Global Challenges, Global Solutions: Some Remarks: Duvvuri Subbarao

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Global Challenges, Global Solutions: Some Remarks1

Duvvuri Subbarao
___________________________________________________________________

Mr. Chairman

1. Recent experience suggests that globalization offers incredible

opportunities but also poses immense challenges. If the years before the global

financial crisis - the period of the so called ‘Great Moderation’ - demonstrated the

benefits of globalization, the devastating toll of the crisis showed its costs. Just as

in the case of an economy, there are price setters and price takers, in the

international economy too, there are economies which shape the forces of

globalization and those that have to shape their policies to adjust to those forces of

globalization. The post-crisis reform effort - whether here at the IMF or at the other

global fora such as the BCBS, FSB, WTO - is all aimed at managing the forces of

globalization for maximizing our collective welfare. For these reforms to be

sustainable, it is important that they are even handed as between those who shape

the forces of globalization and those who have to adjust to the forces of

globalization.

EMEs in the Global Context

2. Before I get to specific issues, let me make a brief comment on EMEs in the

global context. The shift in the global balance of power in favour of EMEs is by

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Lead intervention by Dr. Duvvuri Subbarao, Governor, Reserve Bank of India and Leader of the
Indian Delegation, at the International Monetary and Financial Committee (IMFC), IMF,
Washington D.C on April 16, 2011.
now a familiar story. It may be useful to put some numbers around that. Setting

GDP at 100 in the base year of 2000, against the aggregate growth of 17 per cent in

the decade 2000-10 of advanced economies, emerging market and developing

countries (EMDCs) grew by 82 per cent and BRICs (Brazil, Russia, India, China)

by a whopping 127 per cent. When we look at shares in global GDP, the share of

advanced economies in the global GDP dropped from 80 per cent in the year 2000

to 67 per cent in 2010, with a mirror increase in the share of EMDCs.

3. 2010 was a year of recovery, and EMEs powered this by contributing to

nearly three quarters of global growth in 2010. EMEs were also the motive force

behind the estimated expansion of world trade by 12 per cent last year, an

impressive reversal from shrinkage of 11 per cent in 2009.

4. These trends have an interesting implication for the decoupling hypothesis,

which was intellectually fashionable before the crisis. As a matter of fact, the crisis

failed to validate the decoupling hypothesis, as all EMEs were affected, admittedly

to different extents. What the crisis, in fact, reinforced is that the economic

prospects of advanced economies and EMEs are interlinked through trade, finance

and confidence channels.

5. Let me now move on to specific issues. In the context of the theme of the

session, I want to address five topics which are all interconnected.

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Global Rebalancing

6. First is the issue of global rebalancing. Global rebalancing will require

deficit economies to save more and consume less, while depending more on

external demand relative to domestic demand for sustaining growth. Surplus

economies will need to mirror these efforts - save less and spend more, and shift

from external to domestic demand. The problem we have is that while the

adjustment by deficit and surplus economies has to be symmetric, the incentives

they face are asymmetric. Managing rebalancing will require a shared

understanding on conducting macroeconomic policies to minimize disruptions to

macroeconomic stability. These adjustments have several components. Importantly,

letting exchange rates remain aligned with economic fundamentals, and an

agreement that currency interventions should not be resorted to as an instrument of

trade policy should be central to a coordinated approach at a multilateral level.

Capital Flows

7. That takes me to the second facet of global imbalances - return of lumpy

and volatile capital flows. Since capital flows have become such an emotive topic

around the world in recent months, it is important to be mindful of a few realities.

First, EMEs do need capital flows to augment their investible resources, but such

flows should meet two criteria: they should be stable; and they should also be

roughly equal to the economy’s absorptive capacity. The second reality that we

must remember is that capital flows are triggered by both pull and push factors. The

pull factors are the promising growth prospects of EMEs, their declining trend rates

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of inflation, capital account liberalization, and improved governance. Among the

push factors are the easy monetary policies of advanced economies which create

the capital that flows into the EMEs.

8. To the extent that lumpy and volatile flows are a spillover from policy

choices of advanced economies, managing capital flows should not be treated as an

exclusive problem of emerging market economies. How this burden is to be shared

raises both intellectual and practical challenges. The intellectual challenge is to

build a better understanding of the forces driving capital flows, what type of policy

instruments, including capital controls, work and in what situations. The practical

challenge is the need to reach a shared understanding on an organizing framework

for cross border spillovers of domestic policies in capital-originating countries, and

the gamut of policy responses by capital receiving countries.

9. Managing capital flows involves two important things. First, we need to

make a judgment on how important the externalities are. And, second, we need to

make an objective assessment of what combinations of policies may be used to

minimize their impact. Now that it is broadly accepted that there could be

circumstances in which controls can be a legitimate component of the policy

response to surges in capital flows, policymakers must have the flexibility, and

discretion, to adopt macroeconomic, prudential and capital account management

policies. Importantly, they should be able to do so without a sense of stigma

attached to particular instruments.

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Framework for the Adjustment Process

10. Let me now move on to the third issue which is the framework for the

adjustment process to secure and preserve global financial stability. The adjustment

process should ensure that individual actions of countries add up to a coherent path

forward. I want to emphasise two aspects of this.

• First, the IMF’s surveillance function is critical - it assumes a vital, pre-

emptive role in preserving global and national stability. The

forthcoming Triennial Surveillance Review provides an opportunity to

take stock of the steps taken and to assess recent experience, including

the adequacy of the legal framework for surveillance.

• Second, reserve accumulation has to be viewed in the context of

economic growth and development. The insurance that reserves provide

against sudden stops and reversals of capital flows far outweigh the

opportunity costs of holding reserves. The experience of the crisis has

amply demonstrated this. What constitutes an adequate level of reserves

is a country-specific question, involving a judgment based on practical

experience. Clearly, there can be no “one-approach-fits all” to such

assessments.

Global Reserve Currency

11. My fourth point relates to a global reserve currency. The recent crisis has

brought home the complex challenges arising from the world having a single

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reserve currency. In the ongoing search for solutions, one option is to have a menu

of alternative reserve currencies which fulfill the required criteria – full

convertibility; the exchange rate determined by market fundamentals; a significant

share in world trade; liquid, open and large financial markets in the currency

issuing country; and also the policy credibility to inspire the confidence of potential

investors. There is a debate on whether the SDR can be a reserve currency. For the

SDR to take on this significant role, several prerequisites have to be in place, which

are now well known and need no elaboration here. At the present time, the SDR

does not satisfy these conditions. Thus, we see the move to a multicurrency world

as a gradual evolution.

Protectionism

12. The last issue I want to raise concerns protectionism. Recent international

developments mark an ‘ironic reversal’ in the fears about globalization. Previously,

it was the EMEs which feared that integration into the world economy would lead

to welfare loss at home. Those fears have now given way to apprehensions in

advanced economies that globalization means losing jobs to cheap labour abroad.

13. There is concern in some quarters that even as open protectionism has been

resisted relatively well during the current crisis, covert protectionism has been on

the rise. The short point is that in the years ahead, the pressures for protectionism

will mount, and protectionism will also take new forms. Global welfare will be

maximized when collectively we resist short-term pressures, and put our collective

long-term interest ahead of individual short-term advantage.

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Global Cooperation

14. Mr. Chairman, the thrust of all that I have said is that global challenges

demand global solutions. The need for global cooperation in solving our most

pressing problems of today is vital. The crisis has taught us that no country can be

an island, and that economic and financial disruptions anywhere can cause ripples,

if not waves, everywhere. The crisis also taught us that given the deepening

integration of countries into the global economic and financial system,

uncoordinated responses will lead to worse outcomes for everyone. The global

problems we are facing today are complex, and not amenable to easy solutions.

Many of them require significant, and often painful adjustments at the national

level; and in a world divided by nation-states, there is no natural constituency for

the global economy. At the same time, the global crisis has shown that the global

economy, as an entity, is more important than ever. The IMF is central to these

reforms so that it continues to spearhead and weave together the fabric of

international cooperation. This is in the common interest of all of us.

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