3rd World Crisis
3rd World Crisis
3rd World Crisis
1. Introduction
Consider two perspectives on the international debt crisis - of (a) creditors: governments
of developed countries and international banks; (b) debtors: governments and people of
the indebted countries. There is also a third - that of economists who believe in the
possibility of discovering the objective truth.
Zaire
Assets Liabilities
Mobutu deposit with Swiss Bank $1bn Govt debt to US bank $1bn
Here, there is no necessary transfer of real resources since the funds have not
really been transferred to Zaire at all. Instead, we have an elaborate redistribution of
income from the people of Zaire to General Mobutu. However, if the government of Zaire
is to repay US Bank, they must export an additional $1bn worth of goods (or cut imports
by $1bn or both).
(e) the large increase in real interest rates from the late 1970's on as developed countries
very properly followed monetarist prescriptions for controlling the rate of inflation; these
policies led to a world recession in the early 1980's and also produced a fall in world
commodity prices, further reducing the ability of many developing countries to repay;
(f) the undesirable macroeconomic policies of the debtor countries leading to high
inflation rates and over-valued exchange rates, both of which encouraged capital flight.
In none of this, were the governments or the banks of the industrial countries at
fault. The lending taking place in the 1970's was based on reasonable commercial
judgements of the ability of borrowers to pay at the time. Indeed, up until 1982 the banks
were widely regarded as having played an important role in the recycling of the petro-
dollars of the OPEC countries. The crisis was the result of an unfortunate combination of
events and the bad policy decisions of debtor countries.
The IMF and the World Bank had done all that could have been expected of them
in the circumstances by tying further loans to attempts to improve the policies of the
debtor countries. If those policies led to increased hardship for the people of the debtor
countries this was, on the one hand, a cost of many years of economic mismanagement
by the governments of those countries and, on the other, a reflection of the unequal
income distribution in those countries. After all, if the capital that had flown abroad from
the debtor countries in recent years were only to return, the debt problem would be
solved. For none of this, were the IMF and World Bank to blame. The major banks, too,
had played their part by co-operating with the IMF and the governments of the developed
countries and by taking the lead in the negotiation of re-scheduling agreements,
sometimes involving reductions in interest rates or long periods of grace before expecting
repayment of the actual capital. It was true that they had been unwilling to offer new
money to help the debtor countries maintain their payments on old loans, but this was
purely a commercial judgement which they made, properly taking into account the
interests of their shareholders.
Remedies were clear. Sound policies by the debtor countries coupled with a return
of flight capital would overcome the problem. Small amounts of new money might
perhaps be forthcoming for well-behaved governments. This was the essence of the US
Baker plan of 1985. The banks were happy to endorse this, with the exception of the idea
that they should provide new money. From the beginning of last year on, pushed on by
the moratoriums on debt service by Brazil in 1987 and Argentina in 1988 and by the riots
in Venezuela early in 1989, the US government in the Brady plan and the IMF began to
accept the need for some small amount of debt reduction. Perhaps, it was implied, the
burdens really are too great to be overcome even by sound policies. But any further help
offered must still be tied to such policies and debtor countries must continue to bear in
mind that if they were helped too much to overcome these problems which were
essentially of their own making, no one would be willing to lend to them in future. In any
case, too much help would simply encourage wasteful policies again.
What have these policies required for financial rectitude been? Essentially, there
have been three:
(a) large reductions in budget deficits and hence in government expenditure;
(b) high domestic real interest rates;
(c) Large devaluations of the exchange rate.
(a) and (b) together would keep down the rate of growth of the money supply and would
lead to lower inflation. (a) would reduce the size of the public sector and encourage the
expansion of the private sector; (b) and (c) together would encourage the return home of
flight capital and discourage further flights; (c) would increase the price of imports and so
encourage domestic industry to expand to take the place of imports.
Now all of this is perfectly respectable conventional economics. The attitudes of the banks
and the IMF expressed here also seem very reasonable. But let us consider an alternative
point of view.