| Globalization of the World Economy:  JAMES TOBIN 
         
      Read November 14, 1998 at the Autumn Meeting of the
      American Philosophical Society 1 
      SYMPOSIUM 
      THE GLOBALIZATION OF THE WORLD ECONOMY 
      Financial Globalization 
       
      JAMES TOBIN 
      Globalization is a fashionable word to
      describe trends perceived to be dramatically and relentlessly increasing connections and
      communications among people regardless of nationality and geography. These trends are a
      general source of amazement and excitement, often of pleasure, often of fear. In the
      economic sphere, markets are less and less segmented by national boundaries. Both buyers
      and sellers face wider horizons of opportunity, and by the same token new sources of
      competition. Globalization affects markets of three kinds: (1)commodities -- goods and
      services of all varieties; (2)labor -- workers who produce goods and services; (3)assets
      and debts -- securities, bank loans and deposits, titles to land and physical capital.
      Markets of the third type are the subject of my discussion of financial globalization. The
      speakers who follow will have much to say about other kinds of markets and other aspects
      of globalization.  
       
      Trades of financial assets are the easiest to globalize. Nothing is involved beyond
      exchanging pieces of paper or making entries in electronic ledgers. The communications
      revolution makes transactions easy, fast, and cheap. No movements of physical goods or of
      people are involved. No frontiers have to be crossed. The only barriers are national
      regulations.  As these have been liberalized in country after country, international
      financial flows have flooded into national securities markets and banking systems all over
      the world. These flows could be the vehicles by which savings in the advanced capitalist
      democracies are channeled into productive capital investments in the developing countries
      of Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Or they could be causes of currency crises, recessions
      and depressions, unemployment and deprivation in those countries. Or both.   
       
      The 1990s have been a decade of disturbances in international finance, beginning in Europe
      in 1992, followed by Mexico in 1994-95, climaxed by East Asia in 1997-98, Russia this
      year, and perhaps Brazil in near future. Is the problem that liberalization in developing
      and transition economies is still incomplete? Or has it gone too far? That is the big
      debate today.  
       
      Despite the apparent pace of recent financial globalization and its spectacular
      technological support, it is in fact nothing new. Finance was much more completely 
      internationalized in the nineteenth century, particularly the period 1870-1914, the heyday
      of the gold standard. All countries made their currencies convertible into gold at fixed
      prices per ounce; for example, the pound sterling was worth $4.86, the ratio of between
      the gold value of sterling set by Isaac Newton and the gold value of the dollar set by
      Alexander Hamilton. There were virtually no restrictions on international financial
      transactions. In particular, the United Kingdom lent overseas as much as half its national
      saving, financing the economic development of the Americas, Australia, India, and other
      realms of the British empire in Asia and Africa. The Bank of England served as a sort of
      world central bank and lender of last resort. This regime was destroyed by the first World
      War, the debts it left in its wake in the 1920s, the unwillingness or inability of the
      United States to take over Britains pre-1914 role, the Great Depression, and the
      second World War. Globalization gave way to a maze of national restrictions on currency
      transactions, as governments sought competitive trade advantages in vain hopes of rescuing
      their economies from depression. 
       
      The Bretton Woods Agreement of 1945 brought some order out of world monetary chaos and
      inaugurated a period of liberalization. Yet, taking into account the new national
      participants in world financial markets, the pre-1914 degree of liberalization has not yet
      been restored and, more important, transfers of saving from developed to developing
      economies are still, relative to the size of the world economy, much smaller than at the
      beginning of this century. 
       
      Nostalgia for the gold standard is understandable, but it is misplaced. In the 1920s and
      1930s it was disastrous. During the first World War Britain had to sell off its foreign
      wealth and suspend the gold convertibility of the pound. In 1925 Winston Churchill,
      Chancellor of the Exchequer, bowed to the City and returned sterling to gold at the
      pre-war value, i.e. $4.86, prompting John Maynard Keynes to write "The Economic
      Consequences of Mr. Churchill." Because of its wartime inflation of prices and wages,
      Britain couldnt compete at that exchange rate, and suffered depression and high
      unemployment from 1925 to 1931, when the coalition government finally gave up and
      devalued. In 1931-33 the determination of other governments and central banks, including
      the Hoover administration and the Federal Reserve, to defend their gold parities by high
      interest rates and austere budgets aggravated their depressions and provoked bank crises.
      In Weimar Germany the resulting distress hastened Hitlers advent to power. In
      America FDR devalued the dollar in 1933-34; this act was the most effective New Deal
      policy for recovery from the Great Depression.  
       
      The worldwide system of exchange rates agreed at Bretton Woods was a sort of gold
      standard. Every member of the International Monetary Fund set the gold content of its
      currency. In practice conversions of currencies into gold were rare; the U.S. dollar was
      used instead. The United States Treasury stood ready to exchange gold and dollars at a
      fixed price ($35 an ounce)-- with foreign governments, not with private individuals.
      Countries pegs to gold and the dollar were adjustable, and devaluations were
      frequent. This exchange rate system lasted until 1971, when the Nixon administration
      abandoned the U.S. commitment to redeem dollars in gold. The dollar was under pressure,
      and the administration was frustrated because it could not get Germany and Japan to
      appreciate their currencies against the dollar. The upshot was that since 1973 the
      exchange rates among the three major currencies -- dollar, Deutsche mark, and yen -- have
      floated in free currency markets. Other countries have generally fixed their currencies in
      terms of one of these three "hard" currencies or some combination of
      them. 
       
      Western European currencies have typically been pegged to the D-mark, the key currency of
      the European Monetary System. Now eleven of those currencies are being permanently merged
      into the euro, which will supplant the D-mark and will float against the dollar and the
      yen. The new European Central Bank will make monetary policy for all of
      "Euroland," the new European Monetary Union. The mighty Bundesbank will
      be just one of the new Banks branches. 
       
      Here is a "trilemma" of which international economists are quite fond: A
      nation can maintain no more than two of the following three conditions: (1) A fixed rate
      of exchange between its currency and other currencies. (2) Unregulated convertibility of
      its currency and foreign currencies. (3) A national monetary policy capable of achieving
      domestic macroeconomic objectives. 
       
      For example, consider a government and central bank that wish to reduce unemployment by
      raising aggregate demand for the goods and services its economy produces. This typically
      requires cutting the interest rates facing domestic businesses and households and making
      its products more competitive in world trade. But this is not possible if the exchange
      rate is fixed and arbitrages across currencies are unimpeded. The countrys central
      bank will then be unable to reduce interest rates below those available elsewhere in the
      world, particularly in big centers like New York or Tokyo or Frankfurt or London. Maybe
      the government can empower its central bank by giving up condition (2) and imposing direct
      controls over movements of funds across the exchanges. Alternatively, the government could
      sacrifice condition (1) and let its currency float in the market to a lower level at which
      activity and employment, especially in export industries, would be greater, while lower
      local interest rates would also be tenable. 
       
      In the wake of World War II, it was apparent that the economies of Europe and Asia were in
      no position to make their currencies wholly convertible. The articles of the International
      Monetary Fund adopted at Bretton Woods did not, and still do not, require that of its
      members. What they do require is "current account convertibility," namely that
      foreigners be free to convert any of a countrys currency they earn in trade.
      "Capital account convertibility," which would allow any holder of a currency,
      resident or non-resident, to buy foreign-currency assets, was put off to the indefinite
      future. Under the Marshall Plan 1948-1951 the United States encouraged European countries
      to set up a multilateral clearing system for their currencies, while restricting
      conversions into dollars. Currency exchange restrictions in Western Europe were not wholly
      abandoned until the mid-1980s. Today, however, the world financial powers, private and
      public, are impatiently pushing developing countries and transition economies towards full
      convertibility. 
       
      Likewise, fixed exchange rates, adjustable pegs to hard currencies., are the prevailing
      exchange rate regime among developing economies, "emerging" and
      "transition" and others. Typically, they are "managed crawling
      pegs", which do allow for some flexibility. Markets are allowed to move the exchange
      rate within a specified band. The entire band is itself moved from day to day by an
      announced percentage, usually designed to depreciate the currency to compensate for a
      local inflation trend in excess of the inflation trend in the hard currencys
      economy. For example, the central parity and the band of Brazils real rise
      at a monthly rate of 0.7 percent. However, if under market attack the price of a dollar in
      terms of reals should rise to its upper limit (depreciation of the real)
      then the central bank would have to use its dollar reserves to redeem reals just
      as if it were defending a simple fixed peg. 
       
      An attack on a currency is like a run on a bank. A depositor worried about the ability of
      a bank to redeem deposits will want to ask for her cash before the bank runs out, and any
      depositor worried about what other depositors will think and do will act the same way even
      if she thinks the bank is solvent. A country on a fixed exchange rate is like a bank, its
      holdings of hard currency reserves are like the banks cash, and the local currency
      assets outstanding are like the publics deposits in a bank. The same instability and
      vulnerability apply in both cases. For a domestic banking system, deposit insurance is an
      effective protection against runs, and a nations central bank acts as a "lender
      of last resort" to provide liquidity to banks under attack.  The
      analogous institutions do not exist on an international scale, to protect currencies
      against runs.  
       
      The recent epidemic of currency crises makes it unmistakably clear that fixed but
      adjustable exchange rates are a bad idea. The only viable regimes in our increasingly
      globalized financial world are floating rates, on the one hand, and irretrievably fixed
      rates, on the other.   
       
      Floating rates have since 1973 worked for the Big Three currencies. They have fluctuated,
      but there have been no crises. From 1995 to 1997 the yen gradually and unobtrusively fell
      50 percent against the dollar, but this decline never rated headlines or evening TV news.
      (One of the causes was Japans recession and stagnation, a disaster for Japan itself
      and for its neighbors -- indeed a principal source of their currency crises and economic
      recessions. But this macroeconomic disaster would have been worse if the yen/dollar rate
      had been fixed.) 
       
      Floating rates would work for most currencies. They would forestall extreme crises. Of
      course, exchange rates would go up and down, people would speculate on them, and often the
      fluctuations would be unpleasant for the economies affected. But the trauma of discrete
      regime change, default of solemn official promises, and the bandwagon momentum these
      events generate, would be avoided. Foreign lenders would be more careful if they
      understood that exchange rates were not guaranteed. Events that triggered the Asian crises
      would have likewise pushed down those currencies had they been floating, but surely not
      nearly as far as they plunged in the panicky free falls following the collapse of fixed
      rates. Fixed rates are, after all, a hangover from the pre-globalized Bretton Woods
      system. 
       
      At the other extreme is the alternative of fixing the national currency irretrievably to
      the dollar or some other hard-currency standard. The trouble with this course is that it
      surrenders monetary sovereignty. This is what the eleven European countries are doing.
      They will no longer have their individual monetary policies, or even discretionary fiscal
      policies. It remains to be seen whether political and economic advantages, comparable to
      those of the two hundred year old monetary union of the American states, can be quickly
      manufactured in Europe. 
       
      An individual country can tie itself tightly and permanently to a hard currency. Examples
      are Hong Kong and Argentina, which are effectively dollarized. The idea is to sacrifice
      every other possible objective of monetary and fiscal policies to the defense of the
      exchange rate. Indeed the dollar may partly or wholly replace local currency as unit of
      account and means of payment. This is the essence of a "currency board" -- one
      well enough endowed with reserves of the hard currency to convince the world of
      convertibility, and convincingly determined to protect those reserves. For example, if it
      takes double- or triple-digit interest rates to attract and hold enough reserves, so be
      it, regardless of macroeconomic consequences. The rule is that local currency outstanding
      must be covered 100 percent by the central banks hard currency reserves.  In
      terms of the trilemma, the country meets condition (1) fixed exchange rate, and (2)
      convertibility. But it sacrifices (3) monetary sovereignty, thus forfeits all possibility
      of controlling its own macroeconomic fate.  
       
      In contrast, consider China. Like Hong Kong and Taiwan, China is evidently immune from the
      "contagious" currency crises that began in East Asia in 1997. But the
      reason for the stability of the renminbi is quite different. It is not currency-board
      austerity or any other capitalist virtue. China allows no "capital account
      convertibility," only "current account convertibility," like
      European countries in the early days of Bretton Woods. In terms of thetrilemma, violating
      condition (2) enables China to maintain the other two conditions, (1) fixed exchange rate,
      and (3) monetary sovereignty. 
       
      The economic rationale for internationalization of asset markets is movement of productive
      capital from wealthy developed economies to poorer developing countries. But what matters
      are the net flows of capital, not the gross volumes of transactions. Despite the limited
      convertibility of its currency, China is benefiting from a quarter trillion dollars worth
      of direct investment in plant, equipment, and technology in China by foreign companies
      around the world. The emerging economies of East Asia, as well as some in Latin America
      and Eastern Europe, are also beneficiaries of foreign business investments. But much of
      their capital inflows have taken the form of loans of hard currencies from banks in
      financial centers like Tokyo, New York, and Frankfurt to banks in Korea, Thailand, and
      Indonesia. Many of these were short-term, and crises came when the lenders became
      distrustful and refused to renew the loans.  
       
      Although developing countries have increasingly benefited from inflows of capital, the
      investments that have propelled their growth have been mainly due to their own internal
      saving.  Capital flows from the world economic core to the periphery, only $150
      billion a year in the 1990s, have been less than 15 percent of their investment and less
      than 5 percent of the saving of the developed capitalist economies. These shares are much
      smaller than comparable figures before 1914, when they were both close to 50 percent. 
       
      The worldwide gross volume of foreign exchange transactions is mind-boggling, 1.3 trillion
      dollars per business day and growing. Nine tenths of these transactions are reversed
      within a week, mostly within a day. Clearly many of these are speculative. The gross
      volume dwarfs the net capital transfers that carry the economic benefits globalization is
      advertised to bring. 
       
      Most observers, West and East, public and private, in governments and international
      institutions, in banks and businesses, in big countries and small, now agree that
      financial globalization went too far too fast. Some reforms are the responsibilities of
      the borrowing countries. They need to develop the institutions that make financial markets
      work in the developed world, banking regulation and supervision, transparency requirements
      like the U.S.  Securities and Exchange Commission, bankruptcy procedures. Since their
      international reserves are at stake, those governments should limit the hard currency
      exposures of banks and businesses. They should feel free to slow down inflows of liquid
      capital, by devices such as extra reserve requirements on new foreign deposits in their
      banks, used successfully in Chile. They should stress import of capital in the form of
      direct investment and equity. As argued above, they should let their exchange rates float. 
       
      I have proposed a system-wide international measure to slow down flows of "hot
      money," without interfering significantly with currency transactions related to trade
      and productive investment. This is a simple small tax on foreign exchange transactions,
      levied at an agreed common rate by all countries where such transactions originate in
      significant amount. The tax, perhaps only 0.1 or 0.2 percent means nothing for a round
      trip of a year or more from one currency to another and back. But for one-week round trips
      it would be equivalent to a difference between interest rates in the two markets of 10 or
      20 percent per year, a palpable protection of monetary sovereignty. Alas, the lords of
      finance throughout the world will have none of the "Tobin Tax."  How
      would you like to have a tax named after you?. 
        
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