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SOCIAL
SCIENCE RESEARCH COUNCIL / AFTER SEPT. 11
U.S.
Foreign Economic Policy After September 11th
Barry Eichengreen, Professor of Economics and Political
Science, University of California, Berkeley
Unquestionably, the events
of September 11th have reshaped the debate over
globalization. A trend that many economists characterized
as irresistible suddenly appears less so. Foreign assembly
operations have become less attractive to U.S.
corporations now that there is the fact, or even the
danger, that their trucks will be stuck in mile-long
queues at the U.S.-Canada or U.S.-Mexico border. Companies
like McDonald's and Starbucks, whose main opportunities for
market growth are outside the United States, now must
factor in extra costs of security when contemplating
opening another outlet abroad. Computer programmers from
India and graduate students from Pakistan will face
additional hurdles when attempting to obtain temporary
residency in the United States, and American companies
will think twice about posting their executives abroad.
Foreign trade, foreign direct investment, and
international migration all will grow less quickly than
they did before the terrorist attacks.
All this is common sense.
But it is also common sense not to push the argument too
far. For one thing, there will be a strong incentive to
invest in new technologies that will minimize disruptions
to international business. We already use infrared
scanners on certain trucks coming in from Mexico and CAT
scans on selected luggage at airports. More investment in
such equipment will allow international traffic to move
more quickly, whether that traffic takes the form of
trucks, container ships, or passenger airliners.
Technologies that are hard to imagine now, precisely
because they have not been invented yet, will help to move
these lines even faster. The 60 per cent rise in the
prices of the stocks of security-related companies in the
four weeks following September 11th confirms that the
incentive for their development is there.
International cooperation
will work in the same direction. Vincente Fox has already
proposed major investments in immigration control on
Mexico’ southern border, which will limit the burden on
U.S. immigration officials along the United States’ own
southern border. A survey of 250 Canadian CEO’s, taken
at the end of October, similarly yielded an overwhelming
consensus that the two neighbors should urgently agree on
a common set of rules immigration in order to protect
Canadian access to the U.S. market. Our NAFTA partners
have the largest investments in globalization of virtually
any countries in the world. They have a strong incentive
to make us see the relevant security zone as North America
and not simply the United States.
The terrorists targeted the
World Trade Center because it was a symbol of American
capitalism in one of its most visible manifestations,
American financial markets. Among the victims were large
number of persons who worked for companies, foreign as
well as domestic, whose business was international
finance. This points up the question of how international
capital flows will be affected by these events. Clearly,
bonds issued by countries that are on the front lines of
the so-called war against terrorism, Pakistan for example,
will be regarded as even riskier than before. But there
are plausible reasons for thinking that disembodied
portfolio investment, as opposed to direct investment,
will be stimulated rather than depressed by the attacks.
Buying a bond of a foreign government or a stock issued by
a foreign corporation is physically less risky than
opening an American factory abroad or checking into the
Intercontinental Hotel in the capital city of a country
whose government is not a member of the Bush
Administration’s coalition against terrorism. There
is still a big world economy out there. Investors still
want “foreign exposure” in their
internationally-diversified portfolios. Arguably,
portfolio investment will be even more attractive than
before as a way of getting it.
The main impact on capital
flows thus will be not on their level but on their
composition and direction. Investors will have an even
stronger incentive to differentiate among countries
according to the strength of their economic, financial,
and political institutions. One of the problems of the
1990s was that investors, in their enthusiasm for emerging
markets, failed to differentiate adequately among
destinations for their funds. Any new tendency for capital
to flow more disproportionately to countries that
have built relatively strong financial systems, political
institutions and international alliances can only be a
good thing from the point of view of financial stability.
This will also sharpen the rewards for countries that
build strong democratic institutions, that deal with
minorities in ways that minimize ethnic strife, and that
build bridges to their neighbors, since these will be the
places where Americans will seek to invest. Of course,
this also means that the gap between the haves and
have-nots will widen. More foreign investment will flow to
the first-tier countries of Eastern Europe, attracted by
their democratic institutions and prospects for EU
accession. Investment in sub-Saharan Africa, in contrast,
is likely to be seen as even less attractive than before.
This new emphasis on
politics, international politics in particular, means that
investors will be paying special attention to the
implications of recent events for International Monetary
Fund assistance for emerging markets. The Bush
Administration has made clear that it will use every
weapon at its disposal in the fight against terrorism. The
IMF is one such instrument, like it or not, since the
United States is the Fund’s largest single shareholder.
This clearly enhances the prospects for multilateral
assistance for front-line countries like Turkey, who are
now too geopolitically important to be allowed to default
on their debts.
Argentina, on the other
hand, is far from the front lines. (One is reminded of
Henry Kissinger’s quip that “Argentina is a dagger
pointed straight at the heart of Antarctica.”) Now that
the stakes have been raised, amplifying the voices of
those who argue that we cannot afford a major disruption
to international financial markets, IMF lending will be
ramped up. But to demonstrate that the United States is
not consorting with the IMF in blindly throwing at
emerging markets the hard-earned tax dollars of U.S.
plumbers and carpenters (to paraphrase Treasury Secretary
O’Neill), there will also be a temptation to make an
example of a problem country. It is not hard to imagine
who this might be.
Just as the Asian crisis
ultimately forced the Congress to acknowledge the need for
an IMF quota increase, the current crisis highlights the
need for the international financial equivalent of the
FDNY. Thus, the extreme view on Capitol Hill that the IMF
should be abolished is likely to be extinguished once and
for all. On the other hand, the legitimacy of the IMF and
its economic advice will not be enhanced if it is viewed
by other countries, even more than before, as an
instrument of U.S. foreign policy. Calls for reform of the
institution’s voting formulas and procedures to enhance
the representation of developing countries are likely to
be met in Washington by the response “not now.” If the
IMF becomes less of a politically lightening pole here,
the opposite is sure to be true in the developing world.
This new enthusiasm for IMF
programs will be only one manifestation of a more
outward-looking U.S. foreign economic policy. Clearly, it
will be easier for the Bush Administration to make the
case for Fast-Track Authority to reward friendly countries
with enhanced access to the U.S. market. It will push
harder for debt relief for highly-indebted poor countries
in the hope that less debt will mean more growth, and more
growth will mean fewer disaffected religious
fundamentalists. Progress in granting debt relief has been
slowed by the perception, not entirely accurate, that it
has budgetary costs for the OECD governments that are the
principal creditors, and that blanket relief would
penalize countries that had made serious efforts to reform
while rewarding spendthrift governments. These objections
are likely to be shelved as a result of the new urgency
attached to enhancing stability and restarting growth in
the poorest countries.
What of foreign aid? Talk
of a “Marshall Plan for Afghanistan” has already
started. It will be followed by arguments that the United
States cannot continue giving only pitiful amounts of aid
to countries where young men seek refuge from grinding
poverty and lack of opportunity in political and religious
fanaticism. Some increase in U.S. foreign aid there will
surely be. The Marshall Plan was most directly motivated
by the eruption of the Cold War; some kind of “New
Marshall Plan,” it can be confidently predicted, will be
proposed by the Administration in response to the war on
terrorism, although whether the U.S. will be prepared to
devote two per cent of its GNP over four years to such an
initiative, as it did between 1948 and 1951, is another
question.
The answer lies, in part,
on what return we can expect on our investment. The
Marshall Plan may have been a great economic and political
success, but a reading of its history, and the history of
foreign aid generally, renders one pessimistic that its
success can be replicated in many of the poorest countries
today. Foreign aid has worked only where there has existed
a domestic constituency for reform and where multilateral
assistance tipped the balance in its direction. This was
recognized by one of the IMF’s early managing directors,
Per Jacobsson, as early as 1959, when he observed that
foreign assistance “can only succeed if there is the
will in the countries themselves.” Why, then, did
Marshall Plan funds work after World War II to help bring
about inflation stabilization, fiscal consolidation, and
market-friendly reform? The answer is that European
governments were strongly predisposed to adopt these
policies, and the Marshall Plan tipped the balance by
limiting the short-run pain and sacrifices that had to be
imposed on their constituents. Europe already had long
experience with the market, which inclined it toward the
adoption of market-friendly reforms. It had suffered
devastating hyperinflations after World War I, which
predisposed it to monetary and fiscal stabilization after
World War II. It had democratic governments with checks
and balances that prevented aid from being diverted into
the pockets of elites. And many European countries had
single-party governments or strong coalitions capable of
credibly committing to the relevant reforms.
Where on the other hand has
foreign aid not worked? It has not worked where there did
not already exist a strong domestic constituency for
reform, where the government was weak, and where democracy
was absent or the government otherwise lacked the capacity
to commit to the relevant reforms. Thus, scholars like
Andrew MacIntyre ascribe the failure of IMF assistance to
produce quick results in Thailand in 1997-8 to a flawed
constitutional design that generated weak coalition
governments and incohesive parties unable to commit to
reform. They attribute the severity of Indonesia’s
crisis to the weakness of democratic institutions, which
vested arbitrary decision making power in the hands of one
person, Suharto, who could as easily change his mind as
stay the reformist course.
These historical
observations caution against exaggerated hopes that
foreign aid conditioned on a laundry list of reforms and
policies can play a major role in getting a postwar
Afghanistan back onto its economic feet. They suggest
relatively pessimistic conclusions about whether providing
sustained U.S. aid, as opposed to dropping dehydrated
meals from the skies and hiring U.S. construction
companies to rebuild bridges and airstrips, will do much
to alleviate the problems of countries where contract
enforcement and investor protections are unreliable, and
where political checks and balances are too weak to
prevent foreign aid from being funneled into the pockets
of the elites. We have no choice but to try, but realism
and the historical record suggest not expecting too much
of foreign aid to countries that have not yet succeeded in
putting the relevant political and economic infrastructure
in place.
We know much more about how
to help developing countries that have already begun to
take these steps. Abolishing restrictions on their sales
of bananas to Europe and apparel to the United States can
invigorate their exports, raise their rates of economic
growth, and help to create improved living standards for
their masses.1 The Multifiber Agreement, an
historical anachronism dating from 1974, continues to
limit imports of textiles and apparel into the U.S.
market. If the Congress is serious about addressing the
problems of developing countries as a way of bringing them
into the fold, it could start by abolishing the Multifiber
Agreement. U.S. foreign economic policy cannot solve the
problems of the entire world. Some parts will have to
first begin to help themselves. But where they have done
so, and where we have instruments that can usefully push
the process along, it would be a crime not to do so.
November 1, 2001
Barry Eichengreen is
George C. Pardee and Helen N. Pardee Professor of
Economics and Political Science at the University of
California, Berkeley, and a member of the Board of
Directors of the SSRC.
Footnotes
1 The idea that
freer trade and improved market access for developing
countries can help to improve the prospects of the vast
majority of their poorest residents is such obvious common
sense that it almost inevitably becomes the subject of
arcane academic debate and controversy, requiring a
footnote. Evidence as opposed to rhetoric speaks clearly:
see Neil McCullock, L. Ana Winters and Xavier Cirera, “Trade
Liberalization and Poverty: A Handbook,” London: Centre
for Economic Policy Research (2001).
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