1 / 13

UNCTAD 3 October 2011

What is wrong with the International Financial Architecture and some elements for its reform Alfredo Calcagno. UNCTAD 3 October 2011. The International Financial System does not comply with the goals set in Bretton Woods:. Stable exchange rates at sustainable levels. Capital controls.

zeus-rivers
Download Presentation

UNCTAD 3 October 2011

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. What is wrong with the International Financial Architecture and some elements for its reformAlfredo Calcagno UNCTAD 3 October 2011

  2. The International Financial System does not comply with the goals set in Bretton Woods: Stable exchange rates at sustainable levels. Capital controls. Timely financing in order to smooth adjustments and limit their costs. Avoiding lasting imbalances. In addition, Legitimacy eroded by unfair distribution of voting rights « Triffin Paradox » 2

  3. Exchange rates, January 2006 – Sep. 2011(domestic currency per dollar, January 2006= 100) 3

  4. Exchange rates, January 2006-Sep. 2011 (domestic currency per dollar, January 2006= 100) 4

  5. Exchange rates, January 2006-Sep. 2011(domestic currency per dollar, January 2006= 100) 5

  6. IMF-sponsored programmes systematically underestimate their negative impact on GDP growth and fiscal balances

  7. Total deficits and surpluses in current accounts, 1990-2011 (% of GDP) 7

  8. Current account imbalances widened before the crisis, contracted and are widening again (billion $) 8

  9. Possible responses: 1) At the national level Select an exchange rate regime that would reduce volatility and real misalignments (managed floating vs. « corner solutions »). Capital management Reserve accumulation (self-insurance and limiting appreciation). Pros and cons: Worked quite well in 2008 Costs of monetary sterilisation Works better for avoiding appreciation than depreciation 9

  10. International reserves, 2000-2010 10

  11. Possible responses: 2) At the regional level Use of national currencies for international transactions Clearing systems Credit among Central Banks Regional exchange rate system Regional development banks « Modularity » of cooperative measures 11

  12. Multilateral payments mechanism Liquidity financing Multilateral mechanisms for financing and supervision Finance for defending exchange-rates and policy coordination Single currency and regional Central Bank Clearing house Yes Reciprocal credit agreements (swaps) Desirable Yes Supervision mechanism desirable Regional reserve funds Desirable Yes Yes Exchange-rate system Desirable Yes Yes Yes Monetary union Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Different types of financial integration 12

  13. Possible responses: 3) At the global level Debate within the G 20: Cooperation or « beggar-thy-neighbor » Still a recessive bias: fiscal adjustment, confidence game, structural reforms Debate on capital flows, liquidity, reserves, exchange rates Market-oriented vs. macro prudential policies More radical reforms? Multilateral agreements on exchange rates From regional to global A true international currency 13

More Related