.
investors in China too. PSA International, the ports group, has stakes in several
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Temasek, Singapore’s state investment
Chinese ports, where turnover is rising
company, has been at the forefront of
fast due to the surge in trade. CapitaLand,
a new wave of investments in the past
the property group, has also started to
three years. In a bid to boost the return
make big investments. It is betting that the
Chinese property market will continue its
Adapt or die
explosive growth, fuelled in large part by
For manufacturers facing competition from
breakneck urbanisation. In a deal symbolic
China, the obvious response has been to try
of its new strategy, it last year sold Raffles
to make products with greater value-added,
Hotel – the Singapore landmark – and other
or to move into niche markets. As Singapore
hotel assets for $820m, and reinvested
has lost assembly-line manufacturing jobs
most of the proceeds in China. CapitaLand
– last year, for instance, Maxtor, the US
derives around a quarter of its earnings
computer hard-drive maker, said it would
from its $4.6bn portfolio of commercial and
cut 5,500 jobs in the city-state and shift
residential projects in China. The group is
production to China – it has sought to
also planning to launch a $800m real-estate
promote industries such as semiconductors
investment trust for its China portfolio later
and pharmaceuticals instead. Many of the
this year.
world’s largest drug-makers now have big manufacturing operations in Singapore,
South-east Asian companies are also
while Switzerland‘s Novartis and America’s
prospering in sectors of the Chinese
Eli Lilly have set up research laboratories.
➣
economy where local companies have been slow to raise their game to international levels. One notable example is the retail sector, which, until a few years ago, was dominated by stuffy, state-owned department stores that lacked branding
“China is losing some of its competitive edge as labour costs soar, especially in the coastal areas where most exporters are based.”
and customer-service skills. This allowed foreign competitors to steal a march. The leading department-store brand in mainland China (alongside Japan’s Isetan) is Parkson, part of the Lion Diversified Holdings Group from Malaysia. The company has 39 stores in the mainland, which contributed to a 62% rise in net profits in 2005. The first opened in 1994 – well before most other foreign retailers arrived – and the company has built a strong reputation in areas such as cosmetics and designer clothes for women, giving it a solid platform to capitalise on the rapid growth in the Chinese middle-class. Another example is BreadTalk, a Singapore food chain, which has 20 outlets in China. It is able to charge premium prices for its bakery products by using its interior design and branding skills – its products have names such as Floss and Earthquake – to appeal to aspirational Chinese consumers.
China’s growing interest in biofuels as a means of meeting some of its vast energy needs has provided a big boost for plantations in Indonesia and Malaysia, the world’s two largest palm-oil producers.
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Focus on Asia
Some companies have adopted a dual strategy of shifting low-cost manufacturing to China, while keeping the more technologically advanced operations at home. Singapore’s Keppel, the world’s largest builder of offshore oil rigs, uses two sites to manufacture ships used to support oil exploration. Vessels that need a high level of design and engineering expertise are made in Singapore, while the less sophisticated ones are built in Nantong, just north of Shanghai. Seeing Chinese cars penetrate the southeast Asian market, Proton, the Malaysian national carmaker, has signed a deal with China’s Chery that will allow them to produce cars in each others’ markets. This gives Proton access to the fastLocal officials at the foundation ceremony for Jiayuguan airport: the increase in air travel has been paralleled by airport expansions. Photo: Gansu Provincial People’s Government Website.
➣ When its electronics and textiles sectors
growing Chinese market and a boost after the collapse earlier this year of its negotiations with Volkswagen over
came under pressure in the 1990s,
a strategic alliance between the two
Thailand tried to build up its car and auto-
companies.
parts industries instead. But Chinese competition proved too strong, so Thailand
Moving up the value chain only buys
is instead focusing on a niche. Following
companies a limited amount of time,
big investments by Ford, Toyota, Nissan
however, because China’s manufacturing
and Mitsubishi, it has become the world’s
sector is also rapidly becoming more
second-largest producer (after the US)
sophisticated. Its steel industry has a
of pick-up trucks, a third of which are
long tail of small producers that make
exported.
low-quality steel, but also half a dozen large players that have invested heavily in
Malaysia’s steel producers, which are
more sophisticated products. Meanwhile,
reeling from a flood of cheap but low-quality
a handful of Chinese companies are
Chinese imports, are investing in new
becoming trusted providers of chemical
technologies to improve the quality of their
raw materials for medicines, and the
products. One, Malayawata, wants to raise
pharmaceuticals industry is investing in
the share of its production that is industrial-
new manufacturing plants in the country.
grade from 10% to 50% by 2010, including
China is even making inroads in drugs
through a $150m joint venture between
research – Lilly now has a research facility
its parent company and Kobe Steel of
there and Novartis is planning to open one.
Japan. Another, Ornasteel, is investing in
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a new cold-rolled plant which will produce
Yet the growing sophistication of China’s
extremely thin steel products.
manufacturers and its rising labour
costs are also opening up space for its
As a result, many Chinese businesses are
neighbours. Vietnam and Cambodia
seeking to shift production to lower-cost
have both built up large clothes-making
manufacturing locations. For instance, TCL,
industries in recent years, partly thanks to
the Chinese television maker, set up a factory
the international quota system that limited
in Vietnam several years ago, in part to
China’s global market share. Although they
serve the local market, but also to serve the
suffered when the quotas were abolished
entire region. It also now has factories in the
at the beginning of 2005, exposing them
Philippines and India.
to the full blast of Chinese competition, they have since recovered some of their poise.
In short, as China gets richer, the debate
Chinese exports to Europe and the US face
has come full circle. China’s manufacturing
fresh restrictions until 2008; but perhaps
base remains formidable, in terms of both
more importantly, China is losing some of
price and reliability. But as its companies
its competitive edge as labour costs soar,
begin to challenge the top end of markets,
especially in the coastal areas where most
space is reappearing at the bottom. And as
exporters are based. Guangzhou increased
its domestic market swells, it offer south-east
its minimum wage by 15.7% in July, while
Asian companies growing export opportunities.
Shenzhen lifted its basic salary by 20%
As long as they remain nimble, the tigers can
in May.
continue to prosper in the dragon’s shadow.
■
Thanks to its booming private sector, China now has around 300,000 millionaires, such as this property developer (below) who is happy for his wife (above) to shop at Beijing’s designer stores.
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Schedule of Events
2006 Annual Meetings of the Boards of Governors
International Monetary Fund World Bank Group September 2006, Singapore
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11
8:00 a.m.
Registration Opens
Singapore City Hall
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 14
9:00 a.m.
Civil Society Forum opens
CSO Center, Suntec Singapore
3:00 p.m.
Press Briefing: World Economic Outlook (WEO); Suntec Singapore IMF Economic Counsellor and Research Department Director Raghuram Rajan
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15
9:00 a.m.
Press Briefing: IMF Managing Director Rodrigo
Suntec Singapore
de Rato 10:30 a.m.
Press Briefing: World Bank President Paul
Suntec Singapore
Wolfowitz SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16
9:00 a.m.
12:00 noon
Annual Meetings
Pan Pacific Hotel
Group of 24 Ministers Meeting
Suntec Singapore
Press Briefing: World Development Report
Suntec Singapore
2007: Development and the Next Generation; World Bank Chief Economist Franรงois Bourguignon and WDR director Emmanuel Jimenez Press Briefing: Chair of the Group of 24 Ministers
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Suntec Singapore
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 17
8:30 a.m.
Annual Meetings
Pan Pacific Hotel
International Monetary and Financial Committee Suntec Singapore 11:00 a.m.
Press Briefing: African Finance Ministers
Suntec Singapore
Press Briefing: IMFC Chairman Gordon Brown
Suntec Singapore
and IMF Managing Director Rodrigo de Rato 3:00 p.m.
Per Jacobsson Foundation Lecture on “Asian
Marina Mandarin Hotel
Monetary Integration: Will It Ever Happen?” by Mr. Tharman Shanmugaratnam, Singapore’s Minister for Education and Second Minister for Finance MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18
8:30 a.m.
Annual Meetings
Pan Pacific Hotel
9:00 a.m.
Development Committee
Suntec Singapore
11:00 a.m.
Seminar by the African Governors
Suntec Singapore
Development Committee Press Briefing:
Suntec Singapore
Minister Alberto Carrasquilla Barrera, Chairman of the Development Committee; Paul Wolfowitz, President of the World Bank; Rodrigo de Rato, Managing Director of the IMF TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19
10:00 a.m.
Annual Meetings Opening Plenary Session
Suntec Singapore
3:00 p.m.
Annual Meetings Plenary Session
Suntec Singapore
6:00 p.m.
Lecture by Anne Krueger (IMF First Deputy
Suntec Singapore
Managing Director, Sept. 2001- Aug. 2006) on “An Enduring Need: The Importance of Multilateralism in the 21st Century” WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20
9:30 a.m.
6:00 p.m.
Annual Meetings Plenary Session
Suntec Singapore
Annual Meetings Closing Plenary Session
Suntec Singapore
Civil Society Forum closes
CSO Center, Suntec Singapore
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| 97
www.johnniewalker.com
The new Argonauts Forget the brain drain – today’s highly skilled migrants circulate between the US and developing countries, creating new technology businesses and spreading prosperity along the way.
J
uly Systems, which develops
new Argonauts are in a strong position to
technology for selling content such
mobilise the expertise and capital needed
as games and ring-tones on mobile
to start successful global ventures. Their
phones, was founded by two Indian-born
success also forces us to think afresh about
repeat entrepreneurs. While its headquarters
how countries and regions grow.
are in California’s Silicon Valley, near game developers and mobile-content firms, it
In the late 1990s, nearly three in ten Silicon
develops its products in the Indian city of
Valley start-ups were run by immigrants,
Bangalore, where the founders have good
mostly from developing economies
business connections. In its first five years,
such as India and China. Since then,
July Systems has raised $28m from top US,
these immigrants have become global
Indian and Taiwanese investors.
entrepreneurs. Some remain based in Silicon Valley, while tapping low-cost
ANNALEE SAXENIAN is Dean and Professor at the School of
Verisilicon Holdings, which designs
technical talent and financing in their home
semiconductors, was started by a graduate
countries. Others return home to start
of the University of California at Berkeley
businesses but continue working with
Information and Professor in the
from mainland China. Based in Shanghai, at
customers and partners in Silicon Valley. As
Department of City and Regional
the heart of China’s fast growing integrated-
these cross-regional collaborations multiply
Planning at the University of
circuit (IC) market, it has development teams
and deepen, both the US and developing
California, Berkeley. She is author
in Silicon Valley and Taipei, the leading
economies benefit.
of The New Argonauts: Regional
centres of IC-design talent. Since it was
Advantage in a Global Economy
founded in 2001, VeriSilicon has raised
Entrepreneurs and their far-flung networks
(2006) and Regional Advantage:
$20m from Chinese and US venture-capital
now play a vital role in the technology
firms.
industries’ global expansion – and make
Culture and Competition in Silicon
an increasingly important contribution to
Valley and Route 128 (1994), both from Harvard University Press.
Like the Argonauts of Greek mythology
economic growth and development more
who ventured with Jason centuries ago,
broadly. Ventures such as July Systems
these US-educated but foreign-born
and Verisilicon are among the thousands of
entrepreneurs are embarking on risky
start-ups that have helped create dynamic
foreign adventures in pursuit of wealth.
technology clusters in countries such as
Armed with their knowledge of technology
Israel, Taiwan, India and China. These
markets and their global contact-books, the
investments may be small by comparison
➣
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Focus on Asia
Overseas technology investments are not motivated solely by low labour costs, as critics suggest.
â&#x17E;Ł
to total foreign direct investment, but by
complex tasks, with counterparts far away.
boosting indigenous entrepreneurship, they
Scientists and engineers from developing
create a huge potential for future growth.
countries, who were once forced to choose between settling abroad and returning
This globalisation of entrepreneurial
home to far less attractive professional
networks reflects dramatic changes in
opportunities, can now contribute to
global labour markets. Falling transport
their home economies while maintaining
and communication costs allow high-
professional and business ties in more
skilled workers to work in several countries
technologically advanced countries.
at once, while digital technologies make
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it possible to exchange vast amounts of
This is most evident in Silicon Valley,
information across long distances cheaply
where networks of foreign-born engineers
and instantly. International migration,
and entrepreneurs transfer technical and
traditionally a one-way process, has become
institutional know-how between distant
a reversible choice, particularly for those
regional economies faster and more
with scarce technical skills, while people
flexibly than most multinationals. The
can now collaborate in real time, even on
protagonists in this process are not large
“These US-educated but foreign-born entrepreneurs are embarking on risky foreign adventures in pursuit of wealth.” which exacerbates international inequality by enriching already wealthy economies at the expense of their poor counterparts. According to the 2000 Census, 2.5m highly skilled immigrants (not including students) resided in the United States. Silicon Valley has greatly benefited from this foreign brainpower. Tens of thousands of talented immigrants from developing countries, who initially came to the US to earn a graduate degree in engineering, accepted jobs in Silicon Valley rather than return home, where professional opportunities were limited. By the end of the 1990s, over half of Silicon Valley’s 200,000 scientists and engineers were foreign-born, primarily in Asia, and only a small proportion planned to return home. These immigrants, who were often excluded from established networks, corporations but the new Argonauts: the
nonetheless quickly created ethnic social
foreign-born engineers, entrepreneurs,
and professional networks which have
managers, lawyers and bankers who
supported their career advancement and
have the linguistic and cultural abilities
entrepreneurial success. High-profile start-
as well as the institutional knowledge
ups such as Sabeer Bathia’s Hotmail,
to collaborate with their home-country
Jerry Yang’s Yahoo and Min Zhu’s Webex
counterparts. While systematic data on
are only the most visible reflections of the
these highly decentralised two-way flows of
extent to which Silicon Valley’s immigrant
skill, technology and capital is scarce, their
engineers have mastered the region’s
impacts are arguably as important as more
entrepreneurial business system.
easily measured multinational investments. But these highly skilled emigrants are now
From brain drain to brain circulation
increasingly transforming the brain drain
The migration of talented youth from
to establish business relationships or start
developing to advanced countries has
new companies while maintaining their
traditionally been seen as a “brain drain”
social and professional ties to the US.
into “brain circulation” by returning home
➣ Words into Ac tion
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Focus on Asia
started to influence economic development
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Because of their experience and professional networks, these cross-regional entrepreneurs can quickly identify promising new market opportunities.â&#x20AC;?
back home, both directly, by transferring technology and know-how when they return home to work or start businesses, and indirectly, by influencing policy formation and other aspects of the institutional environment. By 2004, venture-capital and private-equity firms were investing more
â&#x17E;Ł
Foreign-educated engineers turned venture
than $1bn annually in China, and a similar
capitalists often take the lead by investing
amount in India. While this is only a fraction
in their home countries. As experienced
of the venture capital invested annually
engineers, managers and investors return
in the US or, indeed, of total FDI in these
home, either temporarily or permanently,
economies, it is fostering local ecosystems
they export first-hand knowledge of US
which support indigenous entrepreneurship
capital markets and business models to
and which are an increasingly viable
peripheral regions.
alternative to the development opportunities provided by established domestic firms and
In the early 1980s, foreign-born engineers
multinational corporations.
transferred the Silicon Valley model of earlystage high-risk investing to Taiwan and
No longer on the sidelines
Israel, which US venture capitalists were
Traditional accounts of economic
typically neither interested in nor able to
development assume that new products
serve. Native-born investors provided the
and technologies emerge in advanced
cultural and linguistic know-how needed
economies, which have sophisticated
to operate profitably in these markets. As
skill and research capabilities as well as
well as capital, they brought technical and
large and wealthy domestic markets, with
operating experience, knowledge of new
mass manufacturing shifting to less costly
business models and networks of contacts
locations once a product is standardised
in the US. Israel and Taiwan now boast the
and mature. Development, in this view,
largest venture-capital industries outside
builds on success in advanced economies,
North America ($4bn is invested annually in
while peripheral economies remain followers.
Israel and $1.3bn in Taiwan.) Both have high
Both the strategies of multinational
rates of new firm formation, innovation and
corporations and the clustering effects
growth. Israel is now known for software
created by economies of scale perpetuate
and internet firms such as Mirablis (a
this divide.
developer of instant-messaging programs) and Checkpoint (security software); firms
This leaves little scope for the periphery
such as Acer (personal computers and
to develop independent technological
components) and TSMC (a semiconductor
capabilities. At best, foreign investment from
foundry) have transformed Taiwan into
the core might contribute to the incremental
a centre of leading-edge PC and IC
mastery of foreign manufacturing techniques
manufacturing.
and the upgrading of local suppliers. Even the most successful newly industrialising
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Immigrants from India and China with
countries are destined to remain imitators,
experience in Silicon Valley have also
because leading-edge skill and technology
reside in the corporate research labs and
to tap overseas expertise, cost savings
universities in the core.
and markets. Start-ups in Silicon Valley are often global actors from day one; many
But changes in the world economy have
raise capital, subcontract manufacturing
undermined this core-periphery model.
or software development, and market their
The increasing mobility of high-skilled
products or services outside the US.
workers and information, combined with the fragmentation of production
The scarce resource is no longer size but
in the information and communication
the ability to locate foreign partners quickly,
technology sectors, provide unprecedented
and then to manage complex business
opportunities for formerly peripheral
relationships and teamwork across cultural
economies to benefit from decentralised
and linguistic barriers. This is particularly
growth based on entrepreneurship and
challenging in high-tech industries where
experimentation. While policymakers and
products, markets, and technologies are
multinational corporations have a role
continually redefined â&#x20AC;&#x201C; and where product
to play, central to this are communities
cycles are often shorter than nine months.
of technically skilled immigrants with
First-generation immigrants have
experience in, and connections to, Silicon
a commanding advantage.
â&#x17E;Ł
Valley and other technology centres. As foreign-born, but US-trained engineers transfer know-how and market information to their countries of origin, and help jump-start local entrepreneurship, they are allowing their home economies to participate in the information-technology revolution. Because of their experience and professional networks, these crossregional entrepreneurs can quickly identify promising new market opportunities, raise capital, build management teams and establish partnerships with other specialist producers â&#x20AC;&#x201C; even those located far away. This decentralised responsiveness is a vitally important advantage which few multinationals have. As recently as the 1970s, only large, established companies could grow internationally, primarily by establishing marketing offices or factories overseas. Today, the fragmentation of production and the falling costs of transport and communication allow even small firms to build partnerships with foreign producers
Thousands of start-ups have helped create dynamic technology clusters such as The Cyber Gateway in Hyderabad.
Words into Ac tion
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Focus on Asia
markets. Nor can new technological clusters be created simply by mobilising researchers, capital and a modern infrastructure: they also require the shared language and trust of a technical community, which permits open information exchange, collaboration and learning (often by failure) along with intense competition. The new technology centres differ in their specialities and level of technological sophistication. Cross-regional entrepreneurs rarely compete head-on with established US producers; instead they build on the skills and the technical and economic Building new technologies: female workers at the construction site for an IT company, Bangalore.
resources of their home countries. In the 1980s, Taiwan was known for its cheap PC clones and components; today, it is
➣
Developing economies typically have two
recognised for the flexibility and efficiency
major handicaps: they are remote from the
of its IC and electronic-systems producers.
sources of leading-edge technology and
In the 1990s, China was known for me-too
distant from developed markets and the
internet ventures; now, Chinese producers
interactions with users that are crucial for
are poised to play a lead role in developing
innovation. Firms in peripheral locations
wireless technology. In the 1990s, India
can try to overcome these disadvantages
was a provider of labour-intensive software
through joint ventures, technology licensing,
coding and maintenance; today, local
foreign investment, overseas acquisitions,
companies are mobilising the thousands
and so on. But a network of technologists
of underemployed English-speaking
with strong ties to global markets and the
Indian engineers to manage large-scale
linguistic and cultural skills to work in their
software services projects for leading global
home country is arguably the best way to
companies. Whereas in the 1980s, Israel
overcome these limitations. Cross-regional
was a low-cost research location, since
entrepreneurs and their communities can
then, local entrepreneurs have applied the
facilitate the diffusion of technical and
fruits of the country’s advanced military
institutional know-how, provide access to
research to pioneer sophisticated internet
potential customers and partners, and help
and security technologies.
overcome isolated economies’ reputational and informational trade barriers.
A new generation of cross-regional start-ups combine Silicon Valley’s new
104 |
While new technologies and more open
product vision, technology architecture,
global markets make this possible, long-
marketing, and research-and-development
distance collaborations still depend heavily
coordination with the technical capabilities
on a shared social context and language,
of distant regions. The emerging regions
which ensure partners understand each
are hybrids, which marry elements of
other well, which is vital in rapidly evolving
the Silicon Valley industrial system with
➣
Words into Ac tion
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Focus on Asia
Valley system – efficient capital markets, an independent judiciary, regulatory oversight, sophisticated education systems, research institutions, and physical infrastructure – are rarely present in these peripheral economies. Returning entrepreneurs have found different ways to overcome the weaknesses of their home countries. In India, entrepreneurs rely on private telecoms facilities and power supplies rather than on the country’s costly and unreliable infrastructure, while in China returning entrepreneurs have learned to negotiate the complex bureaucratic rules and politics which regulate private companies. They also rely on US institutions: in addition to receiving graduate training in the US, many establish headquarters or research labs in Silicon Valley, harness venture capital, professional services, and managerial and technical talent from the US, and even raise funds on US capital markets. These cross-regional start-ups still face significant challenges. Venture-capital investment is still in its infancy in most of the world. There are shortages of experienced managerial talent and ongoing difficulties coordinating distant activities, particularly Fragmentation of production in the information and communication technology sectors provides unprecedented opportunities to benefit from decentralised growth.
➣
106 |
Words into Ac tion
in developing organisational synergy and persistent, consistent communication. Entrepreneur-led growth, with highly
inherited local institutions and resources.
competitive, specialised technology
Returning entrepreneurs typically seek (with
producers in high-skill regions connecting
varying success) to transfer venture capital,
to, and collaborating with, counterparts
merit-based advancement and corporate
elsewhere, is only one possible future for
transparency to economies with traditions
these regions. If they are not careful, they
of elite privilege, government control,
may miss the opportunity to upgrade local
and corruption. They seek to reproduce
skills and capabilities, and instead remain
team-based firms with limited hierarchy in
suppliers of low-cost labour to global (or
an environment dominated by family-run
domestic) corporations. China and India
businesses or state-owned enterprises. And
have a big enough labour supply to do
they seek to influence policy because the
this for a relatively long time. However,
national institutions that support the Silicon
many cross-regional entrepreneurs are
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Focus on Asia
➣
constructing firms committed to an
specific locations – where the advantages
alternative, high-value-added trajectory.
of locating in a crowded and costly place outweigh the increasing costs, resulting in
The world isn’t flat
a pronounced clustering process. The rise
Is brain circulation between technology
of entrepreneurship-led growth suggests
regions making the world “flat”, as
that the regional cluster may be replacing
Thomas Friedman of the New York Times
the national economy as the locus of
suggests? Hardly. The new Argonauts
economic growth.
cluster tenaciously in the leading technology centres, which is why Palo Alto
Overseas technology investments are not
now has more in common with Taipei and
motivated solely by low labour costs, as
Tel Aviv than with Fresno, a three-hour
critics suggest. The leading destinations
drive away. Residents of Bangalore enjoy
for cross-border technology investment
Western standards of living, while those in
are regions such as Bangalore and
nearby rural areas remain mired in poverty.
Shanghai, where wages and other costs are
Economic geographers have documented
significantly higher than in their surrounding
this phenomenon of increasing returns in
economies, and rising rapidly. Even when
Companies such as this American-owned manufacturer of flexible printed circuits has established itself in China to take advantage of the lower labour costs.
108 |
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low wages attract initial investments, local enterprises distinguish themselves from other low-cost regions by collaborating with Silicon Valley-based partners. This allows local producers to develop specialised
“Palo Alto now has more in common with Taipei than with Fresno, a three-hour drive away.”
skills, expertise and relationships which ensure a regional advantage that compensates for their high costs: Israel in sophisticated internet and security
high-end routers from Israel; and has most
technologies, Taiwan in global logistics and
of its hardware manufactured in Taiwan
design, China in efficient IT manufacturing,
and China. Like Intel and Acer, it also
and India in managing complex software
invests in foreign start-ups with promising
services and consulting projects.
technologies. A start-up such as July Systems obtained venture capital from
The old pattern of one-way flows of
the US, Taiwan, China and India, and its
technology and capital from the core to
products will likely incorporate components
the periphery is being replaced by a far
from all these locations, as well as being
more complex and decentralised two-
targeted at all their markets.
way flow of skill, capital and technology between regional economies with different
US technology producers now look to their
specialities. Silicon Valley is at the core
counterparts in Taiwan, China, India and
of this rapidly diversifying network of
Israel not simply for low-level implementation
economies because it is the largest and
but increasingly to co-develop products and
most sophisticated market as well as a
components. Firms in the new technology
leading source of new technologies. But this
regions are increasingly partnering with one
may change, as new relationships emerge
another, as well as with firms from Silicon
and new markets open up. The fast-growing
Valley. A Taiwanese semiconductor firm
Asian market for wireless communication,
invests in Israeli start-ups specialising in
for example, has enabled firms in China and
digital-speech-processing chips, while an
India to contribute to how the technology
Israeli company contributes intellectual-
and its applications are developed – even
property components to a chip-design firm
though they do not yet define its leading
in India. These collaborations deepen both
edge. Over time, producers in developing
partners’ capabilities and over time can
regions may be able to build independent
support a process of reciprocal innovation
capabilities and define entirely new
and upgrading.
specialisations and markets.
A model for others? Even the largest Silicon Valley companies
Not all developing economies can reap the
participate in all these regions not simply
benefits of brain circulation and peripheral
as competitors but also as investors and
entrepreneurship. For political reasons,
partners. An established firm such as
some of the largest technically-skilled
Cisco designs and sources critical parts
immigrant groups in Silicon Valley have not
of its operating-system software from
built business or professional connections
India; buys application-specific ICs for its
to their home countries. Most of the Iranian
➣ Words into Ac tion
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Focus on Asia
➣
and Vietnamese immigrants, for example,
Cross-regional networks develop only
are political refugees and so not inclined
when skilled immigrants are both willing
to return to countries which, in any case,
and able to return to their home countries
lack the economic stability needed for
to do business in large enough numbers
technology investment or entrepreneurship.
to create close links to the technical
This is also true to varying degrees for
community in the home country. This
immigrants from Russia, parts of Eastern
requires political stability, economic
Europe and Latin America. Saint Petersburg
openness and a certain level of economic
or Buenos Aires may one day become more
development, notably a high level of
attractive to returning entrepreneurs, but
technical education. It often builds on
large parts of Africa and Latin America lack
multinational companies’ investments in
the skill base or political openness to foster
research and development which have
technology entrepreneurship.
helped develop a local skill base as well as an infrastructure which supports
The creation of a transnational community
entrepreneurship. Political leaders must
is a two-way process. While policymakers
also be committed to removing institutional
and planners can encourage cross-regional
obstacles to entrepreneurship-led growth.
connections, they cannot create or substitute for transnational entrepreneurs and their
Technology markets are shifting quickly,
decentralised networks. Foreign governments
with demand from outside the US growing
regularly sponsor networking events for
rapidly. While North America, Europe and
their expatriates in the Bay Area in order to
Japan account for less than 15% of the
recruit return entrepreneurs and investments,
world’s population, they produce more
but without entrepreneurial collaborators at
than half of global output. This is set to
home, these agencies will have little success.
change decisively, with Goldman Sachs, the US investment bank, predicting that customer demand from India and China will dominate global markets within a decade and that these two economies will be larger than the US by 2050. Producers in other peripheral economies will surely develop the capabilities to participate in global networks too. They will likely share with their predecessors a history of investments in education and research, as well as an institutional openness that ensures both competitive intensity and long-distance collaborations. Silicon Valley’s role as the dominant technology centre will most likely continue to diminish. This does not imply decline, rather that it will become one of many nodes in a more open and distributed global network of differently specialised and complementary
Silicon Valley’s role as the dominant technology centre will most likely continue to diminish.
110 |
Words into Ac tion
regional economies.
■
Development Agenda
Hitting the target The Millennium Development Goals to reduce extreme poverty by 2015 are still achievable, insist Sachs & Schmidt-Traub. Developing countries need to up their game, while rich countries, the IMF and the World Bank need to give them more support.
A
t the UNâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Millennium Assembly in
standing pledge to devote 0.7% of the
September 2000, the world adopted
gross national income (GNI) to official
the Millennium Development
development assistance. The Monterrey
Goals (MDGs) â&#x20AC;&#x201C; quantitative, time-bound,
consensus on development aid provides
achievable targets to address extreme
the right framework with its focus on
poverty in its many dimensions: income
improved governance, increased public
poverty, hunger, lack of education, disease,
and private investments, more and better
poor child and maternal health, gender
development assistance, and free trade
inequality, poor sanitation and environmental
for long-term economic development. Yet
sustainability.
with 2015 the deadline to meet the Goals, time is running out to get countries on track
Many countries, notably in East and South
towards achieving them. The cost of failure
Asia, have made substantial progress
in terms of lives lost, growing insecurity and
towards the Goals. Yet many others, and
accelerating environmental degradation is
indeed entire regions, remain dangerously
too high.
JEFFREY D. SACHS
off-track. Sub-Saharan Africa is the most
is Director of the UN Millennium
serious and persistent laggard, with food
Breaking through
shortages, a rapidly expanding population, a
Encouragingly, the past year has yielded
crushing disease burden and environmental
a series of breakthroughs, both in high-
Project, an independent advisory body to the United Nations
degradation combining to keep millions in
level global politics and on the ground,
Millennium Development Goals.
extreme poverty. Other regions, such as the
which are building up the momentum
He is also Director of The Earth
Middle East, Central Asia and parts of Latin
behind the Goals and give us cause
Institute at Columbia University,
America, have had mixed success, with
for optimism. The rich world has made
great progress on some of the Goals and
a series of commitments to provide
persistent inequalities in others.
financing at the scale needed to meet
Secretary-General on the
and President and co-founder of Millennium Promise Alliance, a non-
the Goals, while a number of initiatives
profit organisation aimed at ending extreme global poverty. He is the
As reports by the UN Millennium Project,
on the ground have demonstrated, and
author of many books, including
the Commission for Africa, and many others
continue to demonstrate, that scaled-
have shown, the tools and knowledge exist
up, targeted public investments can lead
to meet the Goals, as does the financing
to development success in some of the
â&#x20AC;&#x201C;provided rich countries meet their long-
poorest countries.
New York Times bestseller The End of Poverty (Penguin, 2005).
112 |
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The key breakthrough in 2005 was the commitment of European Union donors to achieve the target of 0.7% of gross national product (GNP) in official development
“16 out of 22 OECD donor nations have either achieved, or committed to a timeline for achieving, the ODA target of 0.7% of GNI by 2015.”
assistance by 2015. An intermediate benchmark of 0.56% of GNP in aid as of 2010 was also established. Encouragingly, the new (much poorer) EU member states
are affordable and, importantly, their results
committed to donating 0.33% of GDP by
can be easily measured and monitored.
2015. Following this landmark commitment,
They now need to be implemented at scale.
16 out of 22 OECD donor nations have for achieving, the ODA target of 0.7% of
Implementation is gathering pace
GNI by 2015. The six remaining countries
The key challenge now is implementation.
are Australia, Canada, Japan, New Zealand,
Fortunately, we are also beginning to see
Switzerland and the United States.
progress on this front. Remarkable results
either achieved, or committed to a timeline
have been achieved in some countries At Gleneagles in July 2005, the Group
that have implemented large-scale national
of Eight (G8) leaders made further
programmes to achieve the Goals. In
commitments to scale up financing for the
Ghana, a public-private partnership,
MDGs, specifically in Africa. An extra $25bn
with support from the government of the
in donor financing by 2010 was promised
Netherlands and Unilever, has launched
for sub-Saharan Africa alone. The G8 also
a national school feeding programme for
agreed to forgive the debt of several of
1m children using locally produced food.
the poorest countries, and committed to
This programme is not only improving child
ensuring universal access to anti-retroviral
nutrition and health; it is also boosting
treatment for AIDS by 2010.
school attendance, improving educational
GUIDO SCHMIDT-TRAUB
outcomes and creating a market for locally
is Associate Director at the UN
produced food.
Millennium Project. Previously,
At the UN World Summit last September, world leaders committed to prepare national
he was a partner at IndexIT
development strategies that are bold
Another powerful example is the Measles
Scandinavia, a strategic adviser
enough to achieve the MDGs. They also
Malaria Initiative, run by the Center for
for technology companies and
adopted several “quick-impact initiatives”,
Disease Control, Red Cross Red Crescent,
concurrently managed a private
designed to make rapid progress in many
UNICEF and WHO, which has implemented
investment fund for European
key areas: bed nets and medicines to fight
national campaigns for measles vaccination
technology companies. He holds
malaria, anti-retroviral medicines for AIDS,
and the free distribution of long-lasting
an M.Phil. in Economics from
fertilisers for replenishing soil nutrients and
insecticide-treated malaria bed nets.
Oxford University, where he was
launching the African Green Revolution,
Extremely successful campaigns have been
a Rhodes Scholar, and a Masters
hardware and software for rural connectivity,
implemented, most recently in Niger and
in physical chemistry from the Free
and countless other practical steps that
Togo, with many other African countries
University Berlin.
can relieve hunger, disease and isolation at
scheduled to follow in 2006 and 2007. The
relatively modest cost. These quick-impact
results include a sharp fall in the incidence
initiatives are already proven to work, they
of malaria and drastically lower measles
➣ Words into Ac tion
| 113
Development Agenda
➣ Quick-impact initiatives are already proven to work: they can relieve hunger, disease and isolation at relatively modest cost, are affordable and, importantly, their results can be easily measured and monitored.
➣
mortality. Perhaps most impressively, the
Once empowered with the means, farmers
campaigns lasted only a few days, were
have more than tripled their crop yields
implemented at an extremely low cost using
and food output in a single season. School
Red Cross Red Crescent volunteers, and
attendance has soared in response to school
achieved country-wide coverage. These
feeding programmes and the elimination of
and other programmes, such as the fertiliser
user fees. Healthcare has been dramatically
strategy currently being prepared by the
bolstered through the provision of local
government of Malawi, clearly demonstrate
clinics and the mass distribution of long-
the feasibility and success of national-scale
lasting insecticide-treated bed nets to fight
programmes to meet the MDGs.
malaria. The initiative, which is partially funded by the government of Japan, covers
114 |
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The Millennium Villages, a joint effort of the
some 390,000 people in 12 sites across
Earth Institute, UNDP, the UN Millennium
sub-Saharan Africa – one for each major
Project and Millennium Promise, are
agro-ecological zone. The results so far are
demonstrating that the MDGs can be met in
impressive, and show that this approach can
some of the poorest villages in sub-Saharan
be taken to scale. It is time for official donors
Africa through community-led development.
to build on these results.
➣
Development Agenda
â&#x17E;Ł
Preparing MDG-based national strategies At the UN World Summit, every country was called upon to prepare an MDG-based national development strategy. Such a goalbased approach requires a major shift in thinking, away from the marginal expansion of services and infrastructure provision towards a long-term programming of public expenditures to achieve the outcome goals agreed in the Millennium Declaration. Over five years after the adoption of the Millennium Development Goals, national strategies that are anchored in the Goals remain few and far between. Most Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers submitted for approval to the International Monetary Fund and World Bank reflect a shadow of what countries actually need to achieve the Goals. Countries are still advised by development partners to continue on a business-asusual scenario by keeping their strategies in line with the limited resources and aid flows at their disposal. It is no wonder that the resulting strategies cannot deliver on the Goals. Governments are accused of
governments should be encouraged and
incompetence, and sceptics feel vindicated
supported in mapping out the practical
in their view that the MDGs cannot be met.
investments needed to deliver basic infrastructure, ensure good health, promote
Fortunately, several countries have begun to
education and gender equality, improve
buck this trend. Ethiopia, Kenya, Senegal,
environmental management, and launch
Tajikistan and others have put forward the
the African Green Revolution. Imperfect
first MDG-based development strategies.
strategies should be improved instead of
Many other countries are approaching
serving as a justification for inaction, as is
the UN for support in preparing rigorous
still too often the case.
strategies to achieve the Goals. Their leadership now needs to be recognised
Fortunately, major strides are being
and reciprocated with bold support from
made in Africa and elsewhere towards
the international community to permit the
the integration of the MDGs into national
implementation of these strategies through
budgets, development initiatives and
a real international partnership.
poverty reduction strategies. NEPADâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s African Peer Review Mechanism (APRM)
116 |
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Where available strategies fall short in terms
is making important contributions towards
of ambition, financing or analytical rigour,
strengthening governance across Africa. The
The Measles Malaria Initiative has implemented national campaigns for measles vaccination and the free distribution of long-lasting insecticidetreated malaria bed nets.
fact that so many countries are voluntarily subjecting themselves to scrutiny by their peers exemplifies the strong commitment among African countries to fulfil their side of the Monterrey Consensus.
“Over five years after the adoption of the Millennium Development Goals, national strategies that are anchored in the Goals remain few and far between.”
In May, African ministers and development partners met in Abuja for the Financing for
20 African countries announced that
Development Conference. The purpose was
they would present national strategies
to transform the recent commitments for
to meet the ‘Education for All’ Goals at
increased financing for African development
this September’s annual meetings of the
into action, with specific focus on meeting
World Bank and IMF. Implementing these
the MDGs and developing coherent national
education strategies will be an important
strategies to do so. Britain’s Chancellor of
breakthrough in moving towards national-
the Exchequer, Gordon Brown, delivered a
scale programmes to achieve the MDGs.
powerful speech in which he reiterated the UK’s commitment to providing $15bn over
Another area where African leaders are
the next ten years in support of ten-year,
taking the initiative is the African Green
costed education strategies. In response,
Revolution. In response to the UN
➣ Words into Ac tion
| 117
Development Agenda
IDE
Once empowered with the means, farmers have more than tripled their crop yields and food output in a single season.
➣
Secretary-General’s call for an African Green
governments in preparing and implementing
Revolution in early 2004, NEPAD convened
practical strategies to meet each Goal.
the Africa Fertiliser Summit in Abuja in June
Needless to say, the IMF and World Bank
this year. Summit participants pledged to
play a critical role in supporting this process.
improve access to fertilisers, improved through smart subsidies and strengthened
The role of the IMF and World Bank
private distribution networks. Malawi and
In his April report on the IMF’s medium-
many other African countries have already
term strategy, Rodrigo de Rato, the Fund’s
drawn up national strategies for agricultural
managing director, pledged to increase the
inputs. These practical commitments hold
organisation’s engagement in low-income
the promise of greatly reducing poverty and
countries to achieve higher growth and to
hunger in rural Africa, and now need to be
meet the MDGs. He called for an approach
implemented.
that assesses “if projected aid flows are
seeds and other key agricultural inputs
consistent with macroeconomic stability
118 |
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Together, these breakthroughs over the
and the estimated costs of achieving
past year show that the glass is half full. The
countries’ development goals” and urged
international community now needs to build
candour by informing “donors when there
on the momentum behind the Millennium
is scope for more aid to be absorbed and,
Development Goals by supporting
conversely, when it judges that expected
aid flows put macroeconomic stability at
In addition to the IMF and World Bank staff,
risk.” Through this document the IMF has
their Executive Boards needs to review every
taken its boldest step yet in aligning its work
country programme proposal for consistency
in low-income countries with the Millennium
with the MDGs. Standard checks applied
Development Goals.
to each programme should be whether the proposed level of financing is consistent with
We see three areas in which the IMF and
achieving the Millennium Development Goals
World Bank can, and must, go further
and if the financing strategy is compatible
in supporting the Goals. First, the World
with long-term economic growth and
Bank should work with the UN system
macroeconomic strategies.
to support every developing country in estimating the financial and human-resource
By building on the Fund’s medium-term
needs for meeting the MDGs. Second, the
strategy and taking decisive action to
Fund needs to support the preparation
implement these practical steps towards
of an MDG-consistent financing and
operationalising the MDGs, the IMF and the
macroeconomic framework. Next, the Fund
World Bank will make a critical contribution
staff should work not only with the finance
to sustaining and building on the accelerating
ministers of the developing country but also
momentum for achieving the Millennium
their counterparts in donor countries to
Development Goals. The fruit of this labour will
IDEA_PUB_singapour 8/17/06 4:22 PM mobilise the needed financing.
Page 1 be many lives saved and a better world for all.
■
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Development Agenda
Spanning the digital divide The most important issue for developing countries is not their relative lack of high-tech infrastructure, but how they make the most of what they have got.
T
echnology always plays the starring
in developed ones (where cell phones are
role in economic growth. Prosperity
already ubiquitous).
depends on the introduction of new
DIANE COYLE is managing director of Enlightenment Economics, and led
technologies by entrepreneurs seeking to
But the trouble with analysing ICT needs
offer better products and services at a lower
in terms of these generally depressing
cost, and their wide use by businesses
benchmarking exercises is that it focuses
and consumers. Today’s information and
attention on a single dimension of policy
communications technologies (ICTs) – such
– investment in physical technological
as the internet and mobile phones – hold
infrastructure and devices, such as PCs
out the promise of new opportunities for
and handsets. This narrow focus distracts
businesses to gain access to markets
attention from the all-important question
and customers. So it’s no surprise that
of what to do with the technology when
policymakers in developing countries hope
it is installed, and how to ensure that it
that ICTs can contribute to broad-based
will actually make the economy more
economic development. But how can they
competitive.
ensure that their high hopes are fulfilled? A new framework paper on ICT strategies
the research team which prepared the infoDev report. She is also a
Analysis of the impact of ICTs on
for competitiveness and growth that I
visiting professor at the University
development often takes as its starting point
prepared for infoDev (Information for
of Manchester and a member of
the scale of the digital divide. A comparison
Development), an international partnership
of access to new technologies in different
of bilateral and multilateral development
countries reveals a chasm between rich
agencies housed at the World Bank,
and poor on most indicators. To take the
looks at these broader policy issues. ICTs
example of internet access, developed
certainly can enhance competitiveness
countries have an average of 53 users per
and growth, as the many examples of how
and Growth: Challenges and
100 inhabitants, while developing countries
entrepreneurs and consumers in some
Opportunities for Developing
have only seven. There is no evidence
developing countries have been able to
Countries’, is available at
that the digital divide is narrowing, either
make productive use of mobile phones
www.infodev.org
– with the important exception of mobile
or internet access show. For instance,
phones, where penetration rates are rising
fishermen off Mafia Island in Tanzania ring
much faster in developing countries than
ahead on their mobiles to see where they
the UK’s Competition Commission. The infoDev framework report, ‘Information and Communication Technologies, Competitiveness
120 |
Words into Ac tion
There is no evidence that the digital divide is narrowing, with the important exception of mobile phones, where penetration rates are rising much faster in developing than in developed countries. will get the best price for landing their catch. The question is which policies can best help make these impacts more systematic, enabling developing countries to make the
“A comparison of access to new technologies in different countries reveals a chasm between rich and poor on most indicators.”
most of the new technologies’ development potential. The detailed answer will vary case by case,
Thus other aspects of physical infrastructure
because the first step in setting an effective
matter too, because they complement
strategy is a realistic assessment of each
ICT use. Electricity supply is one example,
country’s capabilities. The existing ICT
especially when it comes to using ICT in
infrastructure – including key measures such
business, because a reliable power supply is
as international bandwidth, or the scope of
critical for most applications. The transport
the mobile and fixed telephone networks – is
network is also important, because it often
certainly important, but it is not everything.
complements ICT use. For instance, if using
Each country’s competitiveness will also
the new technologies makes firms more
depend on a range of other capabilities, as
efficient and thus enables them to export
well as geographical and historical factors
more, demand for haulage and shipping will
which are beyond the reach of policy.
rise, as will road, rail and port use.
➣ Words into Ac tion
| 121
Development Agenda
country-specific characteristics must play an
“Competition puts pressure on firms to innovate and become more efficient, thus increasing their use of the new technologies which become available.”
important part. An effective ICT strategy must therefore start with a realistic assessment of a range of existing capabilities which will complement use of the technologies. This exercise in
➣
Going beyond infrastructure, human skills
itself might start to suggest policy priorities.
are another key capability. The use of
For example, a strategy centred on the
ICTs involves some specific skills, such as
delivery of the physical facilities for IT-
keyboard familiarity and knowing how to
enabled services is not likely to be a sensible
use standard software, as well as some
priority for a country where too few workers
general ones. Literacy is needed for even
have the literacy and foreign language skills
basic computer use, and some ICT-enabled
required, or where a lack of competition
activities require generally high cognitive
makes overseas calls expensive. Call
skills. The importance of human capital for
centres in some Caribbean countries, such
development is already well-known, but
as Antigua and Grenada, have fallen victim
introducing ICTs is likely to increase the
to high international call charges. But often
need for certain types of skill which are in
it is harder to set policy priorities which
short supply in many developing countries.
take account of the many relationships and feedbacks in an economy. For instance, a
A third important area of capabilities
seemingly small regulatory change can have
which complement ICTs can be put
a big impact on firms’ incentives to invest,
under the general heading of institutions.
which in turn might have an unexpected
Again, it is widely recognised that some
knock-on effect on consumer demand. This
institutions are more likely than others to
kind of virtuous circle, where investment
enhance growth. In the context of ICTs,
stimulates network effects, which in turn
the relevant institutional capabilities will
take consumer demand to a critical point,
include regulatory policies which encourage
seems to have occurred in the case of
competition, for example. This is because
mobile telephones. Certainly, the speed of
competition puts pressure on firms to
diffusion of mobiles in developing countries
innovate and become more efficient, thus
has taken everyone by surprise, not least
increasing their use of the new technologies
the mobile operators and the policymakers
which become available. In general,
who first introduced the relevant licensing
relationships between government, business
changes in the 1990s.
and consumers in the domestic market
122 |
Words into Ac tion
can either encourage or inhibit the diffusion
Conventional statistical regressions do
of ICTs, as can be seen from the different
not allow us to explore these non-linear
patterns of adoption of the technologies
feedbacks, and although they do give us
in countries which are otherwise similar
some idea of the long-term impact of policy
in terms of income per capita or other
variables on growth, in practice there is
economic benchmarks. A comparison of
rarely enough data to be confident that
PC or mobile-phone penetration rates in the
one policy is clearly preferable to another.
smaller sub-Saharan African economies, for
An alternative approach is to test how the
instance, shows such wide variation that
impact of a policy change works through the
➣
Development Agenda
capabilities need to be matched to its opportunities. As well as looking inward, policymakers need to look outward. While it is widely understood that ICTs have played a key part in restructuring the global economy, the generalisations have become so familiar that it is easy to overlook the type of opportunities which this is actually creating for firms from developing countries.
Capturing more of the value chain The most significant aspect of the global structural change is the splitting of supply chains in manufacturing and, increasingly, in services into ever-smaller links, which can be located wherever in the world each activity can most efficiently be carried out. Different countries are building highly Prosperity depends on the introduction of new technologies, yet many in developing countries still work with decades old equipment, such as these journalists at Mozambique’s Radio Xai Xai.
➣
specialised industries. So far, relatively few developing countries form part of
relationships and feedbacks in a particular
these global chains; the growth in trade
economy. Even qualitative judgements about
and foreign direct investment is heavily
key variables and the strength of the links
concentrated in a handful of countries,
between them are sufficient to place policies
notably China.
in order of effectiveness. The full infoDev report demonstrates this kind of prioritisation
What’s more, developed countries have by
with an illustrative example, but the policy
and large retained the high value-added
rankings will of course be specific to each
activities, often intangible and categorised
country and will depend on their existing
as services. These include R&D, design,
capabilities.
branding and marketing. These activities are located at either end of global production
Even benchmarking existing e-readiness and
chains, at the start in the case of product
adding an assessment of complementary
innovation and design, and at the consumer
capabilities is not the full story about ICTs’
end in the case of advertising and marketing
scope as tools of development. A country’s
(see diagram, below). Although developing
The production chain
R&D Design
High value
124 |
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Inbound Logistics
Higher value
Production
Low value
Outbound logistics, Distribution
Marketing, Market research Brand
Higher value
High value
countries’ share of world production has
efficiency. What options does this leave
climbed significantly, their share of world
businesses from developing countries?
value has risen only a little in ten years, creating a ‘value wedge’ (see chart, below).
As ICTs transform the global production landscape, they are also creating new
For example, some 45% of the retail price
opportunities. One path is for developing-
of a basic imported shirt sold in the US lies
country firms to pursue higher-value activities
in the design, branding and marketing of
through identifying market niches which bring
the product. In the European Union, car
them close to customers in export markets.
makers in the EU-15 countries have tended
Country studies carried out for infoDev
to retain their research, design and branding
document examples of successful – and
activities domestically, while among the new
less successful – attempts by companies
EU member states, the Czech Republic has
to capture some of the value either
become the most important centre for vehicle
‘downstream’ or ‘upstream’ from low-value
assembly, Hungary specialises in engine
manufacturing and processing activities.
manufacture and Poland in gear boxes.
For instance, Jamaican Signature Beats brings musicians from the island directly
Thanks to ICTs, global companies have
into contact with potential American and
been able to reallocate their activities more
European customers through a website as
efficiently. In contrast to the multinationals
well as marketing and promotional activities.
of the 1960s and 1970s, which typically
As well as initiating contact with customers,
sought access to markets or resources
the product – advertising jingles, for example
through FDI, global companies are today
– can be delivered online. A very different
using new technologies to pursue greater
example is Tanzania’s use of technologies
➣
40.00% 35.00% 30.00% 25.00% 20.00%
GDP share Production share
15.00% 10.00% 5.00% 0.00% 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 The ‘value wedge’: developing countries’ share of world production and GDP Data source: World Development Indicators
Words into Ac tion
| 125
➣
Development Agenda
➣ such as weather and soil monitoring to
of its manufacturers are using sophisticated
improve the quality of coffee for delivery to
software and communications which give
customers in the US and the EU, although
them a now nearly unbeatable expertise in
it is not yet clear how much this will enable
the logistics of taking an order, sourcing all
producers to boost their margins.
the buttons, zips and so on, manufacturing in large quantities and completing the order
An alternative to seeking access to export
within ten days, or even a week. Often,
markets directly, perhaps in partnership
manufacturers make deliveries straight to
with small and medium-sized companies
the stores of major western retailers, without
located in the destination markets, is to sell
holding any inventory at any stage of the
into the multinational supply chains I have
supply chain.
described. To do so successfully requires an
The existing ICT infrastructure – including the scope of the mobile and fixed telephone networks – is certainly important, but it is not everything.
understanding of these global corporations’
Such an operation requires a lot of ICTs,
strategies. ICTs can allow developing-
ranging from basic communications and
country suppliers to move up the value
web access to electronic data interchange,
chain – either upstream or downstream,
computer-aided design and manufacturing,
or both – from the low-value manufacturing
enterprise flow software, integrated
or processing. Upstream, the first step
point-of-sale feedback and, increasingly,
is likely to be making improvements in
radio-frequency identification tags, which
quality through incremental changes in
are soon expected to be incorporated
processes and delivery speed. The next will
directly into individual garments as they are
be introducing some innovations in both
made. Garment manufacture and delivery
processes and products, and the firm can
operations of this kind are extremely
then aim to move on to more sophisticated
sophisticated and rest on a long period of
R&D. Downstream, a firm can go from basic
accumulated expertise and management
assembly to an active sales effort, product
know-how. It is no surprise that these
marketing, establishing a distribution
manufacturers are able to capture a growing
network and on to developing own-brands,
share of the value in the global supply chain.
advertising and market research. Of course, China’s very successful and There are very few examples of developing
dominant specialisation is a threat to
countries with significant firms that have
textiles and clothing manufacturers from
started along this progression, but some
other countries, especially since the end
ICT-enabled Chinese and Indian companies
of the Multi-Fibre Arrangement (MFA)
do seem to be succeeding in capturing
quotas in 2005. What strategies can
a bigger share of the value added in the
companies in other developing countries
production chain. Consider China’s success
pursue? Chinese firms have a competitive
in the clothing industry.
advantage in the inbound and outbound logistics which lie to either side of the low-
126 |
Words into Ac tion
Some of the reasons for China’s success in
value manufacturing process. Firms from
world clothing markets are unrelated to ICT,
other countries which wish to move beyond
such as its large pool of suitable labour and
the basic manufacturing themselves can
the economies of scale arising from its big
sensibly look to compete at other stages
domestic market. However, many
of the supply chain.
➣
HowD
Development Agenda
➣
In India and Mauritius, for instance, ICTs are
example is a Ugandan t-shirt manufacturer,
enabling garment manufacturers to develop
which is making do with basic means of
innovative textiles and compete successfully
communication (telephone, fax and dial-up
on design. Broadband internet access is
email) and is struggling with high transport
important, as is computer-aided design
costs and long delays even in getting goods
and manufacturing software, and specialist
to port in Nairobi, but whose key asset is
software for grading patterns and so on.
access to high-quality organic cotton, for
Local craft skill can be a significant asset,
which European consumers are willing to
since traditional designs and handcrafting
pay a large premium. The relevant enabling
are highly valued by developed-country
factor in this case was not ICT at all, but
consumers. Mobile camera phones allow a
simply the relevant intelligence about
company’s representatives to send sample
market demand.
designs from far-flung villages to head office for speedy approval. Another interesting
Shaping an effective ICT strategy is not easy, as these examples demonstrate. Policymakers should beware excessively simple prescriptions, especially those drawn up simply by benchmarking a country’s ICT indicators. This type of descriptive assessment of the digital divide does not offer a useful guide to policy priorities. A prescriptive assessment of ICT needs should depend on the full range of relevant capabilities available in the economy – not just ICT indicators but also other relevant infrastructure, skills and institutions. It also depends on a realistic audit of the opportunities open to firms in domestic and export markets, whether selling directly into overseas markets or indirectly via multinational supply chains. ICTs are changing these opportunities and do offer firms from developing countries scope to move into higher-value activities than most have achieved so far. The infoDev framework report describes one approach to this kind of policy mapping exercise, taking account of the complicated links and feedbacks in any economy. The policy ranking can be surprising, because it is precisely these overlooked complexities which can make some policy interventions much more effective than expected, while seemingly
Literacy is needed for even basic computer use, and some ICT-enabled activities require generally high cognitive skills.
128 |
Words into Ac tion
more obvious interventions, as we know all too well, can be surprisingly ineffective. ■
HowDoYouJul06
7/7/06
9:32 AM
Page 1
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Development Agenda
“Our Heroes” Migration is often caused by destitution and despair, but it is also making an increasingly large contribution to poor countries’ development.
E
very year, at Christmas, the
work programmes are a model for what
government of the Philippines
developing countries such as India are
prepares a special welcome for its
seeking to achieve through negotiations at
returning heroes. World-beating sports
the World Trade Organisation, and could
stars? Globe-trotting businessmen? No:
be applied more widely to the benefit of
Filipinos working abroad who are coming
rich and poor countries alike, without all the
home for the holidays. At the airport of the
political and cultural issues which permanent
country’s capital, Manila, prizes are handed
settlement entails.
out to lucky workers. And on Migrant Workers Day, the president awards the
The government reckons that more than 7m
“Bagong Bayani” (modern-day hero) award
Filipinos, or 9% of the country’s population,
to 20 outstanding migrant workers who
work abroad. They sent home $11.6bn
have demonstrated moral courage, hard
in 2004 through official channels – and
PHILIPPE LEGRAIN
work and a track record of sending money
perhaps twice that again unofficially. This
is the author of Open World: The
home. One government minister remarked
money represents at least 13.5% of the
Truth about Globalisation (Abacus,
that “Overseas employment has built more
economy – a more than five-fold increase
2002). His new book, Immigrants:
homes, sent more children of the poor to
since 1990. Remittances (the money that
Your Country Needs Them, will be
college and established more business
migrants send home) typically account for
enterprises than all the other programmes
two-fifths of the household income of those
of the government put together.”
with family abroad. These not only allow
published by Little, Brown in the world outside the US on 2 November.
Filipinos to enjoy a higher standard of living
He a contributing editor to Prospect magazine, a freelance writer for a
Unlike most developing-country
– televisions, home improvements and so
variety of publications such as the
governments, the Philippines’ actively
on – they also fund greater investment in
Financial Times, the Guardian, The
encourages its citizens to go work abroad.
education and enterprise. Studies show
New Republic and Foreign Policy, and
It tries to place workers overseas and also
that as migrants earn more, they send more
a commentator for BBC TV and radio
licenses and regulates private recruitment
money home – and that this extra income
agencies to do so. Migrants typically go
allows kids to stay longer in school, reduces
on globalisation. He blogs at www. philippelegrain.com. He was previously
work on two-year contracts that are usually
child labour and enables local people to
trade and economics correspondent
open to renewal, primarily in Saudi Arabia,
start new businesses, such as taxi services
for The Economist and special adviser
but also in Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore,
and dressmaking. Remittances really came
to World Trade Organisation director-
Japan and the US. They tend to go alone
into their own during the Asian financial
because they are not permitted to bring
crisis of 1997 when the Filipino currency
family members with them. Such temporary-
collapsed and the economy went into a
general Mike Moore.
130 |
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In poor countries, people’s incomes are often volatile as well as low. One year there is a bumper harvest, the next year the crop fails. tailspin. Receipts from workers abroad helped cushion the blow, as migrants sent home extra cash to help their hardup relatives and because the value of their dollar remittances was now higher in devalued Philippine pesos.
“As migrants earn more, they send more money home – and this extra income allows kids to stay longer in school, reduces child labour and enables local people to start new businesses.”
The government encourages migrants to go work abroad through official channels rather
loans through a government body called the
than illegally by offering them subsidised
a Overseas Workers Welfare Administration
benefits, such as training on social and
(OWWA). The government has also made
work conditions abroad, life insurance and
it easier for migrants to send money
pension plans, medical insurance and tuition
home cheaply and easily through private
assistance for migrants and their families,
banks, and even offers tax-free investment
as well as pre-departure and emergency
programmes aimed at overseas workers.
➣ Words into Ac tion
| 131
Development Agenda
➣
The OWWA also helps returning migrants
scarce highly-skilled graduates is viewed
make the most of the savings and foreign
as particularly worrisome. Certainly, if
know-how they have accumulated. Edgar
African countries lose the few doctors
Cortes worked as a casting operator
they have, they will suffer – although since
overseas for fourteen years. When he
governments do not own their people,
returned home, he set up a company to
preventing people from emigrating would
make aluminium side-wheels for tricycles,
grossly violate their human rights. But for
using his savings – and a 100,000 peso
the most part, emigration is a boon for
loan from the OWWA – to buy the machines
developing countries. It can boost the
and tools he needed. His shop, in one
wages of those who remain, while the
of Manila’s most depressed areas, now
money that migrants send back reduces
employs four people. Sotero Owen was a
poverty and can contribute to development.
welder in Saudi Arabia until a hefty pay cut
The Mexican government has started calling
made him decide to return home. With his
its citizens who work in the US “heroes” or
wife, he set up a loom-weaving operation in
“VIPs” in recognition of the huge financial
Baguio City with the support of loans from
contribution their remittances makes to the
OWWA. With income from his business, he
national economy. When migrants return,
has been able to see his children and two
as many do, they bring back the know-how
nephews and nieces through college. He
they acquired in rich countries. Half of the
was also able to build his house and buy
Turkish migrants who return from Germany
a five-hectare property, on which he has
start their own company with money saved
started to farm.
abroad within four years of returning home. In the case of highly skilled workers, such
Mixed feelings
as the Indian internet entrepreneurs who
Most developing-country governments
have returned from Silicon Valley to set up
have mixed feelings about emigration. The
world-beating companies in Bangalore, the
departure of workers overseas is often
circulation of brains from poor countries
seen as a sign of failure, and an exodus of
to rich ones and back can bring huge benefits. In fact, migration could do more to boost the economic prospects of many developing countries than overseas aid or foreign investment. Estimates of how much money developing countries receive from their citizens working abroad vary. But even according to officially recorded flows, remittances are huge – totalling $167bn in 2005, according to World Bank estimates. Including unrecorded flows, the true figure may be more than 50% higher, the World Bank reckons, or as much as three times higher, according to the Global Commission on International
Remittances can transform the lives of poor people for the better: They give farmers and small business people access to precious funds that help them set up and expand their business.
132 |
Words into Ac tion
Migration. Of that official total of $167bn, $45bn went to low-income countries such
➣
Development Agenda
➣
as India, $88bn to lower middle-income
underestimate the true figures, remittances
countries such as China and the Philippines
are arguably by far the biggest transfer from
and $33.8bn to upper middle-income
abroad that poor countries receive.
countries such as Mexico and Poland. The top developing-country recipients in 2004
In 20 developing countries, official remittances
were India ($21.7bn), China ($21.3bn) and
account for over a tenth of the economy.
Mexico ($18.1bn).
The small Pacific island of Tonga tops the list: nearly a third of its economy comes
134 |
Words into Ac tion
The $160bn that migrants sent home
from migrant’s remittances. In 36 countries,
in 2004 is over twice the $79bn that
remittances in 2004 were larger than public
developing countries received in aid from
and private capital inflows combined –
rich-country governments. It is also almost
government aid, foreign direct investment and
as much as the $166bn of foreign direct
net foreign purchases of bonds and shares.
investment – spending by foreign companies
They were larger than total merchandise
on factories, equipment and offices – which
exports in 12 countries or territories, and
developing countries received. And it is
larger than the earnings from the biggest
more than the $136bn of net purchases of
commodity export in another 28 countries.
developing-country bonds and shares by
In Mexico, remittances are larger than foreign
foreign investors. Since the official flows
direct investment; in Sri Lanka, they are worth
more than tea exports; and in Morocco, they bring in more money than tourism. Even better, remittances are rising fast. They are up by nearly three-quarters since 2001, with more than half of that increase
“Remittances from migrants were larger than total merchandise exports in 12 countries or territories, and larger than the earnings from the biggest commodity export in another 28 countries.”
occurring in China, India and Mexico. Of the 34 developing countries that received more than $1bn in remittances in 2004, 26 have
just been hit by a disaster like a crop failure,
notched up an increase of more than 30%
they should surely spend the money on
since 2001.
immediate consumption rather than invest it.
These official figures do not count the
Critics also point out, rightly, that those
money that is transferred through informal
who migrate to rich countries are rarely the
operators, or suitcases of cash carried by
poorest in society – because the poorest
travellers. Obviously, it is very hard to know
can’t afford to move and lack even basic
how much money is transferred in this way,
skills, such as being able to read and write
but it is likely to be a lot. The World Bank
– so that remittances may not help the
estimates, for instance, that less than half
worst off. But in fact, some very poor people
of the money sent to Bangladesh – and only
do move and even the relatively better off
a fifth of the money sent to Uganda – goes
people who do migrate are poor by Western
through official channels.
standards. Their remittances, moreover, benefit not just their friends and families but
Remittances and poverty
the local economy too, including the very
The beauty of remittances is that, unlike
poorest people. According to one estimate,
government aid, they end up directly in the
each dollar sent home by Mexicans boosted
pockets of the people they are trying to help.
the local economy by $2.90 thanks to this
When they are spent in the local economy
multiplier effect.
or used to set up small local businesses, they benefit the local community more
Study after study shows that remittances
generally. Critics claim that remittances do
can transform the lives of poor people for
little good to poor countries because they
the better. They alleviate poverty. They help
are frittered away on consumer goods such
cushion the blow, in countries where there
as televisions rather than being invested
is typically no social insurance, of potentially
more productively. For a start, that’s not
devastating events like a farmer’s crop
true: some of the money is spent, some
failing, or a worker losing his job or falling ill.
is invested. But in any case, what’s wrong
They give farmers and small businesspeople
with consumption? If poor people prefer to
precious access to funds that help them set
spend their money on a television, then it’s
up and expand their business. And they are
up to them. Privileged Westerners, who all
often spent on education and health, which
have televisions and video recorders, should
is good not just for the recipients but for the
not be criticising poor people’s perfectly
economy’s development in general.
valid spending choices. Moreover, if remittances are sent to poor people who are
Start with the impact on poverty. The World
struggling to put food on the table, or have
Bank has calculated what would happen to
➣ Words into Ac tion
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Development Agenda
➣
poor people’s incomes in a cross-section
because they generally have few assets to
of 37 developing countries if remittances
sell, or borrow against, to tide them through
dried up. It found that in the countries where
bad times, and because governments
remittances account for a large share of the
rarely provide any kind of social insurance:
economy – 11% of GDP on average – they
no unemployment benefits, no handouts
cut the poverty rate by a third. And even
to needy families, no sick pay, disability
in countries which receive relatively small
allowance or free healthcare. People often
amounts from migrants – 2.2% of GDP on
have to rely on their extended family as a
average – remittances can cut the poverty
form of social insurance, but this is of little
rate by nearly a fifth. Since the true level of
use if the whole community is hit by drought
remittances is probably much higher than
or a currency crisis.
the official figures, their impact on poverty is likely to be even greater.
Remittances help cushion the blow in several ways. They can provide poor people with a basic minimum when other sources of income dry up. They allow poor people to save more to tide them over bad times. And they can actually offset an unexpected
#
financial blow: migrants typically send more
-
money home if they know that their family
9
has fallen on hard times. For instance,
#-
when Jamaica is hit by hurricane damage,
-9
migrants tend to send home an extra $25
#9
for every $100 in damage suffered, thus
#-9
insuring local Jamaicans against a quarter
+
of their losses. People in poor countries are rarely able to borrow. But by providing a stable source of In Mexico, remittances are larger than foreign direct investment.
income, indeed one that typically rises when they need it most, remittances increase poor
Remittances also help protect poor people
people’s creditworthiness, because lenders
from harmful events from which people
perceive that they are more likely to be
in rich countries are largely insulated. In
able to repay their debts, allowing them to
poor countries, people’s incomes are often
borrow when they need to.
volatile as well as low. One year there is a
136 |
Words into Ac tion
bumper harvest, the next year the crop fails.
When the recipients have incomes above
One year the price of copper soars, the next
the minimum needed to survive and when
it plummets. One year the economy grows
they have not just suffered an economic
in leaps and bounds, the next a financial
calamity, remittances tend to be channelled
crisis destroys people’s savings and throws
more into savings and investment than other
millions out of work. Illness and crippling
sources of income. In El Salvador, which
accidents are also much more common
experienced massive emigration during
than in rich countries. What’s more, people
its civil war in the 1980s, the children of
in poor countries are particularly vulnerable,
families that receive remittances are much
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Development Agenda
of Boston, Massachusetts, where a large community of Mirafloreños now lives. Even while they are abroad, many migrants increasingly remain intimately involved with life back home. The largest Dominican agency in New York, Alianza Dominicana, which mainly provides social services to immigrants, also helps out with emergency relief when disaster strikes in the Dominican Republic. When the town of Jimaní was flooded in 2004, and over 700 people died or disappeared, the Alianza channelled aid from the US through local churches, bypassing the often corrupt government authorities. People in poor countries are rarely able to borrow, so projects such as the DONGA women’s project in Benin are important for funding income generating activities like trade & agriculture.
➣
These are not just isolated examples of
more likely to remain in school. Perhaps
immigrants’ charity. Across the US and
because the income from abroad is more
Canada, migrants have set up thousands
regular, or because the sender earmarks it
of “hometown associations” and other
for kids’ education, remittances do not just
similar grassroots organisations over
make families better off: compared with an
the past decade, to help development
equivalent increase in income from other
projects in their home towns, mainly in Latin
sources, they have a disproportionately
America and the Caribbean. France has a
large impact – ten times as much in urban
thousand or so “organisations de solidarité
areas – on children’s chances of remaining
internationale issues de migrations”
in school. Remittances really can make a
(international solidarity organisations
huge difference.
stemming from migration, or OSIMs), and there are similar groups in Britain, such
Hometown associations
as the Sierra Leonean Women’s Forum,
The Miraflores Development Committee,
which provides food and clothing for people
which was set up to improve living
back home. Hometown associations can
conditions in a small town on the southern
make a huge difference: their donations are
coast of the Dominican Republic, has
often greater than the municipal budget for
made all sorts of improvements to local
public works. “Towns with a home town
life. It has paid for an aqueduct, providing
association abroad commonly have paved
residents with a reliable water supply for the
roads and electricity. Their soccer teams
first time. It has funded renovations to the
have better equipment, fancier outfits, and
village school, health clinic and community
perhaps even a well-kept field where they
centre. It is also paying for a funeral home
practice,” one study found.
and a baseball stadium. Where is this
138 |
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strikingly successful example of community
Some hometown associations are moving
development based? Not in the Dominican
beyond social projects and humanitarian
Republic, but in Jamaica Plains, a suburb
aid to investing in economic infrastructure
and community businesses – and
as fast-food delivery, software and video
developing-country governments are
stores, selling and renting mobile phones,
forming partnerships with them to leverage
based on ideas and skills they had acquired
their benefits. For instance, under Mexico’s
there. Meanwhile, Salvadoran businesses
3-for-1 programme, started in 1997, local,
have come to see the large immigrant
state and federal governments all contribute
community in the US as a big new market.
one dollar for every dollar of remittances
The Constancia Bottling Company, a beer
sent to a community for a development
and soft drinks firm, has set up a plant in
project. Thanks to the 3-for-1 programme,
Los Angeles to cater to the needs of the
Las Animas, a farming village of 2,500
“hermanos lejanos” (distant brothers, as
people, obtained a $1.2m drinking water
Salvadorans call emigrants). Others sell
and drainage project with $300,000 in club
Salvadoran newspapers and the latest
contributions.
CDs and videos, or transfer goods and remittances across countries.
Globalisation from below Most globe-trotting executives work for investment banks, management consultancies or big multinational companies. But much humbler migrants are increasingly taking advantage of cheaper
“Some hometown associations are moving beyond social projects and humanitarian aid to investing in economic infrastructure and community businesses.”
transport and communications to commute between countries too. Their to-ing and froing is creating new businesses and trade
But are such enterprises more than just
links that span several countries: a kind
interesting anecdotes? When Alejandro
of globalisation from below. For instance,
Portes of Princeton University and others
the Otavalan indigenous community from
surveyed over 1,200 Colombian, Dominican,
the highlands of Ecuador have taken to
and Salvadoran family heads in Los
travelling abroad to market their colourful
Angeles, New York and Washington DC,
ponchos and other woollens in major
they found that transnational businesses
European and North American cities. Some
were increasingly common – especially
have settled abroad, but they still earn a
among immigrants who had been abroad
living by running garment workshops in their
for a long time, presumably because they
home town in Ecuador, to which they travel
had accumulated enough capital, know-how
regularly and from which they source their
and contacts to get their businesses started.
clothes. In short, migration has allowed the than being constrained by their smaller and
Macroeconomic impact of remittances
much poorer local one.
Remittances can do more than just alleviate
Otavalan to access the global market rather
poverty and contribute to local development, The Otavalan are not the only ones whose
they can also bring wider benefits to the
businesses straddle different countries
economy as a whole. One study of 13
– or even continents – just as much larger
Caribbean countries found that when the
multinational companies do. In the mid-
economy shrank by 1%, remittances tended
1990s, Dominican immigrants returning from
to rise by 3% over the next two years.
the US pioneered new businesses, such
Much as rich-country governments boost
➣ Words into Ac tion
| 139
Development Agenda
➣
spending in recessions to help stabilise
doubt whether they will be repaid. But
the economy – through public works
by providing a steady stream of foreign-
programmes, and because unemployed
currency earnings, remittances can improve
and needy people receive welfare benefits
a country’s creditworthiness, allowing it
– remittances can have a similar stabilising
to borrow more at lower interest rates.
effect in poor countries.
Developing-country governments are now even able to borrow using their country’s
Many poor countries find it hard to borrow
expected future remittances as collateral.
abroad because their foreign-currency
Mexico was the first to do so in 1994, and
earnings are so small or volatile that lenders
since then such “securitisation” has taken off. Between 2000 and 2004, Brazil, Turkey, El Salvador, Kazakhstan, Mexico and Peru together raised a total of $10.4bn. Even the poorest countries, which receive $45bn in remittances a year, could eventually tap this relatively cheap form of finance, giving them the opportunity of faster growth. The biggest potential prize is that remittances could boost long-term economic growth. Putting kids through school and paying for them to see the doctor benefits the economy as a whole, because healthier, better-educated workers are more productive. If recipients of remittances start up new businesses or invest more in existing ones, this can provide new jobs and boost growth. Of course, it is very hard to disentangle the precise impact of remittances on economic performance. But by looking at a sample of 73 countries between 1975 and 2002, Paola Giuliano and Marta Ruiz-Arranz of the IMF find that in countries with rudimentary financial systems where borrowing is difficult and costly, remittances allow people to bypass these problems, invest more and more wisely, and thus increase economic growth. If remittances increase by one percentage point of GDP, growth rises by 0.2 percentage points. So in a country where official remittances amount to a tenth of the economy, economic growth is boosted by 2 percentage points a year. That
Remittances can transform the lives of poor people.
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is not a prize to be sniffed at.
■
Development Agenda
The missing link The importance of entrepreneurship to development is worryingly under-appreciated.
S
i monumentum requiris, circumspice
Look around at just about any product you
– if you seek a memorial, look
use. Where does it come from? We tend
around. Sir Christopher Wren’s
to take things for granted, and not think
epitaph in St Paul’s Cathedral, which
about the individuals and institutions that
he designed, could equally apply to
make them possible. Often, it is hardest to
entrepreneurs in a market economy, as
see what is in front of your nose. Consider,
the Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises
for example, the computer which I used to
pointed out. Look around at all the wealth,
write this article. My tiny laptop has more
health, resources, technologies and
computing power than most countries
opportunities. They were not conjured out of
had 40 years ago. It performs in seconds
thin air, they were created by innovators who
calculations that have would taken hundreds
dared to imagine a different world – and set
of years with a pen and paper.
about creating it. Think about pioneers – people such as Steve It is easy to forget how fast the world has
Wozniak, Steve Jobs and Bill Gates – who
changed. Only a few generations ago, living
came up with the ideas and business models
conditions in today’s wealthiest countries
which have cut the cost of computing power
at www.johannorberg.net. He has
were worse than those in the poorest
by a factor of around a million in a few
an MA in the history of ideas from
countries are now. No cars, no trains,
decades. And how did the laptop get to me
JOHAN NORBERG is a Swedish author, who also blogs
no planes; no phone, no email, not even
this cheaply? By ship, thanks to Malcolm
Senior Fellow at the Centre for the
electricity; no running water, no indoor
McLean, a truck-driver from North Carolina,
New Europe and. His books cover
sanitation, no antibiotics. We stand a better
who in the 1950s came up with the idea
chance of reaching retirement age than
to load wheel-less containers onto ships
the University of Stockholm and is a
subjects such as human rights,
people in previous eras had of experiencing
and hoist them onto waiting trucks, thereby
liberalism. His book on globalisation,
their first birthday. My ancestors in mid-
reducing loading costs by over 97%. What’s
In Defence of Global Capitalism, has
19 century Sweden were starving. Back
more, the computer and its components
been translated in 24 countries. He
then, Scandinavia was poorer than Congo
travelled smoothly trough the logistics chain
has just completed a new book on
is today, while average life expectancy was
thanks to bar codes, invented by Jerome
only half, and infant mortality three times,
Lemelson in the 1950s after he realised that
the current developing-country average.
visual information could be read by a video
In the thousand years to 1820, average
camera and the signal then converted into
incomes in the world rose by no more than
digital information.
economic freedom and the history of
entrepreneurship, When Mankind Created the World.
th
half; since then, when innovators have
142 |
Words into Ac tion
been set free to create, incomes have risen
Give a thought too to the pioneers whose
ten-fold.
incremental ingenuity led to the outsourcing
of the production, metals and plastic my computer is made from. Not even “natural” resources are natural in any meaningful sense. To explore, exploit and renew them requires creativity and hard work, as many governments that have nationalised resource industries have discovered to their cost. We are all indebted to people such as McLean and Lemelson who saw new opportunities and took the risk of exploring them. The people who find new markets, create new products, think through a new way of handling a commodity commercially, organise work in a novel fashion, use new technology or transfer capital to a more productive use. The entrepreneur is an explorer, who ventures into uncharted territory, finds exotic new places, and opens up new routes along which many others subsequently travel. Without them, the world as we have come to know it would scarcely exist. In the past 100 years, we have created more wealth than in the previous 100,000 – even though people in the West now spend only half as much time working. It is because new ideas have made it possible for us to work smarter, and find easier ways to satisfy our needs and demands. Now that one man with a modern combine-harvester can reap and thresh as much grain in six minutes as 25 people could in a whole day in pre-industrial times, everybody can afford food and 24 men are freed to solve other problems and meet other demands.
The elephant in the room Joseph Schumpeter conceived of entrepreneurs as revolutionaries who destroy the old by creating the new. Yet
➣
The entrepreneur is an explorer who ventures into uncharted territory, finds exotic new places, and opens up new routes along which many others subsequently travel.
Words into Ac tion
| 143
Development Agenda
reducing poverty? Well, perhaps not, but that is of little help. In Ancient Egypt, nobody denied that the world had more than two dimensions, yet traditional art did not have room for perspective. Everyone worked within the existing paradigm, so that artists never really explored the real world, and how to interpret it realistically. The same is true in modern economics. The neo-classical mathematical descriptions of economic activities don’t have room for disruptors, innovators and revolutionaries. Entrepreneurs are everywhere – except in economic textbooks. Economists describe the wealth created when capital, labour and natural resources are combined, but make it seem as if they Certainly a lack of education and dismal institutions destroy opportunities, and aid, properly used, can help deal with these problems. ➣ many pioneers innovate through small,
just happened to meet in the lift one day, and got to work, since the person who connects them is nowhere to be seen.
ongoing attempts to reduce inefficiencies
The standard theories study equilibriums,
and find more practical ways of connecting
whereas the entrepreneur is the person
possible supply with potential demand.
who upsets equilibriums, or profits from
Perhaps the person who opened the store
turning disequilibrium into something that
where I bought my computer, and the Geek
approaches it. The theories study the
Squad, who visit my home to fix my laptop
supply of, and demand for, existing goods,
when the hard-drive crashes, are more
whereas the entrepreneur introduces new
representative of most entrepreneurs.
goods to the market. The theories study standard firms’ repeat decisions, whereas
This is more like Israel Kirzner’s perspective
the entrepreneur creates growth through
of entrepreneurs as the oil that greases the
unpredictable new decisions. As William
machinery of the market: individuals who
Baumol, one of the economists who has
see potential demand and therefore try
studied entrepreneurship and innovation
to supply it. But in my mind, Schumpeter
most, points out: “The entrepreneurial
and Kirzner are like the blind travellers who
mechanisms underlie continuous industrial
touched the trunk, a leg and the side of
evolution and revolution, and surely are not
an elephant, and described it as a snake,
the stuff of which stationary models are
a tree and a wall respectively. They have
built.”
all informed our world view by describing particular aspects of the same entrepreneur.
It’s like the old story about the lamp post. You might not have dropped your car keys
144 |
Words into Ac tion
So what? Don’t we know this by now?
under it, but you look there anyway, because
Does anyone deny the importance of
it’s the only place which is well-lit enough for
entrepreneurs in creating wealth and
you to look for them. That is one reason why
➣
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Development Agenda
In the slums of Nairobi, to get a permit to sell bread legally would need the signatures of 13 different bureaucrats.
“History shows that countries aren’t lifted out of poverty, they rise out of poverty, by liberating the creators and innovators back home.”
about entrepreneurs’ fundamental role in economic activity, they have to turn to glossy business magazines.
The developers So economists see market failures
➣
I think that economic history has been more
everywhere, but miss the entrepreneur
fruitful than economics in the last decades:
who also notices those inefficiencies, but
it sheds some light on the place where the
conceives of them as profit opportunities.
keys were really dropped. You can build a
This blind spot has distorted the debate
model without creators and innovators, but
about globalisation and development. Both
you can’t write history without them.
sides discuss how low-income countries are to be lifted out of poverty, either through
Dan Johansson, a Swedish economist,
vast aid projects or through huge foreign
has studied the most frequently used
investment. Think about the wording: who is
textbooks in Swedish PhD courses. Of 19
supposed to “lift them”? History shows that
books, only two included a reference to
countries aren’t lifted out of poverty, they
“entrepreneurs”, and one used it merely as
rise out of poverty, by liberating the creators
a synonym for borrower, to explain the loan
and innovators back home. Of course, poor
market. Most of these books are written by
countries make use of technologies that
American economists and are used in PhD
were created abroad, but they also have to
programmes worldwide, so the result is not a
adapt them to their own circumstances.
Swedish aberration, according to Johansson.
146 |
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If future economists in universities, politics
Certainly, disease, a lack of education and
and multinational institutions want to read
dismal institutions destroy opportunities, and
➣
8,000
34,192
executives representing 2,000 companies working in countries on Executive Education programmes
alumni in 160 countries
120
887
143
MBA participants of nationalities
73
resident faculty and 84 visiting faculty representing countries
31
56
Executive MBA participants of nationalities
22
Asia Campus Singapore Tel: +65 67 99 53 88 imf@insead.edu Europe Campus www.insead.edu
France Tel: +33 (0)1 60 72 40 00 imf@insead.edu
64
PhD students of nationalities
21
Development Agenda
➣
aid, properly used, can help deal with these
of risk-takers and problem-solvers. Without
problems. But massive transfers of capital to
them, you can import successful solutions,
very poor countries have also made it more
investments or aid projects, but you can’t
profitable for potential innovators to pursue
make it self-sustaining and self-generating.
a career in politics or bureaucracy than in
It’s akin to the difference between copying
business.
the correct solution to some mathematical problems and fostering a group of mathematicians who can use their talents
“Big investors can push countries to open up particular sectors, but potential future entrepreneurs don’t form pressure groups.”
to deal with unforeseen problems. Many kinds of rules and regulations limit the freedom to develop businesses and business models in developing countries, but most destructive are those that limit the right to do business generally, such
The Washington Consensus was right to
as licensing requirements, a lack of
point out that poor macroeconomic policies
property rights and the absence of the
can do great harm, but even with low
rule of law. This should be the focus of the
inflation and a balanced budget countries
development debate today – not to solve
can stagnate. Driving carefully is important,
problems, but to liberate those who solve
but it does not ensure that you move in
problems.
the right direction. Opening up to foreign investment and trade is also essential, but
In a global economy governments have to
if this is the only liberalisation that occurs
pay constant attention to macroeconomic
in a very unequal country with a privileged
indicators – because capital would
class of businesspeople, it tends to create
otherwise flee – but they don’t have the
new opportunities principally for those who
same pressure to deal with these kinds of
already have big businesses and political
microeconomic constraints. Big investors
connections.
can push countries to open up particular sectors, but potential, future entrepreneurs
No country will prosper unless it uses the
don’t form pressure groups.
creative resources of its entire population.
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Words into Ac tion
Otherwise, new ideas and different solutions
Fortunately, we are starting to see a new
will be limited to the small group who
focus on how these types of regulations
already think alike and work within the old
hurt, partly inspired by the Peruvian
system. It was not the presence of big
economist Hernando de Soto, who has
businesses that made Europe and America
highlighted the thriving economic activity
rich, it was the fact that a couple of guys
in the informal sector, and pointed to the
with nothing but a great idea and a garage
benefits of legalising it. Thanks to the World
were allowed to succeed and create new
Bank’s annual Doing Business report,
companies, competing with the old. This
we now have a decent set of data about
not only increases wealth and keeps the
such obstacles in different countries.
establishment on its toes, it creates a large
Unfortunately, there is a lot to measure.
group of people obsessed with finding
Most of the world’s population is left outside
challenges and solving problems – a class
the legal market.
➣
Development Agenda
Poor countries are filled with entrepreneurs and people who work hard: Mark Shuttleworth became a billionaire at 25 when he sold his IT company and his achievements were honoured with a parade through Cape Town.
➣
150 |
Words into Ac tion
It often surprises people that poor countries
of Nairobi, I met Pamela, who sold bread
are filled with entrepreneurs and people
to her neighbours. To get a permit to do
who work hard. The streets of Kenya’s
so legally she would have needed the
capital, Nairobi, are thronging with young
signatures of 13 different bureaucrats. That
people selling food, music and clothes.
would have taken her at least two months
There is plenty of activity and energy,
and cost her half a year’s income in official
but unfortunately much of it has to be
fees – not to mention the cost of bribes. And
devoted to avoiding regulation, corruption
if you are not sure whether you will be able
and dealing with the legal vacuum of the
to feed your children next week, how would
informal sector. On one corner in the slums
you be able to save that much?
In a healthy economy you start a business because you want to get rich. In a regulated economy you have to be rich to start a company. Since Pamela doesn’t have a permit, she
“The entrepreneur looks upon the world with a certain focus, paying attention to challenges, and therefore becomes a serial problem-solver.”
is at the mercy of the authorities. She has to hide from law enforcers, and therefore also from potential customers. She can’t get a loan and can’t expand her business.
revolutionise an industry always start life
It’s dangerous to trade with strangers, since
as a minority view, considered stupid or
she can’t go to the police if contracts are
dangerous by the majority.
broken. Since she works outside the law, the authorities can demand bribes to leave
China’s rapid economic development is
her alone. The sarcastic joke in the slums is
largely a creation of foreign investment in
that it is dangerous to carry large amounts
the export industry. Even though private
of cash – because there are too many
businesses now have much greater
policemen.
freedom, there are few examples of small private Chinese companies that have grown
The biggest problem with the informal
to be successful world-class companies.
economy is rarely mentioned. It is that the
The heavy hand of the state makes it difficult
underground entrepreneur sticks to what
for the creative, rule-breaking spirit of the
is known to her – her own neighbourhood,
entrepreneur to thrive. Small companies
customers and original line of business.
find it harder to get capital from the state-
But as history shows, many of the most
controlled capital market, outsiders find it
successful entrepreneurs started in
more difficult to get the freedom to develop
one business, but then noticed bigger
their business models, and if a company
opportunities elsewhere and changed
competes too vigorously against the rulers’
tracks. For example, several courier services
friends or relatives, it could suffer.
were started by businesspeople dissatisfied with the reliability of their existing delivery
One exception is Lenovo, which bought
service. The entrepreneur looks upon the
IBM’s personal-computer division in 2004.
world with a certain focus, paying attention
Created in 1984 by 11 engineers who
to challenges, and therefore becomes a
didn’t think that the university gave them
serial problem-solver. But if they are stuck in
room to develop their visions, it was the
familiar territory, their talents may be wasted.
first Chinese company to build a brand via advertising. And they constantly followed
But even if people can overcome such basic
their own goals, rather than those the
obstacles and start their own businesses,
government chose for them. Staff incentive
overbearing government may subsequently
systems were introduced that were illegal at
stifle them. By preventing entrepreneurs
the time, and the company used Western
from developing their own visions and
technology instead of relying on the
ideas, governments impede the process of
Chinese components the state wanted it to.
trial and error which all progress is based
Lenovo is now the world’s third-biggest PC
upon. Remember that the new ideas which
manufacturer.
➣ Words into Ac tion
| 151
Development Agenda
The streets of Africa’s capitals, are thronged with young people selling food, music and clothes.
➣
Lenovo succeeded, but how many have the
dependence on us – or do we give people
courage and perhaps the political protection
opportunities to solve problems themselves?
to think differently in an economy where the government always has the last say?
Rulers and analysts may struggle to change their way of thinking. But they would benefit
The chimpanzee in the cage
from embracing entrepreneurship. The
Perhaps we should pay a little less attention
evidence from economic history as well as
to our textbooks, and a little more to history
evolutionary psychology clearly shows that
and all the innovations and wealth that
we all have something of the entrepreneur in
surround us. We might then realise how
us. We should nurture our natural curiosity
essential the entrepreneur is to economic and
and creativity rather than stifling it.
social development. Then we might grasp
152 |
Words into Ac tion
that we have a responsibility to promote
In a classic experiment, a chimpanzee in a
entrepreneurship as much as possible,
cage tried to reach a banana. After a long
to remove obstacles to it domestically,
struggle, it realised that it could rake the
and consider how our efforts to help poor
banana into its cage by fitting two hollow
countries may harm entrepreneurship
sticks together. This discovery caused the
there. Do we try to solve problems – and
monkey such pleasure that it kept repeating
thus perhaps entrench poor countries’
the trick, and forgot to eat the banana.
■
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Reforming Global Governance
Fixing the Fund The IMF is more accustomed to dictating reforms than conceding them, but Asian countries’ efforts to provide their own financial insurance are forcing the Fund to change its ways in order to stay in business.
T
he International Monetary Fund held
in some cases. Hungary’s current-account
its spring meetings in April fighting
deficit, for example, will exceed 9% of GDP
to dispel the impression that it was
this year, the Fund reckons.
obsolete. Even one of its own deputy governors – Mervyn King, the head of the
A dangerous sport
Bank of England – pronounced the institution’s
Perhaps surprisingly, the IMF blames
remit unclear, its role obscure. Imperious,
the recent market volatility in part on the
incompetent, indulgent – the IMF was used to
success of its spring meetings. The April
being called all of these things. But irrelevant?
communiqués issued by the G7 finance
That was a new and chilling charge.
ministers and by its own International Monetary and Financial Committee
Yet only a few months on, as the Fund
apparently drew fresh attention to the
SIMON COX
embarks on its annual meeting, the mood
dangers posed by America’s vast current-
is Economics Correspondent
is rather different. For that it should thank
account deficit. Bad for the markets, this
for The Economist in London.
the financial markets as much as its own
renewed concern has proved good for
He joined the paper in 2003,
efforts to reinvent itself. Between 8 May and
the institution. The Fund has been invited
after studying at Cambridge,
13 June, emerging-economy stock markets
to resume its initial role as a provider
lost a quarter of their value. Spreads on
of the “machinery for consultation and
of Economics. He now covers
emerging-market bonds remain tight, but
collaboration” between the big economic
the IMF, the World Bank and the
Harvard and the London School
whereas investors once seemed gripped
powers, as they decide what, if anything,
WTO, as well as contributing to
by an indiscriminate appetite for such risky
to do about the growing imbalances in the
the Economics Focus column.
securities, they now appear pickier.
world economy. It has begun what it calls “multilateral surveillance” of a group of
This new edginess in global markets has
countries – China, the euro area, Japan and
reminded everyone of two important truths
Saudi Arabia, as well as the United States
which the IMF’s premature obituarists had
itself – which, it hopes, can together resolve
tended to neglect. Not every developing-
the key macroeconomic issue of our time.
country government has more foreign-
154 |
Words into Ac tion
exchange reserves than it knows what to do
The IMF’s bosses are quite taken with their
with; and not all of them are net exporters
new role, however thankless it may seem.
of capital to the rich world. Although capital
Perhaps they are just grateful for an invitation
may be “running uphill” from many poor
to the high table of economic statecraft.
countries, the flow is very much downstream
When the leading powers last mounted a
collective response to an overvalued dollar – at New York’s Plaza Hotel in 1985 – the Fund’s managing director was not invited to the meetings or even told about the accord until the day before it was signed. As the IMF’s historian, James Boughton, has put it, the world’s pre-eminent monetary institution “participated only at the pleasure of the countries’ officials and had no real standing to guide the process”. (It did provide some handy figures, however.) Could the Fund do any more this time round? In a speech in New Delhi earlier this year, Mervyn King urged it to act as an “umpire” of the international monetary system. Its powers to rule against the various players would, of course, be limited. But, as in a genteel game of cricket, it could perhaps rely on the batsmen to declare themselves out, if gently
An IMF team meets a senior tax official and his staff in Afghanistan. The Fund provided the equivalent of 356 person-years of technical assistance in 2003.
reminded of the rules of the game. Yet both are proving remarkably persistent. King’s metaphor no doubt appealed to his
The Fund was founded to help Europe cope
Indian hosts, for whom willow and leather
with the large trade deficits which it was
are sacred. But exchange-rate politics is
expected to run as it struggled to find its
not cricket. If a sporting analogy is required,
feet after the Second World War. Its voting
sumo wrestling might be more apt. The two
structure still reflects those origins. As critics
giants of China and America are grappling
have pointed out, Italy, Belgium and the
at close quarters. For the moment, each is
Netherlands together have more votes on
propped up by the other’s vast bulk. But
the IMF’s board (7.76%) than China, India
that fragile equilibrium might not last. The
and Brazil combined (6.27%). Why should
Fund is brave – some would say foolhardy
Turkey heed the Fund’s sermons, when its
– to step between them.
representation at the IMF (0.45%) falls far short of its weight in the world economy
183 Luxembourgs
(0.57%, at market prices)? Can the IMF
America’s deficit is not the only imbalance
serve as an even-handed umpire between
that the IMF seems keen to resolve. In
America and China when the first casts over
his strategic review, Rodrigo de Rato, the
17% of the votes in the institution and the
Fund’s managing director, noted that the
second less than 3%?
gross inequities in the institution’s voting system were equally troubling to many.
A member’s “quota” simultaneously determines
“Neither imbalance is sustainable,” he wrote.
how much it must contribute to the Fund’s
➣ Words into Ac tion
| 155
Reforming Global Governance
The Fund was founded to help Europe cope with the large trade deficits which it was expected to run as it struggled to find its feet after the Second World War.
➣
coffers, the amount it can borrow, and
Americans decided on the allocation of
the number of votes it can cast. Because
votes they wanted, and then instructed an
they serve three different purposes, these
economist to play around with a formula
quotas are a peculiar concoction. They are
until it delivered the desired outcome.
supposed to reflect both an economy’s
156 |
Words into Ac tion
might – its ability to contribute – and its
A rejigging of these quotas appeals to
vulnerability: its potential need to borrow.
emerging economies on two counts, political
No fewer than five different formulae are
and financial. First, it would give them a greater
in circulation, which place slightly different
say over the Fund’s affairs. Second, it would
weights on a country’s GDP, its currency
grant them a more generous overdraft limit.
reserves, and the size and volatility of its
For some countries, the second consideration
external payments and receipts. These
may be more pressing than the first. But for
calculations have always been a bit of a
others, quota reform is a matter of justice. The
sham. At the Bretton Woods conference
misallocation of voting rights has plunged the
that established the IMF in 1944, the
IMF into a “crisis of legitimacy”, they say.
➣
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Reforming Global Governance
In his strategic review, Rodrigo de Rato, the Fund’s M.D. (above in a Clinton Global Initiative debate with Fernando Henrique Cardoso, former Brazilian President and U.S. Congressman, Jim Kolbe), noted that the inequities in the institution’s voting system were troubling to many.
➣
158 |
Words into Ac tion
As Ngaire Woods of Oxford University
Could a reform of quotas help redress
points out, the countries least represented
these grievances? It might cut both ways.
at the Fund are often those most
Certainly, China, South Korea and Japan
profoundly affected by its decisions.
deserve many more votes, given the size of
Between them, two dozen African
their economies. But the awkward truth is
members, most of them in the IMF’s
that poor African countries already enjoy a
“intensive care”, have just one out of 24
greater voting share than their weight in the
executive directors and cast only 1.41%
world economy warrants. Argentina and
of the votes on the board. If the Fund
Indonesia – the two countries that perhaps
cannot be made more answerable to
feel most victimised by the IMF – are also
these impoverished countries, Woods
overrepresented, relative to the size of their
argues, it should rein in its ministrations. Its
economies measured at market exchange
ambitions must not exceed the limits of its
rates. The G-24, a group of developing
accountability.
countries, thinks market clout should not
“The awkward truth is that poor African countries already enjoy a greater voting share than their weight in the world economy warrants.”
But this argument is unlikely to succeed. In 1999, the Fund appointed an outside group, led by Richard Cooper of Harvard University, to suggest a better way of calculating quotas. That group rejected measures based on purchasing-power parity. Part of the problem is that PPP is a unit of measurement, not a means of payment. An international obligation cannot be settled with a unit of purchasing power. Thus an economy’s size, calculated in PPP terms, is a poor measure of its need for foreign exchange or its ability to contribute hard currency to international bail-outs. If Indonesia, for example, had been able to pay off its anxious foreign creditors in 1997 at the rate of 756 rupiah to the dollar (its purchasing-power exchange rate for that year), rather than 2,906 (the market rate), it might never have needed the IMF in the first place. count for everything. It wants an increase in
There is a second inconvenient truth
“basic votes”, which a country gets just for
about quota reform: one of the most
being a member, regardless of its economic
underrepresented countries, relative to the
size. In 1945, these represented 11% of
size of its economy, is the US. It has 17%
the total, but as the IMF has grown, their
of the votes, but accounts for almost a
share has dwindled to just 2%. The G-24
third of world GDP (at market rates). This
also argues that market exchange rates
anomaly, which the Americans are fond of
understate the size of their economies.
pointing out, does not mean that the Fund’s
Non-traded goods and services are much
shareholder-in-chief is underrepresented.
cheaper in poor countries than in rich ones,
It just demonstrates, quite starkly, that a
so their economies are far bigger than their
country’s share of the vote is no measure
exchange rates, set by the supply and
of its influence. Many of the big decisions
demand of tradable goods and assets,
at the IMF, including the appointment of its
would imply. To take account of this, their
managing director, must be decided by an
economies should instead be measured
85% majority. Thus the US, with 17% of the
in purchasing-power parity (PPP) terms.
votes, always has a veto.
➣ Words into Ac tion
| 159
Reforming Global Governance
➣ But even on decisions that require a
economies now, in the hope of a broader
simple majority, America’s voting power is
reallocation of quotas in the future.
greater than its share of the vote suggests,
Unfortunately, it may take a long time for the
according to a study by Dennis Leech
second shoe to drop. No country has ever
of Warwick University and Robert Leech
agreed to a reduction in its quotas; the Fund
of Birkbeck College, London. How so?
cannot take votes from one country to give
Their argument is best illustrated by the
to another. It can only reallocate power in
“Luxembourg paradox”. The tiny Duchy
the organisation in the context of a general
was one of the original six members of the
increase in shares.
European Economic Community. Though its population was just 310,000, it commanded
But that would place the IMF at the mercy
one vote out of 17 in a system that required
of the US Congress, which must approve
12 votes to pass a motion. West Germany,
any increase in the country’s contributions.
with over 50m people, had just four votes.
Its consent cannot be taken for granted.
Luxembourg, one might say, was grossly
Despite America’s power over the Fund,
overrepresented at the EEC.
the institution is not popular in Congress. Indeed, precisely because America’s
Even one of the IMF’s own deputy governors – Mervyn King, the head of the Bank of England – pronounced the institution’s remit unclear, its role obscure. Photo: Newscast.
However, as Leech and Leech emphasise,
executive branch thinks it owns the IMF, its
a country has influence only to the extent
legislative branch resents it. The IMF is seen
that it can swing a vote, by serving as the
as a “geopolitical slush fund”, as Thomas
decisive member of a coalition that would
Willett of Claremont Graduate University, has
lose without it. Given the allocation of votes
put it – a big pot of money that the White
among the other five members of the EEC
House can throw around without asking
(Belgium and the Netherlands had two votes
Congress’s permission. In April 1998, the
each; Germany, France and Italy had four), it
House of Representatives decided, by a
was mathematically impossible for them ever
margin of 222 to 186, not to stump up
to split 11-5 on an issue. Luxembourg was
America’s $18bn share of a general increase
doomed either to be a redundant member
in IMF funds. Only after Russia defaulted,
of a 13-vote (or more) winning coalition, or
the American economy wobbled, and
to form part of a futile 11-vote (or less) losing
President Clinton upbraided Congress for
bloc. In other words, Luxembourg had 6%
its irresponsibility did they relent.
of the votes and 0% of the power. The Fund may fare no better in any future America’s position is rather the reverse.
fight. “If periodic approval of IMF capital
Leech and Leech calculate that America’s
increases were once viewed as tantamount
17% share of the vote gives it a 24.5%
to votes of confidence in the IMF,” said
share of the power in simple majority voting.
Congressman Jim Saxton, head of the
Their analysis explodes the supposedly
joint economic committee, in 2004, “that
tight link between a country’s clout and its
confidence is sorely lacking today.”
contributions. America has more power than it pays for.
Consumer revolt If the Fund does face a crisis of legitimacy,
160 |
Rodrigo de Rato has proposed a two-
as some argue, then quota reform will do
step quota reform. He wants to sprinkle a
little to rescue it. Any feasible reallocation of
few extra votes on a handful of emerging
votes and voice would not loosen America’s
➣
Words into Ac tion
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STAT0203_IMF_WorldBankMeeting.in1 1
26-07-06 10:09:03
Reforming Global Governance
As a financial middleman, the Fund
“Shrinking budgets have a knack of concentrating bureaucrats’ minds, and, by its own projections, the IMF will face a budget shortfall of $280m in the 2009 fiscal year.”
is always vulnerable to the threat of disintermediation, if lenders and borrowers can match up without its help. The arkbuilders in Asia are experimenting with just such a venture, a web of bilateral promises to provide foreign exchange to each other in a pinch. First announced
➣
grip. But votes are not the only way to
in 2000, the Chiang Mai Initiative, as it is
get the IMF’s attention. Indeed, a fixation
called, has attracted commitments worth
with quotas may obscure the fact that the
over $60bn. Japan has pledged more
emerging economies are now exercising
money (over $30bn) to Chiang Mai than it
great influence over the Fund – not as
has to the Fund. Indonesia can now tap its
shareholders, but as dissatisfied customers.
neighbours for amounts worth three times its IMF quota, and the Philippines can call
Developing countries may have little voice
on four times its IMF limit.
within the IMF, but the threat of exit – of taking their custom elsewhere – still speaks
This is not yet an “Asian Monetary Fund”
eloquently. Argentina and Brazil have
to rival the Washington original. About
prepaid their IMF loans, while some of the
80% of the money on offer is intended
Fund’s biggest borrowers of yesteryear have
to “top up”, rather than replace, an IMF
now elected to insure themselves, rather
loan. The promises are not unconditional:
than relying on the Fund’s condition-laden
even the most neighbourly of creditors
cover. Eight East Asian countries have
wants to make sure it gets repaid. And
together amassed hard-currency reserves
the initiative has inherent limitations. If
worth about ten times the IMF’s total. “It’s
several countries in the region fall foul of
understandable to save for a rainy day,
the same local difficulties, they will all call
but they are building Noah’s Ark,” quipped
on their neighbours’ help at the same time.
Kenneth Rogoff, the IMF’s former chief
Emanuel Kohlscheen and Mark Taylor of
economist, earlier this year.
Warwick University show that extending the web to countries on the other side of the
If no one takes its loans, the Fund doesn’t
Pacific, such as Chile and Mexico, would
make any money. Shrinking budgets have
dramatically improve the pooling of risks.
a knack of concentrating bureaucrats’
162 |
Words into Ac tion
minds, and, by its own projections, the IMF
In principle, the IMF, as a global organisation,
will face a budget shortfall of $280m in the
should provide the best risk-pooling of all.
2009 fiscal year. It has turned to a group of
And spurred by its Asian defectors, it is
eminent persons, including Alan Greenspan,
trying. Rato is in favour of introducing an
the former US Federal Reserve chairman,
insurance mechanism, which might surpass
to look for new ways to cover its annual
the commitments made under the Chiang
budget, which was frozen at around $1bn
Mai initiative. He thinks the IMF should
this financial year, and is supposed to fall, in
promise loans in advance to countries
real terms, by 1% next. The irony of the IMF
which are fundamentally solvent, but are
facing a modest fiscal crisis of its own is not
nonetheless vulnerable to self-fulfilling runs
lost on its critics.
on their credit or their currencies.
The idea is not new. The IMF has already experimented (in vain) with “contingent credit lines” – funds for which countries could apply in advance of actually needing them. But the idea is resurfacing, not only because it is intellectually appealing, but also because the IMF’s survival requires it. If it is to remain of use to countries that are vulnerable to crises but not predestined to them, the Fund will have to compete with the alternatives offered by self-insurance and the Chiang Mai initiative. Such loans would have to be quick, sure and big. If skittish investors have reason to worry that the money will prove too little, or arrive too late, they will act on their concerns, and thus prove themselves right. Countries would therefore have to “prequalify” for the funds, according to some predictable, transparent criteria. Tito Cordella, an economist at the IMF, and Eduardo Levy Yeyati of Argentina’s Universidad Torcuato di Tella have played with various indicators of solvency. In their view, the IMF should precommit to lend to any country that could sustain its debts at the high, but not prohibitive, rate that the promised loan would charge. By their criteria, Thailand, Indonesia and South Korea were all solvent prior to their crises, but Russia, Brazil and Argentina were not.
International Monetary Fund Managing Director Rodrigo de Rato visits children who are living at the SOS Children’s Village, Bata, Equatorial Guinea. (International Monetary Fund Staff Photographer/Michael Spilotro)
How much money would the Fund offer? Rato has suggested countries could
South Korea in 1998 amounted to 18 times
borrow up to three times their quotas in
the country’s quota.
the first instance. Would that be enough? Not quite, according to Cordella and Yeyati.
The Fund is not yet obsolete, and its future
By their calculations, the IMF would need
is worth fighting for. Rato, for his part,
to promise its average client 4.7 times its
is battling on three fronts. The first two
quota. This is a big sum, but if the promise
– multilateral surveillance and quota reform
were credible, the money might never be
– are potential quagmires. But on the third
called on. Conversely, if a run were allowed
– offering better insurance cover to its
to gather momentum, a bail-out might
members – the Fund just might recapture
prove more expensive still. The rescue of
some ground.
■ Words into Ac tion
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Reforming Global Governance
In the public interest Oxfam International, the development charity, is launching a campaign to improve access to education, healthcare, clean water and sanitation in poor countries by investing in public services. We need to act now, say Emmett & Green.
“
I will never forget how I suffered due to
of millions of people will continue. The good
the lack of water. There was no water
news is that this suffering can be avoided if
to wash the baby or myself. I was
lessons are learned from countries that have
ashamed of the unpleasant smell, especially
succeeded in providing essential services
when my neighbours visited me,” says Misra
that meet the needs of poor people and
Kedir, recalling the birth of her child, Hitosa,
work for women and girls.
in Ethiopia. The evidence shows that developing Essential services – basic things like running
countries will only achieve a healthy and
taps, working toilets, classrooms with
educated population if their governments
teachers, and clinics with nurses – transform
take responsibility for providing essential
people’s lives. It is a scandal that in 2006
services, with civil-society organisations and
some people still live without them. Yet
private companies integrated into strong
BETHAN EMMETT
millions of families do. Today, 4,000 children
public systems, but not substituting for
is a policy adviser for Oxfam GB
will be killed by diarrhoea, a disease of dirty
them. Some governments have successfully
working on essential services,
water; 1,400 women will die needlessly in
built universal essential services, delivered
governance and public
pregnancy or childbirth; 115m school-age
through strong public systems, free or
spending. She has a background
children, mostly girls, will not go to school.
heavily subsidised for the poor and geared to the needs of women and girls. Many
in public expenditure management, Decent health and education, clean water
others have lacked the commitment, the
3 years as an economist for the
and adequate sanitation are among the
capacity or the cash to deliver on their
Ministry of Finance in Rwanda.
most basic of human rights, enshrined
responsibilities to the poor. International
in many international covenants. The
donors are crucial partners in supporting
international community has recognised
public systems, but too often are blocking
their critical importance by pledging to meet
progress even where governments have
targets, the UN’s Millennium Development
good intentions, by failing to deliver debt
Goals, such as ensuring universal primary
relief and predictable aid that supports
education by 2015 and reducing by two-
public systems, and by pushing private-
thirds the mortality rate among children
sector solutions that do not benefit the poor.
and has previously worked for
under five. These were deemed realistic and
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achievable, but unless leaders both North
To try to assess governments’ performance
and South act now, most will be missed
in providing essential services, Oxfam
and the needless deprivation of hundreds
has devised an Essential Services Index.
This ranks countries according to their
The Indonesian government, for instance,
achievements in four social areas – child
massively expanded public education in the
survival rates, schooling, access to safe water,
1970s; it now runs 150,000 primary schools,
and access to sanitation – and compares
covering 85% of all enrolments. More
this performance with per capita national
recently, countries such as Uganda and
income. The comparison shows that some
Brazil have doubled the number of children
governments have consistently punched
in school, halved AIDS deaths and extended
above their weight. For instance, while average
safe water and sanitation to millions.
incomes in Kazakhstan ($6,980 a year) are much higher than in Sri Lanka ($4,000), a child
Learning from success
in Kazakhstan is five times more likely to die
Studies of the policies that underpin
in its first five years, and is far less likely to go
developing-country success stories show
to school, drink clean water and have the use
that, despite some differences in approach,
of a latrine (see figure below).
the measures taken by successful countries have much in common. The recipe for
Sri Lanka is not unique. Within a generation,
success is generous investment in public
countries as diverse as Barbados,
services that are provided universally, free
Botswana, Costa Rica, Cuba, Malaysia
at the point of use, and geared to the needs
and Mauritius, along with Kerala state in
of women and girls.
India, have made advances in health and education that it took industrialised countries
Successful countries have greatly expanded
200 years to achieve. In East Asia, the
publicly funded infrastructure, especially
importance of the links between equitable
in rural areas. In Botswana, for instance,
access to social provision, poverty reduction
public construction and post-independence
and growth was recognised early on.
training programmes doubled the number
➣
DUNCAN GREEN is Head of Research at Oxfam GB. He previously worked for DFID as a Senior Policy Adviser on Trade
Kazakhstan 6,980
and Development. He has written widely on themes related to globalisation and Latin America.
Sri Lanka 4,000
Kazakhstan 73
Sri Lanka Kazakhstan 100 92
Sri Lanka 86 Kazakhstan 78
Sri Lanka 91 Kazakhstan 72
Sri Lanka 15 Income per capita US$*
Under 5 mortality rate per 1,000 of population
Net primary enrolment %
Improved drinking water coverage %
Sanitation coverage %
Even though Sri Lanka is poorer than Kazakhstan, its people are healthier and better educated.
Words into Ac tion
| 165
Reforming Global Governance
schooling for up to four children in every household, and there was an 84% increase in attendance at clinics countrywide after user fees were scrapped at all government health clinics. A study funded by the UK government comparing health systems across Asia found that in low-income countries, the most pro-poor health systems were those providing universal services that were free or almost free. Water services differ from education and health in that some form of user charge is necessary to conserve water and maintain infrastructure, but in high-performing countries water tariffs have been subsidised to ensure equity and improve access for the poor. In the Malaysian state of Pulau Penang, for instance, the public water utility, Successful countries have also made providing safe water and sanitation a priority.
PBAPP, supplies water to 100% of urban residents and 99% of rural ones, and does so equitably: it sets a subsidised price for the first 20,000 litres of water a household
➣
of health posts so that, by the 1980s,
uses each month, giving poorer consumers
over four-fifths of the population lived
affordable access to drinking water.
within 15km of a health facility. Successful
166 |
Words into Ac tion
countries have also made providing safe
Public services in successful countries focus
water and sanitation a priority. In Costa Rica,
on women and girls. In high performers,
water supply, latrine construction and public
women’s and girls’ access to education is
education on hygienic practices have gone
higher than the regional average and there
hand-in-hand with extending rural health
is a high proportion of female teachers and
services. Botswana’s government invested
health workers, which encourages others to
in a major programme of groundwater
use the services. This is all underpinned by
drilling and water network construction soon
government actions to strengthen women’s
after independence in 1966, achieving near-
social status and autonomy. In Mauritius,
universal access to safe water by the 1990s.
Cuba and South Africa new legislation has
Rural households were subsidised to build
enshrined the rights of women to own and
latrines and the government invested in
inherit property, and their rights to freedom
health and hygiene education programmes.
from violence and discrimination.
Making services free at the point of use
Successful countries have invested heavily
has been critical in expanding access for
in training, as well as in frontline workers,
poor people. Uganda’s primary-school
such as teachers, health workers and water
enrolments nearly doubled within a decade
technicians. Brazil increased net school
when the government introduced free
enrolment rates to nearly 100% for both girls ➣
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Reforming Global Governance
“Some governments have successfully built universal essential services, delivered through strong public systems, free or heavily subsidised for the poor and geared to the needs of women and girls.”
is unlikely to be able to access medical care, clean water or basic sanitation. Even relatively poor governments have choices over how to allocate spending – and many are not spending enough on social services. The Indian government continues
➣
and boys by instituting broad-based national
to spend almost twice as much on the
reforms to improve teacher qualifications
military as it does on health, while social
and training, along with performance-related
spending goes disproportionately towards
pay and increased salaries with generous
services that mainly benefit the middle
pension benefits. Many governments have
classes, such as hospitals and universities,
also taken measures to ensure that rural
or on other skewed priorities.
facilities are well staffed, often by requiring publicly trained workers to work in rural
The services that do exist are kept afloat by
areas for a time. In Sri Lanka, all teachers are
a skeleton staff of poorly paid, overworked
expected to work for three to four years in
and undervalued teachers and health-
‘difficult schools’, and a teacher deployment
workers. In the least developed countries,
project has implemented a ‘staff equalisation
teachers’ salaries have halved since 1970,
plan’ that penalises provinces with too
and there are far too few of these public-
many teachers and provides resources for
sector heroes to go around. There is a
provinces with teacher shortages.
global shortage of 4.3m health workers and 1.9m trained teachers.
Public failure – when governments fail to act
Where states lack the capacity or
“At the health centre they get annoyed
commitment to fund services, poor people
when they treat you,” says Marta Maria
are made to pay instead. Despite widely
Molina Aguilar, the mother of a sick child in
recognised gains in countries that have
Nicaragua. “If you don’t have any money
scrapped fees in primary education, 89 out
they won’t take you. Then what? Well, you’ll
of 103 surveyed countries still levy official
just be left to die.”
or informal charges for schooling. User fees in healthcare are a life or death issue. In
For every Sri Lanka, there are other poor
one Nigerian district the number of women
countries where millions of people cannot
dying in childbirth doubled after fees were
afford to see a doctor, girls have never been
introduced for maternal health services,
to school and homes have neither taps nor
while the number of babies delivered in
toilets. Countries such as Yemen, where
hospitals halved.
only one in three women can read and
168 |
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write. A Yemeni woman having a baby has
Whether services are provided privately
only a one in five chance of being attended
or publicly, corruption is a major problem.
by a midwife. If she and her child survive
In the worst instances, a vicious circle is
childbirth, her child has a one in three
created where a culture of impunity further
chance of being malnourished and a one in
weakens crumbling public systems through
nine chance of dying before his or her fifth
bribery and misappropriation. Where the
birthday. If she lives in a rural area, her family
providers are private but publicly funded,
corruption generally involves overcharging
have to buy it from private vendors who
government, paying bribes for contracts
are not regulated by the government in
and failing to deliver quality services. Where
their pricing or service quality.
the public sector is the provider, corruption takes place through absenteeism and staff
The result of such a reliance on private
taking second jobs in the private sector,
provision can be a patchwork of services, a
funds going missing and the creation of
lottery for citizens depending on where they
â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;ghost workersâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; to divert payrolls.
live and what they can afford. It was these very failings that prompted governments in
When governments fail to provide services,
now-successful countries to take action in
most poor people get no education,
the first place.
healthcare, clean water or sanitation. Those that do either have to bankrupt themselves
Worse, market reforms can undermine
to pay for private services or are reliant
essential services. When China phased
on a patchwork of civil-society providers,
out free public healthcare in favour of profit-
such as mosques, churches, charities and
making hospitals and health insurance,
community groups. These civil-society
household health costs rose forty-fold
groups offer a lifeline for the lucky few.
and progress on reducing infant mortality
They can reach remote and marginalised
slowed. When multinational companies
communities and provide community-based
enter into contracts with low-income and
services, such as home-based care for AIDS
low-capacity governments, the imbalance of
sufferers. But their coverage is patchy and
power can easily lead to abuse. The global
fragmented, their services are hard to scale
water market is dominated by a handful of
â&#x17E;Ł
up and the quality can vary greatly. They work best when integrated into a publicly led system, while retaining their autonomy.
The market is not the answer When faced with failing government services, many look to the market for answers. In some cases, private providers have indeed increased efficiency and, in the face of poor-quality public services, people often prefer them. But the private sector and the market alone will not deliver for poor people: services are provided instead for those who can afford them and the heavy presence of the private sector in essential services brings inequalities, high costs and skewed treatment practices, because private providers are notoriously hard to regulate. Poor people in the cities of Accra and Dares-Salaam pay up to five times more for a litre of water than other users because they
There is a global shortage of 4.3m health workers.
Words into Ac tion
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Reforming Global Governance
As much as 70% of aid for education is spent on technical assistance rather than on recruiting and retaining teachers.
➣
US, French, and UK companies, such as
Early high-performers in essential services
Bechtel, Suez, and Biwater, which negotiate
all received considerable foreign assistance.
contracts that often ‘cherry pick’ the most
Virtually all the roads, schools and health
profitable market segments, require guaranteed
facilities built in Botswana in the 1960s and
profit margins, and are denominated in
1970s were financed largely from donor
dollars. If governments try to terminate these
sources, as part of a co-ordinated national
contracts, they risk being sued, as recent
development plan. Costa Rica received
cases in Tanzania and Bolivia show.
$3.4bn between 1970 and 1992, mostly from the United States, and this helped it to shield
Regulating private providers can also be
its social spending during the economic
more difficult for weak states than directly
crisis of the 1980s. South Korea and Cuba
providing services. There is no alternative to
benefited from direct foreign aid from the
building public capacity to organise, provide
US and the Soviet Union respectively;
and regulate essential services.
importantly, this aid did not undermine recipient countries’ freedom to make their
Rich countries are responsible too
own decisions on the best way to provide
While poor-country governments can make
public services.
or break progress in delivering decent
170 |
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healthcare, education, water and sanitation to
More recently, some rich countries have
their people, rich-country governments can
supported public systems in poor countries
also have a great, often decisive, influence.
by channelling their aid through national
plans and budgets, enabling governments
and retaining teachers and nurses. A study
to plan for the future and pay decent salaries
of technical assistance in Mozambique found
for frontline workers. In Malawi, which is
that rich countries spent a total of $350m
seen as a high-risk country due to endemic
a year on 3,500 technical experts, while the
corruption under the previous government,
entire wage bill for 100,000 Mozambican
donors are now funding a salary increase for
public-sector workers was a mere $74m.
public health-workers, an intervention that
In health, numerous different ‘vertical’ health
is already stemming the tide of emigrating
initiatives increase transaction costs, duplicate
doctors and nurses and improving the
and undermine health delivery, distort health
quality of care on the wards.
priorities and undermine sector-wide planning. Angola and the Democratic Republic of
But instead of helping to revitalise public
Congo have each been required to set
services, rich-country governments too
up four HIV/AIDS ‘coordinating’ bodies.
often push private-sector solutions to public-service failures, despite the evidence
IMF-imposed ceilings on public-
that this is not working. Central to this is
sector wages and recruitment prevent
the practice by both the World Bank and
governments from expanding health and
the IMF of making governments introduce
education services. The WTO or regional
privatisation or other market reforms in
trade agreements may also threaten public
return for aid and debt cancellation. A 2005
services by limiting how governments
study of the World Bank’s latest adjustment
regulate foreign service-providers.
loans, the Poverty Reduction Support Credits, found that 11 out of 13 schemes
Rich countries are encouraging a
studied contained such conditions. These
haemorrhage of nurses and teachers from
included water privatisation in Nicaragua
developing countries. Of the 489 students
and the greater involvement of the private
who graduated from the Ghana Medical
sector in health-care provision in Senegal.
School between 1986 and 1995, 61% have left the country, more than half of them to
In many countries, the World Bank is
the UK and a third to the US. The African
pushing governments to contract out
Union estimates that poor countries are
services to non-state providers. This can
in effect subsidising public services in rich
speed the scale-up of services, but places
countries to the tune of $500m a year.
unrealistic demands on weak governments to regulate and manage contracts.
Despite recent progress on debt cancellation, many poor countries that
What poor-country governments need is
desperately need it are still being ignored.
aid that is well-coordinated, predictable
Only 17 of the more than 60 countries that
and channelled through public systems
need full cancellation have so far received
and national budgets. What poor countries
it from the World Bank and IMF.
typically get is insufficient, unpredictable aid, disbursed through a jumble of different
A manifesto for change
projects that compete directly with public
Oxfam International calls on developing-
services for staff and scarce resources. As
country governments to make sustained
much as 70% of aid for education is spent on
investments in essential education, health,
technical assistance rather than on recruiting
water and sanitation systems and services,
➣ Words into Ac tion
| 171
Reforming Global Governance
“While poor-country governments can make or break progress in delivering decent healthcare, education, water and sanitation to their people, rich-country governments can also have a great, often decisive, influence.”
Track Initiative. They should also work with poor countries to recruit 4.5m new health workers, 1.9m teachers and other key workers, reduce their own active recruitment of health and other professionals from poor countries, and pay restitution to these
➣
working with civil society and the private
countries for graduates they have poached.
sector within an integrated public system. They need to train and recruit millions
Civil society too needs to act to hold
of desperately needed health workers
governments to account. It has to build
and teachers, and improve the pay and
popular movements to demand that
conditions of existing workers. They have
governments provide quality public services,
to build an ethos of public service, in which
including free health and education; engage
both public and essential-service workers
in local and national planning processes;
are encouraged to take pride in their
work with parliaments to monitor budget
contribution. They need also to ensure citizen
spending, to ensure that services are
representation and oversight in monitoring
reaching the poorest and corruption is
public services, as well as taking a public
not tolerated; and challenge rich-country
C
stand against corruption. They should abolish
governments, the World Bank and the IMF
M
fees for basic education and health care
when they fail to support public services.
Y
and subsidise water for poor people. Last
CM
but not least, they need to make services
Within a generation, for the first time in
MY
work for the welfare and social status of
history, every child could be in school.
CY
women and girls by reducing educational
Every woman could give birth with the
CMY
disparities, promoting women’s employment
best possible chance that neither she nor
in public services and guaranteeing women’s
her baby will die. Everyone could drink
economic and social rights.
water without risking their life. Millions of new health workers and teachers could be
Rich countries, the World Bank and the IMF
saving lives and shaping minds.
must support poor country governments to do this. They should stop pushing the
We know how to get there – through
inappropriate privatisation of public services
political leadership, government action and
through aid conditions, technical advice
public services, supported by long-term
and trade agreements. They should keep
flexible aid from rich countries and debt
their promise to give 0.7% of their national
cancellation. We know the market alone
income as foreign aid and allocate a fifth of
cannot do it, civil society can only fill gaps,
that aid to basic services. They should also
and that governments must act. There is
fully implement commitments to improve aid
no short cut, and no other way. ■
quality, including the Paris commitments on aid effectiveness. They should pay for the removal of user fees in primary health and education and the subsidising of water fees for poor people, as well as fully financing
172 |
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Footnote: This article draws on ‘In the Public Interest’ (working title), a report to be published by Oxfam International and WaterAid at the World Bank/IMF annual meetings in Singapore. For the full version,
the Global Fund for HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis
including the sources for the facts and figures in
and Malaria, and the Education for All Fast
this article, please visit www.oxfam.org.uk
K
M
Y
Y
Y
Reforming Global Governance
First off the mark A healthy financial sector is vital to development, yet donors often neglect it. One of the best ways they can help is by providing the sound financial advice that poor countries are crying out for.
E
MARK ST GILES is Managing Director of the FIRST Initiative. After a career in
ven the richest of countries may
Set up in 2002 by Britain’s Department for
struggle when a natural disaster
International Development together with
such as an earthquake or a hurricane
the development agencies of Canada,
strikes, but what are poorer countries to
the Netherlands, Switzerland and (later)
do? While an international humanitarian
Sweden, as well as the IMF and the World
relief effort may help with the immediate
Bank, it gets many things right that other
crisis, governments are still often lumbered
aid programmes often do poorly. It is quick,
with a vast longer-term legacy of shattered
nimble, sharply focused and responsive to
towns, uprooted plantations, bankrupted
individual countries’ needs, while avoiding
businesses, broken bridges and other
unnecessary duplication. And at a cost
ripped-up infrastructure. The financial
of only $65m, it’s a snip for international
burden of rebuilding a devastated region
donors, while providing invaluable financial
may be too great for a local insurer or
know-how to developing countries.
reinsurer to cover – but it is a drop in the ocean for global capital markets. By issuing
Take Mongolia, where over half of the
“catastrophe bonds”, developing-country
population, and 30% of the economy,
asset management and financial-
governments can purchase insurance from
depends on livestock herding. Unfortunately,
services regulation, he has for the
international investors, who forfeit part of
extremely cold weather, or drought,
15 years prior to joining FIRST run
their loan when a natural disaster exceeds
occasionally devastates the country’s herds
broking, investment banking,
defined limits – in effect, an insurance
of cashmere goats, cattle, sheep and
Financial, which specialises in
payout – but earn an above-average rate
other animals, threatening semi-nomadic
advising developing countries on
his own consultancy, Cadogan
of interest, the equivalent of an insurance
herders and their families with destitution
the establishment of collective
premium. Mexico has blazed a trail by
and damaging important export markets.
investment funds and defined-
issuing such bonds to insure against
Worse, Mongolia does not have a functioning
contribution pension funds. He
earthquake damage, and other developing
livestock-insurance market, because insurers
has served as Chairman of the
countries could now follow in its footsteps.
do not have adequate information to cover herders – whose flocks are undocumented,
British Association of Investment Funds, President of the European Federation of Investment Funds,
and often roam over huge distances – for
financial techniques to help alleviate
their individual losses, while the risk that
poverty is one of the hallmarks of the FIRST
much of the country’s livestock will be wiped
Savings, and was Chairman of an
Initiative, a low-profile, but high-impact
out at once is too great for the country’s
SRO established under the 1986
programme to help reform and strengthen
fledgling private insurance companies to
the financial sector in developing countries.
bear. But FIRST has developed a novel
a board member of National
Financial Services Act.
174 |
Such ground-breaking use of sophisticated
Words into Ac tion
scheme that will provide affordable cover which is available to all, by spreading risk
“Despite all the evidence of its importance to growth and poverty reduction, aiding the financial sector is usually low on donors’ list of priorities.”
nationally, as well as among the industry, the government and the World Bank. Instead of insuring individual losses, the innovative insurance system uses a national mortality index to gauge the extent of livestock deaths. When this is low, herders must bear the loss of their livestock themselves, but when it rises beyond a certain point, the country’s private insurance companies step in to help. Their risk is capped, however, because if the index skyrockets, the government must provide a disaster-recovery programme, with World Bank assistance. One day, the government may even be able to lay off this risk with international reinsurers. FIRST is not only about financial wizardry, important though it can be in providing ingenious solutions to problems that blight poor people’s lives. It also helps countries develop new ways of increasing poor people’s access to much-needed finance. In Colombia, for instance, it has helped draw up a housing micro-credit scheme, a creative mix of self-help, subsidies, government guarantees and loans that enables poor people to get a proper roof over their head. This could be a model for helping the millions of slum-dwellers who eke out a living on the edges of many big cities in developing countries to buy their own homes. Indeed, such schemes could have broader benefits, because, as the Peruvian economist Hernando de Soto has pointed out, giving poor people property rights can unleash a burst of entrepreneurship and economic growth.
Nuts and bolts Most of FIRST’s work is not as eyecatching and exciting as earthquake bonds – but then again financial-sector regulation
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In Colombia, FIRST has helped draw up a housing micro-credit scheme, a creative mix of selfhelp, subsidies, government guarantees and loans that enables poor people to get a proper roof over their head.
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The financial burden of rebuilding a devastated region may be too great for a local insurer or reinsurer to cover â&#x20AC;&#x201C; but it is a drop in the ocean for global capital markets.
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and supervision are not meant to be. The
opportunities and allow insurance
important thing is to get the nuts and
companies, pension funds and other
bolts right, laying solid foundations for
institutional investors to spread their risks.
a thriving financial sector which boosts
Research shows that growth rates are one
economic growth and reduces poverty,
to two percentage points higher in countries
while ensuring stability and protecting
with sound financial sectors than those
against excessive risks. FIRST helps
without â&#x20AC;&#x201C; a crucial advantage when seeking
countries close dangerous gaps in their
to reduce poverty. Developing countries with
laws and regulations, and strengthen vitally
strong and stable financial systems are also
important financial institutions, such as
less vulnerable to economic shocks.
supervisory bodies. But poorly designed (or non-existent)
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Poor countries have much to gain from
financial regulations and supervision can
well-functioning capital markets that
prove extremely costly. Developing countries
channel savings to profitable investment
lost around $1 trillion through banking crises
in the 1980s and 1990s – roughly as much as they have received in foreign aid since the 1950s. Such crises can cause wrenching recessions which hurt the poor and the vulnerable most, while potentially spreading
“FIRST helps countries close dangerous gaps in their laws and regulations, and strengthen vitally important financial institutions, such as supervisory bodies.”
like a virus to rich-country markets too. As was highlighted by the devastating financial crisis which began in Thailand in 1997 and
Technical assistance is often delivered
soon rocked emerging markets, roiled rich-
in a haphazard fashion, if at all. It may
country ones and threatened to plunge the
come too late, and is often inappropriate.
world economy into recession, rich countries
Outsiders may pay little attention to local
have a powerful interest in ensuring financial
conditions and to the appropriate sequence
stability in emerging markets.
of reforms, while their efforts often overlap or even duplicate each other. There are
In a speech to the US Council on Foreign
even examples of different donors financing
Relations in September 1999, Britain’s
separate projects with the same objective at
Chancellor of the Exchequer, Gordon Brown,
the same time. Moreover, poor coordination
called for “a framework of internationally
often prevents countries from benefiting
agreed codes and standards, new economic
from recommendations that are replicable
disciplines, to be accepted and implemented
across several countries in a region.
by countries which participate in the international financial system…They will
FIRST is different. Its approach is one of
deliver the transparency and accountability
“ownership, harmonisation, alignment,
which I believe is the only answer to the
results and mutual accountability”, the
uncertainty and unpredictability of ever more
model endorsed by the Paris Declaration
➣
rapid financial flows.” While such codes and standards apply mostly to rich and middleincome countries with developed financial sectors, it is also important that poorer countries seek to abide by them. FIRST helps emerging markets bring their financial rules up to scratch, to their benefit and to that of donor countries.
Good advice Despite all the evidence of its importance to growth and poverty reduction, aiding the financial sector is usually low on donors’ list of priorities. This is a mistake – finance is not just a luxury for the rich, it is also a necessity for the poor, as the success of micro-credit schemes vividly demonstrates. Unfortunately, developing countries often find good financial advice hard to come by. FIRST is trying to change that.
In Mongolia, over half of the population, and 30% of the economy, depends on livestock herding.
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➣
on aid effectiveness in March 2005, which
identify their own problems and contribute
united ministers from both developed and
to the solutions. As Adolf Denk, the head
developing countries. It puts recipients in
of legal services at Namibia’s Financial
the driving seat, rather than telling them
Institution Supervisory Authority, remarked,
what they need. They are encouraged to
“It is imperative that the assisted should not feel patronised, and in this regard we felt like a partner [with FIRST] in the project
“Research shows that growth rates are one to two percentage points higher in countries with sound financial sectors than those without.”
throughout the process.” FIRST responds quickly and flexibly to local requests for help. It gave “a fast and thoughtful answer to our financing needs,” says Angelique Kantengwa, the director of Rwanda’s Bank Supervision Department. Luz Maria de Portillo, the president of the Central Bank of El Salvador, said that FIRST’s “consultants’ attention to recipients needs is first-class in terms of timeliness, quality and flexibility.” Its projects remain relevant in the context of overall financial-sector development by following up on work identified by the IMFWorld Bank’s Financial Sector Assessment Programmes (FSAP), a voluntary healthcheck for a country’s financial system, and their Reports on Codes and Standards (ROSCs), which gauge a country’s compliance with internationally recognised standards and codes in 12 areas such as auditing and securities regulation. The initiative pools the efforts of several development agencies, leveraging their expertise and reducing needless duplication. It often takes on small, targeted projects which donors could not carry out costeffectively themselves. And once projects are completed, the results are widely disseminated in order to boost their impact and catalyse long-term support from donors. All the results are available on FIRST’s website, www.firstinitiative.org, and
Finance is not just a luxury for the rich, it is also a necessity for the poor, as the success of microcredit schemes vividly demonstrates.
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can be used by any country that has similar needs to those already addressed.
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