Khaleej Times

Shield the global economy from future financial shocks

- AdAm Triggs —The Conversati­on Adam Triggs is Research fellow, Australian National University

It was only in January that the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) was celebratin­g the strength of the global economy, heralding “the broadest synchronis­ed global growth upsurge since 2010”.

How quickly things have changed. Argentina has since sought a bailout from the IMF; Turkey is facing a potential currency crisis; Indonesia is seeing investors flee’ alarm bells are sounding for Italy and Spain; China’s debt remains a serious concern; and the only thing more uncertain than the fallout from Brexit is the outcome of Donald Trump’s trade war. It’s time to review the world’s capacity to respond to crises.

The “global financial safety net” refers to the mishmash of global, regional and bilateral institutio­ns and mechanisms designed to help countries facing economic and financial crises and to prevent these problems from spreading. The most well-known institutio­n is the IMF, which has around $1 trillion in crisis-fighting resources. The World Bank, with around $263 billion, has provided assistance in previous crises.

There is also a range of regional mechanisms, such as Asia’s Chiang Mai Initiative Multilater­alisation agreement (with $240 billion) and the European Stability Mechanism (with $600 billion). Bilateral currency swap arrangemen­ts, under which one country’s central bank can exchange its currency for that of another, are also an important part of the safety net.

Make no mistake, the safety net is big. In total it has about $4.6 trillion in crisis-fighting firepower, seven times what it was in 1980. But this large number can be misleading, as I argue in a recent working paper at Brookings, and is both inadequate and causing a dangerous sense of complacenc­y.

First, not all of this money is immediatel­y available. Some of it is tied up in existing programmes (such as in Greece) and central bank governors interviewe­d for my research (including former US Federal Reserve chairs Janet Yellen and Ben Bernanke, and current Reserve Bank of Australia governor Philip Lowe) warned that many currency swap lines would not be made available during a crisis. This shrinks the safety net to $2.5 trillion.

Second, not all resources are available to all countries. The European Stability Mechanism won’t help you if you live in Latin America. And if your country wasn’t offered a swap line with a major central bank, well, that’s tough luck. The size of the safety net depends entirely on the country. It is twice as large for some G20 countries as for others, or four times as large if you include foreign exchange reserves (which are more accurately described as domestic resources rather than part of the global safety net).

This fragmentat­ion has made the safety net patchier, slower and less consistent, making crises costlier. Many countries have fallen between the cracks, particular­ly emerging economies such as Turkey and Argentina, which don’t have strong institutio­ns or resilient capital markets.

Recent research has sought to assess the safety net’s adequacy by exploring what crises might occur in the future. But instead of trying to predict these things, I pose a simple question: can the safety net provide at least the same level of support today that has been required of it in the past?

To find out, I war-gamed three regional crises — the Asian financial crisis, the European debt crisis and the Latin American debt crisis — and six countryspe­cific crises in Argentina, Turkey, Ecuador, Russia, Mexico and Chile. While financial systems are more resilient today, there are some alarming results.

While the safety net works well for country-specific crises, it struggles to cope with widespread shocks. Providing the same level of support today that was provided during the Asian financial crisis would exhaust all currency swap lines, all regional developmen­t banks and the entire World Bank, and would require exceptiona­l access to the IMF’s resources. If the European debt crisis occurred today, the entire global financial safety net would be exhausted.

Second, most crises now require access to multiple components of the safety net. The IMF is no longer capable of providing assistance alone. Countries increasing­ly rely on regional mechanisms which, in Asia, have never been tested and, in Latin America, are small.

Third, despite the growth in non-global resources, countries often still have to go to the IMF. This means there must be seamless co-ordination of multiple institutio­ns during a crisis, something the IMF warns (and recent history shows) is a “very strong assumption”. Finally, most of these results hold even when foreign exchange reserves are included. There are also many alarming developmen­ts on the horizon. Foreign exchange reserves are declining, particular­ly in China, and the IMF’s resources will halve by 2022 unless the US Congress approves extra funding and countries like China agree to reloan the IMF money, despite getting no additional voting power.

So, what can be done? In the short term, countries must to bolster the IMF’s temporary resources and strengthen co-operation between safety-net institutio­ns. Central banks must clarify whether swap lines are available in a crisis and, where possible, extend them to cover more economies.

In the long term, the IMF’s centrality in the safety net must be reaffirmed. It needs larger, permanent funding and more flexible lending arrangemen­ts. The lead-up to the 2008 crisis was characteri­sed by a dangerous sense of complacenc­y. That complacenc­y should not be allowed to take hold again.

The lead-up to the 2008 crisis was characteri­sed by a dangerous sense of complacenc­y.

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