Conclusions and Recommendations: Findings
Conclusions and Recommendations: Findings
Conclusions and Recommendations: Findings
Findings
First, the ESF has been at the disposal of the Secretary of the Treasury
since its creation in 1934. Exclusive secretarial control has been justified
by the nature of financial markets, the advantage of confidentiality, and
the importance of acting quickly and on the basis of expertise when
conducting foreign exchange intervention and extending credits to foreign
governments. Some members of Congress have challenged the amount
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While maintaining a capacity for action through the ESF, the Secretary
of the Treasury should nonetheless respect six key principles when con-
ducting international financial rescues. These principles derive in part
from the classical doctrine of financial crisis stabilization most commonly
associated with Walter Bagehot (1873) and further developed by a number
of contemporary analysts.1
First, loans from the ESF should be issued sparingly. The Treasury
should make the account available only after borrowers have exhausted
their access to the private financial markets and, preferably, other official
creditors. The account should be a lender of last, not early, recourse.
Second, loans should naturally be conditioned upon policy reforms in
borrowing countries to correct economic problems and facilitate interna-
tional adjustment. Such reforms help to ensure that ESF funds are used
appropriately and that the Treasury will be repaid.
Third, large medium-term loans should usually be made in parallel
with programs administered by the IMF, which should continue to take
the lead in the negotiation of policy conditions. With greater personnel
resources and detailed country expertise spanning the globe, the IMF is
often better positioned to determine conditionality. As a multilateral
agency in which the borrower is also a member, the IMF might well
also have greater legitimacy than the US government in insisting on
policy reform.
Fourth, ESF loans should be backed by a reasonably assured source of
repayment and generally receive an interest-rate premium, relative to the
precrisis market rate, to induce the borrower to return to the private
markets quickly. The assurance of repayment could take the form of an
interest in financial or real assets similar to collateral, an earmarking of
foreign currency reserves, new loans coming from other parties, a currency
swap, or, when justified, the ‘‘full faith and credit’’ of the borrowing
government.
Fifth, loans from the ESF should be effectively senior to the borrower’s
obligations to previous creditors. Legal issues complicate the formal sub-
ordination of loans from private and official financial institutions to loans
from the US Treasury. Nonetheless, owing to the political and economic
stature of the United States, the US Treasury is in practice a highly pre-
ferred creditor. Failure to repay the Treasury, like the failure to repay the
IMF, would severely limit and possibly cut off access to private markets
and would draw potentially far-reaching political consequences—which
the Treasury’s informal dealings with borrowers should of course empha-
size.