April 21, 2015
The annual spring meetings of the International Monetary Fund and
World Bank held in Washington over the weekend comprised the treasurers
and central bankers, together with financial experts and analysts, from
all the major capitalist economies. However not a single proposal was
advanced from this high-level meeting to alleviate, let alone resolve,
the mounting problems besetting global capitalism.
The reason is not hard to find. The meetings were dominated by the
ongoing disintegration of the very structures of the post-war economic
order of which the IMF and the World Bank have constituted two major
pillars.
While it was not officially on the agenda, the announcement by China
that it had secured the agreement of 57 countries to become founding
members of its proposed Asia Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) was a
hot topic of discussion in the backrooms and corridors, especially at
the World Bank.
The IMF and World Bank have been the two most prominent institutions
reflecting the economic primacy of the US in the post-war world. But the
establishment of the AIIB, and the decision of major economic powers,
including Britain, France and Germany, to sign up is an expression of
major shifts in the world economy and the position of the US within it.
A New York Times article headlined “At Global Economic
Gathering, US Primacy is Seen as Ebbing,” published on the eve of the
meetings, captured some of the mood. In an interview with the NYT,
Arvind Subramanian, the chief economic advisor to the Indian government,
said the US was almost handing over legitimacy to the rising powers.
“People can’t be too public about these things, but I would argue this
is the single most important issue of these spring meetings.”
The article went on to cite comments made by former treasury secretary
and a top adviser in both the Clinton and Obama administrations,
Lawrence Summers, that the inability of Washington to prevent key allies
from joining the AIIB signalled “the moment the United States lost its
role as the underwriter of the global economic system.”
US treasury secretary Jack Lew disputed the notion that there was any
decline in the American position, saying there was a lot of “noise in
Washington” and this occasion was no exception “but the United States’
voice is heard quite clearly in gatherings like this.”
It may well be, but talk is cheap. The fact remains that the US is
unable to offer any economic measures to boost the global economy in the
way that it once could. This is under conditions where, as the main
document prepared for the meeting, the IMF’s World Economic Outlook (WEO) drew out, lower growth, and even stagnation, is becoming the “new normal.” The WEO was accompanied by the IMF’s Global Financial Stability report, which showed that far from lessening, financial risks are on the increase.
Those risks are certain to be increased by another major issue that
dominated unofficial discussion—the looming prospect that Greece may
default on its loans, possibly as early as the middle of next month.
The official mantra within the euro zone is that the financial risks
posed by a Greek exit are not as severe as they were in 2012. This is
largely because the outcome of the austerity measures imposed under the
so-called troika has been to take Greek debt off the hands of the
private banks and transfer it to the European Central Bank and the IMF.
In the lead up to the meeting and during its sessions, the IMF and
European financial authorities made clear there would be no accession to
calls by the Greek government for some relief. In fact, the Financial Times
has reported that in private and off-the-record discussions some
European government representatives were in favour of pushing Greece out
of the euro zone.
The hard line against Greece was laid down by IMF managing director
Christine Lagarde. Adopting the tone of a school ma’am lecturing an
errant student, she said: “We have been able to express and explain the
policy of the IMF in terms of payments delays and give the precedents
and history of that to Mr Vourafakis [the Greek finance minister].”
Speaking at a press conference during the Washington talks, ECB
president Marion Draghi said the euro zone was much better equipped than
it had been in the past to deal with a Greek crisis and sought to
downplay the risks of financial contagion.
However, he added: “We are certainly entering into uncharted waters if
the crisis were to precipitate, and it is very premature to make any
speculation about it.”
Summing up the American position, Lew warned that a crisis in Greece
would place a cloud of uncertainty over the European and global
economies. “I do not think anyone can predict how markets will respond
to dramatic changes in circumstances,” he said. “We have been clear in
our conversation with all parties there is an urgent need to come
together around a comprehensive approach.”
While the US views the prospect of a European crisis with alarm because
of its impact on the American economy it is not able to significantly
intervene. That is a measure of its economic decline. Gone are the days
when a crisis would see the US convening an international economic
summit to hammer out measures to overcome it.
In fact there was considerable discussion over whether US financial
policy may contribute to financial instability, when the Federal Reserve
begins to increase official interest rates. In 2013, indications that
the Fed was moving to wind back its program of asset
purchases—quantitative easing—brought a sharp movement of funds out of
emerging markets in what was dubbed a “taper tantrum.”
In the lead up to last weekend’s meeting, the director of the IMF’s
monetary and capital markets department, José Viñals, warned that there
could be a “super taper tantrum” as the Fed moved closer to lifting
official rates from their present near-zero level.
“This is going to take place in uncharted territory,” he said. “Markets
could be increasingly susceptible to episodes in which liquidity
suddenly vanishes and volatility spikes.”
However, despite the warnings of these dangers, nothing emerged from
the IMF-World Bank meeting to suggest that financial authorities have
any measures to meet them.
http://www.globalresearch.ca/us-economic-decline-overshadows-imf-world-bank-meeting/5444265
Tuesday, April 21, 2015
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