The Devils
In a world of highly financially integrated economies, economic theory should differentiate between the role of local agents and that of global financial investors and place the latter at the centre of macroeconomic modelling. The portfolio choices of global financial investors influence the effectiveness of macroeconomic policies: the greater the credibility of a national economy (as perceived by global financial investors), the larger its space available for running effective expansionary policies. Conversely, when investors consider an economy not to be credible, they act in ways that narrow its policy space, and the effects of expansionary policies dissipate into currency depreciation and higher inflation, with little or no impact on real output. Economies should keep their public debt low, limit it to financing investments that repay themselves and/or to bringing the economy out of recessions. In this second case, they should commit to reducing the debt during recoveries.
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Exercising Economic Sovereignty in Today’s Global Financial World
In this article, I argue that current macroeconomic models do not recognise the role that "global investors" play in determining the space for effective macroeconomic policies. These important players must be placed at the center of macroeconomic analysis if we are to understand how macroeconomic policies work in the global financial environment. The article describes the key characteristics of global investors, analyses their power to determine the value at which public sector liabilities (money and debt) are traded on international markets and how this power affects policy effectiveness. No country is truly sovereign in a globalised world and all governments are subject to an inter-temporal budget constraint that is endogenous to global investor decisions. The policy choices of countries in today's globalised financial environment would benefit from revisiting some of J. M, Keynes's teachings, considering his in-depth knowledge of global financial markets and how they affect economies of the countries.
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Bringing Global Finance into Macro-Policy Analysis
The Portfolio Theory of Inflation (PTI) brings global finance into macroeconomic policy analysis, and addresses Obstfeld and Taylor’s (2017) remark that standard models of macroeconomic stabilization do not pay sufficient attention to finance. In particular, the PTI approach shows that: (1) in an open and globally financially integrated national economy the effectiveness of macroeconomic policies depends on the level of credibility that financial markets attribute to the economy, in particular its policy authorities and policy stance (2) whereas the monetary policy trilemma constrains countries to enjoy at most only two of the three possible states (i.e. exchange-rate stability, freedom of cross-border payments, and economic policy autonomy), the trilemma does not constrain all countries equally if they operate in a context of high international financial integration: credible countries enjoy greater space for effective policies than less credible countries (3) not all countries benefit equally from a floating exchange rate regime, either; the latter offers credible countries greater space for policy effectiveness and protection against external shocks, while such space gets progressively thinner as country credibility weakens (4) an open economy that is fully financially integrated, internationally, with large public debt and poor policy credibility does not stand to gain much in terms of shock insulation and policy autonomy from either issuing liabilities in its own (rather than a foreign) currency or adopting a flexible (rather than a fixed) exchange rate regime (5) however, all else being equal, the benefits from a floating exchange rate regime increase with the degree of the economy’s policy credibility.
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Global Finance and Effectiveness of Macro-Policies
The Portfolio Theory of Inflation (PTI) incorporates a global perspective on the analysis of macro policy effectiveness. According to the PTI, in open and internationally highly financially integrated economies: The intertemporal budget constraint (IBC) of governments is endogenous to global investment choices: it is more flexible for credible countries and tighter for less credible ones, and the IBC of highly credible countries becomes even more flexible at times of global crisis. Macro-policies are effective in credible economies and less effective (and potentially inflationary) in non-credible economies (with flatter Phillips curves being observed in credible countries and becoming even flatter in times of global crisis). Governments can reap no advantage from redenominating their debt or increasing the share of their debt held by residents and monetary financing of public deficits is effective as an anti-recessionary, short-term stopgap, but it is not sustainable as a policy to sustain full employment in the longer run.
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Exchange Rates as a ‘Veil’
The effectiveness of exchange rates as an adjustment mechanism in a given country depends on the role played by domestic financial markets. With floating exchange rates and full integration into global financial markets, policy-making space is determined by the size of public debt and the degree of policy credibility. A large debt and weak policy credibility inhibit the power of floating rates to insulate the economy from shocks and to grant independence to its policymakers. When a country’s financial stocks are of significant size, market expectations are the fundamental determinant of equilibrium exchange rates and purchasing power parity.
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The Endless Business of Reforming the IMF
In this article I review Joseph P. Joyce’s thought-provoking book The IMF and global financial crises: Phoenix rising?” (Cambridge University Press, 2012). The book is a comprehensive yet concise appraisal of the IMF’s history of successes and failures in preventing crises, and in dealing with their consequences. The review is an opportunity for expressing some thoughts of my own on the subject, picking on Joyce’s reflection on how to reform the IMF, considering the needs of today’s global economy. The review discusses the role of the IMF’s largest shareholding countries in steering the institution’s strategic direction and action, as well the intellectual capture by the economic paradigm that has long prevailed in the highly financially developed world.
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The ‘Good Global Citizen’ Remit of the IMF
In the highly globalized world economy of our times, where markets are tightly integrated, setting domestic economic policy with a view simply to keeping one’s house in order is no longer optimal. New responsibilities follow for each member of the community of countries from the recognition that the action by one may affect the others. These mutual responsibilities form the core of what we call the ‘Good Global Citizen’ remit of the IMF, a reformed framework for international economic and financial cooperation. This study identifies the new responsibilities, and defines and articulates the rules under the proposed remit.
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The Effectiveness of IMF Surveillance
IMF surveillance of the international monetary and financial system is a global
public good. Its effectiveness depends critically on the dynamics that underpin
the mechanisms governing the IMF and global finance. These dynamics, in turn,
reflect the interests and power of influence of countries (especially the largest),
their cooperative attitude and international relations. Assessing the effectiveness
of IMF surveillance, therefore, demands a clear understanding of the IMF and global financial governance: improving the former requires strengthening the
latter. This study considers how the governance of the IMF and global finance
can be reformed to increase the effectiveness of surveillance and to strengthen
international financial cooperation. The study proposes a configuration of
governance with a clearer allocation of responsibilities and stronger mechanisms
of power checks and balances. It identifies new roles for the IMFC and the
Executive Board, and calls for strengthening management accountability, in
particular by decoupling the dual capacity of the Managing Director as chair of
the Executive Board and Chief Executive Officer.
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