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GLOBAL TURMOIL: THE INTERNATIONAL MONETARY SYSTEM TODAY

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Title: GLOBAL TURMOIL: THE INTERNATIONAL MONETARY SYSTEM TODAY


1
GLOBAL TURMOIL THE INTERNATIONAL MONETARY SYSTEM
TODAY
  • Benjamin J. Cohen
  • University of California, Santa Barbara
  • Remarks prepared for presentation at a Conference
    on the BRICS and Asia, Currency
    Internationalization, and International Monetary
    Reform, Hong Kong, December 10-11, 2012

2
LIVING WITH TURMOIL
  • The intl monetary system faces multiple threats
  • Europes sovereign debt crisis
  • Weakening US dollar
  • Dimming growth prospects
  • Currency wars
  • Volatile capital flows
  • Is worse to come? In my opinion, No.
    Governments will muddle through. Modest reforms
    are possible but not more.
  • Outlook We have to learn to live with a certain
    amount of monetary turmoil.

3
OUTLINE OF MY REMARKS
  • 1. The central challenge governance
  • 2. The four key elements of global monetary
    governance
  • Adjustment
  • Liquidity
  • Confidence
  • Leadership
  • 3. Implications for the BRICS and Asia

4
THE CENTRAL CHALLENGE GOVERNANCE
  • Governance arrangements for the formulation,
    implementation, and enforcement of the rules of
    the game
  • In short, whos in charge?

5
GLOBAL MONETARY GOVERNANCE
  • Governance without government
  • No central authority governance must rely on
    cooperation among sovereign governments
  • Two problems
  • Compromises are inevitable the rules will always
    be sub-optimal
  • Violations are likely behavior will be
    imperfect, too

6
GLOBAL MONETARY GOVERNANCE
  • Four critical elements
  • Adjustment management of exchange rates
  • Liquidity management of the supply of
    balance-of-payments financing
  • Confidence maintenance of trust in principal
    instruments of liquidity
  • Leadership exercise of power for the common good

7
BRETTON WOODS SYSTEM
  • Design was state-centric key decisions to be
    made by governments or their agents (IMF). Rules
    were clear and transparent
  • Adjustment par-value system
  • Liquidity International Monetary Fund
  • Confidence US dollar was as good as gold
  • Leadership the United States

8
THE SYSTEM TODAY
  • Two major changes
  • Revival of global financial markets
  • Exchange rates now determined by markets
  • Financing is also market-determined
  • Greater risk of destabilizing shifts of
    confidence among major currencies
  • Result a sharper risk of systemic crises
  • Diffusion of power among states
  • Deadlocked leadership
  • Can matters be improved?

9
ADJUSTMENT
  • Amendment of IMF charter (1978)
  • Exchange rates free to float
  • Subject to IMF surveillance
  • But surveillance has been ineffective
  • States have been free to do what they want
  • Result risk of currency wars
  • Reason Demands of national sovereignty
  • Unlikely to change

10
LIQUIDITY
  • With revival of financial markets, liquidity
    supply has become hostage to investor sentiment
  • Behavior is often pro-cyclical
  • Thus tendency toward repeated crises
  • Failed responses by governments
  • Repeated promises to strengthen rules
  • In practice, little accomplished
  • Example Europes sovereign debt crisis
  • Reason again, demands of national sovereignty
  • Again, unlikely to change

11
CONFIDENCE
  • Toward a leaderless currency system
  • Dollars dominance is weakening
  • But there is no obvious alternative
  • Heightened risk of sudden shifts of confidence
    destabilizing capital movements
  • Good or bad?
  • Good? Greater discipline on the US no more
    exorbitant privilege
  • Bad? Others will also seek to enjoy an
    exorbitant privilege

12
LEADERSHIP
  • Effective leadership rests on two critical
    factors
  • Consensus on basic principles
  • Concentration of power
  • Most conspicuous today by their absence.
  • Consensus has broken down
  • Power is more diffused (especially autonomy)

13
IMPLICATIONS FOR BRICS AND ASIA
  • Revival of global financial markets
  • Advantage ready access to finance
  • Disadvantage vulnerability
  • Policy option capital controls?
  • Diffusion of power among states
  • Gain to date autonomy
  • Potential gain influence
  • Policy option build a winning coalition?
  • Problem still no consensus on what is needed

14
AGENDA FOR BRICS AND ASIA
  • Adjustment prepared to accept IMF surveillance?
  • Liquidity prepared to submit domestic finances
    to intl rules?
  • Confidence prepared to forego an exorbitant
    privilege?
  • Leadership prepared to share the
    responsibilities of governance?
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