wade financial regime change
he early years of the twenty-first century have been characterized by generally benign global macroeconomic conditions.footnote1 The equity bubble has continued to expand, and the us recession many expected in the wake of 9.11 has failed to materialize. Growth rates in much of the developing world are at record-breaking levels, above all in China, trends which have helped the us sustain ballooning current-account deficits. As a result, according to Kenneth Rogoff, chief economist at the imf from 2001–03, ‘the policy community has developed a smug belief that enhanced macroeconomic stability at the national level combined with continuing financial innovation at the international level have obviated any need to tinker with the [international financial] system’.footnote2
Yet the global economy and interstate system are displaying signs of fragility that could easily tip the world into economic depression and geopolitical conflict. No less than the always-cautious Bank for International Settlements, the club of rich-country central bankers, says in its Annual Report for 2007 that the world is ‘vulnerable to another 1930s slump’. There are several reasons to be seriously worried. Firstly, the extraordinarily high and rising levels of debt to equity in the world financial system hold the potential for a ‘great unwind’. The assets invested in hedge funds have more than tripled in the seven years since 2000, to around $1,500 billion. The ceo of a us hedge fund recently described the current situation as possibly ‘even more alarming’ than that which produced the crash of Long Term Capital Management in 1998: ‘the explosion of hedge fund investments in illiquid assets combined with leverage currently pose a greater risk to the global financial markets than we experienced at the time of the ltcm debacle.’footnote3 Second, this run-up of debt reflects the boom in global liquidity—propelled by the surge in commodity prices since 2003 to the highest levels in more than two decades, the ballooning of the us current-account deficit, and the incorporation of giant savings pools in China and India into world capital markets. The liquidity boom has increased financial instability by enabling many developing-country governments to postpone improvements in financial regulation, as well as helping rebel groups to finance militias once they control a commodity-exporting base.
Third, we must take into account the precarious state of the us economy. Internationally, the us has in recent years been losing its position of economic dominance in both trade and finance, especially to the eu and China—European financial markets now have a higher capitalization than their us counterparts for the first time in a century. Domestically, the us middle class is being squeezed by falling house prices, spiralling mortgage foreclosures, declining real wages in manufacturing and lower-skill service jobs, and historically very high levels of debt to disposable income. Economic growth has slowed to near 1 per cent, while the inequality of income between the top percentile of households and the bottom 90 per cent has reached its highest level since 1928. When the Great Depression struck, the us was in the ascendant. Being in relative decline today may make Washington more likely to react to these trends in an even more unilateralist, more defensive way than in the 1930s. The us has already begun to substitute bilateral and multilateral trade agreements, such as cafta, for commitment to the wto process—allowing it to circumvent the wto’s consensual procedures in order to establish agreements loaded with predatory provisions favourable to the us: open access for American agricultural exports, for instance, and stringent patent protection for us drugs.
Fourth, the relative decline of the us is part of a larger shift in the interstate system. In particular, the previously closed club of advanced capitalist states is under pressure to admit new challengers such as Russia, China and Brazil. In the past, the rise of such contenders has almost always been accompanied by interstate conflict; geopolitical tensions and rivalries are likely to rise this time too—though perhaps not on the scale of the twentieth century’s wars. In particular, neo-imperialism is again in the air—not only the us variety, but also the less noticed neo-imperial ambitions of Russia, based on its control over vast energy resources and raw materials and its consensual authoritarian rule. The tensions between these neo-imperialisms, especially over access to energy, have pushed the West to redouble its efforts to open markets in the rest of the world and reconfigure domestic political economies to facilitate the operations of Western, especially Anglo-American firms—with little more than lip service paid to the idea of compromise with the interests of developing countries.
The international financial system lacks the bodies that set rules and enforce compliance at the national level, such as a central bank, a financial regulator, a bankruptcy court, deposit insurance, and the like. Rather than try to create international counterparts, in the decade since the Asian Crisis the West has sought to build a comprehensive regime of global economic standards of best practice in areas such as data dissemination, bank supervision, corporate governance and financial accounting. The imf and other organizations have been undertaking systematic surveillance of national compliance with the standards. Governments and other bodies are expected to comply with the latter in order to obtain cheap and abundant finance, on the assumption that financial firms will reward compliance and punish non-compliance.
This regime—which I call the ‘standards-surveillance-compliance’ systemfootnote4—has been drafted by a us-led institutional complex, including Western governments and multilateral organizations such as the imf, the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, the Financial Stability Forum, the G20 of finance ministers and a gamut of non-official bodies, as well as financial firms and think-tanks from the advanced capitalist states. The global South has had almost no say. The resulting regime is only one part of a larger set of international arrangements which have the cumulative effect of redistributing income upwards—to wealthy industrialized countries, the financial sector, and the top percentile of world income distribution. Moreover it has also pushed national economies towards one particular kind of capitalism—the Anglo-American type—and shrunk the scope of ‘policy space’ for these countries still further than did the prescriptions of the Washington Consensus. Where the latter insisted on liberalizing the market, deregulation and fiscal austerity, the Post-Washington Consensus could be summed up by the commandment: ‘standardize the market’. In what follows I will trace the evolution of the standards-surveillance-compliance regime, and gauge its effects.
Crisis responses
The Asian Crisis raised fears that the whole world economy, including the biggest industrial countries, might be dragged down as the crisis ricocheted out of Asia and into Russia, Brazil and elsewhere. Alan Greenspan admitted in October 1998, in a speech to the National Association for Business Economics: ‘I have been looking at the American economy on a day-by-day basis for almost a half century, but I have never seen anything like this’—‘this’ meaning the disintegration of market confidence. Stanley Fischer, deputy managing director of the imf, explained that when the governor of the Brazilian central bank told him, in January 1999, that Brazil would no longer make an iron-clad defence of its exchange rate, ‘I thought, this is it. We’re going to lose Latin America, and then it will go back to Asia.’footnote5
The High Command’s worries about the Asian Crisis went far beyond the fact that it affected a sizeable portion of the world’s population in fast-growing and economically important countries. It seemed likely to discredit the hard-won consensus about the virtues of market liberalization and maximum openness for all developing countries. The crisis-affected countries in Asia had been regarded as star pupils of the Washington Consensus—indeed their economic success was routinely attributed to their adherence to the latter and held up as proof of its general validity.
Moreover, the crisis hit only three years after the dramatic Mexican peso devaluation of 1994, and Mexico too had been regarded as a star pupil of the Washington Consensus. Events there had spurred academics and official agencies to present proposals for safeguarding the world economy against a repeat, including better financial supervision at the international level, more transparency in financial markets, sensible macroeconomic policies and exchange-rate regimes, and better monitoring of macroeconomic performance. But once the fallout was restricted to Mexico, ‘complacency soon reasserted itself’.footnote6 The shock of the Asian Crisis was thus compounded by the realization that nothing much had been done to strengthen the international financial system in the several years since the peso’s slump.
In view of Asia’s plight, leading policy economists tripped over themselves to offer up plans for a ‘new international financial architecture’ that would create a much stronger supranational authority in financial markets—a change of a similar order of magnitude to that initiated at the Bretton Woods conference of 1944. Proposals included ambitious new global organizations—a much larger imf, a global financial regulator, a sovereign bankruptcy court, an international deposit-insurance corporation, even a global central bank. It was suggested that the imf be given greater authority to support standstills—postponement of foreign debt repayments and even controls on capital outflows, equivalent to ‘bailing in’ countries’ private creditors—so as to give countries protection from creditor panics, analogous to the kind of protection that companies get from bankruptcy laws.
In the event, none of these proposals left the drawing board. The imf has not been super-sized, as some analysts wanted, so that when crises erupt it could provide enough hard currency for financial investors not to panic about a shortage of liquidity. On the other hand, it has not been abolished, as prominent conservatives like former Secretary of State George Shultz demanded, nor even substantially cut, as sought by the majority on a congressionally appointed panel led by conservative economist Allan Meltzer.
One of the more radical proposals to originate from the official sector—the Sovereign Debt Restructuring Mechanism proposed by Anne Krueger of the imf, which contained elements of a global bankruptcy procedure—was defeated by a combination of developed-country states and private financial organizations in March 2003. This mechanism would have involved full debt restructuring: changes in interest rates, reductions in amounts owed, and influence over private investments and contracts. It would have entailed a substantial increase in the authority of an international organization over private financial markets.
There has not even been progress on the apparently more modest but still important proposal for institutionalized standstill procedures. Evidence from the crises themselves suggested that even ad hoc standstills could significantly reduce the damage to debtor countries. Though most bail-outs mounted by the imf in the late 1990s failed, two succeeded: the second rescue of South Korea, on Christmas Eve 1997, and the second rescue of Brazil in March 1999. The main difference between those that succeeded in stopping the panic and those that did not is that in the successful cases, the us Treasury, imf and World Bank managed to cajole the Electronic Herd—mutual funds, pension funds, commercial banks, insurance companies and other professional money managers—to bail ‘in’ rather than ‘out’ and defer debt repayment, but did not do so in the more numerous unsuccessful ones.footnote7
However, to get the authority needed for institutionalized standstills—and still more, a Sovereign Debt Restructuring Mechanism—the Fund would have to change its Articles of Agreement. Fund members are extremely reluctant to make such changes, and had only done so three times before 1999. Major industrial countries would also have to pass laws recognizing the Fund’s authority, so that bondholders would be prevented from asserting claims in court. Any such laws recognizing the Fund’s authority inevitably encounter a storm of opposition, given that they involve authority to abrogate contracts—the covenants that govern borrowers’ obligation to pay interest and principal on loans and bonds—and authority to block a country’s own citizens, as well as foreigners, from moving their money abroad.footnote8 The us Congress, in particular, would be sure to oppose this tooth and nail.
The proposal for Contingent Credit Lines was implemented, in that the imf did create a facility enabling it, for the first time, to lend pre-emptively to help prevent a crisis. However, countries had to volunteer to join the facility, and the imf had to certify its approval of their economic policies. In the event, no country signed up—to do so amounted to a confession of fragility—and even the imf was unenthusiastic: ejecting a country which acquired a new government not to the Fund’s liking would send a bad signal to the markets, possibly precipitating a crisis.footnote9 In short, there been little movement on any of the more radical proposals for overhauling the international financial system. The central reason is the unwillingness of private financial markets to accept greater international authority, which would afford them less latitude than a world in which a variety of nation-states hold jurisdiction.
Drive for transparency
On the other hand, everyone could agree on the need for more transparency and more standards. In October 1998, as the Asian Crisis was still unfolding, the G7 finance ministers and central bank governors called for ‘greater transparency’—echoing statements made after the Mexican peso’s collapse. What was meant by this was the provision of ‘accurate and timely’ macroeconomic and financial supervisory data, including the reserve positions of central banks and levels of national public and private indebtedness.footnote10 World Bank economists supported this line by arguing that the Asian Crisis was due in large measure to ‘lack of transparency’ in financial data. In the words of a World Bank paper published in 2001: ‘The findings suggest that these countries did not follow International Accounting Standards and that this likely triggered the financial crisis. Users of the accounting information were misled and were not able to take precautions in a timely fashion’.footnote11
The imf for its part argued in 2003 that the global ‘adoption of internationally recognized standards of good practice [would help] foster financial market stability and better risk assessment’. Compliance with standards would help a country ‘mitigate the impact of an external crisis by supporting continued access to external borrowing’, and ‘help prevent crises’ by reducing the cost of foreign capital so that a government could ‘remain solvent in cases it otherwise might not have remained solvent’.footnote12 The assumptions underlying these arguments naturally shield the imf and World Bank from any blame: if they did not act to counter potential instabilities it was because they had been misled by the Mexicans and East Asians.
Division of labour
The initial concern to improve ‘transparency’ grew into a broader thrust to reorganize and re-regulate economic activity around the world. A new standards-setting organization was created in April 1999, called the Financial Stability Forum. It had the G7 finance ministers and central bankers at its core, plus those from four other industrial countries (or territories, in the case of Hong Kong), together with representatives from the imf, World Bank and Bank for International Settlements, and private-sector associations of financial firms. Its purpose was to develop standards in the domains of banking supervision, risk-management systems for banks, financial accounting and corporate governance. The Forum was chaired by the general manager of the Bank for International Settlements. It included no representatives of developing countries.
The imf was given an expanded role. It was charged with developing Special Data Dissemination Standards, mainly for macroeconomic data, and was itself to be the primary enforcer of many of the standards, through formal mechanisms of structural conditionality, contingent credit lines, and negotiations around Article IV of the imf’s Articles of Agreement, which details states’ obligations relating to currency stability. However, these formal enforcement mechanisms were never developed, for the same reason that the more radical of the ‘new international financial architecture’ proposals were not developed. Instead, the imf—and the ‘transparency’ thrust more generally—relied on indirect enforcement through the response of ‘financial markets’: the Electronic Herd. The Fund would make public directly, or indirectly via the government, the results of this surveillance; financial markets would respond to the high-quality information appropriately, lending more funds at cheaper rates to governments that complied more closely with the standards, and less at higher rates to governments that complied to a lesser extent. Knowing this market-driven reward and punishment system, governments would strive for greater compliance, and the international financial system would become more stable.
The imf and World Bank started in 1999 to produce Reports on the Observance of Standards and Codes (roscs), and to undertake a Financial Sector Assessment Programme (fsap). Between 1999 and the end of 2006 the imf produced 502 Reports and the World Bank 92, making a total of almost 600. One hundred and thirty countries had at least one rosc. The Reports fed into the larger exercise of the fsap, which had three main components: compliance with standards, stability of the financial system, and the financial sector’s required reforms. Operationally, the fsap exercise may entail, for a large country, the arrival of a sizeable team of people from the imf and World Bank, along with outside consultants, who then hold detailed discussions with financial authorities on such critical matters as payments systems, feeding back their findings to the authorities.
At much the same time, on a separate but parallel track, the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, under the umbrella of the Bank for International Settlements, was developing a new set of standards for bank capital and banking supervision. The impetus came from bank regulators feeling overwhelmed by the financial innovations of the 1990s, and from the development by banks of new kinds of risk-assessment models—coupled with the prevailing norm that ‘markets’ and not regulators know best. Formulating the new set of standards came to be known as the Basel II process, the successor of Basel I, now seen as out of date. The initial Basel II proposals were published in 1999, the Asian Crisis having given the project added urgency.
In addition to the efforts of these official bodies, a whole gamut of unofficial private-sector bodies have also been formulating standards with global reach. They include the International Association of Insurance Supervisors, the International Accounting Standards Board, the International Organization of Securities Commissioners, the International Organization for Standardization, and the International Federation of Stock Exchanges.
New standards at work
What has been the impact of the new regime? In the case of the imf, the fsap assessment team typically concentrates on ‘supervising the (national) supervisors’—examining how the national financial supervisory system is working and making suggestions for improvement. Often its political role is to strengthen the hand of regulators. Fearing international criticism and market discipline, a number of governments have overhauled their financial regulatory system ahead of an fsap exercise, especially when the government has undertaken in advance to publish the fsap’s findings. Even where the findings of the exercise are not made public, market participants can find out readily enough if they wish to.
This must however be seen in the context of a whole series of negative effects. First, the reports and assessments have generally been compiled as check-lists to be completed. According to one World Bank official:
The problem with the fsap is that the shareholders, primarily G7, burdened it with doing a huge amount of mindless assessments of compliance with a large number of standards. This prevented and/or distracted staff from looking at first-order issues. For example, in [an Eastern European country] two successive heads of the sec were assassinated by ‘defenestration’ from their office windows. Yet the fsap concentrated on their compliance with iosco [International Organization of Securities Commissions] standards, even though with this degree of lawlessness, it is difficult to expect any securities market activity except for trade among insiders. Such silly exercises took resources away from consideration as to why some markets were missing or malfunctioning. The British, the French, Canadians and Americans were the worst in their relentlessly check-list approach.footnote13
Second, the Fund does not devote enough time and effort to overseeing the system as a whole. According to the imf’s Independent Evaluation Office, its operational staff often do not read the imf’s own global stability reports, let alone integrate these findings into their bilateral work. Only 14 per cent of senior staff said that the imf’s ‘multilateral surveillance’ findings were discussed with national authorities.footnote14 Conversely, bilateral surveillance reports contain little discussion of policy spillovers from systemically important countries such as Germany, Russia or even the us.
Third, it seems that financial-market participants generally pay rather little attention to the data provided through ‘transparency’ exercises—even though they would presumably no longer be ‘misled’ by the data as they supposedly were before the Asian crisis. A recent independent evaluation of the fsap concluded that ‘while many authorities identified the “signalling role” to markets as one of their motivations for participating in the fsap exercise, the impact of fssas [Financial Sector Stability Assessments] on the views of financial market participants appears modest’.footnote15 Financial markets pay more attention to ‘traditional’ macroeconomic indicators like inflation than to compliance with standards of good financial practice. Studies of the link between compliance with standards and cost of foreign capital have found no significant impact of the former on the latter.footnote16 If financial markets do not pay much attention to the data from surveillance exercises, the imf’s mechanism for enforcing best practice—which relies on financial markets rewarding high-compliance countries and punishing low-compliance policies—will not function.
Fourth, to the extent that markets do pay attention to the information made available through transparency exercises, the effect may be to make financial markets less stable and more prone to crisis. By homogenizing data about economies and reducing the diversity of opinion on the near future, these exercises may accentuate the tendency to pro-cyclical herding behaviour—bankers and investors buying what others are buying and selling what others are selling.
Fifth, compliance has been highly variable. In some countries, a post-crisis surge of formal compliance was followed by regulatory forbearance and selective enforcement—in effect, mock compliance. Of the four East Asian countries affected by the 1990s crisis, Malaysia has the highest overall level of compliance, followed by Korea, Thailand and, at the bottom, Indonesia.footnote17 In general, compliance with the Special Data Dissemination Standards for macroeconomic data has been highest, since this is relatively easily monitored, and private firms do not bear the costs. Banking supervision comes next highest. Compliance with the standards of corporate governance and financial accounting has been lowest, as these are most costly to the private sector as well as hardest to monitor.
If those are the impacts of the standards surveilled by the imf, what about the impact of the Basel II standards of banks’ capital adequacy, which started to be implemented in early 2007? It is quite likely that these, too, will generate pro-cyclical tendencies and raise the volatility of borrowers’ access to bank finance. Avinash Persaud, former head of research at State Street Bank, argues that Basel II’s move towards more quantitative and market-sensitive risk-management practices reinforces herding behaviour and market volatility in a vicious circle.footnote18 One reason is that the Basel II standards encourage the more sophisticated banks—those based in developed countries—to adopt a single type of internal ratings-based model relying on current asset prices, which tend to be pro-cyclical; this raises the capital requirements at times of downturn, precisely when banks are less able to meet these requirements. A second reason is that banks will tend to react similarly to similar signals—because they are using the same type of risk-assessment model, which leads them to downgrade or upgrade clients en masse.footnote19
Anglo-Americanization?
Standards of best practice are rarely distributionally neutral: they benefit some participants more than others. The standards established by the Basel Committee, the imf, the fsf and the like—and surveillance in line with the standards—may be having at least two far-reaching impacts that are disadvantageous for developing countries and advantageous for developed countries, especially those following the Anglo-American model.
Firstly, Basel II—as compared to Basel I—will shift competitive advantage even further towards developed-country banks and against developing-country banks, and will likely hurt development prospects more broadly by making developing-country access to finance more pro-cyclical. Basel II requires banks with less sophisticated risk-management systems to carry relatively more supervisory capital than banks with more sophisticated systems. It therefore raises the former’s costs of lending relative to those of the latter, which tend to be based in developed countries. These banks are allowed to establish their credit risks and capital adequacy themselves—‘self-supervise’—subject to the financial supervisor approving their model. Basel II also requires bigger differential risk weighting for lower-rated borrowers, who are disproportionately from the global South—giving insufficient recognition to the risk-diversification benefits of lending to clients in developing countries.
The Basel Committee’s own most recent quantitative impact study reveals a large variance in the amount of capital required for banks using the different Basel II-based risk-assessment methodologies. For example, some banks using the ‘advanced internal ratings-based’ approach—predominantly in developed countries—are expected to have large reductions in their capital requirements, of the order of 30 per cent. Banks using the simpler ‘foundational’ approach—predominantly in developing countries—are expected to experience an increase in their capital requirements of over 38 per cent.footnote20 The Basel II standards thus give a structural advantage to large developed-country banks, and a structural disadvantage to developing-country banks; and hence also to the regional, national and local economies within which these are nested.
The upshot is that developing countries under Basel II could face a higher cost of capital and a lower volume of lending than under Basel I, with more pro-cyclical volatility, and with their banks less able to establish international operations and more likely to be taken over by developed-country banks.footnote21 No country should let its banking system be taken over by foreign banks, even if Western banks are likely to be more ‘efficient’ in developing countries than domestic ones: in times of crisis, banks rely heavily on their home base, and are likely to sacrifice operations in developing countries in order to protect it.
A further far-reaching impact of the new standards and surveillance mechanisms lies in their tendency to create a global ‘attractor’ point, in the sense of taking the Anglo-American or liberal market economy as the ‘normal’ or ‘proper’ kind of capitalism.footnote22 This involves short-term and arms-length relations between banks, non-financial companies and the state; non-discretionary regulation which is delegated to ‘independent’ agencies, like the Financial Services Authority in the uk; and banks oriented to maximizing profits. A contrasting type has been common in East Asia, based on longer-term and more ‘multiplex’ relations between companies, financiers and the state; discretionary regulation; and some banks invested with social purposes beyond profit-maximizing, such as development banks. This system was an important factor in the very high rates of investment and diversification in capitalist East Asia from the 1950s to the 1980s, particularly because it enabled big firms to carry much higher levels of debt to equity than their counterparts operating within an Anglo-American framework. High debt-to-equity ratios supported high rates of investment.footnote23
As long as the East Asian system operates on the basis of long-term relationships, patient capital and government guarantees, Anglo-American capital is at a disadvantage in these markets. On the other hand, us and uk financial firms know they can beat all comers in an institutional context of arms-length relations, stock markets, open capital accounts and new financial instruments. Therefore the Asian system must be changed to more closely resemble theirs. An example of this is a Foreign Operations Appropriations Bill passed by the us Senate in September 1998, stipulating that no us funds be made available to the imf until the Treasury Secretary certified that all the G7 governments had publicly agreed to make the imf require its borrowers to liberalize trade and investment, and eliminate ‘government directed lending on non-commercial terms or provision of market distorting subsidies to favoured industries, enterprises, parties or institutions’—that is, eliminate sectoral industrial policy. Moreover, when an East Asian economy adopts the standards of best practice favoured by Western governments and multilateral financial institutions, its banks have to operate under much tighter prudential standards, and cannot support debt-to-equity ratios anything like those they sustained earlier. This puts pressure on the whole chain of savings, credit and investment, and curbs the rate of investment.
The Basel Committee’s rules illustrate the mechanism by which the standards-surveillance-compliance system pulls towards the Anglo-American model. The rules have as their ostensible purpose the enforcement of a uniform level of prudence sufficient to make bank failure and contagion unlikely. Prudence is defined in terms of levels of a bank’s assets, liabilities and core capital. Hence the Basel Committee’s rules of prudence translate into rules about capital adequacy. But in a national economy where banks receive government guarantees, they have to mobilize less capital for their operations. This has been the case with banks in Japan and other East Asian countries, with German Länder banks and development banks in the Third World. These are different from the kinds of bank assumed in the Basel rules: they are not devoted solely to maximizing profits for their shareholders, and government guarantees allow them to support a cross-subsidizing mixture of public and private purposes, and to operate with a trading ethic that does not force them to drop unprofitable borrowers overnight. The imf, World Bank and leading industrial economies, however, consider such banks to have an unfair competitive advantage, and want them to behave like ‘normal’ banks, without government guarantees—which means giving up any public purposes.
In other words, what seem to be universal rules of prudence are actually rules for forcing convergence to the Anglo-American model. Moreover, since financial systems are sub-systems within a larger institutional complex, changes in the former will have ramifications for related institutional areas, including corporate governance, product markets, labour markets, and further on into the welfare state and education. Thus, in so far as the West is able to get its standards of best practice accepted as ‘normal’ and non-compliance as ‘deviant’, it alters the international political economy in a manner that might be compared to global warming—away from coordinated market economies and towards a liberal market economy of the Anglo-American type. Efforts at surveillance on the part of wealthy countries, the imf and World Bank should not be understood as a mere supplement to previous efforts at market liberalization. The drive for ‘transparency’ involves not so much ‘removing the veil’ as a massive programme of standardization around one type of capitalism, thereby reinforcing and legitimizing the power of the G7 states and multilateral organizations to intensify and stabilize financial liberalization.
Can this shift in the political economy of developing countries towards the liberal or Anglo-American model be justified in terms of improving their prospects for growth? Answering this fully would take us beyond the limits of the present article. But it is undeniable that historically, a diverse range of institutional arrangements have succeeded in stimulating economic growth, with varying levels of state involvement. The us and Britain, moreover, perform badly on many non-gdp-based performance indicators compared to equally rich countries with more coordinated market economies.
A false freedom
Since the Asian Crisis, the multilateral financial institutions and G7 governments have continued to place the onus on developing countries to prevent crises, without changes being made at the international level to mitigate the pressures from global financial liberalization. They have rejected such measures for reducing the severity of crisis as the Sovereign Debt Restructuring Mechanism, and standstills more broadly, as well as blocking—albeit with certain qualifications—the use of capital controls by developing countries. Instead, in the name of liberalism, the West has sought to construct a global regime of economic standardization, the effects of which will include the entrenchment of the structural advantages enjoyed by financial organizations in the North, the contraction of policy options for developing countries, and pressure on these national economies towards adopting an Anglo-American model.
The standards-surveillance-compliance system thereby exemplifies a familiar paradox of liberalism: under the banner of economic freedom—expanding market participants’ freedom to move their finance where they wish and use it as they may—it imposes a single policy model from above, curbing the ability of nation-states to choose their own path. And by virtually excluding developing countries from standards-setting forums, the High Command prevents those who are subject to its decisions from having any role in how these are made. In that sense, the revised structure of the international financial system is likely to replicate across the globe policies that will generate further crises, while preventing its architects from being held to account.
Yet the global economy and interstate system are displaying signs of fragility that could easily tip the world into economic depression and geopolitical conflict. No less than the always-cautious Bank for International Settlements, the club of rich-country central bankers, says in its Annual Report for 2007 that the world is ‘vulnerable to another 1930s slump’. There are several reasons to be seriously worried. Firstly, the extraordinarily high and rising levels of debt to equity in the world financial system hold the potential for a ‘great unwind’. The assets invested in hedge funds have more than tripled in the seven years since 2000, to around $1,500 billion. The ceo of a us hedge fund recently described the current situation as possibly ‘even more alarming’ than that which produced the crash of Long Term Capital Management in 1998: ‘the explosion of hedge fund investments in illiquid assets combined with leverage currently pose a greater risk to the global financial markets than we experienced at the time of the ltcm debacle.’footnote3 Second, this run-up of debt reflects the boom in global liquidity—propelled by the surge in commodity prices since 2003 to the highest levels in more than two decades, the ballooning of the us current-account deficit, and the incorporation of giant savings pools in China and India into world capital markets. The liquidity boom has increased financial instability by enabling many developing-country governments to postpone improvements in financial regulation, as well as helping rebel groups to finance militias once they control a commodity-exporting base.
Third, we must take into account the precarious state of the us economy. Internationally, the us has in recent years been losing its position of economic dominance in both trade and finance, especially to the eu and China—European financial markets now have a higher capitalization than their us counterparts for the first time in a century. Domestically, the us middle class is being squeezed by falling house prices, spiralling mortgage foreclosures, declining real wages in manufacturing and lower-skill service jobs, and historically very high levels of debt to disposable income. Economic growth has slowed to near 1 per cent, while the inequality of income between the top percentile of households and the bottom 90 per cent has reached its highest level since 1928. When the Great Depression struck, the us was in the ascendant. Being in relative decline today may make Washington more likely to react to these trends in an even more unilateralist, more defensive way than in the 1930s. The us has already begun to substitute bilateral and multilateral trade agreements, such as cafta, for commitment to the wto process—allowing it to circumvent the wto’s consensual procedures in order to establish agreements loaded with predatory provisions favourable to the us: open access for American agricultural exports, for instance, and stringent patent protection for us drugs.
Fourth, the relative decline of the us is part of a larger shift in the interstate system. In particular, the previously closed club of advanced capitalist states is under pressure to admit new challengers such as Russia, China and Brazil. In the past, the rise of such contenders has almost always been accompanied by interstate conflict; geopolitical tensions and rivalries are likely to rise this time too—though perhaps not on the scale of the twentieth century’s wars. In particular, neo-imperialism is again in the air—not only the us variety, but also the less noticed neo-imperial ambitions of Russia, based on its control over vast energy resources and raw materials and its consensual authoritarian rule. The tensions between these neo-imperialisms, especially over access to energy, have pushed the West to redouble its efforts to open markets in the rest of the world and reconfigure domestic political economies to facilitate the operations of Western, especially Anglo-American firms—with little more than lip service paid to the idea of compromise with the interests of developing countries.
The international financial system lacks the bodies that set rules and enforce compliance at the national level, such as a central bank, a financial regulator, a bankruptcy court, deposit insurance, and the like. Rather than try to create international counterparts, in the decade since the Asian Crisis the West has sought to build a comprehensive regime of global economic standards of best practice in areas such as data dissemination, bank supervision, corporate governance and financial accounting. The imf and other organizations have been undertaking systematic surveillance of national compliance with the standards. Governments and other bodies are expected to comply with the latter in order to obtain cheap and abundant finance, on the assumption that financial firms will reward compliance and punish non-compliance.
This regime—which I call the ‘standards-surveillance-compliance’ systemfootnote4—has been drafted by a us-led institutional complex, including Western governments and multilateral organizations such as the imf, the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, the Financial Stability Forum, the G20 of finance ministers and a gamut of non-official bodies, as well as financial firms and think-tanks from the advanced capitalist states. The global South has had almost no say. The resulting regime is only one part of a larger set of international arrangements which have the cumulative effect of redistributing income upwards—to wealthy industrialized countries, the financial sector, and the top percentile of world income distribution. Moreover it has also pushed national economies towards one particular kind of capitalism—the Anglo-American type—and shrunk the scope of ‘policy space’ for these countries still further than did the prescriptions of the Washington Consensus. Where the latter insisted on liberalizing the market, deregulation and fiscal austerity, the Post-Washington Consensus could be summed up by the commandment: ‘standardize the market’. In what follows I will trace the evolution of the standards-surveillance-compliance regime, and gauge its effects.
Crisis responses
The Asian Crisis raised fears that the whole world economy, including the biggest industrial countries, might be dragged down as the crisis ricocheted out of Asia and into Russia, Brazil and elsewhere. Alan Greenspan admitted in October 1998, in a speech to the National Association for Business Economics: ‘I have been looking at the American economy on a day-by-day basis for almost a half century, but I have never seen anything like this’—‘this’ meaning the disintegration of market confidence. Stanley Fischer, deputy managing director of the imf, explained that when the governor of the Brazilian central bank told him, in January 1999, that Brazil would no longer make an iron-clad defence of its exchange rate, ‘I thought, this is it. We’re going to lose Latin America, and then it will go back to Asia.’footnote5
The High Command’s worries about the Asian Crisis went far beyond the fact that it affected a sizeable portion of the world’s population in fast-growing and economically important countries. It seemed likely to discredit the hard-won consensus about the virtues of market liberalization and maximum openness for all developing countries. The crisis-affected countries in Asia had been regarded as star pupils of the Washington Consensus—indeed their economic success was routinely attributed to their adherence to the latter and held up as proof of its general validity.
Moreover, the crisis hit only three years after the dramatic Mexican peso devaluation of 1994, and Mexico too had been regarded as a star pupil of the Washington Consensus. Events there had spurred academics and official agencies to present proposals for safeguarding the world economy against a repeat, including better financial supervision at the international level, more transparency in financial markets, sensible macroeconomic policies and exchange-rate regimes, and better monitoring of macroeconomic performance. But once the fallout was restricted to Mexico, ‘complacency soon reasserted itself’.footnote6 The shock of the Asian Crisis was thus compounded by the realization that nothing much had been done to strengthen the international financial system in the several years since the peso’s slump.
In view of Asia’s plight, leading policy economists tripped over themselves to offer up plans for a ‘new international financial architecture’ that would create a much stronger supranational authority in financial markets—a change of a similar order of magnitude to that initiated at the Bretton Woods conference of 1944. Proposals included ambitious new global organizations—a much larger imf, a global financial regulator, a sovereign bankruptcy court, an international deposit-insurance corporation, even a global central bank. It was suggested that the imf be given greater authority to support standstills—postponement of foreign debt repayments and even controls on capital outflows, equivalent to ‘bailing in’ countries’ private creditors—so as to give countries protection from creditor panics, analogous to the kind of protection that companies get from bankruptcy laws.
In the event, none of these proposals left the drawing board. The imf has not been super-sized, as some analysts wanted, so that when crises erupt it could provide enough hard currency for financial investors not to panic about a shortage of liquidity. On the other hand, it has not been abolished, as prominent conservatives like former Secretary of State George Shultz demanded, nor even substantially cut, as sought by the majority on a congressionally appointed panel led by conservative economist Allan Meltzer.
One of the more radical proposals to originate from the official sector—the Sovereign Debt Restructuring Mechanism proposed by Anne Krueger of the imf, which contained elements of a global bankruptcy procedure—was defeated by a combination of developed-country states and private financial organizations in March 2003. This mechanism would have involved full debt restructuring: changes in interest rates, reductions in amounts owed, and influence over private investments and contracts. It would have entailed a substantial increase in the authority of an international organization over private financial markets.
There has not even been progress on the apparently more modest but still important proposal for institutionalized standstill procedures. Evidence from the crises themselves suggested that even ad hoc standstills could significantly reduce the damage to debtor countries. Though most bail-outs mounted by the imf in the late 1990s failed, two succeeded: the second rescue of South Korea, on Christmas Eve 1997, and the second rescue of Brazil in March 1999. The main difference between those that succeeded in stopping the panic and those that did not is that in the successful cases, the us Treasury, imf and World Bank managed to cajole the Electronic Herd—mutual funds, pension funds, commercial banks, insurance companies and other professional money managers—to bail ‘in’ rather than ‘out’ and defer debt repayment, but did not do so in the more numerous unsuccessful ones.footnote7
However, to get the authority needed for institutionalized standstills—and still more, a Sovereign Debt Restructuring Mechanism—the Fund would have to change its Articles of Agreement. Fund members are extremely reluctant to make such changes, and had only done so three times before 1999. Major industrial countries would also have to pass laws recognizing the Fund’s authority, so that bondholders would be prevented from asserting claims in court. Any such laws recognizing the Fund’s authority inevitably encounter a storm of opposition, given that they involve authority to abrogate contracts—the covenants that govern borrowers’ obligation to pay interest and principal on loans and bonds—and authority to block a country’s own citizens, as well as foreigners, from moving their money abroad.footnote8 The us Congress, in particular, would be sure to oppose this tooth and nail.
The proposal for Contingent Credit Lines was implemented, in that the imf did create a facility enabling it, for the first time, to lend pre-emptively to help prevent a crisis. However, countries had to volunteer to join the facility, and the imf had to certify its approval of their economic policies. In the event, no country signed up—to do so amounted to a confession of fragility—and even the imf was unenthusiastic: ejecting a country which acquired a new government not to the Fund’s liking would send a bad signal to the markets, possibly precipitating a crisis.footnote9 In short, there been little movement on any of the more radical proposals for overhauling the international financial system. The central reason is the unwillingness of private financial markets to accept greater international authority, which would afford them less latitude than a world in which a variety of nation-states hold jurisdiction.
Drive for transparency
On the other hand, everyone could agree on the need for more transparency and more standards. In October 1998, as the Asian Crisis was still unfolding, the G7 finance ministers and central bank governors called for ‘greater transparency’—echoing statements made after the Mexican peso’s collapse. What was meant by this was the provision of ‘accurate and timely’ macroeconomic and financial supervisory data, including the reserve positions of central banks and levels of national public and private indebtedness.footnote10 World Bank economists supported this line by arguing that the Asian Crisis was due in large measure to ‘lack of transparency’ in financial data. In the words of a World Bank paper published in 2001: ‘The findings suggest that these countries did not follow International Accounting Standards and that this likely triggered the financial crisis. Users of the accounting information were misled and were not able to take precautions in a timely fashion’.footnote11
The imf for its part argued in 2003 that the global ‘adoption of internationally recognized standards of good practice [would help] foster financial market stability and better risk assessment’. Compliance with standards would help a country ‘mitigate the impact of an external crisis by supporting continued access to external borrowing’, and ‘help prevent crises’ by reducing the cost of foreign capital so that a government could ‘remain solvent in cases it otherwise might not have remained solvent’.footnote12 The assumptions underlying these arguments naturally shield the imf and World Bank from any blame: if they did not act to counter potential instabilities it was because they had been misled by the Mexicans and East Asians.
Division of labour
The initial concern to improve ‘transparency’ grew into a broader thrust to reorganize and re-regulate economic activity around the world. A new standards-setting organization was created in April 1999, called the Financial Stability Forum. It had the G7 finance ministers and central bankers at its core, plus those from four other industrial countries (or territories, in the case of Hong Kong), together with representatives from the imf, World Bank and Bank for International Settlements, and private-sector associations of financial firms. Its purpose was to develop standards in the domains of banking supervision, risk-management systems for banks, financial accounting and corporate governance. The Forum was chaired by the general manager of the Bank for International Settlements. It included no representatives of developing countries.
The imf was given an expanded role. It was charged with developing Special Data Dissemination Standards, mainly for macroeconomic data, and was itself to be the primary enforcer of many of the standards, through formal mechanisms of structural conditionality, contingent credit lines, and negotiations around Article IV of the imf’s Articles of Agreement, which details states’ obligations relating to currency stability. However, these formal enforcement mechanisms were never developed, for the same reason that the more radical of the ‘new international financial architecture’ proposals were not developed. Instead, the imf—and the ‘transparency’ thrust more generally—relied on indirect enforcement through the response of ‘financial markets’: the Electronic Herd. The Fund would make public directly, or indirectly via the government, the results of this surveillance; financial markets would respond to the high-quality information appropriately, lending more funds at cheaper rates to governments that complied more closely with the standards, and less at higher rates to governments that complied to a lesser extent. Knowing this market-driven reward and punishment system, governments would strive for greater compliance, and the international financial system would become more stable.
The imf and World Bank started in 1999 to produce Reports on the Observance of Standards and Codes (roscs), and to undertake a Financial Sector Assessment Programme (fsap). Between 1999 and the end of 2006 the imf produced 502 Reports and the World Bank 92, making a total of almost 600. One hundred and thirty countries had at least one rosc. The Reports fed into the larger exercise of the fsap, which had three main components: compliance with standards, stability of the financial system, and the financial sector’s required reforms. Operationally, the fsap exercise may entail, for a large country, the arrival of a sizeable team of people from the imf and World Bank, along with outside consultants, who then hold detailed discussions with financial authorities on such critical matters as payments systems, feeding back their findings to the authorities.
At much the same time, on a separate but parallel track, the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, under the umbrella of the Bank for International Settlements, was developing a new set of standards for bank capital and banking supervision. The impetus came from bank regulators feeling overwhelmed by the financial innovations of the 1990s, and from the development by banks of new kinds of risk-assessment models—coupled with the prevailing norm that ‘markets’ and not regulators know best. Formulating the new set of standards came to be known as the Basel II process, the successor of Basel I, now seen as out of date. The initial Basel II proposals were published in 1999, the Asian Crisis having given the project added urgency.
In addition to the efforts of these official bodies, a whole gamut of unofficial private-sector bodies have also been formulating standards with global reach. They include the International Association of Insurance Supervisors, the International Accounting Standards Board, the International Organization of Securities Commissioners, the International Organization for Standardization, and the International Federation of Stock Exchanges.
New standards at work
What has been the impact of the new regime? In the case of the imf, the fsap assessment team typically concentrates on ‘supervising the (national) supervisors’—examining how the national financial supervisory system is working and making suggestions for improvement. Often its political role is to strengthen the hand of regulators. Fearing international criticism and market discipline, a number of governments have overhauled their financial regulatory system ahead of an fsap exercise, especially when the government has undertaken in advance to publish the fsap’s findings. Even where the findings of the exercise are not made public, market participants can find out readily enough if they wish to.
This must however be seen in the context of a whole series of negative effects. First, the reports and assessments have generally been compiled as check-lists to be completed. According to one World Bank official:
The problem with the fsap is that the shareholders, primarily G7, burdened it with doing a huge amount of mindless assessments of compliance with a large number of standards. This prevented and/or distracted staff from looking at first-order issues. For example, in [an Eastern European country] two successive heads of the sec were assassinated by ‘defenestration’ from their office windows. Yet the fsap concentrated on their compliance with iosco [International Organization of Securities Commissions] standards, even though with this degree of lawlessness, it is difficult to expect any securities market activity except for trade among insiders. Such silly exercises took resources away from consideration as to why some markets were missing or malfunctioning. The British, the French, Canadians and Americans were the worst in their relentlessly check-list approach.footnote13
Second, the Fund does not devote enough time and effort to overseeing the system as a whole. According to the imf’s Independent Evaluation Office, its operational staff often do not read the imf’s own global stability reports, let alone integrate these findings into their bilateral work. Only 14 per cent of senior staff said that the imf’s ‘multilateral surveillance’ findings were discussed with national authorities.footnote14 Conversely, bilateral surveillance reports contain little discussion of policy spillovers from systemically important countries such as Germany, Russia or even the us.
Third, it seems that financial-market participants generally pay rather little attention to the data provided through ‘transparency’ exercises—even though they would presumably no longer be ‘misled’ by the data as they supposedly were before the Asian crisis. A recent independent evaluation of the fsap concluded that ‘while many authorities identified the “signalling role” to markets as one of their motivations for participating in the fsap exercise, the impact of fssas [Financial Sector Stability Assessments] on the views of financial market participants appears modest’.footnote15 Financial markets pay more attention to ‘traditional’ macroeconomic indicators like inflation than to compliance with standards of good financial practice. Studies of the link between compliance with standards and cost of foreign capital have found no significant impact of the former on the latter.footnote16 If financial markets do not pay much attention to the data from surveillance exercises, the imf’s mechanism for enforcing best practice—which relies on financial markets rewarding high-compliance countries and punishing low-compliance policies—will not function.
Fourth, to the extent that markets do pay attention to the information made available through transparency exercises, the effect may be to make financial markets less stable and more prone to crisis. By homogenizing data about economies and reducing the diversity of opinion on the near future, these exercises may accentuate the tendency to pro-cyclical herding behaviour—bankers and investors buying what others are buying and selling what others are selling.
Fifth, compliance has been highly variable. In some countries, a post-crisis surge of formal compliance was followed by regulatory forbearance and selective enforcement—in effect, mock compliance. Of the four East Asian countries affected by the 1990s crisis, Malaysia has the highest overall level of compliance, followed by Korea, Thailand and, at the bottom, Indonesia.footnote17 In general, compliance with the Special Data Dissemination Standards for macroeconomic data has been highest, since this is relatively easily monitored, and private firms do not bear the costs. Banking supervision comes next highest. Compliance with the standards of corporate governance and financial accounting has been lowest, as these are most costly to the private sector as well as hardest to monitor.
If those are the impacts of the standards surveilled by the imf, what about the impact of the Basel II standards of banks’ capital adequacy, which started to be implemented in early 2007? It is quite likely that these, too, will generate pro-cyclical tendencies and raise the volatility of borrowers’ access to bank finance. Avinash Persaud, former head of research at State Street Bank, argues that Basel II’s move towards more quantitative and market-sensitive risk-management practices reinforces herding behaviour and market volatility in a vicious circle.footnote18 One reason is that the Basel II standards encourage the more sophisticated banks—those based in developed countries—to adopt a single type of internal ratings-based model relying on current asset prices, which tend to be pro-cyclical; this raises the capital requirements at times of downturn, precisely when banks are less able to meet these requirements. A second reason is that banks will tend to react similarly to similar signals—because they are using the same type of risk-assessment model, which leads them to downgrade or upgrade clients en masse.footnote19
Anglo-Americanization?
Standards of best practice are rarely distributionally neutral: they benefit some participants more than others. The standards established by the Basel Committee, the imf, the fsf and the like—and surveillance in line with the standards—may be having at least two far-reaching impacts that are disadvantageous for developing countries and advantageous for developed countries, especially those following the Anglo-American model.
Firstly, Basel II—as compared to Basel I—will shift competitive advantage even further towards developed-country banks and against developing-country banks, and will likely hurt development prospects more broadly by making developing-country access to finance more pro-cyclical. Basel II requires banks with less sophisticated risk-management systems to carry relatively more supervisory capital than banks with more sophisticated systems. It therefore raises the former’s costs of lending relative to those of the latter, which tend to be based in developed countries. These banks are allowed to establish their credit risks and capital adequacy themselves—‘self-supervise’—subject to the financial supervisor approving their model. Basel II also requires bigger differential risk weighting for lower-rated borrowers, who are disproportionately from the global South—giving insufficient recognition to the risk-diversification benefits of lending to clients in developing countries.
The Basel Committee’s own most recent quantitative impact study reveals a large variance in the amount of capital required for banks using the different Basel II-based risk-assessment methodologies. For example, some banks using the ‘advanced internal ratings-based’ approach—predominantly in developed countries—are expected to have large reductions in their capital requirements, of the order of 30 per cent. Banks using the simpler ‘foundational’ approach—predominantly in developing countries—are expected to experience an increase in their capital requirements of over 38 per cent.footnote20 The Basel II standards thus give a structural advantage to large developed-country banks, and a structural disadvantage to developing-country banks; and hence also to the regional, national and local economies within which these are nested.
The upshot is that developing countries under Basel II could face a higher cost of capital and a lower volume of lending than under Basel I, with more pro-cyclical volatility, and with their banks less able to establish international operations and more likely to be taken over by developed-country banks.footnote21 No country should let its banking system be taken over by foreign banks, even if Western banks are likely to be more ‘efficient’ in developing countries than domestic ones: in times of crisis, banks rely heavily on their home base, and are likely to sacrifice operations in developing countries in order to protect it.
A further far-reaching impact of the new standards and surveillance mechanisms lies in their tendency to create a global ‘attractor’ point, in the sense of taking the Anglo-American or liberal market economy as the ‘normal’ or ‘proper’ kind of capitalism.footnote22 This involves short-term and arms-length relations between banks, non-financial companies and the state; non-discretionary regulation which is delegated to ‘independent’ agencies, like the Financial Services Authority in the uk; and banks oriented to maximizing profits. A contrasting type has been common in East Asia, based on longer-term and more ‘multiplex’ relations between companies, financiers and the state; discretionary regulation; and some banks invested with social purposes beyond profit-maximizing, such as development banks. This system was an important factor in the very high rates of investment and diversification in capitalist East Asia from the 1950s to the 1980s, particularly because it enabled big firms to carry much higher levels of debt to equity than their counterparts operating within an Anglo-American framework. High debt-to-equity ratios supported high rates of investment.footnote23
As long as the East Asian system operates on the basis of long-term relationships, patient capital and government guarantees, Anglo-American capital is at a disadvantage in these markets. On the other hand, us and uk financial firms know they can beat all comers in an institutional context of arms-length relations, stock markets, open capital accounts and new financial instruments. Therefore the Asian system must be changed to more closely resemble theirs. An example of this is a Foreign Operations Appropriations Bill passed by the us Senate in September 1998, stipulating that no us funds be made available to the imf until the Treasury Secretary certified that all the G7 governments had publicly agreed to make the imf require its borrowers to liberalize trade and investment, and eliminate ‘government directed lending on non-commercial terms or provision of market distorting subsidies to favoured industries, enterprises, parties or institutions’—that is, eliminate sectoral industrial policy. Moreover, when an East Asian economy adopts the standards of best practice favoured by Western governments and multilateral financial institutions, its banks have to operate under much tighter prudential standards, and cannot support debt-to-equity ratios anything like those they sustained earlier. This puts pressure on the whole chain of savings, credit and investment, and curbs the rate of investment.
The Basel Committee’s rules illustrate the mechanism by which the standards-surveillance-compliance system pulls towards the Anglo-American model. The rules have as their ostensible purpose the enforcement of a uniform level of prudence sufficient to make bank failure and contagion unlikely. Prudence is defined in terms of levels of a bank’s assets, liabilities and core capital. Hence the Basel Committee’s rules of prudence translate into rules about capital adequacy. But in a national economy where banks receive government guarantees, they have to mobilize less capital for their operations. This has been the case with banks in Japan and other East Asian countries, with German Länder banks and development banks in the Third World. These are different from the kinds of bank assumed in the Basel rules: they are not devoted solely to maximizing profits for their shareholders, and government guarantees allow them to support a cross-subsidizing mixture of public and private purposes, and to operate with a trading ethic that does not force them to drop unprofitable borrowers overnight. The imf, World Bank and leading industrial economies, however, consider such banks to have an unfair competitive advantage, and want them to behave like ‘normal’ banks, without government guarantees—which means giving up any public purposes.
In other words, what seem to be universal rules of prudence are actually rules for forcing convergence to the Anglo-American model. Moreover, since financial systems are sub-systems within a larger institutional complex, changes in the former will have ramifications for related institutional areas, including corporate governance, product markets, labour markets, and further on into the welfare state and education. Thus, in so far as the West is able to get its standards of best practice accepted as ‘normal’ and non-compliance as ‘deviant’, it alters the international political economy in a manner that might be compared to global warming—away from coordinated market economies and towards a liberal market economy of the Anglo-American type. Efforts at surveillance on the part of wealthy countries, the imf and World Bank should not be understood as a mere supplement to previous efforts at market liberalization. The drive for ‘transparency’ involves not so much ‘removing the veil’ as a massive programme of standardization around one type of capitalism, thereby reinforcing and legitimizing the power of the G7 states and multilateral organizations to intensify and stabilize financial liberalization.
Can this shift in the political economy of developing countries towards the liberal or Anglo-American model be justified in terms of improving their prospects for growth? Answering this fully would take us beyond the limits of the present article. But it is undeniable that historically, a diverse range of institutional arrangements have succeeded in stimulating economic growth, with varying levels of state involvement. The us and Britain, moreover, perform badly on many non-gdp-based performance indicators compared to equally rich countries with more coordinated market economies.
A false freedom
Since the Asian Crisis, the multilateral financial institutions and G7 governments have continued to place the onus on developing countries to prevent crises, without changes being made at the international level to mitigate the pressures from global financial liberalization. They have rejected such measures for reducing the severity of crisis as the Sovereign Debt Restructuring Mechanism, and standstills more broadly, as well as blocking—albeit with certain qualifications—the use of capital controls by developing countries. Instead, in the name of liberalism, the West has sought to construct a global regime of economic standardization, the effects of which will include the entrenchment of the structural advantages enjoyed by financial organizations in the North, the contraction of policy options for developing countries, and pressure on these national economies towards adopting an Anglo-American model.
The standards-surveillance-compliance system thereby exemplifies a familiar paradox of liberalism: under the banner of economic freedom—expanding market participants’ freedom to move their finance where they wish and use it as they may—it imposes a single policy model from above, curbing the ability of nation-states to choose their own path. And by virtually excluding developing countries from standards-setting forums, the High Command prevents those who are subject to its decisions from having any role in how these are made. In that sense, the revised structure of the international financial system is likely to replicate across the globe policies that will generate further crises, while preventing its architects from being held to account.
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