Palma
Palma
                    CWPE 1201
How the full opening of the capital account to highly
 liquid financial markets led Latin America to two
    and a half cycles of ‘mania, panic and crash’
                                                                            José Gabriel Palma1
                                                                               Faculty of Economics
                                                                               Cambridge University
                                              Abstract
 Latin America has recently experienced three cycles of capital inflows, the first two ending in major
 financial crises. The first took place between 1973 and the 1982 ‘debt-crisis’. The second took place
 between the 1989 ‘Brady bonds’ agreement (and the beginning of the economic reforms and
 financial liberalisation that followed) and the Argentinian 2001/2002 crisis, and ended up with four
 major crises (as well as the 1997 one in East Asia) — Mexico (1994), Brazil (1999), and two in
 Argentina (1995 and 2001/2). Finally, the third inflow-cycle began in 2003 as soon as international
 financial markets felt reassured by the surprisingly neo-liberal orientation of President Lula’s
 government; this cycle intensified in 2004 with the beginning of a (purely speculative) commodity
 price-boom, and actually strengthened after a brief interlude following the 2008 global financial
 crash — and at the time of writing (mid-2011) this cycle is still unfolding, although already showing
 considerable signs of distress. The main aim of this paper is to analyse the financial crises resulting
 from this second cycle (both in LA and in East Asia) from the perspective of Keynesian/ Minskyian/
 Kindlebergian financial economics. I will attempt to show that no matter how diversely these newly
 financially liberalised Developing Countries tried to deal with the absorption problem created by the
 subsequent surges of inflow (and they did follow different routes), they invariably ended up in a
 major crisis. As a result (and despite the insistence of mainstream analysis), these financial crises
 took place mostly due to factors that were intrinsic (or inherent) to the workings of over-liquid and
 under-regulated financial markets — and as such, they were both fully deserved and fairly
 predictable. Furthermore, these crises point not just to major market failures, but to a systemic
 market failure: evidence suggests that these crises were the spontaneous outcome of actions by
 utility-maximising agents, freely operating in friendly (‘light-touch’) regulated, over-liquid financial
 markets. That is, these crises are clear examples that financial markets can be driven by buyers
 who take little notice of underlying values — i.e., by investors who have incentives to interpret
 information in a biased fashion in a systematic way. Thus, ‘fat tails’ also occurred because under
 these circumstances there is a high likelihood of self-made disastrous events. In other words,
 markets are not always right — indeed, in the case of financial markets they can be seriously wrong
 as a whole. Also, as the recent collapse of ‘MF Global’ indicates, the capacity of ‘utility-maximising’
 agents operating in (excessively) ‘friendly-regulated’ and over-liquid financial market to learn from
 previous mistakes seems rather limited.
 Key words: Causes of financial crisis, Latin America, East Asia, Financial liberalisation, Neo-
         liberal economic reforms, Systemic market failure, Keynes, Minsky, and Kindleberger
 JEL classifications: D7, D81, F21, F32, F4, G15, G28, G38, H12, L51, N2, O16, 043
 A shortened version of this paper will be published in G Epstein and MH Wolfson (eds.)
 The Oxford Handbook on the Political Economy of Financial Crises, Oxford University Press
 1
   This paper builds on previous work (Palma, 2003a, and 2006). I would like to thank Edna
 Armendáriz, Stephanie Blankenburg, Antonio David, Ashwini Deshpande, Jonathan DiJohn, Jerry
 Epstein, Samer Frangie, Daniel Hahn, Geoff Harcourt, Jan Kregel, Domna Michailidou, José Antonio
 Ocampo, Arturo O’Connell, Ernestina Palma Matte, Carlota Pérez, Ignês Sodré, John Steiner,
 Cornelia Staritz, Lance Taylor Robert Wade, participants at various seminars and students at
 Cambridge for helpful comments. Lastly, I am very grateful to my former Ph.D. student Carlos
 Lopes for the many lively discussions we had on financial crises before his sudden death; I dedicate
 this paper to him. The usual caveats apply.
                                                                                                      2
                                                “The problem is that [...] the theories embedded in
                                               general equilibrium dynamics [...] don't let us think
                                                 about [issues such as ...] financial crises and their
                                               real consequences in Asian and Latin America [...].”
                                                                                    Robert Lucas
                             "I can [understand and] calculate the motions of the heavenly bodies,
                                          but not the madness of [the South Sea Bubble] people."
                                                                                   Isaac Newton
1.- Introduction
Latin America (LA) has experienced three cycles of capital inflows since the mid-1970s,
the first two ending in major financial crises. The first cycle took place between the oil
price increase that followed the 1973 ‘Yom Kippur’ war and the 1982 debt-crisis, with
Chile (the only country in the region that had already fully opened up its capital account)
being the most affected — with a 20% drop in its real GDP between the third quarters of
1981 and 1983.2 The second cycle took place between the 1989 ‘Brady bonds’
agreement (and the beginning of the economic reforms and financial liberalisation that
followed) and the Argentinian 2001/2002 crisis, and ended up with four major crises (as
well as the 1997 one in East Asia) — one in Mexico (1994), one in Brazil (1999), and two
in Argentina (1995, the ‘Tequila-crisis’, and 2001/2). Finally, the third inflow-cycle began
in 2003 as soon as international financial markets felt reassured by the surprisingly neo-
liberal orientation of President Lula da Silva’s government. This cycle intensified in 2004
with the beginning of a (speculation-led) commodity price-boom, and actually
strengthened after a brief interlude following the 2008 global financial crash — and at the
time of writing (mid-2011) this cycle is still unfolding, but it is already showing
considerable signs of distress.3
        The main aim of this paper is to analyse the dynamics of the second cycle — from
the 1989 ‘Brady-bonds agreement’ to the Argentinian 2001/2002 crisis (and 9/11). Two
common characteristics of the financial crises resulting from this second cycle — in both
LA and East Asia (EA)— are that the countries involved had recently opened up their
capital accounts, and that they had done so at a time of high liquidity in international
2
  For this first cycle, see Díaz-Alejandro (1984); Ffrench-Davis (2010); Marcel and Palma (1988);
and Palma (1998).
3
  Some authors have argued that the third cycle finished in 2008, and a fourth cycle began after
the downturn in 2009; however, I disagree because for LA the so-called fourth cycle is nothing but
the resumption of the third after a brief pause in 2008 — led by the same type of inflows, and by
the same commodity-price boom (see Figures 2 and 3 below). For how these three financial cycles
relate to the long-term ‘technology-cycle’, see Pérez (2002).
                                                                                                    3
financial markets, and slow growth in most OECD economies. That is, at a time when
ever more liquid, volatile and progressively un-regulated international financial markets
were anxiously seeking new high-yield investment opportunities — hopefully also
uncorrelated with their existing portfolio!
         This paper will attempt to show that no matter how diversely these newly
financially liberalised Developing Countries (DCs) in both LA and EA tried to deal with the
absorption problem created by the subsequent inflow-surges (and they did follow
different routes), they invariably ended up in a major financial crisis. I shall identify
three different ways in which these DCs tried to deal with massive surges of inflow, and
conclude that each of them led to a financial crisis via a different path. These are best
illustrated by (i) the Mexican 1988-1994 experience — henceforth ‘route 1’ (the “try to
keep public finances in balance, and let markets resolve the resulting private imbalances
by themselves” route), with Chile and Argentina (at least until its ‘Tequila crisis’ of
1994/5) following the same route;4 (ii) the Brazilian 1994-1999 one — ‘route 2’,
characterised by a country that tried to avoid becoming ‘another route-1-Mexico’ via an
aggressive sterilisation and tough monetary policy; and (iii) the Korean 1988-1997 one
— ‘route 3’ (where most inflows were used to finance private investment, in a scenario of
falling corporate profitability), which also included Malaysia and Thailand.
        This paper further attempts to show that all three ‘routes’ led to financial crises in
ways that have little to do with the financial processes described in the most popular
mainstream models of financial crises — in particular ‘second-’ and ‘third-generation’
ones — especially with their supposed unpredictable and undeserved nature.5 That is,
the key proposition of this paper is that the common feature of all three routes to
financial crises during the second cycle is that the resulting crises were both (fairly)
predictable and (certainly) deserved. Basically, they were the outcome of economies
opting to integrate fully (and indiscriminately) into international capital markets via an
open capital account, and then being unable to absorb the subsequent surge of inflows
(no matter how hard they tried to deal with them). The experiences of China, India and
Taiwan during the same period (as well as those of Chile and Colombia in the 1990s,
when they implemented ‘price-based’ capital controls) show that a more selective path of
participation in international capital markets is a far more effective way of avoiding the
pro-cyclical dynamics of unrestricted capital flows — or the huge costs of sterilisation
(Ocampo and Palma, 2008). They also help avoid the massive costs in the alternate
phase of the cycle, associated with stampedes by intrinsically restless (and often under-
informed) fund-managers — so prone to oscillating between manias and panics.
2.- International financial markets and the three main stylised facts of
capital flows into middle-income DCs since the liberalisation of their capital
accounts
4
   Although Chile’s 1982-crisis belongs to the first cycle, as Chile opened-up of its capital account
two decades before the rest of the region, its 1982 crisis resembles a ‘route-1’ crisis (for a full
account of the process of economic reform in Chile, see Ffrench-Davis, 2010). In terms of
Argentina, this country was the only one that, when first in trouble (1995), managed to continue
with the same policies for several years thanks to generous IMF help and some skilful — but
eventually self-defeating — ‘financial engineering’. Therefore, events between its two crises (1995
and 2001) are unique, and do not really fit into any of the ‘routes’. However, for reasons of space
I cannot discuss in detail the intricacies of these events (1995-2001). For analyses, see
Chudnovsky (2002); and O’Connell (2002).
5
  For a brief description of ‘first-’, ‘second-’ and ‘third-generation’ models, see Appendix 1; see
also Krugman (2001).
                                                                                                      4
crisis is a sudden surge of liquidity. The financial crises studied here are no exception.
So, the starting point of the analysis has to be the “when, how and why” there was this
increase in liquidity — and how its ‘clearing process’ led to increased ‘leverages’, asset-
price bubbles, and the opening-up of new and more risky ‘liquidity-outlets’. The
‘rediscovery’ of DCs is an example of the latter, and the sub-prime mortgage-market is
another creation of a new ‘outlet’ to unload excess liquidity. In fact, in the US financial
markets not only issued nearly half a trillion dollars in sub-prime mortgages, but,
according to the WSJ, in 2007 alone the number of new credit-card solicitations mailed to
sub-prime borrowers reached more than 1.3 million (http://finance.yahoo.com/news/
bringing-expired-debt-back-to-life.html). In other words, financial markets became so
liquid that almost any financial asset could be sold with ease — no matter how toxic it
may be. This ‘liquidity-clearing process’, in turn, leads to increased (Minskyian) financial
fragilities. In fact, one way of looking at how liquid international financial markets had
become during the second and third inflow-cycles is that between 1980 and 2007 (i.e.,
between the beginning of financial de-regulation with Thatcher and Reagan, and the year
before the current global financial crisis), the four components of the stock of global
financial assets (equity, public and private bonds and bank assets) jumped 9-fold in real
terms (to US$241 trillion). As a result, as a multiple of world output the stock of
financial assets jumped from 1.1 to 4.4 (see Palma, 2009a).
        In turn, the outstanding amounts of over-the-counter derivative contracts
increased from 2.4 to 11 times the size of global output. And the gross market value of
these ‘financial weapons of mass destruction’ grew eight times faster than world output.
In fact, just those involving commodities increased 59-fold during the same decade (BIS,
2011; excludes gold). This frantic speculation is certainly more important than China or
India in explaining the post-2003 boom in commodity prices. Also, in terms of emerging
markets, total assets for single-manager hedge funds whose primary investment focus
were DCs grew 4.5-fold in only the three years before 2008 — with emerging market
equity managers becoming the best niche group in the hedge fund industry (returning on
average 37%; HFR, 2007).
        In terms of players in the ‘shadow financial market’, the total number of hedge
funds and funds of funds grew from 610 to nearly 10 thousand between 1990 and 2007,
with total assets at that time of nearly US$2 trillion (and total market ‘positions’ of
US$5.3 trillion). In fact, even after the LTCM debacle in 1998 the number of hedge funds
(and LTCM’s business model) continued to expand as if nothing had ever happened — or,
rather, as if life could continue ever more enjoyably as there was now the guarantee that
the Fed would always be available at the other end of a 911 call. And an indication of
their shadiness is that of these funds 53% were registered in the Caribbean, 25% in
Delaware, and only 1.3% in New York.
        Two of the main problems emerging from these post-1980 increasingly liquid and
un-regulated international financial markets were the increased volatility and the
correlation of returns on financial assets. In fact, now shockwaves are transmitted —
and amplified — to such an extent that a simple way of looking at the onset of the
2007/8 financial crisis would be to say that (long-delayed) concerns over US$500 billion
of ‘sub-prime’ mortgage lending led to the wiping off of more than US$40 trillion in global
asset markets. In fact, it used to be that when the US sneezed, the rest of the world
caught a cold; now it is enough for Greece to sneeze, for the rest of the world to catch
pneumonia. And these are the international financial markets to which LA and EA — and
countries of Eastern Europe and of the European periphery — chose to open their capital
accounts fully. The irony is that this was done, supposedly, in search of diminishing
uncertainty and counter-cyclical finance! As Summers once famously said, for DCs to
open capital accounts without capital controls has proved to be like building a nuclear
plant without safety valves
      Figure 1 shows the massive ‘financial deepening’ that took place in the above
economies just in the five years between 9/11 and the 2007/8 global financial crises.
                                                                                          5
                                           FIGURE 1
Basically, in only five years the above countries increased the value of their stock of
financial assets by an amount larger than a whole GDP: Ireland by 3.6 GDPs; Spain 2.3;
Asia 1.8; and Greece (of all countries) by 1.3. That this happened in countries with
dynamic growth, such as China or India, could plausibly have some justification in the
eyes of financial liberalisers (as ‘irrational exuberance’). Also in Ireland something was
actually happening in the real economy. But that it took place in Portugal (0.9% growth
p.a. for GDP, and 15% for financial assets), Greece (4.3% and 24%), or Spain (3.5%
and 27%) can only be labelled as surreal — i.e., the outcome of ‘self-regulation’ in
financial markets becoming freedom to run amok, and ‘market discipline’ becoming a joke.
Something similar happened in LA (4.8% and 27%), Africa (5.7% and 30%), or Eastern
Europe (5.6% and 45%).
        These asymmetries between the real and the financial economy are precisely what
FDR tried to avoid with the ‘New-Deal’-type financial regulation, and Keynes with Bretton-
Woods. Also, they are not exactly what the ‘efficient-market hypothesis’ (especially
‘strong-form version’ theorists) had in mind when they asserted that in liberalised
financial markets “prices at all times fully reflect all available information — public and
private” (Fama, 1976). In essence, according to this theory there cannot be an
endogenous gap between prices in financial market and fundamentals — let alone a
bubble. That is, asset prices deserve a pedestal, and stock options are therefore the
most efficient reward for good performance. Well, not exactly what has happened in the
6
  According to a senior IMF official, what one has to understand is that “Iceland is no longer a
country — it is a hedge fund” (quoted in Lewis, 2009). On Iceland, see Wade and Sigurgeirsdottir
(2010).
                                                                                                   6
increasingly over-liquid and under-regulated post-1980 financial markets!
2.2.- The first stylised fact of post-1990 inflows into (newly financially-
liberalised) DCs: a massive surge of highly volatile capital flows
Figure 2 shows the first and crucial stylised fact of post-1990 inflows into these middle-
income DCs: the sudden surge, the high volumes, and the huge instability of these
inflows.
                                           FIGURE 2
                                                                                             7
2.3.- The second stylised fact: at least in LA, the tsunami of inflows has
had little or no positive impact on the real economy
Figure 3 indicates the second stylised fact of the surge in (volatile) inflows: given what
has happened in LA since financial liberalisation, it would be rather difficult to argue that
the opening up of the capital account c.1990 has had an unambiguous positive impact on
the real economy — this is true even for FDI!
                                             FIGURE 3
● pdt=labour productivity. The percentages in the left-hand Panel are average rates of
productivity growth for respective periods (1950-1980, 1980-1990, and 1990-2010). In the right-
hand panel, investment and FDI are 3-year moving averages.
● Sources: productivity, WB (2011; for output), and GGDC (2011; for employment); investment,
ECLAC (2011; current prices); net private inflows, ECLAC (2011; for 1950-70), and IMF (2011b;
for 1970-2010); and FDI, ECLAC (2011).
As the left-hand panel of Figure 3 indicates, before 1980, when inflows averaged less
than US$ 20 billion per year (in 2010-US$), productivity growth reached 2.6% p.a.
(3.8% for Brazil). But when they increased by more than three times (1990-2010),
productivity growth only reached half the pre-1980 rate (1.2% p.a.; 1.3% for Brazil). Of
course the disappointing post-1990 performance in ‘liberalised’ LA has many roots (see
Palma, 2011a), but there is little doubt that the negative effects of the massive surge of
(volatile) inflows is part of that narrative. For example, huge inflows led to a chronic
deficiency of effective demand for non-commodity tradable activates, especially
manufacturing; this was the outcome of the ‘deadly triad’ of over-valued exchange rates
(that switched aggregate demand towards foreign markets); high interest rates (due to
‘tough’ monetary policies to deal with these inflows); and remarkably low levels of public
investment by ‘sterilised’ governments (of about 3% of GDP; these were necessary to
balance public finances in a context of low taxation, as part of the ‘sound fundamentals’
shop-window part of the open capital account story).7 Added to this, there was a hugely
increased uncertainty (especially due to the volatile nature of inflows) affecting especially
7
  While in OECD countries personal income tax collection reaches on average 9% of GDP, in LA it
amasses less than 1% — with income tax evasion fluctuating around 50%, equivalent on average
to 4.5% of GDP (ECLAC, 2010). From this perspective, there is little doubt that LA confirms
Schumpeter’s hypothesis that: “[t]he fiscal history of a people is above all an essential part of its
general history” (1918).
                                                                                                        8
private investment.
        One aspect of inflows that is truly remarkable is shown in the right-hand panel of
Figure 3: a significant surge of inflows of FDI after the ‘Brady-bonds’ agreement and the
beginning of economic reform — reaching an average of US$ 75 billion a year between
1988 and 2010 (in 2010-US$; ECLAC, 2011) — has been associated with a remarkably
poor rate of investment (as a share of GDP). In fact, despite the growth-acceleration in
many countries after the post-2003 commodity-price boom and the new surge in inflows,
as well as the rapid recovery after the 2008 crisis, by 2010 the average investment-share
of the region was still in its (already disappointing) starting point — with Brazil and
Venezuela, although for different reasons, lagging behind. In other words, as Figure 3
clearly indicates, in LA inflows of FDI equivalent to US$1.8 trillions (1988-2010; 2010-
US$) has been associated with a rate of accumulation that is poor even from the
perspective of its inadequate historical record — on average 19% of GDP (ECLAC, 2011;
see also Palma, 2011a).8
       So, again, not much support here for the mainstream proposition that DCs are full
of investment opportunities, just waiting for the availability of finance (which,
supposedly, can only come from rich countries and not from the high proportion of the
national income appropriated by their élites). And significant support for the Keynesian
proposition that the mere availability of finance does not lead to higher levels of
investment.
        In fact, perhaps the most striking political-economy difference between LA and
Asia is found in their contrasting relationships between income distribution and
investment (Figure 4).
                                             FIGURE 4
● n-3 = third-tier NICs (China, India and Vietnam), and a = Argentina; b = Brazil; cl = Chile; c =
Colombia; cr = Costa Rica; d = Dominican Republic; e = Ecuador; s = El Salvador; mx = Mexico;
8
  Part of this phenomenon is the fairly unimpressive rôle of mostly rentier Spanish multinationals,
only able to operate in (protected) non-tradable activities (including domestic finance and utilities).
To paraphrase Oscar Wilde, for LA to have been conquered by Spain once may be regarded as a
misfortune; twice looks like carelessness.
                                                                                                      9
p = Paraguay; pe = Peru; u = Uruguay; ve = Venezuela; k = Korea; sg = Singapore; m =
Malaysia; th = Thailand; cn = China; v = Vietnam; in = India; za = South Africa; and P =
Philippines.
● Sources: for income distribution, WDI (2010); for private investment IMF (2010).
While in LA private investment (which usually hovers around 15% of GDP) accounts for
only one-third of the income-share of the top decile (about 45% of national income), in
most of Asia this ratio jumps to more than twice that level — with Korea’s even above 1.
In other words, while LA’s top deciles appropriates twice as much as those of Korea and
Taiwan, LA’s share of private investment in GDP reaches half the East Asian levels. From
my own perspective, this is the most crucial characteristic of the (sub-prime) nature of
LA’s capitalism: what I like to call the “two-times-half-style capitalism” — i.e., how to
create an institutional environment in which one can get twice as much, with half the
effort.9 And FDI, instead of making a positive impact on that asymmetry, has been
happy to adjust.10
        Oddly enough, in South Africa (in this respect, LA’s honorary middle-income
country in Africa), and in The Philippines (the honorary one in Asia) similar low ratios as
those of LA indicate that their capitalist élites have the same Latin preference for having
their cake and eating it...
         So the usual argument that one of the main reasons why LA needs capital inflows
is because its many investment opportunities are constrained by finance is rather hollow.
It is not that in LA lacks investment opportunities (e.g., those associated with forward
and backward linkages of commodity production); the issue that still needs a more
elaborate answer is why is it that neither domestic nor foreign capital shows much
interest in taking advantage of them? And, again, post-reform LA has shown little
support for the mainstream argument that says that all that is required for the happy
union between these investment opportunities and foreign finance are ‘prices right’ and
‘institutions right’. The experience of EA shows that effective trade and industrial
policies, pro-growth macros, and so on are probably more relevant.
        Keith Griffin once wrote that foreign aid may well end up simply substituting
domestic savings (Griffin, 1970); well, post-reform LA seems to indicate that in DCs FDI
also could have a strong substituting effect on national private investment — except, of
course, in Asia! It is fairly obvious that LA’s capitalist élite has a preference for both
sumptuous consumption, and for accumulation via mobile assets (financial ones and
capital flight) rather than via ‘fixed’ capital formation.11 And neo-liberal reforms —
despite all the efforts towards defining and enforcing property rights, and all the other
‘market-friendly’ policies aimed at incentivising investment — have had little impact on
that (in spite of all the resources and foreign exchange provided by inflows, and the
particularly favourable terms of trade). Not much evidence here of the supposed
revitalising effects of ‘financial-deepening’ promised by McKinnon and Shaw.
        In essence, economic reform has been unable to reproduce even the relatively low
investment rates of the state-led industrialisation period; instead, it seems to have
unleashed more powerfully the predatory and rentier instincts of the region’s capitalist
élites (the former especially during the privatisation period).12 In many Asian countries,
meanwhile, reforms, especially financial liberalisation, may have brought complex
challenges to the macro, and the inevitable financial fragilities (as well as increased
inequalities, labour insecurity and so on), but at least the rate of accumulation increased
significantly after their implementation. In LA, meanwhile, the cloud did not even have
that silver lining (Figure 5).
9
     TFP aficionados, however, may well argue that there is a positive twist in this.
10
   For example, as discussed below, the share of LA in Banco Santander’s worldwide profits is
twice that of its assets, while in its European operations it is exactly the other way round.
11
     At least easy access to mobile assets helps oligarchies to become democratic (Boix, 2003).
12
     See, for example, Mönckeberg (2001); Wolf (2007); and Winter (2007).
                                                                                                  10
                                 FIGURE 5
      Investment patterns in Latin America and Asia, 1950-2010
● In the left-hand panel, white circles indicate the beginning of economic reform (for India, 1980;
for Brazil, 1990 — Collor’s ‘New Brazil’ Plan). In the right=hand panel, percentages shown in the
graph are growth rates in the respective periods (for Brazil, 1965-1976 and 1980-2010; and for
Korea, 1960-80, 1981-97 and 1997-2008. 3-year moving averages.
● Sources: for investment, WDI (2010); for investment in LA before 1960, CEPAL (2010); in India
(http://mospi.gov.in/). For employment, GGDC (2009).
The contrast between Brazil and India is particularly telling (left-hand panel) — both
countries started their economic reforms with a 22% investment rate in GDP; however,
by 2010 one (India) had brought this rate up to 37%, while the other (Brazil) had
brought it down to 19% (WB, 2011; IPEA, 2011).
        The contrast between LA and Asia is even starker when the comparison is drawn
with investment per worker (right-hand panel). In Brazil, for example, by 2010 (and
despite the post-2004 acceleration of growth) investment per worker (in real terms) was
still well below its 1980 level. Most LA follows a pattern similar to Brazil. An extreme
example is post-NAFTA-Mexico: despite the highest level of FDI per worker in the world,
by 2010 its investment per worker had also not recovered its 1981 level. By then, and
despite 1997, Korea had a level 3.6 times higher, and Malaysia and Thailand 2.2. In
turn, China’s 2010 level was 12 times higher; India’s 4.5; and Vietnam had more than
trebled this statistic since 1994 (the first year that data are available; see Palma, 2011a).
Perhaps from this perspective the contrasting productivity growth performance of LA and
many in Asia since 1990 — and especially the inability of LA to sustain productivity
growth — may not be so difficult to explain after all.
        Furthermore, in the very few cases in LA where investment actually increased
after reforms, as in Chile, it is not obvious why it took so long for it to happen (ten
years), let alone why it ran out of steam so easily afterwards (Ffrench-Davis, 2010);
Palma, 2011a and b). Moreover, what also remains unclear is why despite the huge
share of national income appropriated by the top earners, and despite well-defined and
enforced property-rights, ‘pro-market’ reforms — and a tsunami of FDI — every time
private investment in LA manages to rise much above 15% of GDP its capitalist élite
starts experiencing feelings of vertigo.
                                                                                                 11
2.4.- The third stylised fact: the growing costs of capital inflows in terms
of factor payment abroad
As is evident from Figure 6 the fortunes of LA’s factor payments abroad (interest
payment, profit repatriation, etc.) took a rather remarkable turn after the appointment of
Paul Volker (with his flamboyant monetarism) to the Fed in 1979, and the election of
Reagan a year later — as most of LA’s debt was saddled with flexible interest rates, its
interest payments on foreign debt alone jumped (in 2010-US$) from US$29 billion in
1978 to US$95 billion in 1982 (or nearly half the region’s exports). Unsurprisingly, LA
ended up with a debt crisis.
       Overall factor payments abroad (debits) then fell from US$108 billion in 1982 to
US$61 billion in 1992, to then jump again (mostly due to increased profit repatriation by
FDI) to US$122 billion in 2010 (having reached US$135 billions in 2007 — see Figure 6).
FIGURE 6
● NFK=net private capital inflows; and NTR=net transfer of resources (NKF – net factor
payments). In left-hand panel, payments are debits.
● Source: ECLAC (2011).
                                                                                           12
Concertación government that created this meagre tax gave FDI an additional ‘magical-
realist’ concession: foreign corporations can include this specific tax as a cost of
production! With such ‘light-touch’ fiscal attitude, no wonder LA’s ‘new’ left is so
welcome at Davos...
FIGURE 7
In LA, the turnaround following the opening-up of the capital account is remarkable: (in
2010-US$) the difference between the two periods amounts to US$277 billion in Brazil,
US$194 billion in Argentina, and US$125 billion in Mexico; in fact, the turnaround in
Brazil or in Argentina was larger than in the three East Asian economies together
(US$153 billion). These surges are even more impressive in relative terms to exports
and savings (particularly in Chile). In fact, some of these countries even began to be
important players in the newly developed derivatives markets (IMF, 2011a).
                                                                                                 13
        Foreign capital swamped these countries due to several ‘push’ and ‘pull’ factors.
The main ‘push’ factor consisted of excess liquidity in international financial markets —
from this perspective, DCs continued to play their historical rôle of ‘financial market of
last resort’ (Palma, 1998). As mentioned above, this rôle (emergency ‘liquidity-outlet’) is
not that different from the one played by the ‘sub-prime’ mortgages during the financial
cycle that followed 9/11. Other ‘push’ factors included business cycle conditions,
changes in interest rates, the rise of institutional investors (such as mutual funds,
pension funds, hedge funds) always in need of new profitable assets (hopefully also with
low-correlation in returns with their existing portfolio), and demographic forces in
industrial countries. There was, however, a crucial difference between LA and EA in
terms of the ‘pull factors’. In EA there was an urgent need for foreign-finance to sustain
corporate investment in the face of falling profitability; in LA, instead, the key ‘pull factor’
was rather the combination of radical economic reforms (in particular wholesale
privatisations, and the speed and intensity of trade liberalisation) and the opening up of
the capital account in a context of undervalued asset markets (and when many domestic
corporations were eager to join the stock market just to attract foreign buyers), high
interest rate spreads, and expectations of exchange rate appreciation. In particular,
optimism regarding the success of economic reforms was in excess-supply, partly as a
result of the massive ‘spin’ put on them by those to be found circling around the
‘Washington Consensus’.
         That is, there was a major difference regarding ‘pull’ factors, as in LA a significant
proportion of inflows had practically to ‘invent’ a need for themselves (i.e., it was a
supply in search of a demand — as it takes two to tango). The key characteristic of LA’s
‘pull’ factors is that they fed into themselves: inflows were attracted by newly created
domestic ‘magnetisms’; these inflows generated pro-cyclical dynamics, which attracted
more inflows. Finally, a crucial ‘pull’ factor in all routes was the 'moral hazard' created by
the near-certainty in international financial markets (particularly after 1994-Mexico) that,
as in every good old Western, the cavalry, in the form of a vast international rescue
operation, could be counted on to arrive in the nick of time, should the 'natives' threaten to
default or close their capital account.
        One way of testing which was the causa causans of the surge in inflows
(‘exogenous push’ in LA vs. ‘endogenous pull’ in EA), is by looking at the time-sequence
between changes in the current and in the capital accounts. The question here is, what
is the driving force behind the balance of payments cycle? Does the current account
‘lead’ the capital account (‘endogenous ‘pull’), or is it the other way round (‘exogenous
push’)? This issue can be tested with the help of the Granger ‘time-precedence’ or
‘predictability’ test (often misleadingly called the Granger-‘causality’ test). The results of
this test show a major difference between LA and EA in this ‘chicken-and-egg’-type
problem: in LA changes in the capital account tend to precede — and are useful for the
prediction of — changes in the current account, while in EA the time-dynamic is the
opposite (see Ocampo and Palma, 2008).
        This is also an important finding from the point of view of rôle of capital controls:
if the primary source of the LA financial cycle is an externally induced (i.e., ‘exogenous
push’) change in the capital account, controls on inflows are more likely to be a ‘first-
best’ counter-cyclical policy option if one wants to deal with the excesses of the financial
cycle at their source. In EA, meanwhile, the results of the test indicate a more
macroeconomic textbook time-sequence: changes in the current account — the result of
developments in the domestic real economy — proceed, and are useful to predict,
changes in the capital account. It therefore seems less clear that in this region capital
controls should be the dominant component of a ‘first-best’ policy to deal with the inflow-
problems at source. This does not mean that capital controls cannot help; it means that
they are a ‘second-best’ policy, since the ‘first-best’ one would be to deal with the
domestic problems leading the changes in the current account (e.g., the levels of
external-finance needed to sustain corporate investment).
                                                                                             14
3.1.- The Latin American story: to sterilise or not to sterilise a mainly
‘exogenous push’ of foreign capital – route-1 vs. route-2
Figure 8 shows some of the major differences in LA between Brazil, which decided for
sterilisation, and Chile, Mexico and Argentina, which decided instead to trust the
traditional beliefs of the first law of welfare economics: keep public finance in check, and
let markets solve the resulting private imbalances by themselves.
FIGURE 8
In route-1-LA, the response to the surge in private inflows was to ride them out by
unloading them into the domestic economy via a credit boom (Panel A), and asset
bubbles (Panel C).13 The other (Brazil), was precisely the reverse: to try to stop the
13
    Part of the rapid expansion of the domestic-credit ratio in Chile in 1982 is due to a fall in output
in the latter part of that year (after the onset of the debt-crisis). Argentina’s lower domestic-credit
ratios throughout (Panel A) relate to a longstanding (and well-founded) generalised mistrust of
banks. In LA, part of the bubble in the stock market (Panel C) was that the opening of the capital
account involved the sale of state companies as well as the floatation of private corporations. The
                                                                                                     15
resulting pro-cyclical dynamics by placing an ‘iron curtain’ around them in the Central
Bank (via sterilisation).
         The crucial factor in understanding the different behaviour of Brazil is the timing
of its financial liberalisation (second half of 1994); this coincided with the unfolding of the
growing Mexican financial fragilities that led to the December-1994 crisis. Therefore,
high degrees of sterilisation and high interest rates were continued after the successes of
the 'Real Plan' in conquering inflation in order to avoid following a Mexican 'route-1'
crisis-path.
         Even though there was a similarity in the speed of credit expansion between
'route-1' and 'route-3', there also was a crucial difference: the use made of this
additional credit — as mentioned above, while 'route-1' directed it towards increased
consumption and asset speculation (panels B and C), Korea did so mostly towards
corporate investment (see Figure 10 below). In ‘route-1’, a bubble similar to that of
stocks took place in real estate; in Mexico, for example, the relevant price index jumped
16-fold between financial liberalisation and financial crisis, while there was little increase
in the indices of Korea or Brazil (see Palma, 2003a). Finally, the cases of Malaysia and
Thailand are characterised by having one foot in each camp. Their surges in inflows were
initially necessary to sustain their ambitious private investment programmes — both
Malaysia and Thailand brought their share of private investment in GDP above 30%. But,
contrary to Korea, there was still plenty of ‘spare cash’ after that to follow at least one
element of 'route-1' too — the spare liquidity fuelled a (near) Latin-style asset bubble in
their stock markets and real estate.14
         However, remarkably, in these two East Asian countries massive credit expansion
was associated with a drop in the share of consumption in GDP — in Malaysia this share
declined by nearly 10 percentage points of GDP (to 56.1%); and in Thailand by 3
percentage points (to 64.9%). No sign of a Latin 'route-1' here. So, probably no other
macroeconomic variable so transparently demonstrates the different 'routes' to financial
crises than the behaviour of private consumption (Panel B), and asset prices (Panel C).
In terms of the former, for example, while in route-2-Brazil sales of new cars grew by
only 39% between 1994 and 1997 (to fall again by 23% in the months before the 1998-
crisis), in route-1-Argentina they grew five-fold between 1991 and the 1995-‘Tequila-
crisis’ (McKinsey, 2004). And in terms of the stock market, ‘efficient capital market’
theorists were probably not very well acquainted with LA when they stated that stock
prices are supposed to be a ‘random walk’.15 That is, particularly under risk neutrality, in
stock markets there is supposed to be no scope for profitable speculation — i.e., a
rational stock market cannot be beaten on any consistent basis.16 The key point here is
that if financial markets get misaligned, they are always supposed to ‘self-correct’. And
although in LA they surely got misaligned, they certainly failed to ‘self-correct’ — in Chile
(1975-81), for example, the dollar-denominated value of stocks grew at 87% p.a., or 12
times faster than real GDP; in Mexico (1988-94), meanwhile, they grew 13 times faster
than GDP, and in Argentina (1990-94) 6 times faster.
        So, when students are taught these days that smart market players are bound to
force stock prices to become rational, LA is probably not in the syllabus. The irony is that
former were often sold first to domestic capital at much reduced prices, just to be sold again to
foreign investors at multiples based on expectations of liberalised profit rates. And the latter were
often floated just to be sold to foreign capital. Both operations produced a large private sector
wealth effect that fuelled financial speculation and funded imports of consumer goods, but led to
little or no new investments. This did not happen in Asia; there were no major privatisations, and
corporations were not floated in the stock market just to make them attractive to ‘gringos.’
14
    In Malaysia there was a 12.3-fold increase in real estate prices, while in Thailand an almost 8-
fold increase (Palma, 2003a). The same happened in their stock markets (Panel C), but this
bubble was dwarfed in comparison to Chile or Mexico.
15
     They seem to have been not well acquainted with the US either — see Lo and MacKinlay (2001).
16
   Not surprisingly, Warren Buffett has found amusing the idea that ‘luck’ is supposed to be the
reason why some investors appear more successful than others (1984).
                                                                                                   16
‘rational’ and ‘selfish’ agents (i.e., ‘utility-maximising’ agents) are supposed to do that by
doing exactly the opposite of what they do in real life: take the other side of trades if
prices begin to develop a pattern — as this is bound to have no substance, because share
prices are supposed to exhibit no serial dependencies (meaning that there can be no
‘patterns’ to asset prices). In other words, for the efficient market theology a ‘utility-
maximising’ surfer (proficient in rational expectations) is not the one that has fun riding
waves, but the one that gets drowned trying to create undertows.
       And in the years preceding these financial crises stock prices not only took a
pattern, but they did so ‘tulip mania’-style — see Panel C for clear examples in which
market participants, instead of following dutifully ‘non-trending random walks’, were
quite happy to systematically profit from market 'inefficiencies'. The key point here is
that these are clear examples of markets that are driven by buyers who took little notice
of underlying values — in which investors had incentives to interpret information in a
biased fashion in a systematic way. Here, in order to have a financial crisis, there is no
need for traumatic real-world events — ‘fat tails’ occur mostly because under these
circumstances there is a high likelihood of self-made catastrophic events.
        Finally, particularly in 'route-1' countries, the surge of inflows also distorted
‘fundamentals’; panel D shows the case of the remarkable revaluation of real exchange
rates — in Chile, for example, at a time when the current account deficit was reaching a
level equal to all exports, and in Mexico, Brazil, and pre-Tequila-crisis Argentina one
equivalent to about half their exports (or more), their exchange rates were in freefall-
revaluations. What a contrast with EA; where a fundamental component of their
Keynesian ‘pro-growth macro’ was to keep the exchange rate competitive and stable
despite huge inflows and booming exports.
        It is really difficult to fit LA’s real effective exchange rate picture with the basic
postulate of the neo-liberal creed regarding the need to liberalise, lift ‘artificial’ market
distortions, and stop governments’ 'discretionary' policies in order to allow the economy
to get 'its prices right'. Massive inflows into LA, particularly in relation to exports, and
the use of exchange rate based stabilisation policies (based on the oldest macroeconomic
law of them all: one can only solve a macroeconomic imbalance by creating another one)
brought this crucial price to a level which it would be rather hard to brand as 'right'.
         Moreover, the current account was not the only casualty of the exchange rate
overvaluation; the latter was also (not surprisingly) distorting the composition of what
little investment there was towards the non-tradable sector. In Mexico, for example,
whilst investment in residential construction doubled between 1981 and 1994,
investment in machinery fell by half (and at a time in which trade liberalisation had
already rendered a significant amount of the stock of capital in manufacturing obsolete;
Palma, 2005). Easy access to credit, the distortion in relative prices between tradables
and non-tradables, and the asset bubble in real estate set in motion a huge Kuznets'
cycle — not surprisingly, the best performing sector in the Mexican stock market was
construction.
       This is a rather odd picture: in fact, 'route-1' economies ended up switching the
engine of growth away from their supposedly desired aim — domestically financed private
investment in (increasingly sophisticated) tradable production — towards a more laid-back
(post-modernist?) one of externally financed private consumption, and private
investment in non-tradable activities and unprocessed commodities (i.e., growth-model
with a clear bias for ‘low-hanging fruit’-type activities).
       Finally, the collapse of savings in LA is also definitely not the ‘Promised Land’ of
McKinnon and Shaw — who (misinterpreting Schumpeter) famously declared in 1973 that
in DCs the main constrain on savings was financial ‘repression’: in their respective
periods between financial ‘liberalisation’ and financial crises, gross domestic savings as a
share of GDP fell in Chile by no less than 13 percentage points, in Brazil by 9, in Mexico
by 8, and in Argentina by 6 (WB, 2011). The flipside was booming consumption — in
Chicago-boys’ Chile, the share of consumption in GDP grew by 10 percentage points (to
91%!); in Mexico by seven points (to 83%); in Brazil by 6 points (to 85%); and in
Argentina by 5 points (to 85%; Ibid). The irony, of course, is that in mainstream
                                                                                           17
macroeconomic textbooks it is still taught today that one of the main benefits of opening
up the capital account is to smooth consumption over time...
        Given this evidence, it is difficult to understand how, as late as 1996, the World
Bank (1996) was still preaching to DCs to continue implementing ‘route-1’-type policies
— i.e., preaching DCs to follow the credo of the ‘efficient-capital-market’ theory, and the
first law of Welfare Economics. As mentioned above, the recipe was simple, as recipes
from the Washington Consensus usually are (in fact, this simplicity is probably one of
their main analytical attractions!): try to keep public finances in balance; and allow
markets to resolve the resulting private imbalances by themselves. All the latter
required was market discipline, self-regulation, and civilised ‘governance’.
        It is also particularly difficult to understand the mainstream insistence on the
supposed counter-cyclical nature of inflows, and its aversion to counter-cyclical macro
and capital controls. Let alone, its futile persistence in portraying ‘complete markets’ as
Paradise Lost — the modern-day version of the Garden of Eden! Even in the very
unlikely scenario that for finance ‘complete markets’ could do the trick, there is not much
chance of this utopia taking shape this side of eternity.
        Turning to 'route-2', the crucial vulnerability of Brazil lies mainly in high interest
rates leading straight into a public sector 'Ponzi'-finance (Figure 9).
FIGURE 9
● [i]=annualised nominal interest rate paid for public debt; [p]=annual growth-rates of public
revenues; and [r]=income received for foreign-exchange reserves (assumed to be the domestic-
currency-equivalent to returns on US Treasury Bills). Domestic currency, nominal terms.17
● [a]=Mexican crisis; [b]=East Asian crisis; [c]=Russian default; and [d]=domestic default by the
State of Minas Gerais.
● Sources: BCB (2011); and Palma (2002b, and 2006).
17
   Inflation between 1995 and 1998 was relatively low: the wholesale price index increased by
6.4%, 8.1%, 7.8% and only 1.5%, respectively.
                                                                                                 18
First, the Brazilian Central Bank over-reacted to external shocks (an attitude I have
elsewhere called 'macho-monetarism'; see Palma, 2006). In fact, at times — and even
when there was no fear of devaluation — the Brazilian Central Bank set deposit rates as
much as 20 percentage-points above international rates plus country risk. The crucial
ideological point to understand here is that these were post ‘UK-ERM-crisis’ times, when
‘collective memories’ (and second generation models) were directing all the blame for
financial crises towards Central Banks’ trepidation for interest rate hikes. That is,
financial crises were supposed to be the exclusive territory of feeble central
bankers/finance ministers — in the case of the UK, for example, Norman Lamont’s
imperfect commitment to a currency peg. The uniqueness of the Brazilian political
economy scenario is that the ‘macho-monetarist’ macro that emerged from this
understanding of ‘second-generation’ crises (‘one should not be afraid to do what it
takes’ macro) left a much longer-lasting effect — in fact, with other factors, it generated
a path-dependent dynamic that lasts until today (leading Brazil to the highest real
interest rates in the world).18 Not surprisingly, in its last financial report Banco
Santander indicates that one-quarter of all its world-wide profits came from its Brazilian
operations despite this country having only half that share in its overall assets;
meanwhile, in both Spain and the UK the relationship is exactly the other way round. In
other words, Santander’s profit margins in Brazil are about three times higher than those
in Spain and in the UK — 32% in Brazil (as of September 30th, 2011, trailing twelve
months — or ttm), while in its operations in Spain (Banco Santander Central Hispánico) it
only managed 12.6%. In fact, Santander’s ‘operating margin’ in Brazil reached no less
than 48% (ttm, same period; see http://finance.yahoo.com/q/ks?s=BSBR).19 And these
asymmetries are not the result of current European difficulties, as they have been going
on for a long time. These asymmetries form a crucial part of the already mentioned
Latin-American ‘two-times-half-style-capitalism’, in which (compared with other parts of
the world) institutional arrangements and political settlements are such that the domestic
élite and foreign corporations are able, grosso modo, to get twice as much with half the
effort.20
       Second, the resulting high cost of sterilisation becomes evident in the difference
between what was paid for the paper sold to sterilise and what was recuperated from the
return on their holding of foreign-exchange reserves (i.e., between lines 'i' and 'r' in
Figure 9). Finally, Brazil systematically violated the so-called fiscal ‘golden-rule', by
paying a much higher rate for its public debt than the rate at which it managed to
increase public revenues (let alone its income per capita; on these issues, see Lopes,
2009).
       Furthermore, the levels of lending rates that followed were remarkable: the
annualised real interest rate paid for working capital peaked at 60%, while that for
consumer credit did so at 115%. With these rates, of course, hardly any financial asset
18
   A recent study by Brazil’s ‘Fecomercio’ indicated that “[t]he interest rate on credit cards in
Brazil's financial hub of Sao Paulo averages 238%.” See http://finance.yahoo.com/news/
Creditcard-debt-may-threaten-apf-3046211331.html?x=0. With such ‘light-touch’ financial
regulation (that allows this type of interest rate), no wonder LA’s ‘new’ left is paraded as an
example in the annual meetings of the IMF and the World Bank...
19
   In the last count no less than 43% of Santander’s profits were generated in Latin America, 20
percentage points more than in all its huge Continental Europe operations. And in terms of the
retail side of business, the regional contrast is even more staggering (http://tippie.uiowa.edu/
henry/reports11/std_sp11.pdf).
20
   For example, the latest OECD report on broadband-related statistics (June 2011) indicates that
among its 34 members Chile has the highest charge for the minimum cost of a monthly
subscription (1.6 times the average), but in terms of service it has the slowest download speed
(just one-quarter of the average). So, followed closely by Mexico, the only other Latin American
country in the OECD), Chile has the top spot in this ‘asymmetry table’ (http://www.oecd.org/
document/54/0,3746,en_2649_34225_38690102 _1_1_1_1,00.html#prices). And the same
phenomenon (to get twice as much with half the effort) is also found in education, and many other
activities.
                                                                                                    19
of the banking system (made of household and corporate debt) could perform; as
discussed elsewhere, non-performing loans — as well as a remarkable lack of
‘transparency’ in the banking sector, weak regulatory public institutions, and the end of
‘inflation-income’ by the banking system — led to a succession of banking crises, each
adding a significant amount to the stock of the public-sector debt due to a populist policy
of indiscriminate bail-outs of both private and public banks.21
        In fact, the ease with which the government could finance its domestic debt was
due primarily to private banks falling over themselves to buy public paper, as this was
just about the only financial asset that could perform at such rates. Regarding the rest
of their portfolio, private banks (not having read — or, probably, having read but not
understood — Stiglitz) tried to increase profitability by the self-defeating policy of ever
increasing spreads, leading to an even faster increasing non-performing debt (see Lopes,
2009; and Palma, 2006). No prizes for guessing in which country (in both regions) the
crisis of the domestic banking system came before the overall financial crisis (and was a
major component that led up to it), as opposed to countries in which the banking crisis
came after the crash, when sharp devaluations hit both sides of banks’ balance sheets —
leading to exploding foreign exchange liabilities, and bank-portfolio becoming non-
performing due to falling incomes and asset-price deflation.
        The case of Brazil is also very important for the critique of ‘moral-hazard-type’
crisis-analysis. For example, according to McKinnon and Pill (1997), the main cause of
agents losing their capacity to assess and price their risk properly is that internal and
external moral hazards lead to ‘artificially’ low interest rates; these, in turn, gave a false
incentive to accumulate excessive amounts of private (let alone public) risk. However, in
Brazil, although high interest rates did help to avoid a ‘route-1’ crisis, they did so by
creating a different (but equally damaging) one (‘route-2’). So, the magical realism of
Brazil’s ‘route-2’ is that it created a financial crisis by trying to avoid one...
3.2.- The East Asia story of an ‘endogenous pull’ of foreign capital: the
cost of maintaining high levels of investment in the face of rapidly falling
profit-rates
In a sense, EA’s story is less transparent than LA’s. Inflows were not as remarkably
large and their composition was more stable; real effective exchange rates remained
stable; current accounts deficits, when looked at as share of exports, were small; interest
rates were low and stable, and there was no consumption boom, no collapse of savings,
and no deficits in the public sector. So, what about the often-mentioned moral-hazard-
led investment boom?
21
   Although part of the Real stabilisation package had been the introduction of Basle capital rules
for the banking system, these rules proved hopelessly insufficient for the financial fragilities created
by such high interest rates.
                                                                                                     20
                                           FIGURE 10
As mentioned above, the left-hand panel of Figure 10 shows that in LA (despite the
tsunami of FDI) private investment seems to find a 'natural ceiling’ at about 15% of GDP,
while in ‘Schumpeterian’ EA it seems to be twice as high.22 Furthermore, the graph
(using IMF data) also shows that in Korea, Malaysia and Thailand there is little evidence
of a pre-1997 ‘moral-hazard-led’ investment boom (as third-generation models and the
IMF would like us to believe; see Krugman, 2001 and IMF, 1998). Therefore, the key
question that still needs to be answered is why the Korean corporate sector needed such
large capital inflows to finance an ambitious but relatively stable investment effort. The
right-hand panel provides the answer.
        As discussed in detail elsewhere (Palma 2003a), and mainly due to declining
profitability (a decline which had little to do with the Krugman TFP-type critique of Korea,
and a lot to do with a ‘technology-led’ collapse of micro-electronic prices),23 the corporate
sector had to finance its high, but relatively stable, levels of investment switching from
retained-profits to debt. This process caused the sectoral deficit of the corporate sector
to increase from about 5% to nearly 20% of GNP, absorbing in the process not only all
the increase in the surplus of the ‘foreign sector’, but also that of the household and
government sectors as well.24
22
   Note that in LA the decision to sterilise or not to sterilise — and the corresponding huge interest
rates differentials — made little difference in terms of private investment.
23
   The D-Ram price per megabyte, for example, fell from US$26 (1995) to US$10 (1996), US$4
(1997), and less than US$1 (1998). Memory-chips were one of Korea's main export items.
24
   Daewoo alone, for example, ended up with a corporate debt of US$80 billion — more than the
combined foreign debt of Chile and Colombia. One obvious question is why is it that Korean
corporations did not float equities in domestic and international markets, rather than acquire so
much debt? The answer is that even if they wanted to do so (something which is not clear, as
Korean corporations are very 'tight' — i.e., the last thing they want is other groups, let alone
foreigners, meddling in their internal affairs), there were at the time strict rules limiting foreign
ownership of domestic corporations. At the same time, in the Greenspan era, interest rates were
not just low, but Korean corporations could borrow with less than one percentage point spread over
                                                                                                   21
        Consequently, is the IMF (1998) right when it blames (together with other critics
of the ‘East Asian model’) all on 'over'-investment? The answer is (as is so often the
case) more complex than a typically 'Washington Consensus' one. The crucial issue that
leads to misunderstandings in the East Asian crisis is forgetting that once you have gone
into the type of high-tech exports characteristics of the region, you can only be
competitive if able to produce at the cutting-edge of (a rapidly changing) technology.
And to be able to remain at that level, there seems to be little option but to invest at
East-Asian heights. Therefore, when profitability collapsed, the choice for Korea was not
that of 'blackboard economics' – of having the technological choice of being able to
produce a given amount of output (e.g., memory-chips) with different combinations of
capital and labour. Rather it was whether to stay in the micro-electronics business
altogether, or to look for a new type of development pattern elsewhere (and in doing so,
allowing in the process for a significant amount of its accumulated physical, human,
institutional, and social capital to depreciate). In the memory-chip business, for
example, this meant that Korea had to invest what it took to catch-up with Taiwan’s
breakthrough into a 16-megabyte D-Ram chip, or to leave the industry — as nobody
wanted to buy Korea’s obsolete 4-megabyte chip. That is, investing what it took to keep
exporting micro-chips, or switch to exporting potato-chips (as it were). Or even better,
instead of exporting D-Ram memory-chips, why not follow the Latin American example —
with its above-mentioned ‘low-hanging-fruit-type’ export-style — and return to the less
capital-intensive silk and seaweed, Korea's two main exports before its massive
industrialisation drive?
       In fact, what might have been an effective solution for EA as a whole was a
Keynesian-style programme of regional investment co-ordination, as what triggered the
collapse of the price of the D-Ram memory in 1995 was massive new Taiwanese
investment coming on stream at the wrong time (i.e., when prices were already
weakening due to a rapidly growing supply).
treasury bills. So, debt was very cheap, and in plentiful supply.
25
   If the 1997 crisis was so ‘unpredictable’, why were financial markets shortening their exposure
to Thailand like this?
                                                                                                 22
performing bank-assets.26 The imbalances created by the liberalisation of capital
accounts, instead of being tamed by ‘automatic stabilisers’, were amplified by automatic
‘destabilisers’ (Stiglitz, 2003). In the meantime, foreign and domestic debts exploded,
while the term structure of the foreign debt deteriorated, and the balance-sheet of the
corporate and banking sector became ever more vulnerable to currency depreciation.
This route generated so many financial fragilities that it did not take much for it to face a
sudden collapse of confidence and an abrupt withdrawal of finance, leading to major
financial crises.
        As in LA, events helping to precipitate such collapses are never in short supply,
financial crises did follow. In 1994 Mexico, for example, in just the twelve months before
the December crisis, (among other events) there was a massive indigenous uprising in
Chiapas (January); the assassination of the presidential candidate of the ruling party (the
PRI, March); a not-very-transparent presidential election (August); the assassination of
the Secretary General of the PRI (September, with the widespread belief that the
President had been involved in both assassinations); and a Central Bank that would only
release information on foreign reserves every four months (giving ‘insiders’ a huge
advantage) — and all these events, of course, providing plenty of political thrill
(Armendáriz, 2003). Basically, in DCs ‘utility maximising cum rational expectations’
agents and ‘free’ markets are a little bit more complex (and original) than the idealised
fictional constructions of mainstream models. In fact, at the end of 1994 it only took a
relatively small external shock (a tiny increase in US interest rates in November, which
produced a minor bond crisis) for the debacle to take place (Kregel, 1998; Palma,
2003a).
        In the case of Argentina, the crucial issue seems to have been the difference
between the two periods (1990-1994 and 1995-2001). During the first, it followed
mostly a ‘route-1’ path to financial crisis; in the second, it got into an endless (and
eventually futile) ‘crisis management’ mode due to its refusal to devalue and readjust
after its 1995 ‘Tequila’ crisis.27
       All these crises represented huge costs for the respective economies; in Chile, for
example, the ‘Chicago-boys’ experiment ended-up with a 20% drop in GDP (third
quarters of 1981 and 1983), with unemployment over 30%, and with the share of the
population in absolute poverty doubling to 55%. Furthermore, the cumulative cost of the
rescue of the banking system was equivalent to 43% of GDP; in addition, the
‘administrative’ cost of this rescue reached an extra 9% of GDP (Barandiarán and
Hernández, 1999; see also Díaz-Alejandro, 1984, and Palma, 1998).
        The path to financial crisis for 'route-2'-Brazil also started with a surge in inflows;
but the scene was soon dominated by the effort to avoid becoming ‘another Mexico’.
High interest rates and sterilisation were successful in avoiding a repeat of ‘route-1’, and
in consolidating price-stabilisation; but soon created massive domestic financial fragility
in the banking sector and in state-government finances, leading to an increase in public
debt through continuous (often indiscriminate and sometimes politically corrupt) private
and public banking and state-government rescue activities.28 Moreover, this public debt
exploded due to high interest rates — i.e., a public sector ‘Ponzi’ finance ballooned out of
control — while the real economy imploded because of these rates. But high interest
rates became ever more necessary in order to sustain the ‘peg’ and avoid both further
26
     Non-performing loans in Mexico's banks reached nearly 10% of GDP in 1994 (see Kregel, 1998).
27
    In 1995, Argentina’s ‘Macho-monetarist’ Finance Minister (Domingo Cavallo) called his Chilean
counterpart at the time of the 1982 crisis a ‘Sissy’ for having abandoned convertibility after the
crisis (and devalued the currency).
28
   One of these was the cost of Cardoso’s re-election. In order to get the required majority in
Parliament for constitutional change that would allow a President to run for re-election, Cardoso
offered the opposition (that held many key state governments) to exchange their huge states’ debt
for low-interest ones, and to inject capital into states’ banks. The direct cost of this operations
(US$100 billion; see Lopes, 2009, and Palma, 2006) probably made him the most expensive ‘ego’
in Brazilian political history.
                                                                                                 23
domestic banking crises due to high foreign-exchange liabilities in the financial sector,
and a stampede by edgy fund managers.29 Again, it did not take much (just one of many
of Yeltsin’s follies in 1998, and a minor internal political crisis — a state-governor
declaring moratorium on its state debt with the Central Bank — for this route to end up
in a major financial crisis.
        Finally, in 'route-3' countries, there was another massive surge in inflows leading
to an increase of private credit at low interest rates. However, this did not lead to
consumption booms, or collapses of saving — and in Korea not even to asset bubbles in
the stock market or real estate. Rather, in the context of declining profitability
(particularly the sphere of microelectronics due to collapsing prices), there was a high
(though stable) level of investment — in a world where there was competitiveness only
at the cutting-edge of a very rapidly changing technology. This ended up producing
corporate debt/equity ratios that even in this part of the world should have caused
dizziness. Added to this, Korea had same bizarre regulation that gave the corporate
sector a strong incentive to borrow abroad 'short’ (long-term borrowing had to face
significantly more red tape), and a Central Bank that seemed to have enjoyed the thrill of
living dangerously with low levels of reserves. The resulting rapid decline in the ratio of
reserves to short-term debt made Korea particularly vulnerable to events in Thailand and
Malaysia (at the time of the Thai devaluation, Korean reserves could only cover half its
short-term liabilities; in fact, they were not even enough to cover debt with 90 days
maturity or less).
         Again — and despite a stunning growth record, and fundamentals that although
not perfect were the envy of most DCs — it did not take much (international financial
markets turning their attention to south-east Asia with some trepidation due to the
return of Hong Kong to Chinese rule), for this route to also encounter a major financial
crisis.30 Basically, voracious fund managers — eager to profit from long-standing but
only precipitately acknowledged ‘peccadilloes’ (the precarious balance-sheet structure of
the Thai banking system) — had a much-delayed collapse of confidence that led to bank
runs and a major financial crises.
5.- So, how can one explain that most of the economic profession,
financial markets and the financial press still insist that these crises were
mostly ‘undeserved’ and ‘unpredictable’ (i.e., why do they insist at barking
up the wrong tree)?
It is difficult to understand the mainstream insistence that most of the blame for these
crises should lie on very specific and supposedly avoidable ‘exogenous’ issues — i.e.,
external to the spontaneous working of highly liquid financial markets. And in some
cases, just on ‘chance’. Financial markets (no matter how over-liquid they are) are
supposed to have the intrinsic ability to supply effectively the credit intermediation and
payment services that are needed for the real economy to continue on its growth path.
So, if unmanageable financial instability occurs one of two things tends to be the excuse:
either a ‘missing’ market is creating a market ‘failure’, or something ‘foreign’ is meddling
in these markets. On the whole, the second alternative tends to be favoured in the
position of culprit. In the case of Mexico, for example, most of the attention in
mainstream literature has been diverted towards a relatively expansionary macro-policy
in an election year; in Brazil, towards the political stalemate that delayed endlessly a
necessary fiscal reform (a ‘Waiting for Godot’-type story); in Korea, towards a
supposedly ‘moral-hazard driven over-investment-cum-corporate-debt’ story; and in
29
   Also, it became politically difficult to lower interest rates, as the middle classes got accustomed
to high returns on their savings.
30
  The Thai government was forced to float the baht on the 2nd of July 1997, one day after the
British transfer of Hong Kong to China.
                                                                                                    24
Thailand, towards a ‘crony-capitalist driven unbalanced-balance-sheet’ story’. In a way,
this mainstream attitude of barking up the wrong tree is no different from what
happened after the 2008 financial crisis, when the usual suspects blamed everything on
China and/or Greenspan, or pointed at ‘liberals’ for the 1977 law that helps low-income
people get mortgages. Anything would do (including the fall of the Berlin Wall, excessive
testosterone in trading rooms, or even sunspots! — see Palma, 2009a for the ‘blame
list’), except the possibility that the autonomous outcome of the free interaction of
supposedly utility-maximising agents, interacting in (excessively) ‘friendly-regulated’ and
over-liquid financial markets, could be an endogenous financial crisis (rather than some
sort of ‘equilibrium’).
        So, how can one explain this attitude from most of the economic profession,
financial markets, and the financial press? The answer to this complex question has at
least four components. The Wall Street Journal provides a good insight into the first one;
in an editorial soon after the beginning of the ‘sub-prime’ crisis it stated that: “The recent
market turmoil is [...] raising the stock of one person: a little-known economist whose
views have suddenly become very popular [...] Hyman Minsky.” (WSJ, 18 August 2007).
Perhaps had they read (and, more importantly, had they read and understood) such
obscure economists as Keynes, Minsky, Kindleberger and so many others (including
Stiglitz, and the later work of Krugman) the Wall Street Journal (otherwise known as the
Pravda of Wall Street) could have become more effective at predicting financial crises —
and at realising how ‘deserved’ they usually are. They might even have learnt how
avoidable they could become under a revamp set of FDR/Keynesian-Bretton-Woods-type
arrangements.31
         This also applies to the ‘new’ left which, when in government, often follows
extreme versions of the mainstream orthodoxy (both in developing and developed
countries). In terms of ‘friendly’ regulation of financial markets, for example, nothing
beats ‘purity of belief’ of New Labour in the form of Gordon Brown’s Financial Service
Authority (FSA). When in 1997 he created a new regulatory body for the financial
industry (the FSA), he set it up not only as an ‘independent non-governmental body’
(i.e., a company limited by guarantee), but also as one that was actually financed by the
financial services industry. Furthermore, he appointed ex-bankers as Chairman, Chief
Executive Officer and non-executive directors. That is, he set the FSA up as
operationally independent of Government, funded entirely by the financial corporations it
was supposed to regulate, and led by financial-industry insiders. Thus, New Labour
found a rather ingenious solution to the problem of ‘regulatory capture’; if, supposedly,
lobbyists inevitably succeed in capturing the regulators, why not make them the
regulators in the first place?32
        With this (‘limited-touch’) attitude towards financial regulation, perhaps it is not
surprising that at the beginning of the current financial crisis the first bank failure took
place in the UK (one year before Lehman’s Brothers) — becoming the first UK bank in
150 years to suffer a traditional bank run. In fact, in the UK the regulatory failings in the
lead up to the current financial crisis were such that for many observers it came as no
surprise that its new Chair tried to regain ‘the moral high ground’ with his speech at the
2011 annual Mansion House banquet hosted by the Lord Mayor of London (see epigraph
at the beginning of the paper).
         In fact, I sometimes wonder whether mainstream economics today is just
shorthand for ‘nothing left to decide’ — and, of course, ‘nothing left to think about
critically’ (Palma, 2009b). Indeed, the attitude of many mainstream economists towards
policy-making (before and after the current crisis) resembles Lord Kelvin’s attitude
towards physics at the end of the 19th century, when he famously declared that in
physics “there is nothing new to be discovered now. All that remains is more and more
31
     See, for example, Epstein and Pollin (2011).
32
   Probably this is what Brown meant when he famously declared that his policy on financial
regulation was “... not just a light touch, but a limited touch one” (see http://www.cbi.org.uk/
ndbs/press.nsf/0363c1f07c6ca12a8025671c00381cc7/ee59d1c32ce4ec12802570c70041152c?).
                                                                                                   25
precise measurement.” (Kelvin, 1900) From this perspective, the incapacity of
mainstream economists to consider alternative points of view is such that even the so-
called ‘New Keynesians’ still work within a ‘complete markets’ paradigm, and with the
strongest version of the efficient-markets hypothesis (Buiter, 2009).
        Along this line, perhaps the most amusing definition by a mainstream economist
of what ‘heterodox economics’ is all about is found in a Working Paper of the Chilean
Central Bank (that analyses the post-1982 banking crisis in Chile); according to the
authors, “[t]he Chilean solution to the crisis was heterodox in the sense that many
policies appear to have been arbitrary, and policy mistakes were made [..] along the
way.” (Barandiarán and Hernández, 1999). This attitude towards alternative points of
view can only be explained by the usual dynamics of idealisation: when there is an
unremitting need to sustain the idealisation of something (in this case, that of a
remarkably simplistic view of markets in the face of so much evidence against it the form
of recurring ‘endogenous’ financial crises), what is needed is simultaneously to demonise
something else (in this case, anything to do with alternative views). In fact, the more
evident the flaws of what is being idealised, the stronger the demonisation of the
alternative view has to be.33
        Second, another (closely related) part of the answer to the above question is that
in LA, as in most of the Anglo-American world, economic reforms were carried out with a
peculiar political ideology — what I like to call the ‘Anglo-Iberian’ neo-liberal
fundamentalism — where ‘toxic ideas’ were as damaging as ‘toxic assets’ in the lead up
to the many financial crises discussed in this paper.34 A case in point is Gustavo Franco,
the President of the Brazilian Central Bank who led Brazil into the 1999 financial crisis;
for him, "[the alternative for Brazilians today] is to be neo-liberal or neo-idiotic [neo-
burros].” (Veja, 15 November 1996). And, of course, “burros” (and ‘obscure’
economists, such as Minsky) belong in intellectual Gulags. In fact, for Franco, his main
task in government was to help “...undo forty years of stupidity.”35 With this Anglo-
Iberian ‘reverse-gear’ attitude, LA’s experiment in economic reform and financial
liberalisation almost inevitably ended up as an exercise in ‘not-very-creative’ destruction.
        This reminds me of what Keynes once said (discussing Say’s Law) about Ricardo
conquering England as completely as the Holy Inquisition conquered Spain. Something
similar has happened in LA, where neo-liberalism has conquered the region, including
many in its left-wing intelligentsia, just as fiercely as the Holy Inquisition conquered
Spain. In fact, this process has been so successful that it has actually had the effect of
‘closing the imagination’ to conceptualising alternatives.
        Third, another part of the answer to the above question is the way in which many
within mainstream economics, international financial markets and the financial press
have interpreted economic news along the cycles that have led to a financial crisis.
Following Steiner’s (1993) psychoanalytical understanding of the difficulties of the
human mind to recognise reality when faced with particularly complex and emotionally
charged problems — and of its failure to live with them, and suffer their consequences —
I distinguish three stages in the ‘problem (or bad news)-awareness’ cycle: an initial ‘lack-
of-awareness’ phase, which is eventually followed by a (short-lived) ‘sudden-awareness’
stage, and then by a ‘new form of lack-of-problem-awareness’ scenario. In the first
(mania) phase of each financial cycle, which could be called the initial ‘turning-a-blind-
eye’ stage, good news is often overstated and bad news simply ignored. And if
eventually some bad news can no longer be ignored (e.g., in the current crisis, when in
August 2007 HSBC announced increased provisions for non-performing sub-prime
mortgages), this is reluctantly acknowledged but in the clear understanding that
33
     For an analysis of the process of idealisation, see Sodré (2009).
34
   In fact, we now know that Greenspan was even against tightening regulation against financial
fraud, as (supposedly) rational markets can take care of themselves in this front as well. (http://
www.dailykos.com/ story/2009/3/27/172419/727)
35
   For Keynes, instead, the opening-up of an economy “... should not be a matter of tearing up
roots but of slowly training a plant to grow in a different direction.” (1933; 759)
                                                                                                  26
‘everything is still under control’ — even though most of the pieces of the crisis-puzzle
are (or should be) already evident (see, for example, Figure 1).
        The second stage of the ‘bad-news-awareness’ cycle comes to the fore when a
catastrophic event suddenly reveals what so far has been denied (e.g., in the current
cycle, Lehman’s demise) — and reality sets in. Now there is an abrupt turn towards total
panic, to total dismay. Suddenly, bad news is felt as devastating (and sometimes is even
exaggerated) and everybody seems completely overwhelmed by the catastrophe.
According to Greenspan, for example, this happened to him after Lehman’s, and his
reaction was one of ‘shocked disbelief’; he then famously acknowledged to a
Congressional Committee that what he found was nothing short of “...a flaw in my
economic ideology — in the conceptual framework with which I dealt with reality.” And
he was “...very distressed by that fact.” And when asked “[i]n other words, you found
that your view of the world, your ideology, was not right, it was not working?” He replied
“[yes] — precisely. That's precisely the reason I was shocked, because I had been going
for 40 years or more [...] [with the idea that my view of the world] was working
exceptionally well.” (http://www.pbs.org/ newshour/bb/business/july-dec08/crisishearing
_10-23.html)
         However, this second stage in the ‘problem-awareness cycle’ seems to be short-
lived because it is often followed by a further twist (at the time of writing, what is
currently going on in the global financial crisis). Basically, soon after the ‘sudden-
awareness’ stage there is a turn towards a new form of ‘lack-of-awareness’ — a retreat
from the (unbearable) shock into a new form of omnipotence. In a nutshell, the extent
of the crash and its (ideological and analytical) repercussions are so devastating that
they cannot any longer be acknowledged. When in the second stage ‘truth’ is
recognised, it is found to be unbearable. Its sustainable recognition would involve a loss
of what kept us going, and the mourning of this loss is too difficult. So, the ‘shocked
disbelief’ begins to fizzle out, and reality begins to be evaded, misrepresented, distorted
and covered up in a new ‘lack-of-awareness’ scenario. The most important issue here is
that (very conveniently) it is as if nothing needs to be properly mourned — especially the
economic ideology responsible for the crisis (the ‘toxic ideas’ that lead to the financial
crises). After all, the current global financial crisis is (or should be) to the grandiose
Reagan & Thatcher neo-liberal counter-reformation, what the fall of the Berlin Wall was
to the Communist paradigm. Only a new form of ‘lack of awareness’ can help avoid this.
This new attitude can best be described as “actually, I can take all this on my chin; no
need to have my economic ideology knocked down.” In any case, this must be the fault
of the ‘usual (and more familiar, and less threatening) suspects’! That is, in order to
sustain the status quo after the crash there is a new need to cover up, evade and distort.
So, the focus of attention quickly (and conveniently) switched from the distressing idea
of the self-destructive nature of unregulated and over-liquid financial markets, to the
more familiar terrain of problems relating to China (how could it not be China!), labour
‘rigidities’, uncontrolled immigration, excessive regulation, and (for sure) ‘big
government’.36 And in the UK, of course, the European Union! ‘Shocked disbelief’?
36
   In terms of distortions of reality and cover-ups to keep the status quo, few beat New York City
mayor and media tycoon Michael Bloomberg when he criticised the ‘occupy-Wall-Street’ protesters
because their complaints were ‘misplaced’: “...some of [their] complaints [...] are totally
unfounded. It was not the banks that created the mortgage crisis. It was, plain and simple,
Congress who forced everybody to go and give mortgages to people who were on the cusp (sic.).”
(http://www.outsidethebeltway.com/bloomberg-dont-blame-banks-for-mortgage-crisis/). I wonder
who is the one barking up the wrong tree, as FED data now shows conclusively that it was private
mortgage brokers, not Fannie and Freddie, who created the subprime housing bubble. In fact, “the
predominant players in the subprime market — mortgage brokers, mortgage companies and the
Wall Street investment banks that provided the financing — aren’t covered under CRA [the 1997-
Community Reinvestment Act]. [...]. In all, 94 percent of high-cost loans were totally unconnected
from government homeownership laws.” (http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2011/11/01/358482/
bloomberg-mortgage-crisis/).
        Also, Steve Forbes (the Chairman of Forbes Media and a former Republican candidate for
President) argued along the same lines — that the causes of the financial crisis are simple: “over-
                                                                                                  27
What ‘shocked disbelief’?
        In other words, first, if until the ‘shocked disbelief’ those involved (politicians,
mainstream academics, financial markets and financial press) are unable to acknowledge
the existence of a fundamental problem, why is anybody going to fix it? And if after the
shock the new urgency is about moving away from the unbearable awareness, and into a
new (omnipotent) phase in which the main concern is not the further revelation of truth,
but the cover up of truth, what is the hope for a proper understanding? The key issue
here seems to be the difficulty (perhaps impossibility?) for those involved in creating the
economic environment that led to the crisis of sustaining their full awareness of what has
happened. For example, although many things have already been said regarding the
speed, the size, and the nature of the rescue operations after each financial crisis
(including the urgent need to stop the rot, as well as old-boys’ networks at work,
corruption and so on), perhaps an additional component of these rescue operations
(particularly their urgency) is that they are a fundamental component of the ‘cover up’.
When Clinton quickly intervened after the Mexican crisis with his more than $70 billion
rescue package (in 2010-US$), he was not just saving his mates from Wall Street (who
had been caught badly exposed in Mexico); most probably, he was also trying to turn the
page as quickly as possible — so that one could turn a blind eye to the evidence
emerging from that crisis regarding the risks associated with full financial liberalisation
(especially of the capital account) in middle-income countries. The same happened with
the massive IMF intervention in Brazil and East Asia. And in the case of Chile, when the
government was happy to spend more than 50% of GDP rescuing the banking system
after the 1982 crisis, and when most governments in industrialised countries were all too
happy to shower financial markets with trillions of dollars following Lehman’s downfall —
bringing the concept of a ‘soft budget constraint’ to a totally new dimension — perhaps
(among other things) they were also trying to cover up quickly their unbearable ‘shocked
disbelief’. And, inevitably, some eternally optimistic Keynesians were bound to mistake
the soft budget constraint for a “...vast, Keynesian, fiscal stimuli [...]” (http://www.
guardian.co.uk/business/2009/jan/18/economic-depression). That is, instead of being
part of a cover up, keeping financial dinosaurs on life support was definite evidence that
‘we are all Keynesian again’!
       Moreover, in the case of the seven financial crises in middle-income DCs discussed
above, as opposed to the current global financial crisis, the relatively rapid recovery of
the economies involved greatly helped the cover up. In fact, perhaps Argentina is the
only country of the ones discussed above where (despite the rapid recovery) there was at
least an effort to learn from the pre-crisis mistakes.
        Also, often the cover up extends to personal responsibility. A clear example is
that of Larry Summers who, as Clinton’s Treasury Secretary, led the financial de-
regulation brigade that created the conditions under which financial sanity was left to
depend entirely on ‘self-regulation’ and ‘market discipline’. Summers, for example, led
the repeal of the 1933 Glass–Steagall Act, and he also vehemently opposed the
regulation of derivative contracts. And then, nearly a decade later, as Obama’s Director
of the National Economic Council, he had the task to undo a mess that to an important
extent was his creation. So, it should probably come as no surprise that when he
devised Obama’s (so-called) ‘fiscal stimulus’ plan, almost all funds were diverted to keep
financial relics afloat (and save his own tarnished reputation) rather than to create a
proper fiscal stimulus on output and employment.37 Furthermore, when he was asked
sized government and over-burdensome regulation.” Therefore, not only “the protesters should be
occupying Congress and not Wall Street”; but also the solution to the financial crisis is
straightforward: “If we shrank the government and got our fiscal house in order […] inequality and
joblessness that is fuelling the social frustration would begin to ease of its own accord.” (http://
finance.yahoo.com/blogs/daily-ticker/steve-forbes-wall-street-protesters-occupy-congress-instead-
182232426.html?l=1).
37
   Six months into Obama’s ‘stimulus plan’, while over a trillion dollars had been spent (or
committed) on subsidising financial markets — together with the defence sector, the leading
welfare recipients in the country — less than 1% had actually been made available for highway and
                                                                                                 28
about the collapse of A.I.G. Summers’ response was typical of this third stage in the
‘awareness/lack-of-awareness’ cycle. He answered: “[t]here are a lot of terrible things
that have happened in the last eighteen months, but what's happened at A.I.G. [...] the
way it was not regulated, the way no one was watching [...] is outrageous." (http://
www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/nickrobinson/2011/04/i_told _you_so.html).
        Could it be that this is the same Summers who in 1998, in his testimony before
Congress, had argued against the regulation of all types of derivative contracts (including
A.I.G.’s credit default swaps), because “[t]he parties to these kinds of contract are
largely sophisticated financial institutions that would appear to be eminently capable of
protecting themselves from fraud and counterparty insolvencies. [...] To date there has
been no clear evidence of a need for additional regulation of the institutional OTC
derivatives market, and we would submit that proponents of such regulation [i.e.,
Brooksley Born, the chairperson of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, who
became strongly in favour of regulation in derivative markets after the LTCM debacle]
must bear the burden of demonstrating that need." (Ibid.) Some would argue that
Summers’ ‘outrage’ at the lack of regulation in derivative markets was just sheer
hypocrisy, but I would not be at all surprised if by then he had basically lost touch with
his own past, and he actually believed what he was saying.
         Moreover, in this latter, post-crash, stage (as is often the case in this phase of the
‘awareness-cycle’), typically a new narrative of each crisis begins to emerge in which
‘chance’ is often used as a (convenient) validation of the new turning of a blind eye.
Again, Greenspan provides an example; after having acknowledged the dreadfulness of
his initial ‘shocked disbelief’, and the major flaw in his economic ideology, he soon began
to argue that, after all, the 2008 crisis might well have been a ‘one-in-a-hundred-year’
event. That is, it was still possible that the crisis was undeserved and unpredictable after
all. Even if everything was pointing in the opposite direction, there was still a chance
that it was a fortuitous event. In the same spirit, in most analyses of the 1997 East
Asian crisis (especially in third-generation models), the fundamental ex post assumption
is that this crisis started with a bank-run that occurred in Thailand by chance — financial
markets turning their attention to south-east Asia with some trepidation due to the
British transfer of Hong Kong to China (Chang and Velasco, 2001). In turn, second
generation models want us to believe that the ERM crisis in the UK was just a ‘self-
fulfilling’ shock in an economy that was fundamentally sound — speculators who believe
(rightly or wrongly) that other speculators were about to attack, were themselves
encouraged to do so. The same happened in the 1998 Brazilian crisis; it was all
supposed to be bad luck: contagion from unrelated events far away — literally, at the
other end of the world (in Asia and Russia). And in the case of Korea, the crises
supposedly occurred due to a random event: a sudden flight of capital from another
economy that was also fundamentally sound. And so on (see Appendix 1). After all,
Sophocles had already warned us a long time ago (via one of his characters) that “our
mortal life is ruled by chance. There is no such thing as foreknowledge” (quoted in
Steiner, 1993).
       However, as Žižek explains,
       Repetition, according to Hegel, plays a crucial role in history: when something happens just
       once, it may be dismissed as an accident, something that might have been avoided if the
       situation had been handled differently; but when the same event repeats itself, it is a sign
       that a deeper historical process is unfolding. [...] The same holds for [...] financial crises.
       (2011; 1)
Therefore, the convenient use of the idea of ‘chance’ helps preserve the status quo. This
‘cover up’ makes it possible to continue living in the phantasy world of the supremacy of
unregulated ‘free’ markets. The key point here is that if after the shock (and the
unbearable awareness) the new urgency is not about the further revelation of truth, but
the cover up of truth, there is little hope for a proper understanding.
The other is a more complex (and usually forgotten) aspect to this phenomenon.
Basically, in their eagerness to support the process of economic reform in LA, those
associated with the Washington Consensus somehow succeeded in turning a blind eye to
the Russian-style, predatory nature of these reforms, especially the process of
privatisation. In fact, it is quite remarkable how in these circles what was going on in
this respect was basically ignored — from the ‘Chicago-Boys’ in Chile dismantling the
huge state apparatus for their own benefit (Mönckeberg, 2001), to Salinas’ privatisation
extravaganza — where one privatisation alone (a telephone company) made one
individual (practically overnight) the fourth largest billionaire in the world (he then began
his rapid ascent to become the World’s number one).38 In fact, probably never in the
history of the region success or failure in business has depended so much on political
connections as during the first stages of the neo-liberal era. All this gives Marx’s concept
of ‘primitive accumulation’ a new meaning. And despite Menem having run a
privatisation circus no different from Salinas’, as late as 1998 (i.e., when the Argentinian
38
    See especially Wolf (2007), and Winter (2007). As if that was not enough, Salinas handed over
to Telmex exclusivity in Mexico’s fixed-line market — when one of the most repeated aims of
privatisation was, supposedly, to encourage competition. And this has continued afterwards —
Fox, for example, appointed someone from Telmex as his Minister for Telecommunications. In fact,
despite several adverse WTO rulings, Slim still has over a 90% share of the Mexican telephone
market. Not surprisingly, in the latest OECD report on broadband download speed (reported
above), Mexico (accompanied by Chile) had the slowest internet service among all its members
(with less than 10% the OECD average). In all, Slim’s share of the Mexican telecommunications
market is much larger than the combined one of AT&T, MCI, Quest, Sprint, and Verizon in the US
(Winter 2007). Furthermore, for a US citizen to have the same share of the US economy as Slim
has of Mexico’s, she or he would have to own assets of about US$1 trillion. (Ibid.) According to
Forbes, this is more that the combined fortune of the top 100 US billionaires (http://www.forbes.
com/forbes-400/list/). And Slim is not alone; according to a recent study (quoted in Winter,
2007), of the top 10 Mexicans on Forbes’ billionaires list in 2011 (with a total net worth of US$124
billion, about five times the US$25 billion that Mexican Forbes oligarchs had in 2000), half of them
are ‘creatures of the State’. Basically, they got there a-la Douglas North’s ‘limited access order’ —
as they first jumped from the millions to the billions thanks to a process of privatisation which was
obscure even for the remarkably low standards of other privatisations in the region.
                                                                                                   30
economy was already at the edge of the abyss), in the annual meeting of the IMF and the
World Bank Michel Camdessu (then Head of the IMF) still introduced Menem as ‘the
President with the best economic polices in the world’ — which is rather like praising Al
Capone for the orthodoxy of the business model in his beverages venture...
        And by opting for such a blatant ‘turning a blind eye’ to corruption and
mismanagement, those associated to the Washington Consensus became unable to have
a clear vision (let alone the capacity for critical analysis) of other aspects of the process
of reform — which were also contributing in bringing these economies to their respective
financial crises. In other words, by turning a blind eye to the region’s worst ever
‘government failures’ their analytical judgement was also impeded in relation to the
understanding of the huge ‘market failures’ unfolding in front of their eyes. Under these
circumstances, all that mainstream academics and the financial press could do ex ante-
crash was to keep repeating the traditional narrative of the desirability of the reforms
(i.e., how they were the necessary and practically the sufficient conditions for economic
success). And in the ex post-crash ‘lack-of-awareness phase’, instead of looking at the
key lessons emerging from these financial crises (see conclusions), all they could do was
to come up with such uncontroversial recommendations as ‘optimal sequences’, or
(surprise, surprise) the need for ‘good governance’. That is, mainstream economists
slowly began to recommend supposedly optimal policies for closing the stable gates only
well after all the horses had bolted...
Conclusions
So, the moral of the story of the ‘three routes’ during the second cycle of capital inflows
(from ‘Brady-bonds’ to the Argentinian 2001/2002-crisis) is that no matter how middle-
income DCs that have opened up their capital account fully have tried to handle the
absorption of the sudden surges of inflows that usually follows, they have ended up in a
major financial crisis. And regarding the current third cycle, the jury is still out in terms
of both how long the current unprecedented amount of inflows and favourable terms of
trade would last, and on the nature of the (inevitable) ‘correction’ — no prizes for
guessing where my money would be (Palma, 2011a).
        To give an indication of the extent of the likely ‘correction’ ahead, although LA’s
current account deficits in 2010 stood at only 1.1% of GDP, had the terms of trade been
those of 2003 (the year before the commodity-price-boom), this deficit would have
jumped to 4.9% (Ocampo, 2011). Furthermore, this figure is particularly high for those
countries that benefited most from the commodity-boom. Chile’s pre-global-financial-
crash current account surplus, for example (4.5% of GDP in 2007), would have
deteriorated by no less than 19 percentage points of GDP (to a deficit of 14.4% of GDP)
if 2003-terms-of-trade-terms had applied. Corresponding figures for 2010 were a
surplus of 1.9% vs. a deficit of 15.5%! In other words, at the time of writing LA not only
had already adjusted fully to its new terms of trade and abundance of inflows (as if these
were a permanent state of affairs), but it has done so mostly via increased consumption.
Therefore, if its terms of trade were to return to its pre-commodity-boom levels, or if the
current levels of inflows were to reverse drastically (both events entirely likely), the
domestic adjustment needed in many countries would be no different from that of the
1982-debt-crisis (or worse). And if both adjustments were to take place simultaneously,
it could be like Greece but without German taxpayers. In other words, the post-2003
commodity-price-cum-inflows-led recovery is so fragile that candles should be lit for
speculators continuing to believe commodities to be the sole remaining one-way-bet, and
that China and India continue their (forced) march towards their rightful place under the
sun.
       Of course, with hindsight, one can always think of hypothetical ways in which the
worst excesses in each route could have been avoided, but the fact is that surges in
inflows into economies with newly open capital accounts have created such pro-cyclical
dynamics and risk accumulation that they have proved extraordinarily difficult to absorb.
And as Brazil has shown, desperate attempts to deal with the open capital
                                                                                            31
account/inflow-problem via sterilisation and ‘tough’ monetary policies, instead of helping
to avoid a financial crisis, it just changes the nature of the crisis. As mentioned above,
the paradox of Brazil’s ‘route-2’ is that it created a financial crisis by trying to avoid one!
In all probability, ‘first-best’ capital controls (i.e., an attempt to deal with the problem at
source) could have been a much more effective way forward.39
        All of the above makes it difficult to understand the direction followed by
mainstream literature on financial crises. As is well known, in financial literature ‘second
generation’ crises are supposed to be harmless to the real economy (i.e., a purely
monetary phenomenon), as well as undeserved and unpredictable. And those of the
‘third generation’ are again supposed to be undeserved and unpredictable; however, this
time they can have a major impact on output and employment due to large currency
depreciation causing havoc with corporate balance sheets (see Appendix 1). From this
perspective, one of the main points of this paper is to show that all three routes, but
especially ‘1’ and ‘2’, have little to do with this ‘undeserved’ and ‘unpredictable’ scenario.
Rather, what these countries had were truly deserved and fairly predictable financial
crises.40 The financial fragilities of ‘route-3’ are more intricate, but only Malaysia could
possibly argue that its crisis was, to a certain extent, ‘undeserved’ (i.e., mostly
contagion; see Ocampo and Palma, 2007).
         The end result of all of the above (and in particular the four issues discussed in
Section 5) is that mainstream crises-literature has ended up paying little attention to
(what I believe are) the four main issues surrounding financial crises in DCs with open
capital accounts: i) Why is it that the incentive mechanisms and resource allocation
dynamics of ‘friendly-regulated’ domestic financial and asset markets have failed so badly
under the pressure of surges in inflows (and the resulting abundance of liquidity) by
purely endogenous reasons? As a result, otherwise ‘utility-maximising’ agents operating
in ‘light-touch’ regulated financial markets have ended up accumulating more risk than
was privately, let alone socially, efficient. This excessive amount of risk has become
evident in the alternate phase of the cycle, that of the sudden-stop in external
financing.41 ii) Why is it that some basic adjustment mechanisms — such as relative
price adjustments (e.g., real exchange rates) — have also failed badly when faced with
such sharp changes in external and domestic liquidity? Instead of helping to bring these
economies back to a sustainable growth path, these adjustment mechanisms have
tended to augment the cycle (no ‘self-adjusting’ equilibria here). As mentioned above,
the imbalances created by the liberalisation of capital accounts and inflow-booms, instead
of being tamed by ‘automatic stabilisers’ have been amplified by automatic ‘destabilisers’.
iii), Why is it that in financially-liberalised economies market forces have often pushed
governments and central banks into pro-cyclical policies (and politics!) rather than into
counter-cyclical ones? And iv) as the successful Chilean and Colombian experiences with
capital controls in the 1990s show, there is a clear rôle for ‘proactive agency’ (e.g., public
policy and regulation) in order to counteract the pro-cyclical dynamics of open capital
accounts — and of financial liberalisation in general. In fact, mainstream economics
aversion to them (‘any intervention would simply make things worse’-type attitude)
resembles what a Chilean President famously said at the beginning of the 20th Century:
“In life there are two types of problems, those that will get solved by themselves, and
39
    Despite its 1998/99 financial crisis, Brazil has continued with many of its ‘route-2’ policies,
leading to a situation in which the current cost of sterilisation has reached a level well above US$50
billion a year — not least because its recent taxes on inflows (only applied in the heat of a
presidential campaign in which the official candidate was not doing very well) are so porous that
speculators only have to pay them if they have a bad accountant. This is perhaps not surprising,
because for the Brazilian government to have forced the current Central Bank to implement capital
controls is equivalent to having forced a vegetarian to manage a butcher-shop.
40
   For a prediction of the Mexican crisis, see TDR (1994). For that of Brazil, see Palma (1998).
For a pre-crisis warning on East Asia’s growing financial fragilities, see BIS (1997); and for one of
the current crisis, see Rajan (2005).
41
 For Kindleberger (2000), there is one thing international financial markets can do that is even
more damaging for DCs than ‘over-lending’: to halt that lending abruptly.
                                                                                                    32
those that have no solution” (see Palma, 2009b). The contemporary mainstream version
of this (‘market-submissive’, and rather unambitious) world-view is that now in financial
markets there are only two types of problems: those that markets can be solved by
themselves (helped by more liberalisation), and those that have no solution.”
        My main argument in this paper is that the fundamental explanation of these
crises points not just to a major ‘market failure’, but to a systemic market failure:
evidence suggests that some financial crises, as those studied here, are basically the
spontaneous outcome of actions by supposedly utility-maximising cum ‘rational’
expectations agents, freely operating in ‘light-touch’ regulated, over-liquid financial
markets.
        One issue here is that financial markets, (as opposed to many other markets),
invariably have had the capacity to clear regardless of their amount of liquidity. And
they do so only partially by reducing charges, margins and spreads to traditional
customers; they also do so by opening-up new ‘outlets’ for that liquidity (in which they
actually do the opposite). That is, they did not only opened-up a new sub-prime ‘outlet’,
but after a short ‘teaser’ period, sub-prime mortgages usually became two to three times
more expensive than normal mortgages.
         The issue here is that only when financial markets operate as a ‘sellers markets’
(i.e., relative shortage of liquidity), they can unload their liquidity without accumulating
an amount of risk that is privately — let alone socially — inefficient. But when excess
liquidity turns them into a ‘buyers markets’, the process of ‘clearing’ invariably leads to
the opposite environment, as they have to create (i.e., literally invent) a sufficient level
of demand for that liquidity (no matter what). In extreme cases, any new demand would
do — even people with ‘no income, no job, and no assets’, as the famous ‘NINJA’
mortgage in the recent sub-prime debacle, when financial markets under the pressure of
having to clear excess liquidity (and after having exhausted every possible alternative,
and independently from the 1977-Community Reinvestment Act), change their business-
motto to ‘Redlining is no more’! That is, when financial markets began a process known
as ‘reverse redlining’ — i.e., when lenders and insurers begin to target specifically those
consumers that had been previously denied those services altogether (consumers that
had been previously part of redliners’ blacklists).
        And in order to create new ‘outlets’ for their liquidity, financial markets usually
follow an age-old device: they lower their operational standards, and they reduce the
transaction costs of this liquidity (a signature would do). Also, as the current Chair of the
FSA recently stated at the annual Mansion House banquet (quoted above), “swollen
financial markets” tend to produce "socially useless products and innovations, including a
number of derivatives and hedging products, and aspects of the asset management
industry and equity trading. [So] markets are not always wise”
(http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/ab724158-a7a2-11de-b0ee-00144feabdc0.html#axzz1eU
zyS4Yq). And yet another traditional clearing mechanism by ‘swollen’ financial markets
(especially relevant for the subject of this paper) is the re-discovery of emerging markets
— as mentioned above, for international financial markets DCs have traditionally played a
‘customer of last resort’ rôle (e.g., in the 1820s, 1860s, 1920s, 1970s and 2000s.42
        Another crucial component in the dynamics leading to the creation of the
necessary clearing levels of demand has been emphasised by Kindleberger (2000): a
sudden access to easy credit invariably leads to a surge in expectations and animal
spirits. This process then reinforces itself, becoming yet another self-fulfilling prophesy.
Easy access to cheap credit fuels the expectations of future performance — a
performance that is enhanced by the additional expenditure brought about by the extra
borrowing. ‘Over-lending’ and ‘over-borrowing’ became therefore not only the result of a
closely interrelated process, but also one that had a clear direction of causality: the
propensity to ‘over-lend’ led to the propensity to ‘over-borrow.’
         In other words, markets as a whole are not always right — indeed, in the case of
42
     For how this connects to the technology cycle, see Pérez (2002).
                                                                                          33
financial markets they can be seriously wrong as a whole. For example, in the financial
crises analysed in this paper there is plenty of evidence that over-liquid and ‘light-
touched’-regulated financial markets can be driven by buyers who take little notice of
underlying values — i.e., when investors have incentives to interpret information in a
biased fashion in a systematic way. At the same time, as LTCM learnt the hard way (one
year after its founder wining the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics), high liquidity can
easily make assets that appeared to belong to independent clusters in the past to
become correlated — so, diversification against those clusters cannot provide sufficient
‘staying power’ anymore. Also, as the recent collapse of ‘MF Global’ (and its ‘missing’
customer funds) indicate — a collapse brought about by an over-reliance on short-term
funding, which dried up as revelations of its leveraged bets on European sovereign debt
came to light — the capacity of agents operating in unregulated financial market to learn
from previous mistakes seem rather limited. For Keynes, perhaps, this would not come
as a surprise; according to Deane,
       “[t]he iconoclastic conclusion of [Keynes’] analysis was that there was no invisible hand
       translating private self-interests into social benefit. This was the nub of the Keynesian
       heresy.” (1980, 182)
43
   An analogy in ethics would be in the difference between emphasising the external observance of
laws and precepts, and emphasising the ultimate principles underlying moral conduct.
44
    In a seminar on the subject, the speaker concluded that investment banks should have more
‘balanced’ trading teams in terms of age and gender (to avoid excessive risk-taking at the wrong
time by the usual testosterone-abundant young-male brigades). However, I argued that if that
was the problem maybe a more efficient trading strategy would be to play like in American football,
and alternate the trading teams according to the circumstances — sending a ‘defensive formation’
to the trading floor (i.e., with an appropriate age and gender structure) when a more cautious
strategy is required, and an ‘offensive’ (testosterone-plentiful) one only when the opposite strategy
is more likely to yield higher returns...
                                                                                                   35
        Needless to say, a fundamental part of this task is to turn Lucas’ famous ‘residue
of things’ upside-down — according to him (see epigraph at the beginning of the paper),
        “The problem that the new theories, the theories embedded in general equilibrium
        dynamics of the sort that we know how to use pretty well now — there's a residue of things
        they don't let us think about. They don't let us think about the U.S. experience in the
        1930s, or about financial crises and their real consequences in Asian and Latin America,
        they don't let us think very well about Japan in the 1990s.” (Lucas, 2004; 23)
That is, part of the task ahead is about transforming these ‘odd things’ that mainstream
economics sees as ‘residue’ — including, of course, the current global financial crisis —
into the events which form part of the corner-stone of our analytical thinking on how
financial markets actually work in the real world.45
        However, given the complex current political and economic environment, to be
able to think again about these complex theoretical ‘things’ one has to deal with at least
two main risks. One is that unless the above ‘re-thinking’ is done with a purpose,
heterodox economics runs the risk that its discourse could be overcome by ‘the
narcissism of lost causes.’ That is, sometimes it’s just too easy to admire the sublime
beauty of critical reason doomed to be marginalised. The other risk, of course, is (in a
sense) the opposite: it is also too easy to avoid marginalisation by quitting critical
thinking, and absorbing the fundamentals of the alternative hegemonic (mainstream)
paradigm — ending up with a ‘prudent’ discourse made of scepticism cum a progressive
social substance (although with the latter in the area of ‘diminishing returns’ — a-la-‘new’
left?). The problem with critical thinking, of course, is that it is a distancing, even
debilitating, activity. It distances us from conventions, from established assumptions
and from settled beliefs. It takes what we know from familiar, unquestioned settings and
makes it strange. And it does so not necessarily by supplying new information, but by
inviting and provoking a new way of seeing. Therefore, a key challenge ahead for
heterodox economics is how to steer a course that avoids both types of evasion: that of
the beauty of the ‘lost-cause’, and that of prudent ‘uncritical’ thinking — not least
because when reality is evaded, it is also bound to be distorted and misrepresented.
45
   Charles Kindleberger used to say that when economists run time series in which dummies are
used to account for ‘special’ events, more often than not the only analytically interesting thing in
the whole regression is what happened in those events accounted for by dummies.
                                                                                                       36
Appendix 1
The main issue behind the existence of ‘generation-models’ of financial crises is that mainstream
economics cannot accept the possibility that the autonomous outcome of the free interaction of
supposedly utility-maximising cum ‘rational’ expectations agents, interacting in (excessively)
‘friendly-regulated’ financial markets, could be an endogenous financial crisis. The outcome of the
above could only be some sort of ‘equilibrium’; this may well be a ‘sub-optimal’ one, but it has to
be an equilibrium of sorts. From this point of view, a financial ‘crisis’ proper can only take place if
there is some kind of interference in the incentive mechanisms and/or resource allocation dynamics
of financial markets. Examples of the latter are lax fiscal discipline, fixed exchange rates with a
wrong peg, central bankers/finance ministers unwilling to take tough action when necessary, self-
fulfilling loops (e.g., bank runs), and so on.46 As these ‘interferences’ vary from one crisis to
another, their models can only be developed after the event.
        The so-called ‘first generation’ models tried to explain the currency crises in the US in the
early 1970s. Presidents Johnson and Nixon followed inconsistent macroeconomic policies:
persistent deficits with a fixed exchange rate peg. So, the US got the crisis it deserved — Nixon
run out of reserves. This was an inevitable outcome (given the policies); and its timing was fairly
predictable. Finally, ‘first-generation’ crises seem to do no harm, as they only reveal an economic
problem that was there in the first place.
        The inspiration for second-generation modelling was the speculative attack on the
European fixed-exchange currency system (ERM), which started with the run on the Pound Sterling
in 1992. The UK had entered the ERM in October 1990, but was forced to exit in 1992 when its
currency came under major pressure from speculators. There were several obvious differences
between the UK 1992-crisis and the assumptions of ‘first-generation’ models. Seignorage was not
the issue, but the willingness of the British government to defend the peg; as many considered
that the pound sterling had entered the ERM at an overvalued rate, the British government had to
show that it would do what it took to defend that peg. Therefore, the crisis took place not because
the government run out of reserves (as in the US); the abandonment of the peg was a matter of
policy choice: in 1992 the British Chancellor chose not to pay the price for defending the peg
(higher interest rates), while French officials made the opposite decision a year later (when it was
the turn of the Franc to come under attack). So, ‘second generation’ models are about an
imperfect commitment to a currency peg. When the peg ceases to be credible, investors will
demand higher interest rates in order to hold assets denominated in the country’s currency. As
macroeconomic polices before the crisis are not irresponsible, crises are not ‘deserved’; neither are
they ‘predictable’, as their nature is mostly about chance — i.e., ‘self-fulfilling’ crises of confidence
in which speculators who believe that other speculators are about to attack are themselves
encouraged to do so. As everything is about forcing a currency off its peg, there is no reason for a
negative shock on output or employment. In fact, as a result of the crisis an artificial policy
constraint is removed (the peg), its impact could well be positive.
         Finally, as the latter was clearly not the case in 1997-East Asia, ‘third-generation’ models
try to explain why abandoning a peg could be at times so harmful to output and employment.
There are several narratives. One is the ‘moral-hazard-driven’ investment-booms creating
excessive external debt; others are open-economy versions of bank-runs (crises occur due to a
sudden flight of capital from economies that were not fundamentally unsound); finally, a third story
stresses the balance-sheet implications of currency depreciation. At the end, the most common
narrative mixed several of the above issues: problems began due to moral-hazard-driven bubbles,
which were followed by balance-sheet driven crises when the bubbles burst. Therefore, in ‘third-
generation’ models crises become harmful because they are no longer about problems with
monetary policy. Basically, they are also about chance: something — as Krugman (2001) says, it
could be almost anything — causing a sudden large currency depreciation; and this depreciation
creating havoc with balance sheets. On their liability side, if the price of foreign exchange suddenly
rises, and firms have substantial foreign currency debts, their net worth falls. And on the asset
side of balance sheets, the story is one of a decline in confidence leading to a fall in asset prices,
which leads to a fall in investment that validates both the decline in asset prices and the fall in
confidence. The economy thus plunges into a crisis in the real economy on both accounts.
In sum, in first-generation models scenarios crises are supposed to be ‘deserved’ and predictable,
but not harmful to the real economy. In second-generation ones, instead, crises are ‘undeserved’
and unpredictable, but still not harmful. Finally, in third-generation scenarios, financial crises are
again ‘undeserved’ and unpredictable, but this time they are instead harmful (as they are not just
about problems with monetary policy).
46
     For a brief summary and bibliography, see Krugman (2001).
                                                                                                      37
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