Friday, September 30, 2005

currency competition: survival of the fittest

In the background of three significant international events occurring simultaneously-the US dollar is depreciating against the Euro, the price of oil is soaring in the international circuit, the gold price has reached its highest peak in almost five years-there seems a vigorous competition among currencies to emerge supreme.

The recent issue of The Economist questions the dominance of th mighty U.S. dollar as reserve currency:
Once a decade or so, economists ask whether the dollar's reign as the world's number one reserve currency might be at the start of a slow decline....

...In the past 30 years, the dollar has had four bouts of marked depreciation. During the most recent, which began in 2002, it has fallen by 28% against the euro and by 14% against a broad basket of currencies. .... 66% of the world's official foreign-exchange holdings are still in dollars, compared with 25% in euros, 4% in yen and 3% in pounds.....yet dollar sceptics note that this time the dollar's crown is, if not wobbly, at least skewed.

America's current-account deficit, at 6% of GDP, is its highest on record; its net foreign liabilities, at 22% of GDP, are also close to an all-time high. Foreign central banks seem to have reduced their purchases of American Treasuries: official holdings of these rose by only $2 billion in the first seven months of 2005, against $295 billion in (the whole of) 2004 and $175 billion in 2003. If this trend continues, other currencies could one day challenge the dollar's dominance. History offers perhaps only one true example of a reserve-currency shift, from the British pound to the dollar. The pound was king during the era of the gold standard. But in the years after 1914, Britain switched from net creditor to net debtor, and by the 1920s the dollar was the only currency convertible to gold.... Two costly wars and two episodes of currency devaluation in Britain later, the dollar was unchallenged as the world's chief reserve currency.

The likeliest pretender to the dollar's crown is the euro. Reserve currencies need to have a home economy with a large share of global output, trade and finance. America's economy still dominates, but the euro area is not much smaller. The euro area's total trade with the rest of the world is about as big as America's; about half of this trade is invoiced in euros. The financial market of the reserve currency country must also be deep, open and well developed...

Confidence in the value of the currency is also an important requirement, and this is where critics of the dollar have mostly taken aim. Barry Eichengreen, of the University of California at Berkeley, argues in a recent paper* that whether the dollar retains its reserve-currency role depends mostly on America's own policies. If America allows its large current-account deficit to persist and its net foreign liabilities to rise, foreigners will become less willing to hold more dollars. The dollar would depreciate, creating inflationary pressure in America and making dollar reserves less attractive still—perhaps even if the Federal Reserve raised interest rates.

In another recent study†, Menzie Chinn, of the University of Wisconsin, and Jeffrey Frankel, of Harvard, estimate the importance of these factors in determining the shares of different currencies in the world's total reserves. They also take “network externalities� into account: the tendency of each monetary authority to favour the dominant currency because all others do. They use these estimates to predict whether the euro could overtake the dollar as the world's main reserve currency.

It could, but not soon. Suppose, say the authors, that the dollar loses 3.6% a year against a basket of other currencies, while the euro gains 4.6% a year—the same rates as in 2001-04....it is impossible to forecast such a change with any precision. The dollar, after all, took decades to displace the British pound....the euro zone has obvious economic weaknesses....the stability and growth... and the EU constitution rejected by France and the Netherlands, some even wonder whether the single currency will be around in 20 years...

Another view, offered by Mr Eichengreen, is that the world might eventually have more than one main reserve currency. The dollar could share its status if other currencies become more attractive. The preference to stick with the dominant currency might secure the greenback's position for a long time. However, as financial markets in other countries become more liquid, this effect is weakened and other currencies become more trusted as a store of value. Reserve-currency competition will then cease to be a game in which the winner takes all. This process... favours the euro. Whether the dollar ever loses or is forced to share its pre-eminence among reserve currencies depends mostly on whether America continues to run the economic policies that will eventually undermine its position...

*“Sterling's Past, Dollar's Future: Historical Perspectives on Reserve Currency Competition�. NBER Working Paper No. 11336
†“Will the Euro Eventually Surpass the Dollar as Leading International Reserve Currency?� NBER Working Paper No. 11510:

In the end, I think,
we are witnessing a period of transition, with the US dollar on one side and the Euro on the other. It is very difficult to predict a clear winner between these currencies.

Thursday, September 29, 2005

WHO ARE IN THE LIST OF RACE FOR NOBEL PRIZE IN ECONOMICS?

The Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences, called Nobel Prize, in Memory of Alfred Nobel will be announced on Monday, October 11th. The prize is generally acknowledged as the definitive accolade in terms of the kudos and reputation it affords both its recipients and the universities to which they are affiliated. Thus there is speculation and expectations regarding this and the betting market are no exception. This lists the active and expired candidates on the betting meter.

To come to the basics, if we look at the biographical characteristics of prizewinners in economics, there seems the dominance of USA. About two-thirds of laureates have been US citizens, three-quarters have been affiliated to a small number of top American universities, and two-thirds have received their doctorates from American universities. Some kind of association with the University of Chicago seems particularly useful. Nine prizes have gone to Chicago faculty members - more than twice as many as any other university anywhere in the world. Chicago has also provided PhD training to more Nobel prizewinners than any other university.

My choice, a very short one, for this year’s contender:

Fama, and Phelps are also underdogs in this race.

Monday, September 26, 2005

THE POLITICALLY (IN)CORRECT WORD FAMINE

In a recent issue of Global Policy Forum, Mr. Alex Whiting writes about the difficulties in defining the word “famine�.

In crude sense, famine is a question of excess population over the mean of substance. This is sort of Malthusian framework, where the growth in the population outstrips that of food production.

Such an approach, with the theoretical considerations of cause as a starting point, leads to technologised responses that are only incapable of responding adequately to the politics of mass starvations. Thus the question remains is not “What causes famine and what is the appropriate response needed to avoid famine?�, but “How were acts of mass deprivation committed and by whom, and how can those responsible be brought to justice?� This is very important as donors cannot be motivated to act unless they are convinced that what is taking place is actually famine. The food shortage view was challenged by the celebrated development, Nobel laureate economist Amartya Sen who argued that it did not matter what the food supply per head in any are; what is crucial is whether particular individuals or households have access to food or not. That means the starvation is not about food as a commodity, but about the relationship of the people with the commodity. The institution, the democratic or autocratic, thus, matters.

GLOBAL IMBALANCES OR ASSYMMETRIES: ANY SOLUTION?


Hi, Due to some preoccupations, I am posting this piece after more than a week. I am sorry for that.

Plenty of ink has been deluged to deal with the vexed issue of global imbalances, the recent issue of The Economist (22nd September, 2005) and the IMF’s World Economic Outlook are the most recent add-ons. The World Economic Outlook of IMF acknowledges that, th global saving and investment rates have fallen and current account imbalances have widened to unprecedented levels, yet real long-term interest rates remain low in most countries. According to one view, the swing in the saving-investment gap—from deficit to large surplus—in emerging Asia has resulted in an excess global supply of saving (a global saving “glut� or we can call it “investment deficits�) that has been channeled to the United States to finance its large current account imbalance. At the same time, this would explain the low level of long-term real interest rates, which is needed to equilibrate desired saving and planned investment on a global basis. Others have argued that the sharp drop in national saving in the United States— reflecting the deterioration in the fiscal position and the increase in housing wealth—and the recent rebound in investment are at the root of current account imbalances. Thus, according to these observers, current global imbalances are mainly the result of policy decisions—both fiscal and monetary—in the United States. By itself, however, this would not explain the low level of real interest rates, as a higher demand for net saving from the United States would lead (everything else equal) to higher, not lower, global interest rates.

In a series of articles in The Economist, Zanny Minton Beddoes discusses the global savings glut, the thrift shift, global investment deficit, excess liquidity, the viagra economy, et al., and slow expected world growth hypotheses for the persistence of low long-term interest rates. I find it easier to think about these issues if we formalise them by using the basis textbook of national income identity:

Y=C+I+X-M, where, Y, C, I, X, M are income, consumption, investments, exports and imports respectively. Now since we are talking about the global world, thus the external balance (X-M) will go off theoretically. In other words, we have Y-C ≡ S ≡ I, where S is savings, in other words, global level saving must equal investment So far so good. However, as argued in the The Economist, “people cannot save without investing their money somewhere, and they cannot invest without using somebody's savings�, and thus the S and I differ across the individual countries, and differ considerably as the latest World Economic Outlook of IMF has noticed. The Economist says,

... whereas it is true that at a global level saving must equal investment, the fact that saving and investment end up in balance does not mean that millions of households and individuals spontaneously desire to save and invest in equal measure. To use the language of economics, saving and investment are an “ex-post� identity, but the world's “ex-ante� appetite to save and invest may well be out of balance. Actual saving and investment must be equal. Desired saving and investment may not be.

Most of the time, mismatches between the desired levels of saving and investment are brought into line fairly easily through the interest-rate mechanism. If people's desire to save exceeds their desire to invest, interest rates will fall so that the incentive to save goes down and the willingness to invest goes up. Across borders, exchange rates have a similar effect. If a country has a saving deficit, its currency will fall to the point where its assets are cheap enough to lure foreign savings in.

But there is some uncertainty about how smoothly these adjustments are made. Classical economic theory suggests that interest rates automatically bring saving and investment into a productive balance. The central principle of Keynesianism, however, is that this alignment between saving and investment is not always automatic, and that a misalignment can have serious consequences.

If an economy is not running at full capacity, John Maynard Keynes wrote in his “General Theory� in 1936, more saving might, paradoxically, result in less output rather than more. Companies' decisions to produce depend on the demand they expect for their products. More saving means less spending and hence less demand. Hence the idea that you can have too much thrift, and that there is a place for “Keynesian� government spending policies to boost demand.


The Economist further notes, the modern consensus is that both classical and Keynesian theory can be right, but over different time frames. In the long term, saving and investment will be brought into line by the cost of capital. But in the short term, firms' appetite to invest is volatile, and policymakers may need to step in to shore up demand. Thus, although saving and investment are equal ex-post, economic theory leaves plenty of room for an ex-ante saving glut. This glut could be caused by long-term changes in people's desire to save or firms' desire to invest, or it might be caused by short-term cyclical deviations from normal saving and investment patterns. In either case, the size and duration of mismatches can be influenced by government policy. What might change people's desire to save or invest? That is a question about human behaviour which economists cannot answer with total confidence. Still, they have made some progress in explaining what motivates investment, and a little more in explaining what drives saving.

The most influential theory of household saving is the “life-cycle hypothesis�, pioneered by Franco Modigliani, an Italian economist. It suggests that people try to smooth consumption over their lifetime: they save little or nothing when young but more in their middle years if they have a good income. They then draw down those savings in retirement. It follows that demographic shifts and economic growth are the most important drivers of thrift.

Another theory suggests that people save for “precautionary reasons�, in case they need the money for a rainy day. This implies that people will save more if their income is variable. It also suggests that they will be more inclined to save if they have no access to credit.

A third possibility is that people save because they want to leave assets to their children, either because they love them or as a way to bribe the children to look after their parents in old age. (Economists are always reluctant to believe in altruism.) Whatever the motive, the bequest theory of thrift suggests that savings might not actually be drawn down in retirement.

A final possibility is that people save in response to their government's actions. This theory, known as “Ricardian equivalence�, suggests that people save more if government saves less because they expect higher taxes later on.

How well do these theories fit with what has actually happened in the past? Saving rates differ dramatically between countries and over time, giving economists plenty of statistical ammunition with which to test their theses. Inevitably, there are differences among academics about which hypotheses are best supported by the data. But, in general, the following factors seem to play a role:

•Demographics. Although it is hard to confirm Modigliani's hypothesis by studying individual households, it seems to hold for entire countries. Saving rates do rise when the ratio of children in the population falls (as in China), and decline when the proportion of pensioners rises (as in Japan). Given that the world's population as a whole is ageing but, in most countries, most people are still working, global saving should currently be rising.

•Economic growth. Especially in poorer countries, saving rates rise as economies grow. That is probably because people do not adjust their consumption patterns as quickly as their income rises. Rapid growth was an important reason behind the big rise in saving rates in East Asia in the 1970 and 1980s. It may account for much of the rise in saving by emerging economies today.

•Terms-of-trade shock. If a country's exports suddenly go up in price, its saving rate tends to go up too, at least temporarily. Oil exporters, for example, put on a saving spurt if oil prices rise. This effect also helps to explain the recent increase in saving in many emerging economies.

•Financial development. As an economy's financial system becomes more developed, saving rates tend to fall because people find it easier to borrow. This seems to be true for both rich and poor countries. It suggests that saving rates may be lower in countries with more sophisticated financial systems, such as America.

•Capital gains. In rich countries there is increasing evidence that capital gains influence saving rates. If the stockmarket or house prices rise, people feel richer and save less. A study by the OECD published late last yearsuggests that housing wealth has a bigger effect on saving than financial wealth, and that this effect is stronger in economies with flexible mortgage markets and high rates of home ownership.

•Fiscal policy. In some countries, people do appear to behave as Ricardian equivalence theory suggests: they save more when budget deficits expand, perhaps because they expect higher taxes in the future, although private-sector saving rises by less than the rise in budget deficits. The big exception is America, where the impact of fiscal deficits on private saving appears to be weakest.

Some of these factors work in opposite directions, and gauging which matters most is difficult. But there are indications that in rich countries the biggest disincentives to saving have been capital gains and the ability to borrow. National saving rates in rich countries have been falling gradually for more than two decades, and particularly steeply since the mid-1990s...

... In emerging markets, on the other hand, the most powerful factors pushed in the opposite direction. Fast economic growth and increases in government saving, thanks partly to terms-of-trade shocks, have increased total national saving.

These opposing movements show up clearly in global statistics. Over the past 35 years, the emerging economies' share of global saving has doubled, from 15% to 30%. In 2004, emerging economies saved the equivalent of 6% of global GDP. If there is a glut of saving, it is likely to be found in emerging economies and oil-exporting countries.

The investment puzzle

If it is hard to find out why people save, it is even harder to discover why they invest. In theory, firms should invest if the expected return on their investment exceeds the cost of the capital they are using. In the short term, firms need to worry about the state of overall demand. But in the long term, returns on capital depend on how much capital an economy already has, how productively it is used, and how fast the workforce is growing. If there is little capital available or the workforce is growing rapidly, firms would usually expect a high return on investment.

The evidence supports these theories, up to a point. Statistical analyses suggest that investment rises when economies grow, when productivity increases or when the share of workers in the population goes up, and that it slows when capital becomes more expensive. The IMF's analysis, for instance, suggests that a 1% increase in the cost of capital in rich countries will lead to a drop in investment rates of 0.4% of GDP.

However, in recent years these statistical relationships have failed to hold. Both in rich countries and in emerging economies (except China), investment levels have been lower than economists had expected at the levels of interest and growth rates prevailing at the time. Much of Mr Bernanke's saving glut is due to this unexpectedly low rate of investment. This shortfall could simply be the unwinding of earlier excesses as firms repair their balance sheets, but several “structural� explanations have gained support:

•Demographics. A young and growing workforce boosts the level of investment, just like a mature workforce boosts the saving rate. So the world economy is likely to move through a cycle in which investment peaks first and saving peaks a bit later. With rising life expectancy and falling birth rates, the world economy may be moving into the high-saving phase. But although demographics are important, they change slowly. It is hard to ascribe the recent sharp drop in investment demand in regions such as Japan or East Asia to demographic change alone.

•Declining capital intensity. Firms in rich countries may not need to invest as much as they used to because the share of capital-intensive industries in their economies is shrinking. In a recent analysis, economists at UBS, a bank, pointed out that in America the share of corporate profits that is generated by investment-heavy industries (oil, gas and chemicals, for instance) has fallen from 55% of the total in 1948 to 21% in 2004. This long-term trend may have accelerated over the past decade. But it does not explain investment busts in poor countries.

•Deflation of capital-goods prices. In recent years prices of capital goods have fallen sharply relative to prices of other goods and services, thanks largely to cheaper computers, so companies are able to achieve the desired level of real investment for a smaller outlay. Calculations in the IMF's World Economic Outlook show that in real terms, the fall in average investment rates in industrial countries has been much more modest than it appears at first sight. This may help to explain some of the recent weakness in investment, particularly in rich countries. But it is unlikely to last. Relative price shifts tend to run their course and then stop. More important, computers depreciate more quickly than other capital goods, so eventually firms will need to invest more to maintain the same level of net investment.

•The rise of China. This may have prompted a geographic shift in global investment patterns. As firms move their production to China to take advantage of its huge pool of untapped labour, investment elsewhere slackens. But investment flows to China from America, Europe and Japan are not yet big enough to explain the sluggish investment in those countries. Besides, the rise-of-China thesis is about the location of investment more than about changes in its global level.

In sum, none of these explanations for a structural, global decline in investment is altogether convincing.....
a typical economic explanation.



Sunday, September 18, 2005

niger nemesis

Recently, the world’s attention has been focused on the severe food shortages afflicting Niger, the second most impoverished country on this earth, as a result of the confluence of natural disasters of prolonged drought and a locust invasion, amidst the allegations and counter-allegations of the policy bargain by international aid agencies, IMF, World Bank and EU. According to the United Nations, about 2.5 million of Niger’s 12 million (more than one-fifth) people are directly affected by the crisis.
The IMF and the World Bank, and the EU as well, are killing Africans in their thousands in Niger, Mali and throughout the Sahel region of Africa, writes Judith Amanthis in the Global Policy Forum, who lists various IMF policies as being responsible for the food crisis in Niger.
…. Drought and locusts destroyed crops, it's true, but the rains were down only 11% from normal. There is some food in Niger. The problem is that large numbers of people, especially in the rural areas, are just too poor to buy it when their crops fail. Why? First, subsistence farming in Africa doesn't bring in much money, or any money. It has no western financial backers. Second, in March 2005 the Niger government, having secured Highly Indebted Poor Country status for Niger, implemented an IMF condition on further loans: it put a 19% VAT on basic grains whose price had risen by up to 89% over the past five years. Traders naturally sell to the highest bidder. In this case they sold grains to other West African countries. The free market knows no borders, colonial or otherwise…
Judith Amanthis further writes, long term drought and famine can never be normal for any group of human beings. What is normal is people in the west being lied to about the causes of Africans' suffering and what Africans are doing about it.
Western oil and forestry companies who have created climate change are as implicated as well. Western Europe and the US are responsible for 50% of the world's carbon emissions, and forestry multinationals are destroying the earth's 'lungs', including the great Congo River Basin forest, at 26 hectares a minute (37 football pitches). Greater heat and erratic rain in the Sahel region means the Sahara Desert is creeping south. Areas like northern Nigeria and Senegal are drying up as well. In erratic weather, locusts breed more heavily, but since the mid 1980s, the West African regional organisation, OCALAV, which was set up at independence in the early 1960s to control locust swarms and other plagues has been restructured. Its funding has been cut. African governments which have restructured entire economies to make life easier for multinationals can no longer pay for services vital to the people's survival.
However, the recent discussion paper at IFPRI, Long-Term Prospects for Africa's Agricultural Development and Food Security by Rosegrant, et al., is case in point. The paper explores and evaluates the consequences of various policies related to food security in Africa based on projections for the year 2025, focusing on agricultural production. It uses IFPRI’s International Model for Policy Analysis of Agricultural Commodities and Trade (IMPACT) and IMPACT–WATER to consider how several different policy scenarios are likely to affect the supply of, demand for, and trade of crops. The results of these policy scenarios show that the number of malnourished children, one important indicator of food security, could rise as high as 41.9 million or fall as low as 9.4 million by 2025.
--- The vision scenario attempts to show what type of transformation would be necessary for Africa to reach the MDG target of cutting the proportion of people suffering from hunger in half by 2015. In this scenario national governments and international donors increase investments in education, HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment, water-harvesting technologies and agricultural extension, female schooling, and clean water access in Africa. Population growth slows, but gross domestic product and crop productivity increase significantly. Under this scenario available kilocalories per capita increase markedly in Sub-Saharan Africa, while the total number of malnourished children is reduced to 9.4 million in 2025. Most notably, the percentage of malnourished children under five years old meets—or comes close to meeting—the proposed MDG target of cutting the percentage of malnourished children in half by 2015 in all African regions.
In fact, many of the challenges facing Africa’s agricultural sector stem from a few root causes, including poor political and economic governance (as noticed and elaborated vociferously by celebrated developmental economist, Amartya Sen in most of his work) in many African countries, inadequate funding for the agricultural sector, poor water resources management, and neglect of research and development. The strategies for addressing these challenges should take into account local, natural, and human resources, as well as the political and economic agenda of each country. The paper lists policy priorities for addressing food and nutrition security in Africa. These priorities include (1) reform of agricultural policies, trade, and tariffs; (2) increased investment in rural infrastructure, education, and social capital; (3) better management of crops, land, water, and inputs; (4) increased agricultural research and extension; and (5) greater investments in women.


Friday, September 16, 2005

new kid on the block

Hi,
I am posting a message I got from one of my friend. This is regarding the difference between developed nation and developing nations in the background of Mumbai deluge and Katrina Khauf(meaning 'fear') in New Orleans

Comparison between Katrina and Mumbai Rain

Inches of rain in New Orleans due to hurricane Katrina – 18
Inches of rain in Mumbai (July 27th) - 37.1

Population of New Orleans - 484,674
Population of Mumbai - 12,622,500

Deaths in New Orleans within 48 hours of Katrina – 100 Deaths
In Mumbai within 48hours of the rain – 37

Number of people to be evacuated in New Orleans - entire city Number of people evacuated
In Mumbai - 10,000

Cases of shooting and violence in New Orleans - Countless
Cases of shooting and violence in Mumbai – NONE

Time taken for US army to reach New Orleans - 48hours
Time taken for Indian army and navy to reach Mumbai - 12hours

Status 48hours later - New Orleans is still waiting for relief, army and electricity Status 48hours later - Mumbai is back on its feet and is business is as usual

USA - world's most developed nation
India – just a developing nation