Global Fortune: The Stumble and Rise of World Capitalism
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After two world wars, the Great Depression, and experiments with socialism interrupted the liberal economic order that began in the 19th century, the world economy has recently returned to the level of globalization that it previously enjoyed. Peruvian novelist Mario Vargas Llosa embraces that development, saying, "It is liberalism -- more than any other doctrine -- that symbolizes the extraordinary advances that liberty has made in the long course of human civilization." In Global Fortune, experts from four continents examine the financial turmoil that has accompanied the return to a global economy and address the accusation of its critics that markets spread instability and poverty. The contributors also explore the role of the International Monetary Fund; show that close ties between business and government in South Korea, Thailand, and Indonesia have led to massive malinvestments; and assess Russia's record of reforms, which, according to Andrei Illarionov, President Putin's chief economic advisor, has been dismal. The notion that capitalism has somehow failed is regrettable, because the welfare of humanity is largely tied to the fortune of capitalism itself. Capitalism, Prof. Rudiger Dornbusch says, made the 20th century one of unrivaled prosperity, enabling unprecedented improvements in the living standards of billions of people around the world. Vargas Llosa sums up the sentiments of the authors in this collection when he says, "We should celebrate the achievements of liberalism with joy and serenity, but without triumphalist hubris... That which remains to be done is more important still."
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Global Fortune - Cato Institute
Introduction: The Return to a Global Economy
Ian Vásquez
After two world wars, the Great Depression, and experiments with socialism interrupted the liberal economic order that began in the 19th century, the world economy has now returned to the level of globalization that it previously enjoyed. By the 1970s, trade as a share of world economic output had already reached its pre-World War I height. ¹ During the past 20 years, international integration has continued to increase with the subsequent liberalization of capital controls, reduction of trade barriers, revolutionary technological advances, and the dramatic collapse of central planning.
Compared with the 1950s and 1960s, when most of the world's population lived in economically unfree countries and only 20 percent of the world's population lived in countries with open economies, ² the current era of global capitalism seems unprecedented. Yet John Maynard Keynes's description of the world before 1914 vividly reminds us that there was a thriving global economy during that time.
The inhabitant of London could order by telephone, sipping his morning tea in bed, the various products of the whole earth, in such quantity as he might see fit, and reasonably expect their early delivery upon his doorstep; he could at the same moment and by the same means adventure his wealth in the natural resources and new enterprises of any quarter of the world, and share, without exertion or even trouble, in their prospective fruits and advantages.... He could secure forthwith, if he wished it, cheap and comfortable means of transit to any country or climate without passport or other formality, could despatch his servant to the neighboring office of a bank for such supply of the precious metals as might seem convenient, and could then proceed abroad to foreign quarters, without knowledge of their religion, language, or customs, bearing coined wealth upon his person,and would consider himself greatly aggrieved and much surprised at the least interference. But, most important of all, he regarded this state of affairs as normal, certain, and permanent, except in the direction of further improvement, and any deviation from it as aberrant, scandalous, and avoidable. ³
Significant differences between the two eras of global capitalism have resulted from the growth of government during the 20th century. For example, central banks, fiat currencies, and various exchange-rate regimes have replaced the gold standard. Rich countries now impose extensive restrictions on immigration—a result, as Deepak Lai explains in his chapter, of the rise of the welfare state, which has created property rights in citizenship. Nevertheless, the world is by most measures more integrated today than it was 100 years ago. ⁴ The volume of trade is greater, gross capital flows (now at some'$1.5 trillion per day) are far larger, cross-border lending is more diversified, and international production is more complex. Traditionally poor Latin American and Asian nations, moreover, are experiencing high and self-sustaining growth rates, a sign that the West's dramatic escape from poverty is an experience that can be replicated. ⁵
But the return to a global economy has been accompanied by financial turmoil in Asia and elsewhere, prompting a range of critics to fault markets for spreading instability and poverty. When the Russian ruble fell in August 1998, financier George Soros asserted that right now, market fundamentalism is a greater threat to open society than any totalitarianism.
⁶ President Clinton's call to put a human face on the global economy
⁷ and the International Monetary Fund's bailouts of Brazil, Russia, and Asian countries—ostensibly intended to bolster the free market—contributed to the notion that capitalism had somehow failed. The proposition that utterly unregulated markets rule society more wisely than sovereign governments,
journalist William Greider declared, is being smashed by reality.
⁸
The purpose of this book is to assess such bold claims and to take stock of the ways in which the spread of capitalism has contributed to human progress. The contributors document how the countries that have succumbed to economic crises in recent years, far from having experienced an excess of market reforms, have in fact suffered from perverse forms of state interventionism. Indeed, beginning with Mexico in 1994, all of the crisis countries maintained some combination of the following flawed policies: pegged exchange rates, state-protected banks, irresponsible monetary and fiscal policy, government-directed credit, and implicit or explicit government guarantees to domestic firms and industries. Countries with sound economies, on the other hand, did not become victims of so-called contagion. Thus it is difficult to speak of a truly international economic crisis, much less a crisis of capitalism.
The real crisis of the 20th century was otherwise. Indeed, one of the clearest lessons of the past 100 years has been that inward-looking economic policies of import substitution, development planning, capital controls, and state-owned production have impoverished both the Third World and socialist nations. One of the lessons of the 1990s was that an incoherent mix of market and interventionist policies—such as maintaining pegged exchange rates after liberalizing capital flows—is a recipe for disaster. The challenge for both the developed and developing world is to keep the process of globalization going and not to lose sight of the tremendous blessings of a liberal world economy.
The Spread of Capitalism
Mario Vargas Llosa explains in his chapter that it is liberalism— more than any other doctrine—that symbolizes the extraordinary advances that liberty has made in the long course of human civilization.
Even though classical liberalism has won the great battle of ideas over various forms of totalitarianism, Vargas Llosa warns us not to become complacent. In his view, stereotypes and caricatures are today being used to undermine economic and political freedom. A prominent part of that strategy has been the frequent use of the derisive term neoliberal
to explain nearly every social and economic ill in society. ⁹
To Vargas Llosa, who has met many liberals but no neoliberals, the term is a straw man and is emblematic of much of the misguided criticism aimed at globalization. For example, in response to the oft-heard accusation that multinational corporations behave with impunity, Vargas Llosa stresses the need to establish the proper institutional framework for a free society: If in many developing countries the behavior of multinationals is reprehensible, the ultimate responsibility rests on those who fix the rules of the game in economic, social, and political life.
Thus, Vargas Llosa urges the capitalist democracies to do as much as they can to promote the rule of law and economic and political pluralism in the developing world.
Deepak Lai cautions both developed and developing countries that there is no third way between the free market and socialism. In contrast with Vargas Llosa, however, Lai finds no necessary connection between democracy and development. According to Lai, developing nations can modernize without Westernizing. People in poor countries can easily adapt to, and are eager to attain, economic freedom, but cosmological beliefs
take longer to evolve and may not be consistent with many values the West wishes to advance.
Thus Lai warns against the West's growing attempt to legislate its 'habits of the heart' worldwide.
The West's efforts to promote labor, environmental, and other standards and its insistence on majoritarian democracy remind Lai of 19th-century imperialism, which helped unravel that era's liberal economic order. That is particularly unfortunate, since other major factors that led to the breakdown of the first era of globalization are absent today. If the West ties its moral crusade too closely to the emerging processes of globalization,
Lai concludes, there is a danger that there will also be a backlash against the process of globalization.
In the struggle for global capitalism, the liberal cause nevertheless has the long-term advantage, Brink Lindsey contends. He analyzes the arguments of those who claim that recent financial crises have been the result of unrestrained capitalism and finds that the arguments are illuminating in their almost perfect inversion of the truth.
The world is not seeing an overreliance on markets, a phenomenon that supposedly led to the cataclysms of the 20th century. Lindsey catalogues the anti-market forces that have created bouts of economic instability and notes the dynamics that have changed the world economy. The global economy that existed 100 years ago came to an end because of the rise of economic nationalism and a pervasive loss of faith in markets. Today, by contrast, although globalization is charged with undermining the state, the more powerful flows of historical causation have actually been in the opposite direction: it is the retreat of the state that has allowed international market relationships to regain a foothold.
Lindsey predicts that liberalization will continue, but because of the widespread presence of statist distortions to the market economy, that process will occur through fits and starts in a pattern of reform, crisis, and reform.
The rewards of liberalization are amply demonstrated by the United States, one of the consistently freest economies in the world. Stephen Moore and the late Julian Simon document 25 U.S. trends to show that there has been more improvement in the human condition for people living in the United States in the 20th century than for all people in all previous centuries of human history combined.
In the past 100 years, nearly every indicator of health, safety, environmental quality, and affordability of consumer goods and services has shown rapid and dramatic progress. For example, U.S. life expectancy at birth has risen from 47 to 77 years, agricultural productivity has increased 5- to 10-fold, diseases that used to kill thousands of Americans per year have been extinguished, and per capita annual income has grown from $5,000 to $30,000. Moore and Simon believe that the gains of the 20th century are part of a long-term trend. Those gains are virtually irreversible because they are based primarily on advances in knowledge, which, in the information age, are difficult to erase or suppress.
As Rudiger Dornbusch notes in his chapter, the 20th century was a time of unrivaled prosperity not only for rich countries but also for mankind in general. That was particularly true of the past three decades, during which developing nations began to enjoy sustained high growth rates. By most measures, 1900 was the stone age compared with where we stand today,
Dornbusch observes. The world wars and the Great Depression turned out to be tragic but were momentary setbacks on the path to the most rapid improvements in living standards on record. To keep the world economy on the right track, Dornbusch advises that it adopt a heavy dose of prosperity policies,
including deregulation in Europe and more expansionary monetary policy in Japan.
Asia, Latin America, and Russia
When currency and financial crises erupted in Thailand, South Korea, and Indonesia in 1997, many observers concluded that the Asian miracle
was a fraud. Bill McGurn explains that, despite the turmoil, East Asian countries have achieved remarkable progress in pulling millions of people out of poverty in the past few decades. He notes, however, that, although detractors of globalization have exaggerated Asia's failures, some proponents of globalization have overstated Asia's successes. Many of the region's countries, after all, maintained highly inefficient systems of capital allocation. Those countries that relied most heavily on government-directed credit and protection of politically favored industries suffered the most during the crisis (e.g., Korea and Indonesia); those that intervened less fared much better (Hong Kong and Singapore). Thus, the varied Asian policy landscape gives clues about the solution to the region's problems: the troubled nations must move away from Asian-style corporatism and toward liberalization.
Tomas Larsson's account of the causes of the Asian debacle concurs with McGurn's observations. Close ties between government and business led to massive malinvestments that were politically, rather than market, determined. Once the crisis broke out, the IMF made matters worse by helping to bail out clearly bankrupt institutions and by creating uncertainty in the region with its drawn-out, bureaucratic negotiation process. Larsson observes that the region's recent economic recovery is due mostly to lower exchange rates and interest-rate cuts but that fundamental structural reform has yet to take place. He believes that globalization will promote those reforms and finds it ironic that so many Western proponents of globalization with a human face
advocate such measures as capital controls, which the region's dictators have so effectively used before to repress their populations.
Byeong-Ho Gong describes the Korean sickness
that led to the country's financial crisis and reports that the crisis itself compelled Korea to introduce extensive reforms in its labor, industrial, financial, and government sectors. The economy has rapidly improved, but, according to Gong, it would be misleading to conclude that the government's economic reforms have strengthened the fundamentals of the Korean economy.
Korea still needs a paradigm shift. Instead of letting a market-based financial system determine the restructuring of the chaebol (large conglomerates) through a process of creative destruction, the government has nationalized the banks and instructed the chaebol to engage in certain business activities. Gong categorizes that newly emerging industrial policy as destructive reform and worries that it is the same kind of government-business relationship that got the country into trouble in the first place.
In his chapter, Martin Krause relates how Latin America emerged in the 1990s, after successive cycles of populism and IMF-led adjustment programs, to introduce far-ranging market reforms. Those changes were not imposed from outside; rather, they resulted from a Latin American consensus based on the region's dismal experience with state-led development planning. Yet the fall of the Mexican peso and the Brazilian real and the collapse of the Ecuadoran and Venezuelan economies show that the region's free-market revolution remains unfinished.
According to Krause, the remaining agenda includes fiscal reform (both tax rates and tax evasion remain high), institutional reform (the separation of powers is still nonexistent in many countries), and deregulation (bureaucratic obstacles hamper entrepreneurial activity and harm small and medium businesses). Likewise, Latin American governments have not reformed social services, though they have devoted more resources to them with few or no results. Krause concludes that failure to complete such reforms may lead to periodic eruptions of social and economic turmoil.
In Russia, nine years of reforms
have barely moved the country from the plan to the market, according to Andrei Illarionov. Indeed, Russia is still among the least economically free countries in the world. The 1998 financial crisis, which was the culmination of years of misguided policy,
wiped out the country's few successes— namely, low inflation and exchange-rate stability. Illarionov describes a country in which a corruption-plagued government has increasingly interfered in the economy and in which domestic economic liberalization effectively stopped in mid-1992.
The real struggle over the past eight years in Russia has been not between liberal reformers and old-line statists but rather over who or whose team would win control over the state institutions in charge of distributing economic resources.
Unfortunately, the IMF and other lending institutions have helped sustain that situation by providing Russia with more than $25 billion in credits. Because Moscow has for years been uninterested in reform, Illarionov asserts that IMF credits have actually postponed the implementation of a coherent economic strategy .. . and have reduced the willingness of national authorities to make painful, but necessary changes in economic policies.
The most perverse and discouraging legacy of the transition
period, however, is that,in the minds of many Russians, the free market itself has been discredited.
The International Financial System
The increasing frequency and severity of financial crises, accompanied by more than $180 billion in IMF-led bailout packages since 1997, have forced a reexamination of the global financial architecture.
The instability has also caused many observers to look back fondly to the golden era of Bretton Woods, when the IMF managed the international system of pegged exchange rates. British prime minister Tony Blair, for example, called for a new Bretton Woods for the next millennium.
¹⁰ Francis Gavin questions whether the Bretton Woods system ever did really function.
In Gavin's view, the system was doomed to failure because its reliance on pegged exchange rates and independent monetary policies made it prone to instability once currency convertibility began to be introduced in the late 1950s. In the absence of a reliable adjustment mechanism, the system went from crisis to crisis as countries suddenly and massively changed their exchange-rate parities without the IMF's approval. The current nostalgia for Bretton Woods is even more unfounded now that the world's major countries have moved to flexible exchange rates.
A more liberal world economy requires that borrowers and creditors be more responsible for their investment decisions. That is one reason Onno de Beaufort Wijnholds and Arend Kapteyn oppose proposals to turn the IMF into an international lender of last resort. Not only would such a function be unfeasible—unlike domestic central banks, the IMF has no ability to print its own money or effectively monitor the solvency of the entities to which it provides liquidity—it would also be undesirable because it would increase the moral hazard that has been part of recent IMF financial packages. Wijnholds and Kapteyn believe that the IMF should still play a role as an indispensable lender but that, with large-scale financing, there is a danger that the IMF could be shifting in the wrong direction.
In the following two chapters, Larry White and I go much further. White agrees that the fund should not become an international lender of last resort and argues that developing countries would be better off without the IMF. In a world of national fiat currencies, a laissez-faire alternative to the current international financial system would be characterized by the only two exchange-rate regimes compatible with free markets: free-floating rates and fully fixed rates.
The lack of an official lender of last resort under fixed exchange rates (as in the case of dollarization and currency boards), however, does not mean that there would be no lenders of last resort; private lenders can fulfill and have fulfilled that function. The disadvantage of floating rates is that the presence of domestic central banks increases the risk of exchange-rate swings. The historical record shows that, in those banking systems closest to laissez faire, contagion effects have been virtually absent. IMF lending, by contrast, contributes to contagion by subsidizing risky investment behavior. Ending IMF interventions would substantially reduce such moral hazard.
In the final chapter, I describe how the IMF has been at the center of a crisis-generating system in the international economy. Indeed, over the past 20 years, a dysfunctional relationship between lenders and borrowers has become more acute, as evidenced by financial crises in the 1990s. Through official lending and mediation, usually led by the IMF, authorities have reduced the possibility of sovereign default in an effort to stop the spread of financial turmoil. But that strategy has shielded investors and debtors from economic reality.
The historical experience suggests that direct two-party bargaining between creditors and debtors is a less traumatic way of handling financial crises than is the current approach, in which the IMF has become a burdensome third party. Indeed, private investors in the 19th and 20th centuries regularly solved collective-action problems and provided so-called public goods that official lending agencies today intend to provide. Default, or the real possibility of default, led to renegotiations of debt conditioned on reforms in the debtor country.
IMF interventions, on the other hand, have not been characterized by fundamental reforms based on credible conditionality, as recent experiences in Russia, Brazil, and East Asia demonstrate. The Third World debt crisis of the 1980s also showed how the fund's lending created among all parties a stalemate that postponed recovery for years. Thus, I advocate closing the IMF, because its interventions are disruptive of an increasingly liberal world economy. In a world without the IMF, economic decisions would be more decentralized and market institutions in insurance, credit, and surveillance would do much more to stabilize the international financial system than would continued interventions.
Global Fortune
The welfare of humanity is in large part tied to the fortune of capitalism itself. We must not again allow globalization to stumble
because of a loss of faith in liberal institutions. The consequences of doing so would be devastating to world prosperity and peace. That is why it is important to dispel erroneous notions about global capitalism before they become enduring myths that influence policymakers and the public at large.
This book attempts to contribute to that effort. Drawing lessons from a century that began and ended with globalization, the authors in this volume take a generally optimistic view of the prospects of the new era of global capitalism. Their sentiments are summed up by Vargas Llosa, who writes, We should celebrate the achievements of liberalism with joy and serenity, but without triumphalist hubris.... That which remains to be done is more important still.
Notes
1. International Monetary Fund, World Economic Outlook (Washington: IMF, May 1997), p. 112.
2. Jeffrey D. Sachs and Andrew Warner, Economic Reform and the Process of Global Integration,
Development Discussion Paper no. 552, Harvard Institute of International Development, September 1996, p. 12.
3. John Maynard Keynes, The Economic Consequences of the Peace (New York: Har-court, Brace and Howe, 1920), pp. 11-12.
4. See Michael D. Bordo, Barry Eichengreen, and Douglas Irwin, Is Globalization Today Really Different Than Globalization a Hundred Years Ago?
in Brookings Trade Forum 1999, ed. Susan M. Collins and Robert Z. Lawrence (Washington: Brookings Institution Press, 1999), pp. 1-72.
5. Andrea Boltho and Gianni Toniolo, The Assessment: The Twentieth Century— Achievements, Failures, Lessons,
Oxford Review of Economic Policy 15, no. 4 (1999): 4.
6. Quoted in David E. Sanger, Clinton Appeals for Joint Attack in Economic Crisis,
New York Times, October 6, 1998, p. A12. Business Week also declared that the first and biggest task is to tame the anarchy of markets that globalization has unleashed.
See Michael J. Mandel and Dean Foust, How to Reshape the World Financial System,
Business Week, October 12, 1998, p. 113.
7. William Jefferson Clinton, State of the Union Address,
January 19, 1999.
8. William Greider, Breakdown of Free-Market Orthodoxy,
Washington Post, October 7, 1998, p. A2l.
9. That tendency was especially evident in Mexico after its peso crashed in 1994. Ironically, few people recalled Milton Friedman's visit to Mexico in 1992, when he emphatically urged the country to move away from its pegged exchange rate system because of its inflationary and destabilizing potential. See Hiram Ordonez Morales, Necesario Liberar la Paridad Cambiaria del Peso Frente al Dólar: Friedman
(Friedman: It's Necessary to Liberalize the Peso-Dollar Exchange Rate) El Economista (Mexico City), May 20, 1992. At the time, that suggestion met with severe criticism by prominent members of the business community, the ruling party, the press, and the far left. One headline in an edition of El Financiero, the leading financial newspaper, typified the sentiment: Friedman Does Not Have the Most Minimum Understanding of Mexican History, Say the PRI and PRD
(May 26, 1992).
10. Quoted in David Wighton, Blair Urges Big IMF Overhaul,
Financial Times, September 28, 1998, p. 4.
PART I
THE SECOND ERA OF GLOBAL CAPITALISM
1. Liberalism in the New Millennium
Mario Vargas Llosa
A short time ago, the town council of El Borge, a tiny town in the Spanish province of Malaga, held a plebiscite of its thousand inhabitants. The citizens were asked to decide between two alternatives: humanity or neoliberalism. The result of the poll was 515 votes for humanity and 4 votes for neoliberalism. Since that time, I have not been able to chase those four votes from my thoughts. In the face of such a dramatic dilemma, those four musketeers did not hesitate to charge against humanity in the name of the macabre scarecrow of neoliberalism. Were they four clowns or four sages? Was this a Borgean
joke or was it the only sign of sense in the entire farcical plebiscite?
Not long after, in Chiapas, an International Congress against Neoliberalism was convened by Subcomandante Marcos, the latest hero of the frivolous, media-driven politics of the West. Among the attendees were numerous Hollywood luminaries, a belated Gaullist (my friend Regis Debray), and Danielle Mitterrand, the incessant widow of President Francois Mitterrand, who gave her socialist benediction to the event.
Those are quaint episodes, but it would be a grave error to write them off as the insignificant fluttering of human idiocy. In truth, they are but the tense and explosive extremes of a vast political and ideological movement, solidly rooted in sectors of the left, center, and right, and united in a tenacious distrust of liberty as an instrument for the solution to the problems of humanity. They have built up their fears into a new phantom and called it neoliberalism.
In the mumbo jumbo of sociologists and political scientists, it is also known as the only thought,
a scapegoat on which to hang both present calamities and those of the past in world history.
Brainy professors from the universities of Paris, Harvard, and Mexico pull their hair out trying to show that free markets serve for little more than making the rich richer and the poor poorer. They tell us that internationalization and globalization only benefit the giant multinationals, allowing them to squeeze developing countries to the point of asphyxiation and entirely devastate the planetary ecology. So it should not surprise us that the uninformed citizens of El Borge or Chiapas believe that the true enemy of mankind— guilty of all evil, suffering, poverty, exploitation, discrimination, abuses, and crimes against human rights committed on five continents against millions of human beings—is that terrifying, destructive entelechy known as neoliberalism. It is not the first time in history that what Karl Marx called a fetish
—an artificial construction, but at the service of very concrete interests—acquired consistency and began to provoke such great disruptions in life, like the genie who was imprudently catapulted into existence when Aladdin rubbed the magic lamp.
I consider myself a liberal. I know many people who are liberals, and many more who are not. But, throughout a career that is beginning to be a long one, I have not known a single neoliberal. What does a neoliberal stand for? What is a neoliberal against? In contrast with Marxism, or the various kinds of fascism, true liberalism does not constitute a dogma, a closed and self-sufficient ideology with prefabricated responses to all social problems. Rather, liberalism is a doctrine that, beyond a relatively simple and clear combination of basic principles structured around a defense of political and economic liberty (that is, of democracy and the free market), welcomes a great variety of tendencies and hues. What it has not included until now, nor will include in the future, is that caricature furnished by its enemies with the nickname neoliberal.
A neo
is someone who pretends to be something, someone who is at the same time inside and outside of something; it is an elusive hybrid, a straw man set up without ever identifying a specific value, idea, regime, or doctrine. To say neoliberal
is the same as saying semiliberal
or pseudoliberal.
It is pure nonsense. Either one is in favor of liberty or against it, but one cannot be semi-in-favor or pseudo-in-favor of liberty, just as one cannot be semipregnant,
semiliving,
or semidead.
The term has not been invented to express a conceptual reality, but rather, as a corrosive weapon of derision, it has been designed to semantically devalue the doctrine of liberalism. And, as we enter the new millennium, it is liberalism— more than any other doctrine—that symbolizes the extraordinary advances that liberty has made in the long course of human civilization.
We should celebrate the achievements of liberalism with joy and serenity, but without triumphalist hubris. We must be clear in understanding that although the achievements of liberalism are notable, that which remains to be done is more important still. Moreover, as nothing in human history is fated or permanent, the progress obtained in these last decades by the culture of liberty is not irreversible. Unless we know how to defend it, the culture of liberty can become stagnant and the free world will lose ground to the forces of authoritarian collectivism and tribalism. Donning the new masks of nationalism and religious fanaticism, those forces have replaced communism as the most battle-hardened adversaries of democracy.
For a liberal, the most important thing to occur in this century was the defeat of the great totalitarian offensives against the culture of liberty. Fascism and communism, each in its moment, came to threaten