Financial Crisis
Financial Crisis
Successful Emerging
Economies
Ricardo Ffrench-Davis,
Editor
UNITED NATIONS
BROOKINGS INSTITUTION PRESS
Financial Crises 
in Successful 
Emerging Economies
This page intentionally left blank
Financial Crises 
in Successful 
Emerging
Economies
Ricardo Ffrench-Davis
editor
UNITED NATIONS
Economic Commission for Latin America 
and the Caribbean
BROOKINGS INSTITUTION PRESS
Washington, D.C.
anour niooxixcs
The Brookings Institution is a private nonprofit organization devoted to 
research, education, and publication on important issues of domestic and foreign policy.
Its principal purpose is to bring knowledge to bear on current and emerging policy
problems. The Institution maintains a position of neutrality on issues of public 
policy. Interpretations or conclusions in Brookings publications should be 
understood to be solely those of the authors.
Copyright  2001
uxirio xarioxs icoxoxic coxxissiox ioi 
iarix axiiica axo rui caiinniax
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any
means without written permission from the Brookings Institution Press.
Financial Crises in Successful Emerging Economies may be ordered from: 
niooxixcs ixsriruriox iiiss, 1775 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W., 
Washington, D.C. 20036. Telephone: 800/275-1447 or 202/797-6258. 
Fax: 202/797-6004. Internet: www.brookings.edu.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication data
Financial crises in successful emerging economies / Ricardo
Ffrench-Davis, editor.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-8157-0211-6 (pbk. : alk. paper)
1. Latin AmericaEconomic conditions. 2. AsiaEconomic
conditions. 3. Financial crisesLatin America. 4. Financial crisesAsia.
I. FfrenchDavis, Ricardo. II. United Nations. Economic Commission for
Latin America and the Caribbean.
HC123 .F56 2001 2001003366
332.095dc21
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
The paper used in this publication meets minimum requirements of the 
American National Standard for Information SciencesPermanence of Paper for 
Printed Library Materials: ANSI Z39.48-1992.
Typeset in Adobe Garamond
Composition by Northeastern Graphic Services, Hackensack, New Jersey
Printed by R. R. Donnelley and Sons, Harrisonburg, Virginia
Preface   vii
1 The Globalization of Financial Volatility: Challenges 
for Emerging Economies   1
iicaioo iiiixcu-oavis axo ;osi axroxio ocaxio
2 Korea and Taiwan in the Financial Crisis   38
xaxuii i. acosix
3 Three Varieties of Capital Surge Management in Chile   65
iicaioo iiiixcu-oavis axo uiiiniiro raiia
4 From the Capital Surge to the Financial Crisis and
Beyond: The Mexican Economy in the 1990s   107
;aixi ios
5 An International Financial Architecture for 
Crisis Prevention   141
sriiuax\ ciiiiiru-;oxis
Contributors   167
Index   169
Contents
v
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T
his book is the result of a project developed by the
United  Nations  Economic  Commission  for  Latin
America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), with support from the Ford Foun-
dation. The text encompasses five articles analyzing emerging economies
that  were  generally  rated  as  successful  by  international  financial  institu-
tions and the financial press during episodes characterized by a broad sup-
ply of external funds. We include the cases of Chile, Korea, and Mexico in
the critical years of the 1990s and Chile in the deep crisis of the 1970s. All
of  these  economies  were  praised  for  their  efficient  public  policies. They
all experienced  episodes  of  an  abundant  supply  of  financial  capital,  and
they all suffered macroeconomic disequilibria as a result. We contrast these
cases with the positive experiences of Chile during the Tequila crisis and
of Taiwan during the Asian crisis.
Three of the articles are country studies, undertaken from a compara-
tive perspective. The paper by Manuel Agosin, professor at the University
of Chile, draws parallels between Korea and Taiwan. These two countries
achieved  a  similar  performance  from  the  mid-1960s  through  the  early
1990s, but their paths then diverged. The study analyzes the national poli-
cies adopted in each case and the underlying motives.
The article by Ricardo Ffrench-Davis and Heriberto Tapia, both econ-
omists at ECLAC, compares three positive financial shocks experienced in
Chile: the liberalization of the capital account in the 1970s, which exploded
in a massive crisis in 1982; a substantial policy shift in 199194 in the di-
rection of a prudential macroeconomic management of the capital account,
Preface
vii
which kept Chile immune to the tequila crisis in 1995; and the capital surge
of 199597, which culminated in a rather severe adjustment in 1999.
The third study is by Dr. Jaime Ros, Mexican economist and profes-
sor at Notre Dame University, who addresses the contrasting experiences
of Mexico in 199194 and 199697. The paper examines the different do-
mestic  and  external  variables  that  explain  the  marked  differences  in  the
two episodes, and it evaluates the depth of the economic and social effects.
The fourth article, by Dr. Stephany Griffith-Jones of the University of
Sussex, analyzes the current architecture of the international financial sys-
tem and its incapacity for preventing crises or moderating the disequilibria
that generally lead to crises. The article analyzes several recent proposals, in-
cluding those of the author herself.
Finally,  the  paper  by  Jos  Antonio  Ocampo,  Executive  Secretary  of
ECLAC,  and  Ricardo  Ffrench-Davis,  which  opens  the  book,  examines
why countries that were considered successful before the explosion of a cri-
sis  incurred  a  level  of  macroeconomic  disequilibria  that  made  them  vul-
nerable  to  a  financial  run. We  start  by  considering  the  nature  of  supply,
focusing  on  investors  who  specialize  in  short-term,  highly  liquid  opera-
tions. We then trace the evolution of the prices of financial assets, foreign
exchange,  and  stock  markets  in  the  receiving  countries,  and  we  identify
links with paths that culminate in unsustainable macroeconomic disequi-
libria. On the basis of this analysis, we expose five misconceptions that are
commonly held among proponents of full liberalization of the capital ac-
count.
Heriberto Tapia provided highly professional support in preparing the
final manuscript, verifying the technical content, and ensuring agreement
between  the  Spanish  and  English  versions.  Lenka  Arriagada  was  excep-
tionally efficient in assisting with the presentation of the final manuscript.
We  thank  ECLAC  for  providing  a  stimulating  environment  for 
policy-oriented research and the opportunity for independent analysis on
a most relevant issue today. Our deepest thanks also go to the Ford Foun-
dation for its support. Naturally, all the opinions presented here are the re-
sponsibility of the respective authors.
viii
Financial Crises 
in Successful 
Emerging Economies
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1
:
O
ne of the outstanding features of modern financial
crises is that they occurred in emerging economies
that  were  generally  viewed  as  very  successful  until  the  crises  exploded.
Moreover,  recent  crises  have  been  radically  different  from  those  typical
from  the  1940s  to  the  1970s,  which,  in  Latin  America,  displayed  three
major features that have been absent or relatively less important in recent
experiences.  First,  past  crises  involved  large  fiscal  deficits  that  were  fi-
nanced with external loans or, in the absence of such financing, by central
banks. Second, domestic financial systems were repressed, a fact that was
generally accompanied by private sector access to rediscount or bank loans
at negative real interest rates. Finally, balance of payments crises were fre-
quently associated with a sharp worsening in the terms of trade or explicit
domestic policy decisions to overvalue exchange rates.
Over the past quarter century, a new variety of crises has gradually de-
veloped in Asia and Latin America. Four features differentiate them from
the previous type. First, the international capital market has been the major
source of shocks, whether positive or negative. Second, flows have largely
originated from and been received by the private sector. Fiscal deficits, in
contrast, have played a secondary role, and in most cases public finances
have  been  sound. Third,  these  financial  crises  have  mostly  hit  emerging
iicaioo iiiixcu-oavis
;osi axroxio ocaxio*
The Globalization of
Financial Volatility:
Challenges for Emerging
Economies
*We appreciate the assistance of Angela Parra and Heriberto Tapia.
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  ;osi  axroxio  ocaxio :
economies  that  were  considered  to  be  highly  credible  and  successful.  In
fact, the bulk of private flows has been concentrated on a small number of
relatively  affluent  and  well-organized  developing  nations.  Fourth,  these
flows have been characterized by a lack of regulation, on both the supply
and demand sides. Domestic financial systems have often been liberalized
without the parallel development of a significant degree of domestic pru-
dential regulation and supervision.
In  practice,  the  differentiation  between  old-  and  new-style  crises  is
naturally  somewhat  less  clear-cut  than  the  above  description  would  sug-
gest.  An  early  example  of  the  new  variety  was  the  Chilean  experience  of
the 1970s and early 1980s, but the old type of crisis was still prevalent in
the rest of Latin America during that period, with other Southern Cone
countries in an intermediate position. In the 1990s, the new type gener-
ally predominated in both Latin America and Asia, but there were some
mixed  episodes  in  which  features  of  both  new  and  old  crises  were  inter-
mingled, with budget deficits and terms-of-trade fluctuations.
The evolution of private capital flows over the past three decades is well
known. During the 1970s, a large supply of funds was made available to
many  developing  nations.  The  1980s  brought  a  severe  and  widespread
shortage  of  financing,  particularly  for  the  Latin  American  countries.  In
contrast, the Asian countries that were affected by the disturbances in the
international financial markets adjusted rapidly (with the exception of the
Philippines) and were able to leave the contagion effects behind. External
financing returned to Latin America in the 1990s, but it was volatile. The
resurgence of capital flows between 1991 and 1994 was followed by a sharp
scarcity, especially in Mexico and Argentina, with a rather generalized port-
folio outflow in late 1994 and early 1995. The so-called tequila crisis gave
way to renewed access in 199697, but in 19982000 external financing
was again in short supply as a result of contagion from the crisis detonated
in Asia in 1997. Worsening terms of trade aggravated the recession. On all
those occasions, changes in external financing were supply-led.
1
They had
a strong impact on the national economies on both sides of the cycle, with
contagion first of overoptimism and then of overpessimism.
Through  1996,  the  successful  emerging  economies  of  Asia  appeared
to be immune to the instability associated with capital surges, as illustrated
by their performance during the tequila crisis. In reality, part of the out-
flows from Latin American countries were reallocated to Asia during that
1. Evidence shows that these changes have originated, to a large extent, in the sources of supply. See
Calvo (1998); Culpeper (1995); Griffith-Jones (1998); Larran (2000).
cionaiizariox  oi  iixaxciai  voiariiir\ ,
episode. The subsequent events show that immunity was no longer a fea-
ture of the East Asian economies, and the two regions now faced common
destabilizing external forces.
The following section outlines the three capital surges experienced by
Latin American countries since the 1970s. Subsequently, the paper reviews
the main macroeconomic effects generated by capital surges and their pol-
icy implications. We then compare the specific experiences of the emerg-
ing economies covered by this research project: Korea and Mexico in the
1990s and Chile in the 1970s were all regarded as highly successful until
the sudden outbreak of severe crises. The study contrasts these experiences
with  Chile  in  the  early  1990s  and  Taiwan  throughout  the  last  decade,
which  provide  examples  of  economies  that  deployed  a  set  of  prudential
macroeconomic  policies  and  thereby  avoided  domestic  disequilibria  and
mitigated  contagion. The  paper  then  addresses  five  misconceptions  that
are currently in fashion. The final section summarizes some robust lessons
for domestic policies and reform of the international financial architecture.
Three Financial Capital Surges to Emerging Economies 
since the 1970s
Purely  financial  factors  have  been  changing  in  the  world  at  a  much
faster  pace  than  international  trade  and  the  globalization  of  production.
During the 1970s and 1980s, many countries began to liberalize their fi-
nancial  sectors  and  to  relax  or  eliminate  foreign  exchange  regulations.
2
This contributed to a boom in international flows, which was facilitated
by the revolutionary innovations in data management and telecommuni-
cations technology and the emergence of increasingly sophisticated finan-
cial  techniques.  The  financial  booms  generally  occurred  within  a
framework of lax or nonexistent regulations and supervision, and most ex-
isting regulations were in fact procyclical.
3
Net capital inflows to Latin America averaged nearly 5 percent of gross
domestic product (GDP) in 197781, 199194, and 199697. Exchange
rates  appreciated  in  all  three  periods,  which  naturally  led  to  a  rapid  in-
crease  of  imports  relative  to  exports,  with  the  corresponding  current  ac-
count deficit being financed (indeed, overfinanced) by a sharp rise in the
2. Daz-Alejandro (1985); Devlin (1989).
3. Ocampo (1999, 2001); Griffith-Jones (in this volume); United Nations (1999); Turner (2000).
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  ;osi  axroxio  ocaxio 
stock  of  external  liabilities.
4
All  these  macroeconomic  variables  experi-
enced  some  overshooting.
5
Adjustment  was  frequently  anchored  to  one
dominant balance, which generated imbalances in other macroeconomic
variables, as in a falling inflation rate associated with real exchange rate ap-
preciation and climbing external deficits. Such adjustment was obviously
facilitated  by  access  to  external  financing,  which  most  probably  would
have been absent in a dry foreign supply.
The increased supply of external funding in those three episodes gener-
ated a greater demand for such financing. Recipient countries that adopted
procyclical or passive domestic policies experienced real exchange revalua-
tion and large current account deficits. Because these were heavily financed
by volatile flows of mostly short-term, liquid capital, the economies tended
to become increasingly vulnerable to changes in the mood of external cred-
itors; the outstanding case was Mexico in 199194 (see Ros, in this volume).
Creditors with financial assets placed in the region became more sensitive to
bad news as their exposure increased. The sensitivity rose steeply with the
size of net short-term liabilities.
6
The dramatic increase of international financial flows was more diver-
sified in the 1990s than in the 1970s. The situation is potentially more un-
stable,  however,  inasmuch  as  the  trend  has  shifted  from  long-term  bank
credit,  which  was  the  predominant  source  of  financing  in  the  1970s,  to
portfolio  flows;  medium-  and  short-term  bank  financing;  time  deposits;
and foreign direct investment (FDI; including acquisitions and other than
greenfield investment). A very high share of the newer supply of financing is
short term or liquid or both. The region thus saw a paradoxical diversifica-
tion toward volatility in the 1990s. The relative improvement after the te-
quila crisis, with a rising share of FDI, still included a significant proportion
of volatile flows.
7
The foundations of a broad liquid market for portfolio in-
vestment were laid down in the late 1980s through the Brady bonds and de-
veloped vigorously in the 1990s, with Latin America as a major destination
for both bond and stock financing. This market offered the expectation of
high rates of return during the upswings of the two cycles in the 1990s.
4. ECLAC (1995, 1998, 2000a).
5. When significant macroeconomic disequilibria persists despite repeated statements on the need
to maintain equilibria, it reveals an inadequate understanding of how to achieve sustainable equilib-
ria that are consistent with development. See Ffrench-Davis (2000, ch. 6).
6. Rodrik and Velasco (1999).
7. The positive link between FDI and productive investment is well documented (see Ffrench-Davis
and Reisen, 1998, chap. 1). The link was weakened, however, by the fact that about 40 percent of FDI
inflows in 199799 corresponded to acquisitions of Latin American firms rather than the creation of
new capacity (ECLAC, 2000b, chap. 1).
cionaiizariox  oi  iixaxciai  voiariiir\ ,
In 1991 the stock of assets invested in Latin America by the new in-
vestors that had discovered the emerging markets was evidently below their
desired  stock  level,  but  by  1994  it  had  become  considerably  larger.  Net
capital inflows were used to finance rising current account deficits, and ex-
ternal liabilities accumulated through time. This was sometimes accompa-
nied  by  significant  mismatches  in  the  maturity  structure  of  the  balance
sheets  of  domestic  financial  intermediaries,  when  short-term  external
funds  were  used  to  finance  longer-term  domestic  credits. This  issue  was
particularly severe in the dollarized segment of the domestic financial sys-
tem and in those cases in which external interbank credit lines were used
as a major source of domestic financing. Consequently, the region moved
into a vulnerability zone, with the economy becoming increasingly sensi-
tive to adverse political or economic news and hostage to the whims and
fancies of a few country analysts in London, Frankfurt and New York.
8
This situation was likely to put the economy at the mercy of the capital
markets occasionally whimsical moods.
9
The longer and deeper the econ-
omys incursion into that zone, the more severe was the financierist trap in
which authorities could get caught, and the lower the probability of leav-
ing it without undergoing a crisis.
10
Mexico  and  Argentina  were  particularly  vulnerable  in  1994,  while
Chile  had  deliberately  avoided  venturing  into  the  vulnerability  zone.
Meanwhile, East and Southeast Asian countries were just starting to take
that risk in the first half of the 1990s, and the resulting mismatches in the
maturity structure of the balance sheets of domestic financial intermedi-
aries proved to be even more severe than a worsening net debt position.
By the next cycle, several economies in both Asia and Latin America had
penetrated deep into the vulnerability zone. Both regions suffered severe
crises when the mood of the external market changed.
Worsening of Macroeconomic Fundamentals Led by Inflows
The economic activity of Latin American countries exhibited signifi-
cant  vulnerability  to  changes  in  international  financial  markets  over  the
last three decades, which worked as an intensely procyclical factor for the
8. Rodrik (1998).
9. Calvo (1998).
10. The financierist trap refers to a macroeconomic policy approach that leads to an extreme pre-
dominance of or dependency on agents specializing in microfinance, positioned in the short-term and
liquid segments of the market.
emerging economies. This vulnerability was associated with the volatility
of  international  markets  since  the  1970s,  as  well  as  with  the  procyclical
macroeconomic  policies  adopted  by  recipient  countries.  Several  Asian
emerging economies followed suit in the 1990s.
Annual GDP growth rose in Latin American countries from 1.3 per-
cent in the 1980s to 4.1 percent between 1991 and 1994 and 4.5 percent
in 1996 and 1997. Recessive adjustments took place in 1995 and 199899
(see  table  1-1).  Overall,  GDP  rose  by  a  mere  3.3  percent  in  the  decade
(19912000). Given that GDP was highly unstable, however, the precise
figure depends on the period chosen. For 199099 the growth rate was 2.8
percent, because the period starts and ends with a recession. From peak to
peak (between 1989 and 2000), average growth was 2.9 percent.
A growth of productive capacity of around 3 percent (1.3 percent per
capita) is remarkably low compared with the expectations generated by the
structural reforms. Comparison with the previous golden age is striking.
During the three decades from 1950 and 1980, GDP growth averaged 5.5
percent a year (2.7 percent per capita), with rather high domestic invest-
ment ratios sustaining these vigorous rates. In the 1980s, gross domestic
investment dropped sharply, by 7 percentage points of GDP. The recovery
in the 1990s was weak (see figure 1-1). In fact, investment grew much less
during this decade than did capital inflows; a significant proportion of ex-
ternal flows thus financed increased consumption, crowding out domestic
savings.
11
Recovery from Recession
The  domestic  conjuncture  has  crucial  implications  for  the  link  be-
tween capital flows and economic activity. When there is a binding exter-
nal constraint, any inflow will contribute to relaxing it, thus facilitating a
recovery of economic activity. Binding external constraints predominated
during several episodes in many Latin American countries, and they were
particularly widespread from the early 1980s up to 1990, in 1995 and in
19982000.
In the early 1990s, renewed capital inflows thus contributed to a recov-
ery  of  economic  activity,  and  they  facilitated  the  adoption  of  successful
anti-inflationary adjustments. Argentina and Peru, for example, both fea-
tured huge underutilization of capacity and hyperinflation; the disappear-
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  ;osi  axroxio  ocaxio o
11. See Ffrench-Davis (2000, chap. 1 and 5); Uthoff and Titelman (1998).
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iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  ;osi  axroxio  ocaxio 
Figure 1-1. Latin America: Gross Fixed Investment, 19772000
Source: Authors calculations, based on ECLAC figures, scaled to constant 1995 prices.
26
24
22
20
18
0
Percent of GDP
1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 19992000
25.9
23.7
19.2
19.8
ance of the binding external constraint and the reintroduction of macroec-
onomic discipline to combat hyperinflation were strongly complementary.
The monetary effects of reserve accumulation and the wealth effects of ex-
change rate appreciation tended to push up aggregate demand, which facil-
itated the recovery of economic activity. At the other end of the spectrum,
capacity underutilization was not significant in Chile and Mexico. Conse-
quently, the positive link between capital flows and GDP growth was not
automatic, but rather was contingent on the capacity to transform addi-
tional external financing into increased productive investment.
On average, Latin American GDP rose faster in 199194 than the ex-
pansion of the production frontier thanks to increased capacity utilization.
An  estimated  one-third  of  the  4.1  percent  annual  GDP  growth  in
199194 was based on this factor. In 1995, the binding external constraint
again became a crucial variable, with GDP growth lagging behind capac-
ity growth. Renewed capital inflows in the following years contributed to
a recovery of economic activity, based to some extent on the excess capac-
ity generated in 1995. However, the return of a binding external constraint
in 199899, particularly in South America, led to a new recession.
One  implication  of  this  analysis  is  that  any  serious  research  should
control for the huge swings in the rate of capacity utilization when meas-
uring  productivity  and  the  performance  of  policies  and  reforms.  In  the
cionaiizariox  oi  iixaxciai  voiariiir\ ,
presence of excess capacity, recovery naturally yields high private and so-
cial returns, but they are built on preexisting disequilibria, that is, on for-
gone  profits,  wages,  taxes,  and  employment  that  exist  whenever  the
economy is operating below its productive frontier or economically poten-
tial  GDP. Whether  economic  recovery  opens  the  way  to  more  sustained
growth depends crucially on two dimensions. First, the speed at which ca-
pacity  is  expandedthrough  physical  investment,  investment  in  people,
and productivity gainsdetermines future potential growth. Second, the
sustainability  of  the  macroeconomic  environment  that  develops  during
the  recoverynamely,  exchange  and  interest  rates,  current  account  defi-
cit, domestic financial vulnerability, fiscal accounts, and asset pricesde-
termines  whether  growth  in  aggregate  demand  can  be  sustained  or
whether it will be subject to corrections associated with imbalances accu-
mulated during recovery.
Overshooting in Emerging Asia and Latin America
The increased availability of financing in the 1990s removed the bind-
ing external constraint that had been responsible for the decade-long re-
cession  in  Latin  America.  The  bases  for  growth  were  not  laid  down,
however, as investment did not increase rapidly and macroeconomic im-
balances built up. Effective output thus approached the production fron-
tier, while exchange rate appreciation led to overvaluation.
12
Asset markets
also overshot, and a large stock of mostly liquid external liabilities accu-
mulated  (see  figure  1-2). The  regions  economies  therefore  became  more
vulnerable  to  future  negative  external  shocks.  With  some  variation,  this
story applies to both 199194 and 199597, reproducing the path toward
the crisis of 197681.
In 1995, the tequila crisis had negligible effects on the Asian region,
even  in  economies  with  large  current  account  deficits,  such  as  Malaysia
and Thailand.  Many  outstanding  researchers  and  observers  therefore  as-
serted in 1996 that such deficits were not relevant if investment ratios and
economic growth were high. Several Asian countries had successfully reg-
ulated capital inflows and foreign exchange markets for long periods.
13
Ec-
onomic growth was actually sustained and extremely high. From 1970 to
12. Several Latin American countries implemented sharp import liberalization at the same time that
the exchange rate was appreciating. See Ffrench-Davis (2000, chap. 3) and ECLAC (1998, chap. 5;
for an English version, see ECLAC 1995). The average import tariff was cut from 45 percent in the
mid-1980s to 13 percent in the mid-1990s; nontariff restrictions were also reduced significantly.
13. On  Malaysia,  Indonesia,  and Thailand,  see  Sachs, Tornell  and Velasco  (1996);  on  Korea  and
Taiwan, see Agosin (in this volume).
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  ;osi  axroxio  ocaxio :c
Figure 1-2. Latin America and East Asia: Current Account Balance,
19902000
a
Source: ECLAC; IMF.
a. East Asia includes Indonesia, Korea, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand. Latin America includes nineteen
countries.
10
8
6
4
2
0
2
4
Percent of GDP
1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000
Surplus
Deficit
East Asia
Latin America
1996, yearly GDP growth averaged 8 percent in Korea, Indonesia, Malay-
sia, Taiwan, and Thailand (see table 1-1 above). The investment ratio fre-
quently exceeded 33 percent, with domestic savings ratios at a similar level.
Inflation was low (in the range of 5 percent a year), and fiscal budgets were
generally  balanced  or  in  surplus  (with  the  exception  of Taiwan).  Mean-
while,  average  GDP  growth  in  Latin  America  was  2  percent  and  the  in-
vestment ratio fluctuated around 20 percent.
What is the explanation for the sudden worsening in Asia? First, export
performance in several Asian economies weakened. Export sectors that had
been  experiencing  notably  dynamic  demand  suddenly  faced  tightening
markets, either as a result of a temporary excess supply or because specific
markets were reaching maturity.
14
The long Japanese crisis contributed to
the intensity of these problems.
Second, the global drive toward financial liberalization had also per-
meated several Asian economies in the 1990s.
15
China, India, and Taiwan
were three notable exceptions. Capital inflows and current account deficits
increased substantially in Korea and Thailand from 1993 on. External im-
14. Radelet and Sachs (1998).
15. Agosin (in this volume); Ariff and Ean (2000); Akyz (1998); Furman and Stiglitz (1998); Jomo
(1998); Wang (2000).
cionaiizariox  oi  iixaxciai  voiariiir\ ::
balances were not associated with public deficits and did not imply losses of
international reserves: in fact, in Korea, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand,
international reserves, fed by capital inflows, accumulated consistently be-
tween 1992 and early 1997, more than doubling in the period. All the data
indicate that the cause of disequilibria was a rise in private expenditure led
by capital inflows, which allowed liquidity constraints to be relaxed. The
induced domestic lending boom was accompanied by bubbles in real estate
and stock market prices. In some cases, real exchange rate appreciation and
import liberalization led to cheaper imports, which further fed the import
boom.
Third, most inflows were short term or liquid, including a large pro-
portion of interbank lending.
16
Domestic balance sheets became quite vul-
nerable as a result of maturity and currency mismatches and the rapid rise
of firms leverage.
17
Weak prudential supervision of the financial system,
which had not been a real threat in the previously repressed domestic mar-
kets, became evident with financial liberalization and the lending boom.
In these Asian economies, vulnerability was thus associated with wors-
ening macroeconomic fundamentals led by a capital surge, which carried
over to an exchange rate appreciation (moderate compared to that in Latin
America), a boom in aggregate private demand (with a significant enlarge-
ment  of  the  current  account  deficit  by  5  percentage  points  of  GDP  in
Korea, 2 points in Indonesia, and 3 points in Thailand), and an increased
vulnerability  of  the  balance  sheets  of  domestic  financial  intermediaries.
The disequilibrium was recognized by financial markets only in 1997 and
resulted in a weighty bill in 1998. The policy failure was an error shared
with the rather similar financial reforms conducted in Chile in the 1970s
and in Mexico in the 1990s.
18
Why the Market Fails to Avoid Overshooting
On  the  whole,  the  authorities  took  a  procyclical  approach  in  both
Latin America and Asia, allowing capital surges to be transmitted domesti-
cally. They therefore fell into a financierist trap, from which it is extremely
difficult  to  escape  without  a  traumatic  adjustment,  involving  outlier  ex-
change or interest rates and considerable liquidity constraints that together
generate  a  very  unfriendly  macroeconomic  environment  for  firms  and
16. IMF (1998); Radelet and Sachs (1998).
17. See Krugman (1999).
18. Ffrench-Davis and Tapia (in this volume); Ros (in this volume).
labor.  Most  authorities  (as  well  as  observers)  took  the  view  that  nothing
could or should be done during the expansive stages, or they preferred to
benefit a little longer from the capital boom. The ex post consensus among
observers, however, was that disequilibria had accumulated.
Given that voluntary flows cannot take place without the willing con-
sent of both debtors and creditors, why did neither agent act in due time
to  curb  the  inflows  well  before  a  crisis?  Some  specialists  recognized  and
warned of the growing vulnerability in all three episodes examined. Why,
then, did the market fail to avoid major crises? 
19
Asymmetries of informa-
tion among creditors, lack of adequate internalization of the negative ex-
ternalities that each agent generates (through growing vulnerability), and
other  imperfections  of  international  capital  underlie  the  cycles  of  abun-
dance  and  shortage  of  external  financing.
20
These  factors  contribute  to
herd behavior, cross-border contagion, and multiple equilibria.
Over and above these features, however, the particular nature of the
agents acting on the creditor side is crucially important. Short-term hori-
zons were a significant factor in the 1990s, as reflected in the volatility of
flows that characterized the boom-bust cycles. The gradual spread of in-
formation on investment opportunities is another key influence. Investors
from different segments of the financial market were steadily drawn into
international  markets  as  they  took  notice  of  the  profitable  opportunities
offered  by  emerging  economies.  This  explains  why  the  three  surges  of
flows to emerging economies were processes that went on for several years,
rather than one-shot changes in supply.
On the domestic side, many Latin American economies were experi-
encing recession, depressed stock and real estate markets, high interest rates,
and  initially  undervalued  exchange  rates;  capital  surges  directed  to  these
economies therefore could expect potentially high rates of return.
21
Indeed,
in the early 1990s, prices of equity stocks and real estate were extremely
depressed in Latin America. That allowed for a 300 percent average capital
gain in the Latin American stock markets between late 1990 and September
1994, with rapidly rising price-to-earnings ratios (see table 1-2).
22
Average
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  ;osi  axroxio  ocaxio ::
19. For  instance,  see  a  warning  advice  on  Latin  America,  as  early  as  in  mid-1992,  reproduced  in
Ffrench-Davis (2000, chap. 9).
20. McKinnon (1991); Rodrik (1998); Stiglitz (2000); Wyplosz (1998).
21. A similar outcome tends to result in an emerging economy moving from a closed to an open
capital account. The rate of return is naturally higher in the productive sectors of capital-scarce emerg-
ing economies than in mature markets that are capital rich.
22. Figures in current dollars; the real rate of return is obtained by adding distributed profits and
subtracting dollar inflation.
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prices dropped sharply around the time of the tequila crisis, which produced
contagion to all Latin American stock markets, and then nearly doubled 
between March 1995 and June 1997, pushed up directly by portfolio in-
flows.
Domestic interest rates tended to be high at the outset of surge epi-
sodes,  reflecting  the  binding  external  constraint  faced  by  most  countries
during periods of sharp reductions in capital inflows, the restrictive mon-
etary  policies  then  in  place,  and  the  short-term  bias  of  the  financial  re-
forms  implemented  in  Latin  America.
23
Finally,  the  increased  supply  of
external  financing  generated  a  process  of  exchange  rate  appreciation  in
most Latin American countries (see table 1-3). This encouraged additional
inflows from dealers operating with maturity horizons within the expected
appreciation of the domestic currency.
The interaction between the two sets of factorsthe nature of inves-
tors  and  the  adjustment  processexplains  the  dynamics  of  capital  flows
over time. When creditors discover an emerging market, their initial expo-
sure is nonexistent. They then generate a series of consecutive flows, which
result in rapidly increasing stocks of financial assets in the emerging mar-
ket. The creditors sensitivity to negative news, at some point, is likely to
suddenly increase remarkably with the stock of assets held in a country (or
region)  and  with  the  debtors  degree  of  dependence  on  additional  flows,
which is associated with the magnitude of the current account deficit, the
refinancing  of  maturing  liabilities,  and  the  amount  of  liquid  liabilities
likely to flow out of the country in the face of a crisis. The probability of
a reversal of expectations about future trends therefore grows steeply after
a significant increase in asset prices and exchange rates accompanied by ris-
ing stocks of external liabilities.
The  accumulation  of  stocks  and  a  subsequent  reversal  of  flows  can
both be considered to be rational responses on the part of individual sup-
pliers, given the short-term horizon of the principal agents on the supply
side. Investors with short horizons are little concerned with whether cap-
ital surges improve or worsen long-term fundamentals while they continue
to bring inflows. What is relevant to these investors is whether the crucial
indicators from their point of viewexchange rates and real estate, bond,
and  stock  pricescan  continue  providing  them  with  profits  in  the  near
term  and,  obviously,  that  liquid  markets  allow  them  to  quickly  reverse
decisions. They will continue pouring money in until expectations of an
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  ;osi  axroxio  ocaxio :
23. See Ffrench-Davis (2000, chap. 2).
imminent  near  reversal  start  to  build.  For  the  most  influential  financial
operators, the more relevant variables are not related to long-term funda-
mentals  at  all,  but  rather  to  short-term  profitability.  This  explains  why
they may suddenly display a radical change of opinion about the economic
situation of a country whose fundamentals, other than liquidity in foreign
currency, remain essentially unchanged during a shift from overoptimism
to overpessimism.
The widespread belief that withholding of information prevented the
Mexican  crisis  of  1994  being  foreseen  is  therefore  mistaken.  While  the
provision of official information on international reserves was admittedly
only sporadic, the key datanamely, real exchange rate appreciation, the
high current account deficit and its financing with volatile resources, and
low  GDP  growth  despite  booming  flowswere  available  on  a  regular
basis. Data were also available on the significant crowding out of domes-
tic  savings.  However,  Mexican  policies  were  widely  praised  in  1993  by
financial institutions, the media, and risk evaluators.
24
The incorporation
of Mexico into the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and
the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)
in 1994 served to intensify the trend. The crucial problem was that nei-
cionaiizariox  oi  iixaxciai  voiariiir\ :,
24. Gurra (1995, p. 281).
Table 1-3. Latin America: Real Exchange Rate, 19872000
a
Indexes (198790 = 100)
Country 198790 1994:4 1995:1 1997:3 1999:1 2000:3
Argentina 100.0 63.1 63.8 65.6 56.6 56.9
Brazil 100.0 74.3 71.5 64.4 102.8 91.4
Chile 100.0 96.4 97.1 80.2 85.8 91.7
Colombia 100.0 80.4 79.7 71.2 80.3 97.4
Mexico 100.0 75.9 116.3 81.4 81.9 69.2
Peru 100.0 59.3 59.9 56.0 64.5 62.0
Weighted average 
(18 countries) 100.0 75.9 83.9 71.3 85.3 78.7
Source: Authors calculations, based on official ECLAC figures.
a. Quarterly averages of real exchange rate indexes for each country with respect to the currencies
of their main trading partners, weighted by the share of exports to those countries; inflated by
external CPI and deflated by domestic CPI. For Brazil we weighted the Rio CPI index (two-thirds)
and the new official series of inflation (one-third). Selected quarters correspond to peaks and
minimum levels for the Latin American average.
ther those on the supply side nor those on the demand side paid sufficient
attention to the available information until after the crisis erupted.
It is no coincidence that in all three surges, loan spreads underwent a
sustained fall while the stock of liabilities rose sharply, lasting for five to
six years in the 1970s, for three to four years before the tequila crisis, and
for over a couple of years after that crisis. This implies a downward slop-
ing medium-run supply during the expansive phase of the cycle, which is
a highly destabilizing feature indeed (see figure 1-3).
One  particularly  relevant  issue  is  that  firms  specializing  in  microfi-
nance,  which  may  be  highly  efficient  in  their  field  but  which  are  short-
sighted by training and by reward, have come to play a determining role in
generating macroeconomic conditions and policy design. This leads, unsur-
prisingly, to unsustainable macroeconomic imbalances, outlier macroeco-
nomic prices, and an undermined environment for productive investment,
particularly in tradables. Authorities should obviously be making decisions
with a long-term view, yet they become seduced by the lobbying and policy
recipes of microfinance experts and the financial press, which leads to irra-
tional exuberance (to use Alan Greenspans expression) despite evidence of
inefficiency in resource allocation and total factor productivity. Macroeco-
nomic authorities need to undertake the responsibility of giving priority to
fundamentals  in  order  to  achieve  macroeconomic  balances  that  are  both
sustainable  and  functional  for  long-term  growth. This  requires  that  they
avoid entering vulnerability zones during economic booms based on capital
surges, since policy design is otherwise prone to being caught in the finan-
cierist trap.
The Economic and Social Costs of the Tequila and Asian
Crises in Selected Countries
The economic literature commonly asserts that the only correct way to
conduct policy is with an open capital account, as Mexico and Korea did in
the 1990s. In reality, however, there is significant room for policy diversity.
Chile and Taiwan provide two striking examples of policy diversity and suc-
cessful prudential macroeconomic management of the capital account.
Mexico and the Tequila Crisis
The Mexican crisis that exploded in 1994 illustrates the harm that can
be caused when the absorption of an excessive volume of capital inflows
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  ;osi  axroxio  ocaxio :o
cionaiizariox  oi  iixaxciai  voiariiir\ :;
25. Ros (in this volume); Sachs, Tornell, and Velasco (1996).
Figure 1-3. Latin America: International Bond Issues, 19922000
Source: ECLAC; World Bank; IMF.
a. Total annualized cost is equal to average differential on bond issues plus long-term U.S. Treasury bonds.
18
15
12
9
6
3
Billions of dollars per quarter
1992:1 1992:3 1993:1 1993:3 1994:1 1994:3 1995:1 1995:3 1996:1 1996:3 1997:1 1997:3 1998:1 1998:3 1999:1 1999:3 2000:1 2000:3
17
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
17
14
11
8
5
Cost (percent) Maturity (no. of years)
1992:1 1992:3 1993:1 1993:3 1994:1 1994:3 1995:1 1995:3 1996:1 1996:3 1997:1 1997:3 1998:1 1998:3 1999:1 1999:3 2000:1 2000:3
Maturities
Costs
a
Costs and Maturities
Issues
leads to the accumulation of a large stock of mostly short-term or liquid ex-
ternal liabilities and to a domestic credit boom.
25
Between 1990 and 1994,
producers and consumers accommodated to a level of overall expenditure
that  rapidly  outstripped  potential  GDP:  expenditures  exceeded  effective
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  ;osi  axroxio  ocaxio :
GDP by 8 percent in 199294. The real exchange rate appreciated signifi-
cantly, contributing to the sharp rise of the external deficit. Since the public
sector was in balance, the disequilibrium was located in the private sector.
When expectations of profitability were reversed, the amounts involved be-
came unsustainable. Creditors cut financing sharply, forcing Mexico into a
highly contractionary adjustment and a huge devaluation after the author-
ities adopted the flexible exchange rate. Despite the large package of inter-
national support that Mexico received in 1995,
26
GDP dropped that year by
6.1 percent and capital formation by nearly 30 percent.
GDP recovered strongly shortly thereafter, but the overall rise in GDP
averaged only 3.5 percent in 19952000. The growth trend continued to be
slow despite the fact that Mexico received a positive shock from the U.S.
boom: export volume expanded vigorously by 17 percent a year in 1995
2000, four-fifths of which was directed to the U.S. markets. The investment
ratio, which dropped sharply in 1995, did not fully recover until 1998. Real
wages decreased substantially during the crisis and had not recovered by
2000. This was also true of poverty, which increased from 45 to 52 percent
of the population between 1994 and 1996. Though the indicator fell back
to 47 percent in 1998, it had still not returned to pre-crisis levels by 2000.
27
The  Mexican  crisis  did  not  trigger  a  widespread  contagion  effect
throughout the region in 1995, in contrast to 1982. The most notable ex-
ception was Argentina, which experienced significant drops in GDP, em-
ployment, and investment in 1995. Nonetheless, many countries recorded
negative flows in several segments of the supply of financing, particularly
bonds, deposits, and flows to stock markets. Subsequently, the flow of funds
became extremely abundant again. GDP recovery in Argentina and Mexico
was particularly vigorous, since the sharp drop in both countries in 1995
had generated a large gap between effective GDP and productive capacity.
This facilitated a significant degree of reactivation, which led to compla-
cencynot only in those countries, but also in international financing in-
stitutions and elsewhereregarding the effects of crises and the capacity to
recover from them. However, as said above, growth in Mexico was slow for
the six-year period 19952000 as a whole, and it was even slower in Argen-
tina  (1.7  percent),  which  entered  into  another  severe  recession  in
19992000.
Significant differences also emerged between Argentina and Mexico.
Mexico moved from a quasi-fixed nominal exchange rate to a flexible rate in
26. Lustig (1997).
27. ECLAC (2000c).
cionaiizariox  oi  iixaxciai  voiariiir\ :,
1995, which facilitated the adjustment to the financial shocks generated by
the  Asian  crisis.  Also,  the  country  experienced  a  sizable  positive  shock
associated with the rapid growth of the U.S. economy in 19982000. Ar-
gentina, meanwhile, was tied to the currency board; this limited the coun-
trys ability to confront the negative shocks from Asia, from the devaluation
of the Brazilian currency, and from the revaluation of the dollar. Argentinas
inability to facilitate the correction of relative prices through the active use
of the nominal exchange rate was intensified by the strong international ap-
preciation of the dollar and the persistent dryness in the supply of external
funding. Indeed, the international capital markets underwent lengthy dry
periods during the recent crisis, despite the boom in the U.S. economy and
the acceleration in Europe in 2000. This indicates that financial markets
may tend to recover slowly and incompletely, as was clearly the case in the
1980s.
Korea and the Asian Crisis
The  East  Asian  countries  suffered  deep  recessions  in  1998,  after
decades of sustained annual GDP growth of around 8 percent. Indonesia
exhibited  a  13  percent  recession,  similar  to  the  spectacular  drop  of  Chi-
lean GDP during the 1982 recession. Korea, Malaysia, and Thailand re-
corded reductions of 7 to 10 percent. The nature of the crises varied across
countries in Asia. The Korean and Thai experiences, however, appeared to
be associated with the capital surge of the 1990s and the resulting liquid-
ity.  During  19992000,  Korea  (and  Malaysia)  recovered  faster  than  the
other  countries  of  the  region.  Notwithstanding  Koreas  impressive  GDP
growth in 1999 and 2000, the costs have been significant: in the period
19982000, GDP was about 12 percent below what it would have been
had the historical trend continued, and investment fell by over one-fifth
in 199899 as compared to 199396 (28.9 percent and 36.4 percent, re-
spectively). Since the country also achieved an impressive external surplus
of 9 percent of GDP in 199899, versus a deficit of almost 5 percent in
1996, disposable income was well below output.
The recessions in East Asia are comparable to those of Latin America in
198283, with drops in productive investment, banking crises, and social
regression.
28
Apart  from  the  intrinsic  strengths  of  the  Korean  economic
28. For interpretations of the Asian crisis, see Krugman (1999); Akyz (1998); Furman and Stiglitz
(1998); Perry and Lederman (1998); Radelet and Sachs (1998); Reisen (1998); Stiglitz (1998); Wang
(2000); Wyplosz (1998).
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  ;osi  axroxio  ocaxio :c
structure and of several other Asian economies (excluding Indonesia), four
features of the international economic environment largely explain why the
shift  from  recession  to  recovery  came  sooner  in  Asia  than  in  the  Latin
American  debt  crisis:  the  plentiful  supply  of  official  external  financing;
rapid action spearheaded by the United States to refinance private credits,
particularly interbank lending; significantly lower interest rates in the ad-
vanced economies; and higher growth rates, especially in the United States.
The countercyclical policy implemented by the Korean public sector also
played  a  significant  role  in  the  recovery;  consequently,  the  fiscal  balance
swung from a surplus of 0.3 percent of GDP in the period 199396 to a
deficit of 4.7 percent in 199899.
Until the early 1990s, Korea had extensive capital account regulations,
based on a combination of market forces and state guidance.
29
In 1991, the
country began implementing a broad range of measures aimed at liberaliz-
ing the capital account. Contrary to what is commonly assumed by observ-
ers, greenfield FDInot acquisitionswas deregulated. Local firms and
banks were allowed to issue securities abroad, and foreigners were author-
ized  to  purchase  stocks  in  Korean  companies  subject  to  limits  that  were
raised progressively starting in 1992. Foreign currency loans to local firms,
trade  credit,  and  short-term  financing  were  also  liberalized.  Only  long-
term borrowing and acquisitions remained restricted. Under the new regu-
lations,  Korean  banks  and  firms  were  permitted  to  engage  in  arbitrage
between international lenders and local markets by borrowing short abroad
and, in some cases, lending long at home. This practice would not have
been allowed under the regulations prevailing before the liberalization drive
in  the  early  1990s.  In  addition,  Koreas  sound  creditworthiness  afforded
local firms lower spreads and more expeditious access to funding, which
they used, in part, to borrow for financing investment and lending in other
Asian markets.
30
Capital inflows expanded hugely after liberalization and included pur-
chases of stock shares, bond issues, and private loans to banks and nonfi-
nancial  firms.  Liabilities  became  highly  liquid,  with  short-term  debt
reaching twice the level of international reserves in 1996. This was not ac-
companied, however, by strengthened prudential regulation and supervi-
sion, in a replication of the negative Latin American experience.
31
29. See Agosin (in this volume); Furman and Stiglitz (1998); Wang (2000).
30. In May 1995, one of the large international risk-rating agencies upgraded the sovereign credit
rating of Korea (see Wang, 2000). In June 1997, the World Economic Forum classified Korea as the
fifth most secure place to invest in the world (see Dean, 1998).
31. See ECLAC (1998, chap. 12). For an English version, see ECLAC (1995).
cionaiizariox  oi  iixaxciai  voiariiir\ ::
The  process  of  liberalizing  the  capital  account  caused  the  exchange
rate to appreciate with respect to the currencies in which borrowing took
place,  which  encouraged  further  borrowing.  Korea  accommodated  the
capital  surplus  through  import  liberalization  and  currency  appreciation,
together with a relaxation of domestic liquidity constraints. The combined
effect of increased imports and worsening export prices explain the rise in
the current account deficit to 5 percent of GDP in 1996. Net inflows rose
from U.S.$7 billion in 1992 to U.S.$24 billion in 1996, but gross inflows
amounted to U.S.$49 billion.
The opening of the capital account represented a source of vulnerabil-
ity,  exacerbated  by  poor  bank  regulation  and  supervision.  It  left  Korea
prone to contagion, even though the fundamentals were generally sound.
In fact, Agosin (in this volume) concludes that the main factor behind the
Korean debacle was the liberalization of the capital account, without the
concurrent adoption of adequate bank regulation and prudential macro-
economic measures to discourage excessive capital inflow.
Chile and Taiwan: Going against the Fashion
Is it possible to forge ahead with policies that go against contempo-
rary  economic  ideology? Two  casesChile  in  the  first  half  of  the  1990s
and  Taiwan  throughout  the  decadeprovide  evidence  that  it  is  indeed
possible and can be an efficient and cheap way to avoid costly crises.
Chile deployed three types of capital account policy in the last quar-
ter  of  a  century.
32
The  first  was  the  plain  neoliberal  experiment  of  the
1970s, which culminated in a major crisis in 1982. That episode featured
a drop in GDP of 14 percent, followed by an increase in open unemploy-
ment  to  30  percent  in  1983. The  second  approach  was  that  taken  from
1990 to 1995. In that period, authorities went against prevailing fashion
by pursuing a set of active macroeconomic policies that included the pru-
dential regulation of financial inflows. As a result, Chile was practically un-
affected  by  contagion  from  the  tequila  crisis.  The  third  type  of  policy,
which was implemented after 1995, involved a relative relaxation of mac-
roeconomic prudential policies. This gave way to a significant appreciation
and  allowed  the  external  deficit  to  double  from  2.5  percent  of  GDP  in
199095 to 5.7 percent in 199697.
Chiles  performance  in  1995  was  diametrically  opposed  to  that  of
Mexico, despite numerous similarities in the two economies in the preced-
32. Ffrench-Davis and Tapia (in this volume).
ing years. The difference in results is attributable to the distinct divergence
in macroeconomic policies in the first half of the 1990s. Toward the end
of the 1980s, both countries had already liberalized their trade consider-
ably, they had substantially improved their fiscal budgets, privatization was
well underway, the annual rate of inflation was around 2030 percent, and
they  showed  similar  domestic  savings  rates.  In  199094,  however,  Chile
and Mexico chose divergent approaches with respect to the management
of capital inflows, exchange rate policy, and the prudential regulation and
supervision of the domestic financial system. Chiles main advantage over
Mexico  in  1995  is  that  it  responded  to  the  abundance  of  external  funds
from 1990 to 1994 with a deliberate policy of active prudential macroec-
onomic regulation.
Instead of allowing in and spending all the available external supply,
which  would  have  led  to  significant  appreciation  of  the  peso  and  a  ris-
ing current  account  deficit,  the  Chilean  authorities  chose  to  discourage
short-term  capital  inflows.  In  1991  a  tax  was  imposed,  and  substantial
non-interest-bearing reserves were required for external credit. The reserve
requirement was subsequently extended to foreign currency deposits and
investment in second-hand stocks, while primary issues of American de-
pository  receipts  (ADRs)  and  FDI  venture  capital  were  kept  exempted.
FDI had to be held in Chile for at least one year. The financial system was
subject  to  relatively  strict  prudential  regulation,  including  a  selective
supervision of bank assets and required provisioning, as well as restrictions
and drastic penalties on operations with related parties. This set of meas-
ures  effectively  discouraged  speculative  capital  inflows.
33
Most  empirical
research  shows  that  these  regulations  had  a  significant  effect  on  the  vol-
ume of short-term inflows, and, contrary to common belief, several stud-
ies also show an effect on total inflows.
34
The smooth transition to democracy, an increasing international ap-
proval of Chilean economic policies, and high domestic interest rates com-
bined  to  boost  capital  inflows  to  Chile  after  mid-1990;  the  process  was
earlier and relatively stronger than in other emerging economies. As a con-
sequence  of  its  prudential  macroeconomic  policies,  however,  Chile  had
only a moderate external deficit by late 1994, with high international re-
serves, a manageable short-term debt, a domestic savings rate that was ris-
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  ;osi  axroxio  ocaxio ::
33. Agosin and Ffrench-Davis (2001); Le Fort and Lehmann (2000).
34. See several references in the case of Chile in this volume. The classical  paper arguing against
the effectiveness of the Chilean reserve requirement is Valds-Prieto and Soto (1998).
ing instead of falling (whereas the opposite was the case in Mexico), and a
level of domestic investment that far exceeded historical records from 1993
onward. The exchange rate in 199094 was comparatively closer to equi-
librium than in most Latin American countries, as reflected by a moder-
ate current account deficit over that period.
Policy was effective in achieving its targets for most of the 1990s, but
in 199697 the policy mix and the intensity with which it was applied re-
mained unchanged despite a new vigorous capital surge to most countries
in the region. Chile, in particular, was a target of these flows, since it had
remained immune to the tequila contagion. This surge should have been
met  with  increased  restrictions  on  rising  inflows.  In  the  absence  of  such
measures, inflows became excessive as investors were willing to pay the in-
sufficiently restrictive cost of the reserve requirement, with no evidence of
significant evasion; also, as Le Fort and Lehmann emphasize, some inflows
that ought to have been made subject to regulation remained exempt.
35
Although  the  Central  Bank  intervened  heavily  in  foreign  exchange
markets, a sharp real exchange rate appreciation and a rise of the current ac-
count deficit were observed over the two-year period, which pushed Chile
into a vulnerability zone. Nonetheless, the active regulation implemented
up to the mid-1990s had left large international reserves, a low stock of for-
eign  liabilities,  and  a  small  share  of  volatile  flows.  Unfortunately,  those
strengths were partially undermined by the excessive exchange rate appreci-
ation and high current account deficit recorded in 199697, as well as the
Central Banks delay in reacting to the deterioration of the external envi-
ronment. In particular, the Bank resisted market pressures for devaluation,
concerned  that  exchange  rate  depreciation  would  increase  inflation  and
worsen the balance sheets of the large domestic firms that became highly
indebted in foreign currency liabilities in the period. The outcome was a
sort of automatic adjustment featuring a sharp loss of reserves, a 10 percent
fall in aggregate demand, a 1 percent drop in GDP, a 3.5 percentage point
increase in the unemployment rate, and a marked drop in capital formation
in 1999. Despite this recent recession, however, Chile achieved an average
growth rate of over 6 percent for the 1990s, which was its best performance
ever recorded in a decade.
The case of Taiwan is more straightforward. Taiwan similarly pursued
a  policy  that  went  against  the  global  trend,  but  its  policy  was  notably
tougher than Chiles. It kept in place a variety of direct capital controls that
cionaiizariox  oi  iixaxciai  voiariiir\ :,
35. Le Fort and Lehmann (2000).
had been initiated in previous years.
36
The Taiwanese dollar remained non-
convertible.  The  authorities  restricted  inflows  to  banks,  firms,  and  the
stock market. Acquisitions remained forbidden (as they were in Korea until
the crisis). Taiwan held quantitative restrictions on the stock shares that for-
eign persons and institutional investors could own. Domestic banks were
also strictly supervised by the Central Bank. Consequently, external liabil-
ities were low at the outbreak of the Asian crisis, because they had been re-
stricted during the preceding boom in financing to emerging economies.
The Taiwanese economy exhibited a notably stable dynamism, simi-
lar  to  that  experienced  in  Korea  for  three  decades.  Data  on  Taiwan  are
rather  limited,  but  the  available  information  is  quite  revealing.  For  the
years  immediately  before  the  crisis  (199396),  the  available  information
shows a GDP growth of 6.7 percent, with negligible capital inflows and a
current account surplus. Taiwan was clearly outside the capital surge. An-
other remarkable feature of Taiwan is that its fiscal performance was not-
ably different from that of most emerging economies: the government ran
a significant budget deficit, with public investment financed in the domes-
tic private market. In all, domestic private savings financed a fiscal deficit
of 2.7 percent of GDP and an external surplus of 3.2 percent in 199296.
The  fiscal  deficit  coexisted  with  a  stable  real  exchange  rate  and  an  infla-
tion rate that was lower than in Chile, Korea, or Mexico.
Taiwan experienced some contagion and a few attacks on the Taiwa-
nese dollar despite the palpably safe macroeconomic environment, which
was  further  bolstered  by  huge  international  reserves  (U.S.$88  billion  in
1996). The attack quickly receded, however, and an initial devaluation of
20 percent quickly recovered by half. In 19982000 only a slight down-
ward adjustment took place in economic growth, which fell to 5.9 percent
(as compared to 4.2 percent in Korea). The strong adherence to real mac-
roeconomic  sustainability  appears  to  have  been  extremely  rewarding  for
Taiwan.
Misleading Recipes and Misconceptions in Fashion
A series of widely accepted hypothesis or beliefs form part of the con-
ventional wisdom of the financial world, including international financial
institutions, although these have undergone some positive changes in their
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  ;osi  axroxio  ocaxio :
36. Agosin (in this volume).
perceptions in the wake of the Asian crisis. This section reviews five com-
mon assertions that we believe have significant policy and welfare implica-
tions.  These  beliefs  are  not  validated  by  the  actual  performance  of
international financial markets and still less by the behavior of domestic
markets in emerging economies.
Recovery from Recent Crises Has Been Rapid
A first, common assertion is that the recovery from crises has proved
to be fast. This is fundamental for claims that authorities should allow the
free, self-correcting operation of markets, since it is assumed that attempts
to adopt policies to counter booms or accelerate recoveries tend to gener-
ate additional instability. Given that financial markets are the major source
of economic instability for emerging economies, this line of reasoning im-
plies that instability is inevitable but not excessively costly.
This  assumption  is  inconsistent  with  the  evidence.  Crises  generate
medium- and long-term effects on financial markets. The most significant
case in recent decades was the effect of the Latin American debt crisis on
long-term  syndicated  bank  loans,  which  were  then  the  principal  mecha-
nism of financing. This form of lending disappeared after the crisis, and
bank lending never returned to being a major source of financing for Latin
American countries in the 1990s. Equally important, the Asian crisis had
negative effects on bond financing, which have still not been surmounted.
Issues have remained volatile, costs high, and average maturities low. The
usual assertion that markets have recovered rapidly is based on a very par-
tial view of external market conditions, which takes into account the abil-
ity of emerging economies to return to the market, but not the conditions
of such access in terms of stability, costs, and maturity of financing.
As shown above, a rapid return to positive GDP growth rates is by no
means a good basis for asserting that the effects of crises are short-lived. All
countries  that  have  undergone  severe  crisesincluding  Korea,  where  re-
covery  was  very  strongdisplay  evidence  that  they  were  pushed  into  a
lower  GDP  path. Three  channels  through  which  these  medium-term  or
even permanent effects on GDP are transmitted are particularly important.
First, investment falls sharply during a crisis, which affects the path of pro-
ductive capacity. Second, the bankruptcy of firms generates a loss of capac-
ity, as well as a permanent loss of the goodwill, productive and commercial
networks, and social capital of those firms. Even firms that do not go bank-
rupt may pass through a long period of debt restructuring, in which prop-
cionaiizariox  oi  iixaxciai  voiariiir\ :,
erty  rights  are  indeterminate;  this  uncertainty  may  affect  their  perfor-
mance. Finally, domestic financial crises may ensue if the portfolios of do-
mestic  financial  institutions  deteriorate  severely.  The  experience  of
emerging economies (and Japan) indicates that restoring a healthy financial
system takes several years and generates adverse effects throughout the pe-
riod in which it is rebuilt.
A growing body of evidence indicates that boom-bust cycles also have
ratchet effects on social variables.
37
The deterioration of the labor market
(through open unemployment, a worsening in the quality of jobs, or a fall
in real wages) is generally very rapid, whereas the recovery is painfully slow
and incomplete. This is reflected in the long-lasting worsening of Argen-
tine  unemployment  and  Mexican  real  wages  after  the  tequila  crisis.  It  is
also reflected in Brazilian and Chilean joblessness following the 1999 re-
cession, despite a fairly positive recovery in both cases.
38
The evidence on
poverty  similarly  indicates  that  a  ratchet  effect  is  present.  As  mentioned
above, poverty in Mexico had not abated to 1994 levels despite economic
recovery.
Opening the Capital Account Discourages Macroeconomic Disequilibria
It  is  commonly  argued  that  fully  opening  the  capital  account  deters
domestic macroeconomic mismanagement and encourages good macroec-
onomic fundamentals. This is partly true for domestic sources of instabil-
ity, such as large fiscal deficits, permissive monetary policy, and arbitrary
exchange  rate  overvaluation. The  volatility  in  market  perceptions  makes
this type of control highly unreliable, however: financial markets tend to
encourage  lax  demand  policies  and  exchange  rate  overvaluation  during
booms,  whereas  excessive  punishment  during  crises  may  actually  force
authorities  to  adopt  overly  contractionary  policies  (so-called  irrational
overkill). Contrary to the usual argument, this is not associated with inap-
propriate  information.  Even  well-informed  market  actors,  such  as  credit
rating agencies or investment banks, usually operate procyclically.
39
The opening of the capital account may actually lead emerging econo-
mies to import external financial instability, with capital inflows engender-
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  ;osi  axroxio  ocaxio :o
37. Lustig (2000); Rodrik (2001).
38. ECLAC (2000a).
39. On  rating  agencies,  see  Larran,  Reisen,  and  von  Maltzan  (2000).  Market  discipline  can  also
pose obstacles to necessary social reform (for instance, to higher taxes to finance efficient human cap-
ital investment) or to the ability to capture economic rents from natural resources.
ing a worsening in macroeconomic fundamentals. Thus while market disci-
pline can serve as a check on domestic sources of instabilityalbeit not a
very  efficient  one,  given  the  whims  of  opinion  and  expectations  charac-
teristic of financial marketsit is a source of externally generated instabil-
ity. Not only will the market inaccurately perceive some domestic policies as
inadequate, it may actually induce key variables to deviate from sustainable
levels. In other words, it is the market itself that generates incentives for
emerging economies to enter a vulnerability zone during the booms.
Financial operators evidently fulfill a useful microeconomic function
as intermediaries between savers and users of funds, as hedgers of risk, and
as  providers  of  liquidity.  In  practice,  however,  they  have  perhaps  unwit-
tingly come to play a role that has significant macroeconomic implications.
Their herd-prone expectations have contributed to intensifying financial
flows  toward  successful  countries  during  capital  surges,  thus  facilitating
rapid increases in financial assets and real estate prices and sharp exchange
rate appreciation in the recipient markets. Apart from the poor quality of
prudential  regulation  and  supervision  in  these  markets,  these  macroeco-
nomic  signals  contribute  to  prolonging  a  process  that  appears,  mislead-
ingly, to be efficient and sustainable (with good profits and loan guarantees,
supported by high stock prices and the low value in domestic currency of
dollar-denominated debt). In fact, bubbles are being generated with outlier
macroeconomic prices, and sooner or later the bubbles tend to burst.
The general practice has been to encourage the recipient countries to
accept the increasing supply of resources from the international financial
institutions and financial specialists, and to praise them for doing so. The
cost of external financing typically falls during boom periods, which im-
plies that the market actually operates with a downward-sloping mid-run
supply  of  funds.  Excessive  indebtedness  and  periods  of  massive  outflows
ensue, often prompting admonishment by the very agents who praised the
economic  performance  of  the  emerging  economies  during  the  boom.
There is an obvious contradiction between these two attitudes.
Fundamentals  are  clearly  essential. There  is  wide  misunderstanding,
however, about what constitutes sound fundamentals. The inappropriate
conventional  definition,  together  with  irrational  exuberance,  led  to  high
positive grades being given to Chile just before the crisis of 1982, to Korea
and Thailand in 1996, and to Mexico and Argentina in 1994. Something
fundamental was thus missing in markets evaluation of market fundamen-
tals! The severe crises of these five countries cannot all be due to bad luck or
contagion alone. Rather, certain crucial components of a comprehensive
cionaiizariox  oi  iixaxciai  voiariiir\ :;
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  ;osi  axroxio  ocaxio :
set of fundamentals deteriorated, led by massive capital inflows. A satisfac-
tory definition of fundamentals should thus include not only low inflation,
sound fiscal accounts, and dynamic exports, but also sustainable external
deficit  and  net  debt,  low  net  liquid  liabilities,  non-outlier  real  exchange
rate, and strong prudential regulation, supervision, and transparency of the
financial system.
Corner Exchange Rate Regimes Are the Only Right Policy 
Alternatives Today
In todays open developing countries, the exchange rate regime is sub-
ject to two conflicting demands, which reflect the limited degrees of free-
dom  that  authorities  face  in  a  world  of  weaker  policy  instruments  and
reduced policy effectiveness. The first demand comes from trade: with the
dismantling of traditional trade policies, the real exchange rate has become
a  key  determinant  of  international  competitiveness. The  second  is  from
the  capital  account.  Boom-bust  cycles  in  international  financial  markets
generate a demand for flexible macroeconomic variables to absorb, in the
short  run,  the  positive  and  negative  shocks  generated  during  the  cycles.
Given  the  reduced  effectiveness  of  traditional  policy  instruments,  par-
ticularly  monetary  policy,  the  exchange  rate  can  play  an  essential  role  in
helping  to  absorb  these  shocks. This  objective,  which  is  associated  with
short-term  macroeconomic  management,  is  not  easily  reconcilable  with
the trade-related goals of exchange rate policy.
Many  analysts  call  for  limiting  the  alternatives  to  the  two  polar  ex-
change  rate  regimes  of  a  totally  flexible  exchange  rate  versus  a  currency
board (or outright dollarization). The relevance of the dual demand is not
captured in this approach, however, whereas intermediate regimes featur-
ing managed exchange rate flexibility, such as crawling pegs and bands and
dirty floats, attempt to reconcile these conflicting demands.
40
Currency  boards  certainly  introduce  built-in  institutional  arrange-
ments that provide for fiscal and monetary discipline, but they reduce or
even eliminate any room for stabilizing monetary, credit, and fiscal poli-
cies, which are all necessary for preventing a crisis and facilitating recov-
ery in a post-crisis environment. Currency boards thus allow the domestic
transmission of shocks originating in international capital markets. In so
doing, they generate strong swings in economic activity and asset prices,
with the corresponding accumulation of domestic financial vulnerability.
40. See Frankel (1999) and Williamson (2000) on intermediate exchange rate policies.
cionaiizariox  oi  iixaxciai  voiariiir\ :,
At the other extreme, the volatility that is characteristic of freely float-
ing exchange rate regimes is not a problem when market fluctuations are
short-lived, but it becomes a major concern when there are longer waves,
as has been typical of the access of emerging economies to capital markets
in recent decades. In this case, volatility tends to generate perverse effects
on resource allocation. Moreover, under freely floating regimes with open
capital accounts, anticyclical monetary or credit policies exacerbate cycli-
cal exchange rate fluctuations, with their associated allocative, wealth, and
income effects. In fact, authorities have to adopt procyclical monetary and
credit policies if they want to smooth out real exchange fluctuations under
these conditions.
The ability of a flexible exchange rate regime to smooth out the effects
of externally induced boom-bust cycles thus depends on the authorities ca-
pacity to effectively manage a countercyclical monetary and credit policy
without enhancing procyclical exchange rate patterns. This is only possible
under intermediate exchange rate regimes with capital account regulation.
Because these intermediate regimes of managed flexibility grant a degree of
effective, albeit limited, monetary autonomy, they provide the best oppor-
tunity  to  respond  to  the  dual  demands  on  exchange  rate  policy.  Such
regimes  obviously  have  shortcomings  and  may  generate  costs.  First,  all
intermediate regimes are subject to speculative pressures if they do not gen-
erate credibility in markets. The costs of defending the exchange rate under
these conditions are very high; at critical conjunctures it may be advisable
to move temporarily to full flexibility. Second, sterilized reserve accumula-
tion during booms may also be costly. Finally, the capital account regula-
tions that are necessary for managing intermediate regimes efficiently are
only  partially  effective.  All  things  considered,  however,  intermediate  re-
gimes offer a sound alternative to costly volatility.
External Savings Tend to Complement Domestic Savings
There  is  a  strong  correlation  between  investment  and  growth  rates,
with a significant interaction between capital accumulation and technical
progress.
41
The Latin American experience in recent decades also provides
compelling evidence that the way investment is financed is not irrelevant,
because external savings are unstable and may crowd out domestic savings.
Moreover, the induced real exchange rate effects of unsustainable external
financing may lead to a misallocation of resources.
41. Schmidt-Hebbel, Servn, and Solimano (1996).
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  ;osi  axroxio  ocaxio ,c
In  the  1950s  and  1960s  capital  flows  to  developing  countries  were
mostly tied to particular investments and to public users, financing real as-
sets mostly through direct investment and official project lending. The na-
ture  of  financing  tended  to  generate  strong  complementarities  between
external and domestic savings. Commercial bank lending in the 1970s and
private portfolio investments in the 1990s, however, made the link between
foreign savings and domestic investment weaker and less direct.
42
This dis-
association between capital flows and actual investment has three implica-
tions: inflows may increase consumption rather than investment; inflows
do not necessarily enhance the recipient countrys ability to earn foreign ex-
change through expansion of capacity in the tradables sector; and foreign
investment is easily reversed, insofar as the acquisition of securities is essen-
tially a short-term commitment. The first of these effects is associated with
the empirical fact that consumers and financial asset markets tend to re-
spond more quickly to released liquidity constraints than do productive in-
vestors, who have a longer response lag because of the irreversibility and
long  maturity  of  their  decisions.  Nonetheless,  construction  generally  re-
sponds faster than other forms of capital formation and is more prone to in-
vestment overshooting, given the effects of liquidity on asset prices.
The  diverse  behavior  of  markets  and  participants  explains  why  the
stability of flows has a significant effect on the relation between foreign and
domestic  savings.  Uthoff  and Titelman  distinguished  between  the  trend
and deviations from the trend for foreign and domestic savings.
43
They find
a strong crowding out of domestic by foreign savings when capital inflows
are temporary (above or below the trend). Moreover, the effects of flows on
the real exchange rate distort the allocation of investment. Real apprecia-
tion during booms may lead to a suboptimal allocation of funds to the ex-
pansion of productive capacity in tradables sectors (that is, it may generate
so-called Dutch disease effects). This seriously weakens the mid-term ob-
jective of penetrating external markets with new exports and strengthens
the negative vis--vis the positive effects of trade reform.
44
Prudential Regulation and Supervision of Banks is Sufficient for Facing
External Volatility
Lax or poor prudential regulation and supervision of domestic finan-
cial  institutions  obviously  reinforces  disequilibria.  Strong  regulation  and
42. Turner (1996).
43. Uthoff and Titelman (1998).
44. ECLAC (1995, 1998, 2000b); Ffrench-Davis (2000, chap. 3); World Bank (1998).
cionaiizariox  oi  iixaxciai  voiariiir\ ,:
supervision per se does not solve the problem, however. First, a significant
share of capital inflows usually is not intermediated by domestic financial
institutions; cases in point include Chile before the 1982 crisis and Korea
and Mexico in the 1990s. Nonbank to nonbank flows have become increas-
ingly important as a result of the type of diversification that has taken place
in supply. Second, expectations are in themselves volatile. This applies not
only  to  expectations  of  financial  intermediaries,  but  also  to  those  of  na-
tional authorities and international financial institutions. Regulation and
supervision may influence the transmission mechanism, but it can hardly
affect  the  source  of  instability  (volatility  in  expectations). Third,  normal
regulatory practices (including Basel Committee criteria) have procyclical
features.
45
In particular, there is a lag between loan-loss provisions and over-
due loans; and in turn, these lag behind the level of economic activity. Reg-
ulations are generally ineffective in dampening the strong incentive to lend
during  booms  because  overdue  loans  and  provisions  are  low,  prices  and
guarantees are biased upward, and high profit levels facilitate meeting the
capital requirements necessary to increase lending. During crises, the level
of overdue loans increases, and provisions must therefore be increased as
well. This reduces the capacity to expand lending by biting into capital re-
quirements, at the same time that low profits also reduce the funds available
to increase the capital base of financial intermediaries.
Robust Policy Lessons
Several of the policy lessons that we developed in earlier works are re-
inforced by the research in this volume on the recent experiences in Asia
and Latin America.
46
We group these lessons into five areas of action.
Maintain a Sustainable Volume, Composition, and Use of 
Capital Inflows
The volume of inflows must be consistent with the absorptive capac-
ity of the host country. The failure to address this point is at the core of
recent  macroeconomic  instability  in  emerging  economies.  Absorption
capacity refers, of course, to both the use of existing productive capacity
and the creation of new capacity. The composition of flows is relevant for
three reasons. First, FDI (excluding acquisitions of existing assets) feeds di-
45. Griffith-Jones (in this volume); Ocampo (2001).
46. See also Ffrench-Davis (2000); Ocampo (1999).
rectly into capital formation, as do long-term loans to importers of capi-
tal goods. Second, volatile flows tend to have a direct impact on foreign
exchange and stock markets and a relatively weak impact on capital for-
mation,  which  requires  long-term  financing.  Third,  temporary  capital
surges tend to leak into consumption, since consumers can respond faster
than firms undertaking irreversible productive investment.
Allowing an excessively large share of capital inflows to drain off into
the stock exchange and the consumption of imported goods will usually
create bubbles in asset markets and imbalances in the external sector, which
tend to be unsustainable. Fast rising stocks of net liquid foreign liabilities,
in particular, generate deep vulnerabilities. Consequently, higher ratios of
long-term  flows  and  productive  investment  imply  a  higher  capacity  for
efficient absorption. This means not only that the economy will efficiently
absorb a higher volume of capital flows, but that a higher flow will be sus-
tainable.
Recent  experience  offers  a  dramatic  demonstration  that  recipient
emerging economies can pay a high cost for allowing the volume and com-
position of capital flows to be determined by the markets dominated by
agents with short horizons. The microeconomic costs associated with the
use of regulations on capital inflows should therefore be balanced against
the  social  benefits  in  terms  of  macroeconomic  stability,  investment,  and
growth.  Effective  and  efficient  regulation  can  result  in  higher  and  sus-
tained GDP growth, as occurred in Chile and Taiwan in the 1990s.
Avoid Outlier Prices and Ratios
Economic authorities must ensure that capital flows do not generate
outlier prices or significant distortions of basic macroeconomic indicators,
such as interest rates, exchange rates, aggregate demand, the composition
of expenditure in terms of consumption and investment, and the produc-
tion of tradables. An artificial increase in absorptive capacity characterized
by outlier appreciation and reduced interest rates usually leads to costly ad-
justment. First, real appreciation during booms tends to distort the allo-
cation of investment, seriously weakening the structural goal of increasing
competitive export capacity. Second, if productive investment capacity re-
acts  with  a  lag  and  domestic  financial  markets  remain  incomplete  and
poorly supervised, capital surges cannot be absorbed efficiently in the do-
mestic economy and instead either leak to inefficient investment or crowd
out domestic savings.
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  ;osi  axroxio  ocaxio ,:
Capital surges should not be used to target a single domestic economic
variable,  such  as  inflation. This  tends  to  throw  other  major  variables  off
balance. It is risky to remain bound to a fixed nominal rate or to dollarize
permanently, unless the economy shares an optimum currency area with
the United States. As discussed above, intermediate exchange rate regimes,
which  cover  a  broad  diversity,  are  generally  preferable,  as  they  are  better
adapted to managing the dual demands they face in emerging economies.
Adopt Flexible and Comprehensive Macroeconomic Regulation
Across-the-board  opening-up  of  the  capital  account  was  premature.
Countries should have postponed the process, proceeding selectively until
other major reforms had been consolidated and new equilibrium prices es-
tablished.
47
During  structural  adjustment,  open  capital  accounts  tend  to
allow  capital  flows  to  increase  too  fast,  especially  when  international  fi-
nancing is abundant. This produces destabilizing macroeconomic and sec-
toral effects.
It is therefore unwise to make an inflexible commitment to fully open-
ing the capital account, particularly in the light of the crucial importance of
macroeconomic stability and the disproportionate volume of the interna-
tional capital markets compared to the small size of emerging economies.
As  long  as  flows  depend  on  short-term  horizons  and  domestic  securities
markets  remain  shallow,  this  new  modality  of  linkages  with  the  global
economy will carry the risk of severe instability. The recent experiences of
Mexico, Korea, and Thailand attest to the wisdom of discouraging the ac-
cumulation  of  large  short-term  financial  liabilities.  Domestic  prudential
macroeconomic regulations offer the best defense given the present inter-
national  financial  architecture.  If  this  approach  makes  use  of  a  market-
based  set  of  policies,  including,  for  instance,  the  Chilean-style  reserve
requirement,  its  level  must  be  adjusted  to  the  intensity  of  the  supply  of
funds.
Sustaining  economic  growth  in  the  face  of  volatile  capital  flows  re-
quires the deployment of a battery of policy instruments, including pru-
dential price-based capital account regulations to deter speculative inflows
and improve their maturity structure; an exchange rate regime based on a
crawling band with intramarginal intervention or managed flexibility; the
sterilization  of  the  monetary  effects  of  capital  inflows;  strong  prudential
cionaiizariox  oi  iixaxciai  voiariiir\ ,,
47. Williamson (1993).
regulation and supervision of the financial system, with countercyclical de-
vices;  and  strong  fiscal  accounts,  also  with  countercyclical  mechanisms.
Reserve requirements alone (or any other policy that increases the cost of
external  borrowing),  while  clearly  useful,  are  insufficient  for  deterring
speculative attacks when large exchange rate fluctuations are anticipated.
Obviously, this implies that authorities must make an effort to avoid cu-
mulative exchange rate disequilibria and sharp changes in the macroeco-
nomic environment.
Reform the International Environment for a More Efficient and
Balanced Globalization
The governance of domestic and international financial markets is key
to the future of the world economy. A common factor in recent crises has
been the great volatility of the most rapidly growing segment of interna-
tional financial markets: namely, short-term and speculative funds. Succes-
sive waves of overexpansion, followed by financial panic, indicate that the
market tends first to grow and then to contract more than is justified by
economic  fundamentals. These  features  are  inconsistent  with  a  balanced
and efficient globalization. More energy is being spent on resolving crises
than  on  avoiding  them.  While  appropriate  prudential  regulation  of  do-
mestic financial markets has obviously been lacking in most of the emerg-
ing economies affected by the crises, the lack of appropriate international
and regional institutions to monitor such a sophisticated, but unstable, fi-
nancial market is even more notorious.
48
Focus on Crisis-Prevention Policy, Based on Prudential Management 
of Booms
The  focus  of  attention  for  international  and  domestic  institutions
should be the management of booms, rather than the resolution of crises,
which are usually the consequence of badly managed booms. Given that
existing international institutions and instruments have been ineffective in
warning  of  impending  turbulence  and  instead  have  actually  encouraged
unsustainable booms, it is particularly relevant to design domestic pruden-
tial  macroeconomic  policies  and  appropriate  domestic  regulatory  frame-
works,  aimed  at  controlling  booms  before  they  become  unsustainable.
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  ;osi  axroxio  ocaxio ,
48. United Nations (1999); Griffith-Jones (in this volume); Ocampo (1999, 2001).
This  principle  also  applies  to  the  design  of  the  international  institutions
required for a more balanced and stable globalization.
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the Fourth Annual Conference on Development in Latin America and the Caribbean,
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Development 28(6).
Turner, P. 1996. Comments on Reisen. In Promoting Savings in Latin America, edited by
R. Hausmann and H. Reisen. Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) and Organiza-
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Uthoff, A., and D. Titelman. 1998. The Relation between Foreign and National Savings
under  Financial  Liberalization.  In  Capital  Flows  and  Investment  Performance:  Lessons
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nancial Opening, edited by H. Reisen and B. Fischer. Paris: Organization for Economic
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cionaiizariox  oi  iixaxciai  voiariiir\ ,;
,
2
K
orea  and Taiwan  fared  very  differently  in  the  in-
ternational financial crisis that started in July 1997
with the crash of the Thai baht. While Taiwan came through the crisis rel-
atively  unscathed,  Korea  experienced  a  major  economic  downturn  bor-
dering  on  a  depression,  the  countrys  first  since  entering  a  period  of  fast
growth following the Korean War. Prior to the onset of the crisis, both of
these economies were viewed by commentators, international financial in-
stitutions, and academics as among the most successful developing coun-
tries  in  the  postwar  era.  The  crisis  in  Korea  was  certainly  unexpected,
perhaps more so than in most other stricken East Asian countries. As late
as June 1997, the World Economic Forum had classified Korea as the fifth
most secure place to invest in the world.
1
The similarities between Taiwan and Korea prior to Koreas descent into
financial distress in November 1997 are striking. Both economies had man-
aged to sustain per capita gross domestic product (GDP) growth rates of
xaxuii i. acosix
*
Korea and Taiwan in 
the Financial Crisis
*I wish to thank the many people in Korea and Taiwan who helped with research for the prepara-
tion of this paper, especially Inkyo Cheong, Yophy Huang, Shin-Yuan Lai, Kenneth Lin, Chao-Chen
Mai, Jae-Joon Park, Yung Chul Park, Julius Caesar Parreas, Shi Schive, James Tsuen-Hua Shih, Sang-
dal Shim, Lee-Rong Wang, Yunjong Wang, and Rong-I Wu. Thanks also to Ricardo Ffrench-Davis
and Jaime Ros for extensive comments on earlier drafts.
1. Dean (1998).
xoiia  axo  raiwax  ix  rui  iixaxciai  ciisis ,,
around 7 percent a year for over three decades.
2
Both started out at similarly
low levels of income per capita in the mid-1950s. Both based their almost
miraculous growth rates on export-oriented industrialization and the cre-
ation  of  new  comparative  advantages.  Saving  rates  were  high  in  both
economies and especially so in Korea, whose domestic saving-to-GDP ratio
was above 30 percent. Neither country relied on foreign capital: both had
repeatedly  recorded  current  account  surpluses  or  negligible  deficits  (in
Korea, up to 1995). Furthermore, both countries had a track record of ex-
cellent macroeconomic management, emphasizing prudent monetary poli-
cies, stable real exchange rates, and low inflation rates. Until the early 1990s,
both economies had extensive controls over the capital account.
3
In sum,
both Korea and Taiwan had achieved strong, sustained economic growth
through the harmonious blending of market forces and state guidance.
The two economies also demonstrate important differences, of course.
While  Korean  policy  favored  the  formation  of  large  conglomerates  (the
chaebol), Taiwanese development relied on small- and medium-size com-
panies. Korean investment rates were consistently higher than Taiwanese
rates, but the growth of Korean output was concentrated in more capital-
intensive sectors than Taiwans.
What is surprising, then, is the sudden unraveling of the Korean mir-
acle.  Korea  was  devastated  by  the  financial  crisis  that  engulfed  the
economies of the clearly more troubled countries of Southeast Asia such
as  Indonesia,  Malaysia,  and Thailand.  In Taiwan,  in  contrast,  the  main
manifestations  of  the  crisis  were  a  marked  slowdown  in  export  volume
growth, a mild deceleration of the countrys fast growth rate, and a tem-
porary depreciation of the real exchange rate of about 20 percent.
This  paper  tries  to  explain  the  disparity  in  economic  performance
since the onset of the financial crisis in mid-1997. It finds that the main
factor behind the Korean debacle was the liberalization of the capital ac-
count, without the concurrent adoption of adequate bank regulation and
prudential macroeconomic measures to discourage excessive capital inflow.
In Taiwan, the currency is still nonconvertible, and the monetary author-
ities continue to impose a variety of capital controls, which were very suc-
cessful  in  preventing  a  build-up  of  external  debt  or  a  large  inflow  of
2. See World Bank (1993).
3. There is  extensive literature on the development of these economies and the causes of their suc-
cess. The two classic texts are Amsden (1989) and Wade (1990).
portfolio capital. Other factors include major differences in the structure
of the economy, industrial organization, and bank regulation.
Economic Performance up to 1997
From 1992 to 1997, both economies grew rapidly, Korea at an aver-
age annual rate of 6.6 percent and Taiwan at 6.8 percent. Both countries
recorded  investment  rates  in  line  with  their  historical  performance. The
growth  rates  of  export  volumes  were  considerably  higher  in  Korea,  but
Taiwans  export  growth  figures  were  nonetheless  quite  respectable  (see
table 2-1).
These economies were also similar in other respects. Inflation was low
in both countries. With regard to the public budget, Korea had a more fa-
vorable performance than Taiwan. Korea was able to maintain its public
finances practically in balance, while Taiwan ran deficits. The red ink in
Taiwan, however, was due exclusively to investment expenditures. Taiwan
also consistently ran public surpluses in current expenditure and income.
The  deficit  on  the  capital  account  was  financed  largely  with  recourse  to
domestic borrowing.
Where these economies differ is in the balance of payments (see table
2-2). Korea tended to run current account deficits in the 1990s until the
onset of the crisis, while Taiwan had a current account surplus equivalent
to a couple of points of GDP. Up to 1996, however, the Korean deficit was
very moderate. In 1996, the worst year, the deficit was almost 5 percent
of GDP, declining to less than 2 percent in 1997.
The  behavior  of  the  real  exchange  rate  also  differed  (see  table  2-3).
Koreas real exchange rate appreciated consistently but moderately during
the period 199396, owing to large capital inflows. In contrast, Taiwans
real exchange rate was fairly steady in this period.
4
It would thus have been difficult to predict the depth of the crisis by
looking only at real exchange rate appreciation or the cumulative current
xaxuii  i.   acosix c
4. The degree of real effective overvaluation in both Taiwan and Korea was much greater than sug-
gested by the calculation in terms of the U.S. dollar. The 32 percent depreciation of the yen vis--vis
the U.S. dollar between the second quarter of 1995 and the first quarter of 1997 spelled overvalua-
tion for all the currencies in East Asia, which were either pegged or quasi-pegged to the U.S. dollar.
Taiwan and Korea both employed a quasi-peg. Prior to the crisis, Korea operated a crawling band ex-
change  rate  regime  whose  reference  currency  was  the  U.S.  dollar,  whereas Taiwan  allowed  the  N.T.
dollar to fluctuate within a narrow band around a reference price for the U.S. dollar.
account deficit. However, Korea did experience large capital inflows over
a  short  period  of  time  (199396).  Net  capital  inflows  were  consistently
larger than the current account deficit during this period, and the Bank of
Korea  accumulated  considerable  reserves  (see  table  2-4).  By  1997  there
were signs of increasing financial fragility. Short-term debt was rising very
xoiia  axo  raiwax  ix  rui  iixaxciai  ciisis :
Table 2-1. Korea and Taiwan: Indicators of Economic Performance,
199299
Percent, except as indicated
Indicator 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999
Growth rate of GDP
Korea 5.4 5.5 8.3 8.9 6.7 5.0   -6.7 10.7
Taiwan 7.5 7.0 7.1 6.4 6.1 6.7 4.6 5.7
Gross fixed investment 
(% of GDP)
Korea 37.0 36.2 36.0 36.7 36.8 35.1 29.8 28.0
Taiwan 24.1 25.2 24.6 24.9 22.5 22.8 23.5 22.9
Export volume growth
Korea 8.3 6.7 14.9 23.9 19.8 24.9 16.9 9.2
Taiwan 5.3 7.2 5.5 12.8 7.1 8.7 2.4 9.6
Export price changes
Korea 4.8 3.2 1.8 0.9 9.7    -16.9   -2.2
Taiwan   -5.4 5.2 0.6 6.9 1.7 2.1 5.6 1.1
Inflation (CPI)
Korea 6.2 4.8 6.2 4.5 4.9 4.4 7.5 0.9
Taiwan 4.4 3.0 4.1 3.6 3.1 0.9 1.7 0.2
Fiscal surplus 
(% of GDP)
Korea   -0.5 0.6 0.3 0.6 0.3   -1.5   -3.8   -4.6
Taiwan   -5.4   -3.9   -1.7   -1.1   -1.3   -1.6 0.1   -1.3
Source: For Korea: Asian Development Bank, Asian Development Outlook, various issues;
International Monetary Fund (IMF), International Financial Statistics, Washington, various issues;
Korea Development Institute, Major Indicators of the Korean Economy, Seoul, various issues; The
European Union Chamber of Commerce in Korea, EU Chamber Monthly Bulletin, Seoul, various
issues; Sangdal Shim, Recent Trends and Macroeconomic Forecast for 1998/1999, Korea
Development Institute, Seoul, 15 December 1998, unpublished. For Taiwan: Chung-Hua
Institution for Economic Research, Major Economic Indicators for Taiwan, Taipei, February 1999;
Asian Development Bank, Asian Development Outlook, various issues; Central Bank of Taiwan,
Balance of Payments Quarterly, Taipei, various issues; Central Bank of Taiwan, Financial Statistics
Monthly, Taipei, various issues; Council for Economic Planning and Development, Taiwan
Statistical Data Book 1997, Taipei; Central Bank of Taiwan, Domestic Key Economic and Financial
Indicators, Taipei, 1 March 1999. Data for 1998 and 1999 for both economies were partly drawn
from Pacific Economic Cooperation Council, Pacific Economic Outlook, 200001, Asia Pacific Press
at the Australia National University, Canberra, 2000.
rapidly: at more than twice the value of reserves, it had reached a level that
made  the  economy  very  vulnerable  to  a  change  in  investor  and  creditor
sentiment. As shown in table 2-5, up to 1996 the rise in the short-term
debt-to-reserves ratio was due not to a fall in reserves, which doubled be-
tween 1992 and 1996, but rather to the much faster increase in debt. In
the second half of 1997, as the economy began to look increasingly frag-
ile, capital outflows led to rapidly falling reserves.
5
The Impact of the Crisis on the Real Economy, 199798
Economic performance was very dissimilar in the aftermath of the cri-
sis.  In  Korea,  the  withdrawal  of  external  capital  that  began  in  October
1997  caused  a  contraction  in  GDP  of  6.7  percent  in  1998.  Unemploy-
ment,  which  had  typically  held  at  about  2  percent  of  the  labor  force,
jumped to 8.6 percent by February 1999 and remained at over 5 percent
at the end of that year.
6
Although inflation was originally forecast to rise
well above 10 percent, the slowdown in the economy kept the rate of in-
crease in consumer prices at 7.5 percent in 1998. A sharp correction in the
won (which had initially overshot in the direction of depreciation) inten-
sified the effects of the slow economy, resulting in an inflation rate of just
0.9 percent in 1999, far below its historical average (see table 2-1).
xaxuii  i.   acosix :
5. The  first  signs  of  trouble  in  the  real  economy  appeared  in  early  1997  with  the  bankruptcy  of
Hanbo Steel and Kia Motors. While growth was still fairly strong in 1997, it was due mostly to over-
expansion  of  exports  by  chaebol attempting  to  beat  back  the  increased  competitiveness  of  Japanese
firms, which had benefited from the sharp fall in the yen beginning in mid-1995.
6. PECC (2000, p. 31); see also Shim (1998).
Table 2-2. Korea and Taiwan: Current Account Balance, 199299
Current 
account balance 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999
Billions of dollars
Korea   -3.9 1.0   -3.9   -8.5   -23.0   -8.2 40.4 24.5
Taiwan 8.6 7.0 6.5 5.5 10.0 7.1 3.4 5.9
Percent of GDP
Korea   -1.3 0.3   -1.0   -1.7   -4.7   -1.7 12.7 6.0
Taiwan 4.0 3.1 2.7 2.1 3.9 2.4 1.3 2.0
Source: See table 2-1.
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The Korean government was unable to control the outflow of capital,
and it called in the IMF in late November 1997. The IMF put together a
package of financial resources consisting of U.S.$21 billion to be disbursed
in  eleven  installments  over  a  three-year  period.  In  addition,  it  secured
commitments  totaling  U.S.$36  billion  from  bilateral  and  multilateral
sources.
7
Disbursements were subject to the usual IMF conditions of tight
money and the achievement of a fiscal surplus, despite the facts that the
fiscal deficit was small and the economy had entered a steep recession. Sur-
prisingly, it also required the Korean authorities to introduce the follow-
ing far-reaching structural reforms:
The complete opening of the capital account of the balance of pay-
ments, including the elimination of any remaining limits on mergers and
acquisitions (M&A);
The transformation of labor markets in the direction of Western in-
stitutional arrangements by abolishing lifetime employment practices and
obstacles to firing;
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ernance, greater transparency, and an end to what was viewed as crony cap-
xaxuii  i.   acosix 
7. For an analysis of the IMF program, see Y. C. Park (1998); Feldstein (1998); Radelet and Sachs
(1998); Wang and Zang (1999); Furman and Stiglitz (1998).
Table 2-4. Korea: Capital Inflow, Current Account Balance, and Change
in Reserves, 199299
Billions of U.S. dollars
Current account Change in Errors and
Year Capital inflow surplus reserves
a
omissions
1992 6.4   -3.9   -3.7 1.1
1993 2.7 1.0   -3.0   -0.7
1994 10.7   -3.9   -4.6   -1.8
1995 17.3   -8.5   -7.0   -1.2
1996 23.9   -23.0   -1.4 1.1
1997   -9.2   -8.2 23.0   -5.0
1998   -8.3 40.4   -25.9   -6.2
1999 12.7 24.5   -33.3   -3.5
Source: International Monetary Fund (IMF), International Financial Statistics, Washington,
several issues.
a. A negative sign indicates an increase.
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xaxuii  i.   acosix o
italism (basically, opaque relations between different affiliates and between
the conglomerates and the government); and
The closure of troubled banks, the promotion of bank mergers, the
opening of the banking sector to purchases by foreign entities, and an in-
crease in capital requirements and bank reserves to reflect Basel Commit-
tee standards.
The IMF adjustment program was bound to make matters worse in the
short term. Higher interest rates were not able to contain the run on the
won, which traded as high as W 1,960 to the dollar in December 1997, up
from about W 830 at the end of 1996. If investors perceive a sharp increase
in interest rates as reducing the likelihood of loan repayment, the increase
will not only fail to shore up the value of the currency but could wind up
fuelling further depreciation.
8
The combination of high interest rates and
sharp  depreciation  caused  widespread  bankruptcies,  as  firms  were  both
highly leveraged and heavily indebted in foreign currency. Company bank-
ruptcies had extremely adverse effects on banks, many of which had already
been  weakened  by  currency  and  maturity  mismatches  between  assets
(which were mostly domestic currency denominated and long term) and li-
abilities  (which  were  mostly  foreign  currency  denominated  and  short
term). Many banks failed and had to be rescued or restructured by the Bank
of Korea.
As shown in figure 2-1, the sharp rise in both interest rates and the nom-
inal exchange rate eventually subsided as a result of the evolving recession.
The Korean adjustment was so severe that the current account swung from
a deficit of U.S.$8.2 billion in 1997 (less than 2 percent of GDP) to a sur-
plus of U.S.$40 billion in 1998 (12.7 percent of GDP). This was achieved
basically through a fall in import volumes, since export earnings were almost
flat. The IMF itself recognized that it had erred in imposing sharp fiscal re-
straints, and it relaxed its fiscal targets at the beginning of 1998.
Several  authors  criticize  the  conditions  related  to  structural  reform
that the IMF imposed in Korea. Radelet and Sachs rightly point out that
it is difficult and counterproductive to initiate reforms in the midst of a
crisis.
9
Whether the reforms are even necessary is debatable. I argue below
that  the  liberalization  of  the  capital  account  without  taking  any  precau-
tion for the potential adverse effects of capital surges was one of the causes
of the Korean crisis. This implies that further liberalization is unnecessary
and probably counterproductive. Other reforms were ill-timed. Requiring
8. See Furman and Stiglitz (1998) for a full development of this argument.
9. Radelet and Sachs (1998).
xoiia  axo  raiwax  ix  rui  iixaxciai  ciisis ;
Figure 2-1. Republic of Korea: Exchange Rate and Short-Term Interest
Rates, 199798
Source: IMF, International Financial Statistics.
18
16
14
12
10
8
1,600
1,400
1,200
1,000
800
Won per U.S. dollar Percent
March
1997
June
1997
Sept.
1997
Dec.
1997
March
1998
June
1998
Sept.
1998
Dec.
1998
Short-term interest rates
(right axis)
Exchange rate
(left axis)
banks to increase their capital-asset and reserve-asset ratios during a bank-
ing crisis increased the intensity of the credit crunch and led to additional
bankruptcies.
Feldstein argues that the IMF program for Korea constituted an un-
warranted intrusion into issues that are far removed from the countrys bal-
ance-of-payments  crisis.
10
He  holds  that  the  changes  sought  in  the  IMF
program, which should be left to national political processes and not im-
posed from outside under duress in times of crisis, were derived from long-
standing demands on Korea to open its markets to Japanese goods and U.S.
capital.
The impact of the crisis was much milder in Taiwan. There was a sharp
deceleration in export growth and a modest decline in GDP growth, since
domestic demand compensated the slack. As the crisis in Southeast Asia
unfolded, the New Taiwan (N.T.) dollar came under strong attack. The ini-
tial response of the Central Bank was to defend the N.T. dollar and to ac-
cept a reduction in its comfortable level of foreign exchange reserves. When
foreign reserves began to decline, however, it switched policies and stopped
defending  the  currency  in  October  1997.  The  N.T.  dollar  quickly  lost
10. Feldstein (1998).
xaxuii  i.   acosix 
Figure 2-2. Taiwan: Exchange Rate and Interest Rates, 199798
Source: Central, Bank of China, Domestic Key Economic and Financial Indicators, March 1999; Chung-Hua
Institution for Economic Research, Major Economic Indicators for Taiwan, February 1999.
8.0
7.5
7.0
6.5
6.0
5.5
5.0
4.5
34
32
30
28
26
24
22
N.T. dollars per U.S. dollar Percent
March
1997
June
1997
Sept.
1997
Dec.
1997
March
1998
June
1998
Sept.
1998
Dec.
1998
Interbank
money market rate
(right axis) 
Exchange rate
(left axis)
about 20 percent of its value in relation to the U.S. dollar (from N.T.$28 to
N.T.$34 to the U.S. dollar). In late 1998, the N.T. dollar began to appreci-
ate again.
11
At the same time, nominal interest rates began an upward trend
in mid-1997 but fell again in the first quarter of 1998. By December 1998
they were lower than before the crisis broke (figure 2-2).
Thus the growth rate of the Taiwanese economy dropped temporarily
by about 2 percentage points between 1997 and 1998, mainly as a result
of  the  deceleration  of  export  growth.  Its  unemployment  rate  remained
largely unchanged at about 2.7 percent. Consumer price inflation contin-
ued to fall toward a zero rate. Taiwan was poised to resume rapid growth
as demand for its exports recovered in 1999. In fact, Taiwanese firms may
have  strengthened  their  competitiveness  by  pursuing  a  policy  of  moving
the  export-oriented  assembly  of  light  manufactures  offshore  to  locations
in Southeast Asia, since the effects of the financial crisis have made those
countries very attractive sites for export processing.
12
11. In November 2000, the exchange rate stood at N.T.$31 to the U.S. dollar.
12. Huang (1998).
xoiia  axo  raiwax  ix  rui  iixaxciai  ciisis ,
The Role of Economic Structure
Why Taiwan was able to stave off the crisis should be clear from the
above analysis. What is much less obvious is why Korea was hit so badly.
Korea was not a mismanaged economy, and it had high investment rates
financed basically by domestic saving. A serious problem became apparent
when the crisis broke, however. Korean firms had developed excess capac-
ity, partly as a result of the depreciation of the yen beginning in the third
quarter  of  1995.
13
Rather  than  pulling  back,  Korean  manufacturers  re-
sponded  with  even  larger  increases  in  production  and  exports,  which
caused a sharp worsening of export prices in 1996.
14
This was particularly
the  case  in  the  semiconductor  industry,  where  the  Korean  response  to
gains in the competitiveness of Japanese firms contributed to the develop-
ment of considerable excess capacity globally.
Government action to coordinate decisionmaking by individual firms
had been on the wane for some time, as the government gradually handed
over  to  the  market  most  resource  allocation  decisions.  Excess  capacity
problems  had  previously  been  dealt  with  through  rationalization  efforts
led by planning agencies, but by the mid-1990s that restraint on the chae-
bol  dominating  Korean  industry  was  simply  no  longer  there.
15
These
moves toward the liberalization of economic policy and the dismantling of
planning instruments received impetus from international agreements on
subjects such as export subsidies and financial services, under the aegis of
the World Trade Organization (WTO). The chaebol were basically left to
their own devices to pursue whatever course of action they perceived to be
in their own interests.
16
In Taiwan, increases in export volume were much more modest prior
to the crisis, and average export prices continued to rise. Like Korea, Tai-
wan  exports  semiconductors,  but  firms  were  able  to  weather  the  global
semiconductor slump of 1996 by reducing costs and switching their prod-
uct mix away from those in excess supply. Strategic alliances between Tai-
wanese  producers  and  leading  firms  in  the  United  States,  Japan,  and
Europe contributed to avoiding excess capacity.
17
Another  important  characteristic  of  the  chaebol is  that  they  were
13. Of all the East Asian economies, Korea is the most competitive with the Japanese.
14. Y. C. Park (1998).
15. Chang (1998).
16. Y. C. Park (1998).
17. Yanagihara (1999).
xaxuii  i.   acosix ,c
highly leveraged. In 1996, the thirty largest chaebol had debt-equity ratios
of 380 percent, compared to less than 100 percent for Taiwanese firms.
18
High leverage is good when the economy and profits are expanding briskly
and when credits are renewed. In such situations, high leverage actually in-
creases a firms profitability, since interest rates are normally much lower
than the rates of return on investment. What is a blessing in an expand-
ing economy, however, becomes a curse in a shrinking one. When credits
are not renewed or when interest rates rise sharply, companies go bankrupt
more  rapidly  if  they  are  highly  leveraged  than  if  their  debt-capital  ratios
are  more  reasonable.  Since  Korean  companies  had  never  experienced  a
downdraft like the one that hit them in late 1997, their high debt-equity
ratios seemed rational to them.
By contrast, Taiwanese companies are much smaller than their Korean
counterparts, and they are consequently highly risk averse and extremely
conservative in taking on debt. Investments are usually financed with re-
tained  profits  and  capital  drawn  from  the  extended  family  rather  than
from banks. This explains why the average debt-equity ratio in Taiwan is
much lower than in Korea.
The Structure and Regulation of the Banking Industry
Many Korean conglomerates encompass a finance company, and they
obtain  funding  from  financial  markets  through  these  financial  affiliates.
Others  have  extensive  dealings  with  a  single  bank,  much  in  the  manner
of the relationship between the Japanese keiretsu and their main bank. In
the years leading up to the crisis, the finance companies had been allowed
to become full-fledged merchant banks, which improved the Korean con-
glomerates access to international debt markets. Since merchant banks do
not  accept  deposits  from  the  public,  it  was  generally  believed  that  they
did not need regulation. Commercial banks were, on paper, more tightly
regulated. In practice, however, regulators turned a blind eye to many of
their activities, in the mistaken belief that regulations were somehow con-
trary to the spirit of liberalization, particularly in view of the countrys ac-
cession to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
(OECD).
19
18. Y. C. Park (1998, p. 32).
19. J.-J. Park (1998) and personal communication.
xoiia  axo  raiwax  ix  rui  iixaxciai  ciisis ,:
Korean banks were accustomed to strong government guidance. Until
the late 1980s, a large proportion of their assets was made up of so-called
policy loans, which were loans made at preferential interest rates to firms in
sectors that were favored by government policies for selective intervention.
In the mid-1980s, however, the authorities began implementing a policy of
broad liberalization of financial markets, and policy loanswhich had rep-
resented  60  percent  of  bank  lending  in  the  late-1970swere  gradually
phased out.
20
Until the mid-1980s, then, commercial banks were either state-owned
or  under  strong  guidance  by  the  planning  authorities.  Domestic  banks
were  therefore  unaccustomed  to  operating  in  a  market  environment,
despite the recent liberalization. They had not yet developed expertise in
credit  analysis,  risk  management,  or  due  diligence. Their  ability  to  deal
with  the  risks  of  foreign  financial  transactions  was  particularly  inade-
quate.
21
Banking  authorities  performed  poorly  in  the  area  of  regulating
and monitoring foreign financial activity. Prior to 1985, the economic au-
thorities practiced extensive control over all items in the capital account,
such that banking supervision and regulation in this area were redundant.
This may explain why Korea had not developed a strong regulatory frame-
work for financial institutions.
Taiwanese banks are very prudent in their lending policies, and they
are also closely regulated by the Central Bank. Taiwanese banks were tra-
ditionally state-owned. The establishment of private banks was very grad-
ual:  even  as  late  as  1990,  twelve  of  the  twenty-four  banks  in  operation
were state-owned.  These  banks  accounted  for  75  percent  of  all  bank
branches,  86  percent  of  all  deposits,  and  87  percent  of  all  loans.
22
In
1991, rules governing the establishment of private banks were eased, and
sixteen new private banks were opened. In addition, the Central Bank al-
lowed the licensing of new foreign banks. Both public and private banks
in  Taiwan  have long  been  subject  to  stringent  prudential  regulations.
23
In September 1998, for example, the capital adequacy ratio of Taiwanese
banks  was  11.4  percentquite  a  bit  above  the  Basel  Committee  norm
of 8 percent. Taiwanese banks also face a number of restrictions on open
20. The liberalization of financial intermediation through formal banks caused the curb market to
shrink considerably (Noland, 1996).
21. Y. C. Park (1998).
22. APEC (1998, chap. 9).
23. Yang (1998).
positions  in  foreign  exchange,  which  must  be  approved  by  the  Central
Bank.
24
These differences in banking structure and regulation show up in the
behavior  of  nonperforming  loans.  At  the  outbreak  of  the  crisis  in  1997,
nonperforming loans in Taiwan were only 4 percent of all loans, whereas
they  were  14  percent  in  Korea.  This  ratio  inevitably  increased  in  both
countries as a consequence of the crisis, but in Taiwan they remained at a
manageable level (5.5 percent in 2000). In Korea, in contrast, they came
close to crippling the banking sector, peaking in 1998 at 25 percent of all
loans (or 34 percent of GDP) and then gradually falling back to an esti-
mated 18 percent in 2000.
25
This forced the Bank of Korea to intervene
by  liquidating  banks,  merging  weak  banks  with  stronger  ones,  injecting
more capital into banks deemed to be salvageable, and selling others off to
foreign banks. Nonperforming loans are still a major stumbling block in
the ability of the banking sector to grant fresh credit to the private sector.
Policies on Capital Inflows
In globalized financial markets, it is difficult for a country to run into
an international financial crisis without first having experienced large cap-
ital  inflows.  A  country  can  have  a  balance-of-payments  crisis  simply  be-
cause of bad domestic policies, of course, but the IMF is prepared to deal
with this type of crisis by means of conditional lending. Another possible
source of crisis in the absence of large capital inflows might be a currency
crisis produced entirely by contagion. If a crisis elsewhere induces fears of
a possible depreciation of the currency and if international financial trans-
actions  are  reasonably  free,  then  national  and  foreign  financial  investors
could  cause  a  crisis  by  selling  the  domestic  currency  and  buying  foreign
exchange. Such contagion was a factor explaining why countries that had
been quite well managed experienced difficult times during the recent cri-
sis  regardless  of  past  policy.  Examples  include  Chile  and  Hong  Kong.
26
Despite the enormous differences between these two economies, they both
were pursuing rather prudent policies before the financial crisis. Nonethe-
less, they both suffered significant contagion.
xaxuii  i.   acosix ,:
24. Personal communication with Central Bank officials.
25. Data on nonperforming loans are taken from Goldman Sachs, March 1998; J.P. Morgan, April
1998; Asiaweek, The Asiaweek Financial 500, September 19, 1997, and September 11, 1998.
26. On Chile, see Ffrench-Davis and Tapia (in this volume).
However, the new breed of crisis associated with the globalization of
finance  is  generally  preceded  by  a  strong  upsurge  in  capital  inflow. This
was the case in Mexico prior to 1994.
27
It was universally the case in the
countries that were most badly hit by the recent financial crisis: Brazil, In-
donesia, Korea, Malaysia, Philippines, Russia, and Thailand. Large capital
inflows can occur for a variety of reasons, including the perception by for-
eign financial investors that a country is doing things well or simply that
its currency will appreciate because they believe others think it will.
28
Since
interest  rates  are  normally  higher  in  emerging  markets  than  in  mature
ones, expectations of currency appreciation can produce very large inflows.
Such inflows are often not marginal for an individual recipient. They
can therefore have important negative externalities: they can generate cur-
rent account deficits, appreciate the exchange rate, and unleash asset price
bubbles. They  also  often  increase  the  level  of  short-term  debt  relative  to
international reserves. At the same time, the short-term nature of the in-
flows makes it easy for investors to flee and for creditors to not renew their
lending when they sense trouble.
29
Consequently, any worsening of fun-
damentals that generates perceptions of vulnerability will cause capital in-
flows to slow down, usually quite abruptly, and then to reverse direction.
When the country has lost sufficient reserves, foreign and domestic finan-
cial investors discover exchange rate risk. As the fear of depreciation gath-
ers  momentum,  everybody  seeks  to  liquidate  positions  in  domestic
currency,  accelerating  the  loss  of  reserves  and  precipitating  a  full-blown
balance-of-payments crisis.
These stylized facts fit the case of Korea fairly well. Korean banks in-
termediated huge capital inflows and financial resources in the 1990s. Even
so, the current account was not out of control despite being in deficit (it
had been in surplus in the second half of the 1980s). Although the real ex-
change rate appreciated as a result of capital inflow, the degree of apprecia-
tion was not excessive by recent standards. Financial fragility rose to very
dangerous levels, however: the ratio of short-term debt to international re-
serves exceeded 200 percent in 1997, making the economy very vulnerable
to capital flight by scared investors and creditors (see table 2-5).
xoiia  axo  raiwax  ix  rui  iixaxciai  ciisis ,,
27. See Ros (in this volume).
28. This is a peculiar international version of Keyness beauty contests (see Eatwell, 1997, p. 243).
Some  investors  are  more  concerned  with  what  other  investors  are  doing  than  with  the  underlying
worth  of  assets.  When  these  participants  predominate  over  the  so-called  fundamentalists,  financial
markets can be very volatile indeed.
29. Ffrench-Davis and Ocampo (in this volume).
Korea introduced a broad range of measures in 199193 to liberalize
the capital account. In 1991, all remaining restrictions on greenfield for-
eign direct investment (FDI) were scrapped, and resident companies and
banks were allowed to issue securities abroad. Beginning in January 1992,
foreigners  were  allowed  to  purchase  stocks  in  individual  Korean  compa-
nies, with the limitation that a maximum of 10 percent of a companys eq-
uity  could  be  owned  by  foreigners  as  a  group.
30
Both  the  aggregate  and
individual investors ceilings were gradually enlarged thereafter.
Short-term flows, however, were liberalized ahead of most long-term
flows. Ceilings on loans in foreign exchange to domestic firms were lifted
in 1994, but ceilings on banks long- and medium-term borrowing from
international  financial  markets  were  not.  Only  trade  credits  and  other
short-term borrowing abroad were liberalized. This forced banks to raise
short-term credit to finance long-term loans to the chaebol.
31
Other types
of long-term capital movements were also excluded from the trend toward
liberalizing  the  capital  account.  These  included  purchases  of  domestic
bonds by foreigners, as well as a virtual ban on M&A owing to restrictions
on  foreign  ownership  of  existing  Korean  companies.  The  crisis  and  the
conditions attached to the IMF program eliminated most of the remain-
ing restrictions. By the end of 1997, the aggregate ceiling for foreign port-
folio investment had been raised to 55 percent of a companys equity. All
restrictions on M&A were eliminated in May 1998.
32
The short end of the financial market was thus opened up ahead of
bond markets, long-term bank finance, and the market for corporate con-
trol. The  authorities  seemed  to  hold  the  erroneous  view  that  short-term
finance (most of which was assumed to be trade related) is self-liquidating
and,  as  such,  unlikely  to  generate  overindebtedness.  However,  Korean
banks and firms were borrowing large sums of short-term funds to finance
long-term  investments.  Even  when  the  authorities  became  aware  of  the
deteriorating quality of bank assets and the increasing mismatches in the
term structure of assets and liabilities, they failed to intervene, perhaps be-
cause they lacked experience and resources, but also, to a significant degree,
because they were influenced by the atmosphere of euphoria predominat-
ing in international financial markets.
33
xaxuii  i.   acosix ,
30. Park  (1996).  Until  that  date,  foreigners  were  allowed  to  invest  in  Koreas  stock  market  only
through authorized open-end mutual funds.
31. Y. C. Park (1998).
32. Wang and Zang (1999, chap. 9).
33. Y. C. Park (1998).
The flows that followed liberalization in the early to mid-1990s were
enormous  (see  table  2-6).  Curiously,  the  big  increases  were  not  in  FDI
(perhaps  because  of  restrictions  on  M&A),  but  in  portfolio  transactions
and bank lending. Purchases of shares on the Seoul market jumped from
U.S.$2.5 billion in 1992 to U.S.$6.6 billion in 1993. Since Korean com-
panies  are  among  the  worlds  most  competitive,  they  were  undoubtedly
very  attractive  to  foreign  portfolio  investors.  Thus  much  of  the  equity
portfolio inflows that took place after 1992 was a stock adjustment phe-
nomenon that should have been fully anticipated by the authorities. Un-
fortunately, it was not. This lack of foresight fueled the capital surge.
Debt-creating portfolio inflows rose spectacularly, from U.S.$2.5 bil-
lion in 1992 to U.S.$15.2 billion in 1996. These were mostly securitized
forms of bank lending. International banks were acting as middlemen in
the  placement  of  securities  by  Korean  banks  (and  also  by  banks  from
other  East  Asian  countries)  in  international  financial  markets.
34
Private
credit to both banks and nonfinancial firms also rose dramatically. At the
same time, Korea experienced large outflows in the form of debt-creating
portfolio flows and lending by banks and nonbanks. This is an indication
that Korean banks and firms were engaging in interest rate arbitrage be-
tween international  capital  markets,  on  the  one  hand,  and  Korean  or
other markets, on the other. As shown above in table 2-4, net capital in-
flows consistently exceeded the current account deficit plus reserve accu-
mulation  between  1993  and  1996.  Large  negative  errors  and  omissions
demonstrate that Korean banks and chaebol were engaging in financial in-
vestments in other countries, such as Indonesia and Thailand. There are
even  some  reports  that  Korean  banks  were  purchasing  Russian  govern-
ment bonds.
Financial liberalization, then, led to large capital inflows and outflows.
Korean banks borrowed short abroad in order to lend long to the chaebol,
which borrowed to finance aggressive investment plans. In some instances,
the  borrowers  on  international  markets  were  the  chaebol themselves  or
their foreign subsidiaries. This mismatch between the maturity structure
of assets and liabilities was accompanied by an equally dangerous currency
mismatch: Korean banks took on debt in foreign exchange and lent in won
(and  also  in  baht,  Indonesian  rupiahs,  and  other  currencies).  Banks  be-
came totally illiquid during the crisis when foreign creditors refused to roll
over short-term loans. The first to flee were the foreign equity investors,
xoiia  axo  raiwax  ix  rui  iixaxciai  ciisis ,,
34. For a description, see Kregel (1998a, 1998b); Taylor (1999).
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who dumped Korean stock even when doing so meant taking a big hit. As
the stock market fell, so did the international value of the won. The ex-
change rate depreciation, in turn, caused many banks and firms to become
technically bankrupt, since their assets were insufficient to cover their lia-
bilities.
The case of Taiwan is quite different. Taiwan did not experience large
capital inflows, not because foreign investors and lenders were not inter-
ested  in Taiwan,  but  because  the  authorities  did  not  allow  it  to  happen.
Although Taiwan underwent a process of domestic financial liberalization
and limited opening of the capital account in the 1990s, that process was
extremely cautious. Capital inflows are still strictly regulated. Given Tai-
wans long-standing current account surplus, the authorities gave priority
to liberalizing capital outflow.
Taiwan limits the value of shares that can be held by foreigners: any
single foreigner may hold up to 15 percent of a listed companys equity,
and all foreigners together may hold up to 30 percent. Acquisitions of Tai-
wanese companies by foreigners are forbidden.
35
On the other hand, there
are  no  restrictions  on  greenfield  FDI  investments,  profit  remittances,  or
the repatriation of capital. Foreign institutional investors have a ceiling of
U.S.$600 million on the investments they can make in Taiwan. Natural
foreign persons can purchase up to U.S.$5 million in Taiwanese assets, and
firms  that  are  not  listed  institutional  investors  face  a  ceiling  of  U.S.$50
million. As already noted, Taiwanese banks are under the strict guidance
and supervision of the Central Bank as regards their taking on foreign li-
abilities  for  conversion  into  N.T.  dollardenominated  assets. The  use  of
N.T. dollar derivatives is authorized by the Central Bank only for genuine
hedging  purposes.  For  example,  cross-currency  swaps  between  the  N.T.
dollar and the U.S. dollar may be used to cover bank loan obligations or
interest payments from one currency to another in order to hedge currency
and interest rate risks.
With regard to capital outflows, the use of foreign exchange for over-
seas investment is allowed, but such investments must be approved by the
Ministry of Economic Affairs and the Central Bank. Natural persons may
invest  up  to  U.S.$5  million  abroad  without  permission. The  limit  for  a
domestic firm is U.S.$50 million.
It might be objected that the current account surplus is evidence that
greater capital account liberalization would not have led to stronger capi-
xoiia  axo  raiwax  ix  rui  iixaxciai  ciisis ,;
35. Judging from press reports, this norm appears to have been liberalized in 1999.
xaxuii  i.   acosix ,
tal inflows. Stronger capital inflows are certainly compatible with a surplus
on current account. Had they taken place, foreign investments in the Tai-
wanese economy would have been even greater and the outflows of capi-
tal from Taiwan even larger. Larger capital inflows, however, would have
made  Taiwan  more  vulnerable  to  the  type  of  events  that  took  place  in
Korea. Had Taiwan been more open to capital inflows, the effects of the
crisis undoubtedly would have been far worse. Taiwan is one of the most
successful economies in the world. It has strong companies that might be
of  interest  to  many  transnational  corporations.  Its  stock  market  is  un-
doubtedly attractive for institutional investors and individuals looking for
plays in emerging markets. Many Taiwanese banks might have borrowed
more had the monetary authorities allowed them to do so.
36
They might
have  used  the  good  credit  rating  of Taiwan  to  borrow  and  lend  in  other
countries, much as the Korean banks did.
The  fact  is  that  none  of  the  damaging  sequence  of  events  that  took
place in Korea happened in Taiwan. The main cause for Taiwans relative
success is clearly its much more cautious policy on the kinds of capital in-
flow that are likely to lead to those situations. At the time of the crisis, Tai-
wans external debt was notably low at about U.S.$25 billion, a figure that
is insignificant in comparison to its international reserves (see table 2-5).
Most of its debt was in the form of trade credit. In other words, Taiwan
had low levels of external indebtedness because it was cautious about bor-
rowing excessively. Equity markets had little foreign investment, so port-
folio outflows were commensurately moderate after the crisis struck.
Korea,  on  the  other  hand,  found  itself  in  a  situation  of  extreme  fi-
nancial  fragility  shortly  after  liberalizing  short-term  capital  inflows.  By
1996,  just  three  years  after  the  implementation  of  the  most  ambitious
measures, the ratio of short-term debt to reserves had reached a level that
was not macroeconomically sustainable, which should have alerted the au-
thorities. The increase in the ratio was not the result of a fall in reserves,
which had in fact risen; it was due entirely to a very rapid accumulation
of short-term debt. Large inflows of portfolio capital also meant that the
country had made itself very vulnerable to a change in sentiment. And that
is what happened: before the crisis became full-blown, most of the foreign
investors in Korean stock had already exited.
36. Taiwanese interest rates are lower than those in Korea, however, so the possibilities for arbitrage
are more limited.
xoiia  axo  raiwax  ix  rui  iixaxciai  ciisis ,,
The Role of Contagion
Contagion clearly had a leading role in the Korean debacle. Would the
crisis have occurred in the absence of contagion? Probably not. If measured
on  the  basis  of  pre-crisis  levels  for  the  exchange  rate  and  interest  rates,
major  Korean  firms  and  banks  were  not  insolvent.  Banks  were  certainly
vulnerable  to  a  liquidity  squeeze,  and  the  chaebol were  vulnerable  to  a
slowdown in world demand for their products, but both banks and firms
would  have  been  able  to  resolve  their  problems  if  foreign  investors  had
been willing to keep their money in Korea and creditors had rolled over
expiring  loans,  even  at  higher  interest  rates. The  proper  role  of  the  IMF
should have been to coordinate expectations around the fact that Korean
institutions were solvent. By insisting that major structural changes were
required, it reinforced the view of market participants that something was
fundamentally wrong with the economy, its firms, and its banks.
Korea clearly had better fundamentals than, say, Thailand or Malaysia.
As noted, Koreas current account deficit was significant only in 1996 (4.4
percent of GDP). For the period 199296, the average Korean deficit was
a mere 1.6 percent. And even in 1996, Koreas deficit was well below Thai-
lands  (7.9  percent  of  GDP).  Thailand  ran  an  average  current  account
deficit of 6.5 percent of GDP for the period 199296. The average deficit
for Malaysia in the same period was 5.8 percent of GDP, with a peak of
9.7 percent in 1995.
37
International  financial  markets  worried  about  Korea  only  after  the
onset  of  the  financial  crisis  elsewhere.  Before  the  crisis  struck  other  East
Asian countries, international portfolio investors and international banks
were pouring finance into the Korean economy. After the Thai, Malaysian,
and  Indonesian  crises,  they  reassessed  their  commitments  to  Korea  and
pulled  out  en  masse,  with  all  the  adverse  consequences  described  above.
The  almost  unrestricted  opening  of  the  capital  account  (following  over
three decades of universally acclaimed economic success) made the coun-
try highly vulnerable to just such a sequence of events.
Korea experienced several forms of contagion, starting with the effect
on  trade.  Generally  speaking,  when  a  crisis  affects  real  economies,  other
countries experience a drop in export volumes or export prices or both. In
the Korean case, export prices had worsened before the onset of the crisis
37. Data drawn from International Monetary Fund, International Financial Statistics, various issues.
as  a  consequence  of  the  insufficient  demand  vis--vis  a  huge  increase  in
supply, partly because the chaebols insisted on going ahead with their in-
vestment plans regardless of world market conditions.
The second important form of contagion was financial contagion. A
financial crisis in one country can spread to other economies if the ensu-
ing panic causes investors to flee and creditors to refuse to roll over credit.
This was the major form of contagion in the Korean case, and the one that
produced the most damage to the domestic economy.
The third common manifestation of contagion is in the exchange rate,
which occurs when foreign and domestic agents dump the domestic cur-
rency and purchase foreign exchange in response to a financial crisis else-
where.  Korea  experienced  this  type  of  contagion,  but  it  was  relatively
short-lived. The foreign exchange market witnessed enormous overshoot-
ing. The permanent effect was a depreciation of the won from about W
888 to the U.S. dollar before the crisis (at the end of the second quarter
of 1997) to about W 1,100 in October 2000. This represents a permanent
nominal depreciation of about 25 percent. In real terms, the depreciation
was  less  than  20  percent. This,  of  course,  reflects  the  inefficiency  of  fi-
nancial markets. The Korean won was overvalued in mid-1997, but it did
not need to go through the wild gyrations that it experienced between the
fourth quarter of 1997 and the end of 1998.
Taiwan  similarly  experienced  strong  trade  contagion,  which  was  ex-
pressed in a sharp fall in the growth rate of export volumes. Some degree
of exchange rate contagion was also felt, but it was much milder than in
Korea. As already noted, most of the nominal exchange rate depreciation
that occurred in Taiwan in late 1997 was quickly corrected. Where Taiwan
really differs from Korea is in the area of financial contagion: Taiwan ex-
perienced  no  such  phenomenon. The  country  had  little  volatile  foreign
capital within its borders, so little fled. If Taiwanese individuals and com-
panies wished to leave, their ability to do so was limited by financial reg-
ulations.
Concluding Remarks
The main lesson to be drawn from the differing experiences of Korea
and Taiwan is that liberalization of the capital account of the balance of
payments needs to be very cautious, particularly when it comes to short-
xaxuii  i.   acosix oc
xoiia  axo  raiwax  ix  rui  iixaxciai  ciisis o:
term flows and portfolio capital. Countries that choose to liberalize must,
at the very least, ensure that banking supervision and regulation are ade-
quate. Since domestic interest rates in emerging economies are bound to
be higher than international rates, domestic banks operating in economies
with a high degree of integration into international financial markets are
under  constant  temptation  to  borrow  abroad.  Preventing  major  mis-
matches requires strong, well-trained supervisory authorities. This is eas-
ier  said  than  done.  Good  banking  regulation  and  supervision  develop
gradually  and  are  highly  correlated  with  the  level  of  development. Their
evolution is often speeded, however, as a consequence of a financial crisis.
Korea is likely to come out of the crisis with a much improved domestic
financial system, much as Chile did after its 1982 banking crisis.
But better banking supervision is not a panacea. In financially open
economies where banks are not allowed to borrow freely, domestic firms
that  can  borrow  directly  from  international  markets  may  take  on  exces-
sive international debt.
38
When times are good and the real exchange rate
is appreciating, even rational firms may simply ignore the possibility of a
damaging exchange rate depreciation. Unhedged borrowing by firms was
a  component  in  the  Korean  and  other  financial  crises  of  the  late  1990s.
Since  the  borrowing  by  each  firm  inflicts  an  adverse  externality  on  the
economy  as  a  whole  (by  exposing  it  to  the  risk  that  changes  in  creditor
and  investor  sentiment  will  force  many  firms  into  bankruptcy),  there  is
a good  argument  for  monitoring  such  borrowings  and  limiting  it  when
necessary.
39
Large capital inflows may have other adverse effects on the economy, as
well. Large inflows unleash asset price bubbles that could attract even more
foreign  capital,  which  is  extremely  volatile  and  can  thus  cause  excessive
fluctuations in the real exchange rate. Such fluctuations are highly damag-
ing in countries that are attempting to integrate into international markets
through trade. A good part of these flows is temporary, but they can have
permanent effects on recipient economies. It may therefore be advisable for
the authorities to limit them. This is precisely what Taiwan has doneand
what Korea used to do before 1992. Korea has now dismantled most of its
controls on capital inflows, however. Much of this process was carried out
38. This point is made forcefully by Furman and Stiglitz (1998).
39. Fischer (1998), a fervent advocate of capital account liberalization, suggests that prudential con-
trols ought to include matching requirements on nonbank firms assets and liabilities in foreign ex-
change.
xaxuii  i.   acosix o:
before the crisis struck, and the authorities have essentially completed that
task as a result of the crisis, partly under pressure from the IMF. The policy
apparatus that allowed the country to change its economic structure dra-
matically  and  to  build  strong,  internationally  competitive  firms  is  now
gone.
The firms are still there, however, and the Korean economy is recov-
ering from the crisis much faster than anyone expected. The growth of the
Korean economy was very strong in 1999 (almost 11 percent), and despite
a slowdown in the fourth quarter, it appears to have exceeded 8 percent in
2000. Much of the growth in 1999 and 2000 represents a recovery of con-
sumption  and  equipment  investment. The  Central  Bank  was  able  to  re-
duce interest rates as international reserves recovered and capital began to
flow back in, which was very beneficial to the highly-leveraged Korean cor-
porate sector. Strong export growth has also assisted the recovery.
Nonetheless, the crisis is forcing major changes on the Korean econ-
omy. The banking sector is undergoing a profound transformation, and it
is to be hoped that banking regulation and supervision will advance sig-
nificantly. On the other hand, the Korean authorities have been forced to
open the economy to the purchase of domestic firms by foreign interests.
There  are  reports  of  large  inflows  of  FDI,  mainly  in  the  form  of  M&A.
Many  financial  and  nonfinancial  firms  are  being  bought  up  at  bargain-
basement prices by investment fundsand often not by transnational cor-
porations  in  the  same  field  as  the  acquired  companies,  which  could  be
expected  to  contribute  new  management  or  technology. The  purchasers
are portfolio investors rather than long-term direct investors, and they are
likely to hold on to their Korean assets only until their prices rise with the
consolidation of economic recovery.
Recovery  has  thus  stimulated  renewed  capital  inflows.  Korean  firms
are already regaining their access to international financial markets. For-
eign funds are returning to the stock market. Korean banks will take longer
to  regain  international  creditworthiness,  since  the  bank  restructuring
process is far from complete.
40
It is to be hoped that the Korean authori-
ties  will  soon  have  in  place  the  banking  regulation  and  supervision  that
can control unnecessary and potentially damaging capital inflow. It is also
to be hoped that they will find substitutes for the now discarded capital
account controls of the past.
40. Park (1999).
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3
o,
C
hiles recent history includes three interesting epi-
sodes  that  shed  light  on  the  policies  designed  to
confront  surges  of  capital  inflows  and  their  effect  on  the  national  econ-
omy. The first episode began in the mid-1970s and ended with the 1982
debt crisis; the second began in the early 1990s and continued through the
so-called Mexican tequila crisis; and the third consisted of the two years
preceding  the  Asian  crisis. The  three  have  features  in  common:  they  all
originated in an overabundance of foreign funds; the capital flew into the
private sector; in all cases Chile exhibited some strong fundamentals, such
as a fiscal surplus, and held an outstanding image as a successful country;
and each financial boom was followed by an international financial crisis.
Notable differences, however, are found in both the policy approach used
to  face  the  capital  flood  in  the  three  cases  and  the  results  obtained. The
three cases thus offer a valuable opportunity to study the relation between
the economic policies in question and their consequences.
1
This paper focuses on the characteristics of the three booms and their
impact on the sustainability of macroeconomic balances. It is during this
iicaioo iiiixcu-oavis
uiiiniiro raiia
*
Three Varieties of Capital
Surge Management 
in Chile
*We are grateful to Guillermo Le Fort, Manuel Marfn, Carlos Massad, Jaime Ros, Gonzalo San-
hueza, John Williamson, Felipe Jimnez, Daniel Titelman, Mara ngela Parra, and Andras Uthoff for
substantive comments and criticisms.
1. See Ffrench-Davis (2001, chaps. 5, 6, and 10).
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  uiiiniiro  raiia oo
stage of the cycle that future crises are seeded or avoided. We only margi-
nally consider the post-boom period, when additional shocks (such as on
the terms of trade) may affect the adjustment path of the economy. 
The impact of capital flows on emerging economies can be analyzed in
two dimensions. The first refers to the capacity for domestic absorption,
which largely determines how flows affect fundamentals in the host coun-
try. If absorption is efficient, capital inflows will contribute to a sustainable
growth process. If, on the contrary, the new funds distort key macroeco-
nomic  prices,  then  wrong  resource  allocation  results,  and  external  sav-
ing will crowd out national saving. The central issue here is how to extract
the  benefits  from  a  higher  availability  of  capital. The  second  dimension
has to do with external vulnerability. It involves examining the economys
exposure as it encounters volatile financial markets in order to determine
the cost of instability. Both dimensions are crucial for assessing the manage-
ment of capital flows. Dealing with the first is a necessarybut not suffi-
cientcondition  for  sound  financial  integration,  while  neglecting
the second  may  generate  considerable  short-term  benefits  at  the  cost  of
medium-term risks stemming from higher foreign debt and exchange rate
and current account imbalances. These factors send the wrong signals to
the productive sector and ultimately make the economy the victim of its
own success.
Chile was the recipient of huge capital flows in each of the three peri-
ods under consideration. Private sector capital predominated in all three
cases, and it was directed to Chiles private sector. However, indicators of
vulnerability,  such  as  the  current  account  deficit  and  an  appreciated  ex-
change rate, and indicators of sound domestic absorption, such as national
saving and investment rates and the growth rate of potential gross domes-
tic product (GDP), behaved differently in each case. The first case in the
1970s coincided with low domestic investment and saving. Foreign saving
sharply crowded out national saving, and the macroeconomic environment
with an appreciated exchange rate and extremely high interest rates
discouraged the channeling of resources to productive investment. GDP
growth was high for several years, however, because the large underutilized
capacity resulting from the heavy 1975 recession (when GDP fell 13 per-
cent) left an important margin for easy economic recovery. In other words,
GDP was able to grow without requiring new capital formation. Rapid ex-
pansion of aggregate demand, stimulated by financial capital inflows, thus
moved  the  economy  toward  its  productive  frontier,  closing  the  gap  by
198081.
2
The large indebtedness made the economy highly vulnerable to
external shifts, but it was also in itself unsustainable, given a current ac-
count deficit of 14.5 percent of GDP in 1981 (at current prices; the figure
is 21 percent with a normalized dollar) and growing amounts coming due.
Pronounced inefficiencies thus characterized both the absorption of flows
(which was mainly limited to contributing to the recovery of economic ac-
tivity) and management of the external vulnerability. The result was that in
1982 Chile suffered the deepest debt crisis of all Latin American countries.
The situation was entirely different in the first half of the 1990s, re-
flecting the lessons learned. GDP grew strongly and was accompanied by
high investment and saving. The pre-tequila phase in Chile, unlike the pe-
riod preceding the debt crisis, began with high utilization of productive ca-
pacity. Policy designed to maintain the stability of macroeconomic prices
allowed aggregate demand to increase along with saving and investment.
The high growth rates were therefore sustainable over time. In other words,
capital inflows were absorbed efficiently. In the external sector, the current
account deficit was carefully controlled, and the Central Bank pursued an
active policy of preventing excessive exchange rate appreciation. With the
Mexican crisis of 199495, the Chilean economy showed that its domestic
achievements were accompanied by great strengths on the external front. A
positive trade shock reinforced this solid position.
Chile was highly regarded in the international community at the start
of the third episode. The economy had been almost immune to contagion
from the tequila effect, and it enjoyed full utilization of capacity and solid
domestic fundamentals. In 199697 Chile recorded vigorous growth that
could be judged sustainable thanks to high domestic investment rates, but
the economy was becoming vulnerable to changes in the international en-
vironment. When such changes occurred in 1998, driven by the large trade
and financial shocks brought on by the Asian crisis, Chile had a high exter-
nal deficit and an appreciated exchange rate. The country was forced to un-
dergo  an  intense  process  of  macroeconomic  adjustment,  which  led  to  a
recession (though with a moderate drop in GDP of 1 percent in 1999).
The specific policies and approaches used in each of the three episodes
varied, evolving from the extreme naivet of the 1970s into the more prag-
matic approach of the early 1990s. The end of the century saw a turning
away from macroeconomic sustainability as authorities gave in to the temp-
caiirai  suici  xaxacixixr  ix  cuiii o;
2. Ffrench-Davis (2001, chap. 1).
tation to move toward financial globalization without properly respecting
underlying risks.
Liberalization of the Capital Account: 197582
Shortly after the military coup of 1973, Chile began its transition to
a free-market economy with a series of institutional reforms of great depth
and breadth. The implementation of the neoliberal model meant substan-
tial changes in the public sectors role in the national economy. An intense
program of import liberalization was initiated in 1973, and the financial
system was radically reformed in 1975. Almost all the banks that had been
nationalized  by  the  previous  government  were  privatized.  Interest  rates
were abruptly deregulated in April 1975, and the rules governing lending
(which  encouraged  its  channeling  to  production  rather  than  consump-
tion) were eliminated. Authorities underrated prudential supervision, be-
lieving that the market would do the job.
3
Volume, Source, and Use of Flows
Capital  flows  into  Chile  rose  fast  starting  in  1977  as  a  result  of  the
boom in lending to developing countries by international banks, which was
triggered by the capital surplus of oil-producing countries and was further
stimulated by domestic financial reforms. Chile exhibited a significant ac-
cumulation of international reserves up to 1981, although shortly thereaf-
ter the external sector showed a high and rising current account deficit. The
capital flow was overwhelmingly concentrated in the private sector without
guarantees by the State, with less than one-fifth of inflows taking the form
of foreign direct investment (FDI) and loans to the public sector.
Flows were sizeable in the second half of the 1970s, as shown in table
3-1. Foreign saving (the current account deficit) and debt service also grew
as a share of exports, despite very strong export activity in the initial years
of the neoliberal experiment. Foreign debt service in 1982 equaled 88 per-
cent of goods and services exports, that is, three times the debt-service co-
efficient for 197074. The magnitude of capital movements is reflected in
the fact that for 198081, gross loans received climbed to 24 percent of
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  uiiiniiro  raiia o
3. See  Ffrench-Davis  and  Arellano  (1981);  Daz-Alejandro  (1985);  Edwards  and  Cox  Edwards
(1987);  Ffrench-Davis  (2001,  chap.  5);  Harberger  (1985);  Morand  and  Schmidt-Hebbel  (1988);
Reinstein and Rosende (2000); Tapia (1979); Valds-Prieto (1992).
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iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  uiiiniiro  raiia ;c
GDP.  All  of  these  indicators  were  substantially  greater  than  the  Latin
American averages for the 1970s.
4
The composition of agents participating in capital flows changed sig-
nificantly  in  this  period.  On  the  lending  side,  84  percent  of  the  foreign
debt  in  1981  was  to  banks,  compared  to  only  19  percent  at  the  end  of
1974. Chiles bank debt grew 57 percent a year between 1977 and 1981,
while the average for developing countries was 28 percent. On the borrow-
ing side, the growing net inflows were directed primarily at the private sec-
tor  from  1975  on,  while  the  State  moved  toward  a  budget  surplus.  A
deliberate policy of reducing the role of the State was facilitated by changes
in  international  markets,  where  official  institutions  lending  to  govern-
ments  lost  relevance  while  private  capital  markets  emerged  strongly  as  a
source of access for both public and private borrowers.
The  great  majority  of  private  debt  was  contracted  with  no  explicit
guarantee by the State. Fully two-thirds of Chiles total debt lacked such
guarantee  in  1981. Through  1977,  the  private  sector  obtained  a  signifi-
cant part of its loans directly, as a result of quantitative restrictions then
applying  to  local  banks  with  respect  to  foreign  financial  credits.
5
From
1978 on, domestic banks were allowed gradually greater importance in the
direct intermediation of foreign financing. It was only in April 1980, how-
ever, that domestic banks were allowed access to foreign credit on the same
conditions as the nonbanking sector. Lending through the banking sector
grew dramatically from then on, yet flows to the nonfinancial sector con-
tinued to grow at a significant rate as well. The private sector received 94
percent of the gross flow in 197681.
6
Debt and Macroeconomic Adjustment
Chile  took  on  massive  quantities  of  debt  between  1977  and  1981,
which had significant effects on aggregate demand and its composition. It
also  contributed  to  both  economic  recovery  and  the  concentration  of
wealth, crowded out domestic savings, and had a decisive effect on mon-
etary and exchange rate policies. Generally speaking, the initial impact of
foreign borrowing is an increase in the supply of foreign currency, which
can lead to two outlets: an increase in reserves or exchange rate apprecia-
tion and a growing current account deficit. Chile experienced both effects
4. Ffrench-Davis (1984).
5. A large share of these loans was backed by bank guarantees at the beginning of the borrowing
boom. See Ffrench-Davis (2001, table 5.4).
6. See Ffrench-Davis (2001, chap. 5).
caiirai  suici  xaxacixixr  ix  cuiii ;:
up to 1981. Net capital inflows were greater than the capacity of the do-
mestic economy to absorb foreign funding, despite the growing expansion
of that capacity as a result of economic recovery, import liberalization, and
exchange rate revaluations driven by inflows.
The rapid accumulation of reserves, in turn, had substantial effects on
the money supply. The large capital flowsboth those used to finance in-
creased imports and those that went to expanding international reserves
led to a high proportion of the economys domestic credit being based on
foreign funding. Despite this volume, substantial differences between do-
mestic and external interest rates persisted.
xoxirai\  ioiic\  axo  caiirai  coxriois Starting  in  1975,  net  pur-
chases  of  foreign  currency  by  the  Central  Bank  were  the  main  source  of
money  supply  expansion.
7
They  represented  over  100  percent  of  money
supply changes in the three-year period 197880. As already mentioned,
the  overwhelming  share  corresponded  to  private  borrowing;  operations
with the public sector actually had a contractive effect in some years. The
severe  macroeconomic  disequilibria  that  had  been  accumulating  finally
emerged in 1981, when international reserves began to fall. The monetary
effect  of  foreign  exchange  operations  correspondingly  became  strongly
contractive.
Some direct restrictions were applied to capital inflows as a part of the
monetary program. One such restriction was designed specifically to mod-
erate  the  monetary  effects  of  flows  by  limiting  the  amount  that  banks
could exchange each month at the Central Bank. This measure was in ef-
fect from 1977 to 1979, with a series of modifications in the maximum
amount  allowed.
8
The  restrictions  were  not  sufficient,  however,  to  hold
foreign loans to the private sector at a volume consistent with the rate of
monetary  expansion  considered  desirable  by  economic  authorities.  Do-
mestic credit by the Central Bank (rediscounts or loans to the banking sec-
tor)  was  therefore  tightened  in  the  face  of  increased  money  supply
stemming from foreign exchange dealings. Nevertheless, the increase in ag-
gregate demand was much more rapid than GDP growth. A strong real ex-
change  rate  revaluation  took  place  despite  the  accumulation  of  reserves,
which had the effect of crowding out domestic producers of tradables.
Targets for expanding liquidity were in effect while a closed-economy
approach predominated in policymaking. In 1979, authorities adopted an
7. Ffrench-Davis and Arellano (1981, table 13).
8. Ffrench-Davis and Arellano (1981).
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  uiiiniiro  raiia ;:
open-economy monetary approach to the balance of payments. The nomi-
nal exchange rate was frozen in June, and a supposedly neutral monetary
policy was established. Variations in the level of international reserves were
to automatically determine the economys level of liquidity, within the con-
text of a fiscal budget in surplus and low reserve ratios in the banking sector.
In April 1979, an unremunerated reserve requirement was established
for foreign loans (under Article 14), with percentages varying according to
the term of the loan. The prohibition on loans with an average maturity
of less than twenty-four months was maintained (with a 100 percent re-
serve requirement), and reserve requirements were based on a structure of
decreasing rates according to the loan term. Loans over sixty-six months
were exempt. In August 1979 and July 1980, rates were lowered for loans
with a maturity of over twenty-four months. The modifications were not
significant for two reasons, however. First, no loan of less than two years
could be contracted throughout this period, except for trade credits gov-
erned by limits that had survived the deregulation of April 1980. Second,
the strong segment of the international market at the time was syndicated
loans, whose average term varied from six to ten years in 197680.
9
The  monetary  approach  to  the  balance  of  payments  prevailed  from
mid-1979 to mid-1982, with a neutral monetary policy based on the dollar
standard. At the end of these three years, a contractionary automatic adjust-
ment was in effect, with disastrous results on employment and output.
10
ixcuaxci iari ioiic\ Exchange rate policy evolved significantly in the
197482 period.
11
Up to June 1976, there was a crawling-peg regime, with
adjustments  made  one  to  four  times  a  month.  The  subsequent  regime
combined daily devaluations determined each month in advance with four
abrupt changes in the value of foreign currency (two devaluations and two
revaluations). In early 1978 and 1979, a table of daily adjustments was es-
tablished  for  the  remainder  of  each  year.  In  June  1979,  this  system  was
interrupted with a devaluation that brought the price of the dollar to the
level scheduled for the end of the year (39 pesos). This rate was maintained
until  June  1982,  when  there  was  an  18  percent  devaluation  and  an  an-
nouncement  of  a  table  of  smaller  devaluations. This  was  soon  replaced,
however, by a short-lived freely floating exchange rate, which was followed
by a return to a crawling-peg regime. The evolution of the real exchange
rate is shown in figure 3-1.
9. Ffrench-Davis (1984, table 11).
10. See Arellano and Cortzar (1982); Ffrench-Davis (2001, chaps. 1 and 4).
11. See Ffrench-Davis (2001, chap. 4).
caiirai  suici  xaxacixixr  ix  cuiii ;,
Figure 3-1. Real Exchange Rate, 19742000 
a
Source: United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC); Central Bank of
Chile; Ffrench-Davis (2001).
160
140
120
100
80
60
40
20
Index, 1974  100
1974 1976 1978 1980 1982 1984 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000
ECLAC
Adjusted
Central
Bank
Net inflows were a crucial factor in making it possible for the author-
ities to manage the exchange rate with goals other than efficient resource
allocation until 1981. The use of the exchange rate to shape expectations
(in  197679)  or  to  anchor  domestic  prices  to  external  prices  (197982)
resulted in lower inflation, but it also produced significant real exchange
rate appreciation (45 percent between 1975 and 1981). When combined
with import liberalization (the average tariff was reduced from 94 percent
to 10 percent) and the economic recovery of 197781, this caused the not-
able current account deficit mentioned above.
12
Furthermore, the gradual
appreciation brought the observed real cost of foreign borrowing down to
negative levels in 1979 and 1980, which encouraged inflows.
ixriiisr  iari  oiiiiiixriais The  government  expected  liberalization
to cause a strong trend toward the reduction of spreads, with an equalizing
of domestic and foreign interest rates. Large differentials between lending
12. The increase in the deficit was also associated with high interest payments and falling copper
prices. The loss in government revenue in 1981compared to the 196570 averagerepresented 1.6
percent of GDP. The sharp fall in copper prices was partially offset by the governments capturing the
economic rent following the nationalization of copper mining in successive stages in 1966, 1969, and
1971.
and borrowing rates in the domestic financial market persisted throughout
the period, however, and both rates were quite high. In addition, domestic
rates continued to exceed international rates by a wide margin despite the
large capital inflows, especially from 1979 on (see table 3-2).
13
The  distributive  impact  of  interest  rate  differentials  is  illustrated  by
the fact that between 1976 and 1982 the average domestic borrower paid
interest exceeding a normal annual real rate of 8 percent, equivalent to
300  percent  of  the  principal  borrowed.  In  other  words,  a  borrower  who
paid the lender 8 percent, renewed principal, and capitalized interest over
8 percent would, by the end of 1982, have had a debt four times the in-
itial one, in currency of constant purchasing power. By contrast, the debtor
borrowing abroad on the same terms would have owed 44 percent less be-
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  uiiiniiro  raiia ;
13. One recurring explanation is that the rate differentials derived from expectations of devaluation.
In 1981, however, many local borrowers still moved from peso-denominated to foreign-denominated
debt. Ffrench-Davis (2001, chap. 5), and Harberger (1985) examine the causes of the real interest rate
differentials in pesos. These causes were reinforced by the rediscount constraints imposed by the Cen-
tral Bank.
Table 3-2. Chile: Domestic and External Real Interest Rates, 197582
a
Annual percent in pesos
Year Domestic External Differential
1975
b
121.0 . . . . . .
1976 51.2   -21.1 72.3
1977 39.4 0.2 39.2
1978 35.1 3.8 31.3
1979 16.9   -0.9 17.8
1980 12.2   -8.0 20.2
1981 38.8 12.4 26.4
1982 35.2 45.0   -9.8
Sources: Authors calculations, based on data from the Central Bank of Chile; Instituto Nacional
de Estadsticas (INE); R. Cortzar and J. Marshall, Indice de precios al consumidor en Chile:
197078, Coleccin Estudios CIEPLAN 4 (November), 1980; R. Ffrench-Davis and J. P. Arellano,
Apertura financiera externa: la experiencia chilena en 197380, Coleccin Estudios CIEPLAN 5
(July), 1981.
a. The domestic rate refers to the predominant segment of the market, covering transactions for
terms of thirty to ninety-one days. The external interest rate is that paid for bank credits obtained
under Article 14, plus the cost in respect of compulsory deposits and the financial spread, all
converted into their peso equivalents. In 1982 the preferential exchange rate was used to calculate
the external interest rate.
b. Second semester, after interest rate liberalization.
fore the 1982 devaluation than the original debt contracted in 1976. The
massive real devaluation of 80 percent then raised this borrowers debt to
its original level (equivalent to only one-fourth of the first borrowers peso-
denominated debt). The figures vary, obviously, according to the date of
borrowing. For example, late borrowers who took loans denominated in
foreign currency in 1981 lost dramatically, given the real devaluations that
took place in 1982.
These differentials had significant effects, from both the allocative and
distributive  points  of  view.
14
Small  and  medium-size  enterprises  (SMEs)
were largely relegated to the high-interest segment of the market. Firms as-
sociated with the management of financial institutions, as well as the larger
economic  groups,  enjoyed  expeditious  access  to  foreign  credit,  whether
directly or through the intermediation of Chilean banks. The low rates of
saving and investment during this period show that the environment pro-
vided  more  incentives  for  financial  activity  and  speculation  than  for
productive activities.
15
oiriiioiario ioirioiio quaiir\ axo iiuoixriai suiiivisiox For-
eign  borrowing  gave  rise  to  a  domestic  lending  boom.  The  increase  in
credit  took  several  forms:  direct  foreign  loans  not  backed  by  guarantees,
direct foreign loans with guarantees, foreign loans intermediated by local
banks, and loans made by these banks in domestic currency on the basis
of  the  liquidity  generated  by  foreign  exchange  operations.  The  lend-
ing boom took place in an atmosphere of very lax prudential supervision.
Related-party lending rose rapidly, often without guarantees or with ficti-
tious  guarantees.  Regulations  were  circumvented  via  cross-lending  and
loans to paper firms, as well as loans through off-shore institutions. Faced
with  high  interest  rates,  the  banks  renewed  loans  (often  on  a  thirty-day
basis)  and  financed  interest  payments  with  new  loans.  Meanwhile,  the
stock  of  loans  grew  38  percent  a  year  in  real  terms  between  1976  and
1981.  Nonperforming  loans  appeared  low  and  the  banks  profits  high.
Many  loans  were  backed  by  stock  and  real  estate,  but  the  prices  of  such
collateral were inflated as a result of the financial boom and the mistaken
belief that the Chilean economy would continue to grow at around 8 per-
cent a year.
Required provisions were low. In 1979, general requirements were re-
caiirai  suici  xaxacixixr  ix  cuiii ;,
14. Zahler (1980).
15. See Mizala (1992).
duced from 2 percent of loans to 0.75 percent. Priority was to be given to
individual  provisions,  although  this  was  not  implemented.  After  the  ex-
plosion of the banking crisis in January 1983, observers realized that 19
percent of loans in late 1982 were with related parties and represented 249
percent of the capital and reserves of private banks. The severe weakness
of the financial system, which resulted from typical neoliberal reforms, had
enormous fiscal costs in the following years.
16
It should be emphasized that around 40 percent of external lending to
private  firms  in  the  domestic  market  (Article  14)  was  handled  directly,
with  no  intermediary  between  borrowers  and  foreign  lenders.  Conse-
quently, not even the strictest and most effective prudential supervision of
the local financial system could have fully prevented the development of
macroeconomic imbalances as a result of the boom in foreign funding.
17
Inefficient Domestic Absorption and External Vulnerability
The world economy and the domestic market underwent a process of
increasing indebtedness, which led to a gradual exchange rate appreciation
and great vulnerability for Chiles external sector. The belief that the appre-
ciation would prove sustainable made foreign loans more attractive. Stock
and real estate prices were rising at a dizzying rate.
18
Such feedback rein-
forced the cycle, increasing the inflow of capital. This, in turn, increased ag-
gregate demand and supported the persistent exchange rate appreciation
and a notable rise in asset prices. The economy became increasingly accom-
modated  to  a  massive  financial  inflow,  and  aggregate  demand  became
highly intensive in importables.
19
The  form  that  foreign  funding  took  and  the  incentives  provided  by
the economic model led to a decrease in investment, and, more so, in na-
tional savings (see table 3-1 above).
20
Gross fixed capital formation aver-
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  uiiiniiro  raiia ;o
16. Held and Jimnez (2001); Sanhueza (1999).
17. See Valds-Prieto  (1992)  on  the  weaknesses  of  prudential  supervision  on  the  supply  side  and
the importance of nonbank flows.
18. The  General  Stock  Price  Index  grew  by  1,000  percent  between  1976  and  1980.  Real  estate
prices peaked in 1981 at more than 100 percent above their 1976 prices (Morand, 1992).
19. Ffrench-Davis and De Gregorio (1987).
20. One theoretical interpretation of the crowding out of national savings is that a sharp rise in pro-
ductivity generated the expectation that GDP capacity would continue to grow by 8 percent a year
even given a low investment ratio. Anticipating the consumption of future increased income was there-
fore  seen  as  an  equilibrating  intertemporal  adjustment.  Since  the  expectation  was  wrongcapacity
was growing very slowlythe adjustment was actually destabilizing (Ffrench-Davis and Reisen, 1998,
chap. 1).
aged only 18.7 percent of GDP in 197781, significantly under the 21.2
percent average of the 1960s.
21
A growing share of funds was channeled
to  the  consumption  of  imported  goods,  crowding  out  spending  on  do-
mestic  tradables  and  national  savings.  This  phenomenon  intensified  in
1981, as the process of recovery came up against the economys produc-
tive capacity. National savings fell to 8 percent of GDP in 1981 and to 2
percent  in  1982.  Excessively  high  domestic  interest  rates,  the  disman-
tling of  public  mechanisms  to  support  productive  activities,  the  drop  in
public  investment,  and  an  abrupt  import  liberalization  with  an  appre-
ciated and unstable exchange rate all combined to discourage productive
investment.
It was obvious that the external deficit could not be sustained for long,
even if the international environment were to remain unchanged. Never-
theless,  the  government  argued  that  the  process  was  in  balance  because
private  lenders  were  financing  it  and  that  it  would  be  self-regulating.
Demand for imports would soon reach the saturation point, spontaneously
checking the rise. A currency crisis could not occur against a background of
budget surpluses, international reserves larger than high-powered money,
and  a  supposedly  neutral  monetary  policy. When  international  financial
problems began to emerge in 1981, however, the current account deficit
was 14.5 percent.
22
There was a clear and compelling need to reduce the ex-
ternal imbalance and correct the appreciated exchange rate.
Chiles difficulty in obtaining foreign loans in 1982 coincided, then,
with  a  great  domestic  need  for  fresh  funds  to  pay  growing  interest  and
amortization costs, as well as to cover the trade deficit. The composition
of the foreign debt had some strongly negative dynamics. First, given the
prevalence  of  variable  international  interest  rates,  net  interest  payments
quadrupled between 1978 and 1982 (reaching 7 percent of GDP), after the
contraction  of  international  financial  markets.  Second,  short-term  debt
grew from what was considered a normal level, associated with a sustainable
volume of trade, to double its share, reaching 20 percent of all debt by 1982
caiirai  suici  xaxacixixr  ix  cuiii ;;
21. Figures in 1986 currency. The authorities reiterated that increased productivity made higher in-
vestment unnecessary. Our calculations show, however, that of the actual GDP increase of 6.5 percent
in the 197680 period, only 2 percent a year was due to increased capacity, while the rest reflected ex-
ploitation  of  existing  capacity  that  had  been  underused  since  the  deep  recession  of  1975  (Ffrench-
Davis, 2001, chap. 1).
22. This figure, in current prices, underestimates the importance of the deficit as a result of the ex-
cessive exchange rate appreciation in 1981. The deficit climbs to 21 percent of GDP if measured using
the exchange rate of 197678. For a discussion of alternative measures of this coefficient, see Ffrench-
Davis (2001, chap. 5).
(13 percent of GDP). Third, amortization of private medium-term debt
grew rapidly.
In brief, the Government was relying on the automatic functioning of
the dollar standard, and the productive apparatus was weak and suffering
from overindebtedness. The external shocks of the early 1980s thus found
the Chilean economy in a very vulnerable position. The effects of the fi-
nancial and terms-of-trade shocks were multiplied in the domestic market,
with a reduction in aggregate spending of 30 percent and a GDP drop of
17 percent in 198283 (see table 3-3). In the midst of this general crisis,
many observers failed to analyze the specific policies for capital flow man-
agement used in this period. The tools were clearly inadequate for coun-
teracting  the  crisis.  This  was  not  so  much  the  fault  of  the  instruments
themselves, however, as of the fact that a small economy was confronting
an enormous supply of funds and that very high differentials between do-
mestic and foreign interest rates (about 20 to 30 percentage points) made
any sort of inflow profitable.
Active Regulation of Capital Inflows: 199095
Latin America began to see renewed inflows of private capital in the
late 1980s. Chile was one of the first to attract new funds and was among
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  uiiiniiro  raiia ;
Table 3-3. Debt Crisis in Chile, 197783
Indicator  1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983
GDP
a
8.3 7.8 7.1 7.7 6.7   -13.4   -3.5
Aggregate expenditure
a
12.9 9.7 10.4 10.5 12.4   -23.8   -8.6
Fiscal expenditure
a
8.8   -18.8   -7.4   -3.2 7.6 16.7   -4.0
Exports
a
12.0 11.8 14.2 14.5   -9.0 4.5 0.1
Imports
a
32.4 18.1 23.9 20.7 13.3   -34.0   -17.7
Current account deficit
b
3.7 5.2 5.4 7.1 14.5 9.2 5.4
Real exchage rate
c
62.8 69.7 69.7 60.9 51.8 60.1 72.1
Terms-of-trade effect
d
-0.2   -0.9 1.8   -0.6   -2.2   -0.8 1.6
Source: Based on data from the Central Bank of Chile; F. Larran, Public Sector Behavior in a
Highly Indebted Country: The Contrasting Chilean Experience, 197085, in The Public Sector and
the Latin American Crisis, edited by F. Larran and M. Selowsky, San Francisco: ICS Press, 1991;
Ffrench-Davis (2001).
a. Official figures at 1986 constant prices, annual growth (percent).
b. Current prices, percent of GDP.
c. Index, 1986 = 100.
d. Current prices, percent of GDP.
the countries facing the greatest quantity of inflows in relation to the size
of its economy. Recipient countries generally experienced macroeconomic
problems stemming from the magnitude of the inflows and their compo-
sition, which was prone to volatility.
23
Chilean policy in the first half of the 1990s represented a significant
step toward a more pragmatic approach to macroeconomic management.
In brief, policymakers responded to the massive availability of foreign cap-
ital by attempting to moderate short-term inflows while keeping the door
open  to  long-term  flows.  Specifically,  an  unremunerated  reserve  require-
ment  was  established  to  raise  the  cost  of  bringing  in  short-term  capital;
this is a market-based instrument that affects relative costs. Authorities also
used exchange rate intervention and monetary sterilization to hold down
the  appreciation  of  the  real  exchange  rate  in  the  face  of  those  flows  that
surpassed the reserve barrier and gave way to the monetary effects of for-
eign operations. These tools were used in support of a development strat-
egy that encouraged export growth and diversification.
The policy was highly successful, in the sense that in 199194 the cur-
rent  account  deficit  was  moderate,  the  currency  appreciated  less  than  in
most of the regions countries, and the total short-term external debt was
held to a fairly low magnitude. When the Mexican exchange rate crisis ex-
ploded in late 1994, the Chilean economy proved immune to contagion
(see table 3-4). The country had significantly reduced its vulnerability.
Capital Inflows from 1990 to 1995
The return to democracy in 1990 coincided approximately with the
beginning of an episode of abundant foreign capital flowing to emerging
economies. Effective private inflows to Chile achieved some importance in
1989; after that date, FDI increased steadily and represented a solid ma-
jority of capital inflows in the 1990s (see figure 3-2).
24
A set of active mac-
roeconomic policies was adopted to regulate the capital surge. During this
period,  productive  capacity  expanded  vigorously,  and  the  economy  was
running close to full capacity. This was a determining factor in creating a
virtuous circle of rapid capital formation.
25
caiirai  suici  xaxacixixr  ix  cuiii ;,
23. See,  for  instance,  Calvo,  Leiderman,  and  Reinhart (1993);  Ffrench-Davis  and  Griffith-Jones
(1995).
24. Significant movements began in 1986 in relation to a debt conversion program, but this activ-
ity involved debt paper instead of cash flows. See Ffrench-Davis (2001, chap. 7).
25. See Agosin (1998); Ffrench-Davis and Reisen (1998).
Private  short-term  lending  also  figured  prominently  in  the  capital
surge into Latin America in the 1990s. For a country to be the target of
interest  rate  arbitrage,  domestic  interest  rates  must  exceed  international
rates by a margin that more than offsets the currencys expected deprecia-
tion and the country risk. Such conditions obtained in Chile starting in
the early 1990s. On the one hand, in 1992 and 1993, international rates
on dollar loans were at their lowest level in thirty years, and though they
later rose, they continued to be moderate and remained far below their lev-
els in the 1980s. On the other hand, Chile is a capital-scarce country, with
a stock consistent with a GDP of only U.S.$5,000 per capita. Because the
scarcity  entails  a  higher  price,  the  interest  rate  in  emerging  economies
tends  to  be  higher  than  in  developed  countries.
26
Monetary  policy  must
keep average real interest rates above international rates to ensure sustain-
able macroeconomic balances.
27
Other conditions for interest rate arbitrage also proved favorable to in-
flows.  After  a  cumulative  real  depreciation  of  130  percent  in  the  1980s,
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  uiiiniiro  raiia c
26. Our  policy  implications  are  consistent  with  the  idea  that  the  fastest  growing  economies  have
higher interest rates associated with their GDP growth rates.
27. Chilean authorities increased the structural interest rate differential through a macroeconomic
adjustment in 1990, based unilaterally on a substantial rise in the interest rate by the Central Bank
(see Ffrench-Davis, 2000, chap. 7).
Table 3-4. Tequila Crisis in Chile, 199195
Indicator 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995
GDP
a
8.0 12.3 7.0 5.7 10.6
Aggregate expenditure
a
6.2 15.0 10.8 5.5 16.2
Fiscal expenditure
a
10.4 12.3 7.4 5.6 6.2
Exports
a
12.4 13.9 3.5 11.6 11.0
Imports
a
7.0 21.8 14.2 10.1 25.0
Current account deficit
b
0.3 2.3 5.6 3.0 2.0
Real exchage rate
c
106.4 97.6 96.9 94.3 88.9
Terms-of-trade effect
d
0.1   -0.3   -1.9 2.8 2.5
Source: Based on data from the Central Bank of Chile; Direccin de Presupuestos del Ministerio
de Hacienda (DIPRES), Estadsticas de las finanzas pblicas: 19901999, Santiago, March 2000;
Ffrench-Davis (2001).
a. Official figures at 1986 constant prices, annual growth (percent).
b. Current prices, percent of GDP.
c. Index, 1986 = 100.
d. Current prices, percent of GDP.
Figure 3-2. Composition of Capital Flows, 19802000
Source: Central Bank of Chile.
8
6
4
2
0
-2
-4
-6
-8
Billions of dollars
Other
Portfolio
FDI outflow
FDI inflow
1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000
the exchange rate began to appreciate gradually in the 1990s. As in the case
of other countries in the region, Chiles country risk premium fell. An at-
mosphere  of  emerging  markets  mania  (  la  Kindleberger)  on  the  part  of
international investors generated a spectacular drop in perceived country
risk.
28
Private short-term capital inflows were heavy well into 1992, after
which they began to fall as a result of policy measures taken to check them.
Portfolio  inflows  took  two  forms:  investment  through  large  interna-
tional  mutual  funds  and  the  issuing  of  American  depositary  receipts
(ADRs) by large Chilean firms. Primary issues of ADRs represent an op-
portunity for a firm to expand its capital at a relatively low cost, since costs
in international markets naturally tend to be lower than in the Chilean fi-
nancial market. Secondary issues of ADRs occur when foreigners purchase
securities available on the Chilean stock market and subsequently convert
them into ADRs.
29
This operation constitutes a change of ownership from
nationals to foreigners, without a direct financial effect on the firm. Chiles
relatively developed domestic securities market, together with the growing
use of ADRs to reach the U.S. securities market, made Chilean securities
caiirai  suici  xaxacixixr  ix  cuiii :
28. For instance, the Euromoney index shows an improving country risk from 47.7 in 1990 to 72.9
in 1995.
29. See Ffrench-Davis, Agosin, and Uthoff (1995).
attractive  for  investors  seeking  new  financial  vehicles.  These  changes  of
ownership exposed the economy to an additional degree of uncertainty and
volatility, since foreign investors can easily withdraw their investments.
30
Such flows clearly played a destabilizing role in the economy. They contrib-
uted to the inflationary behavior of the securities market in 1994 and 1997
and depressed the market in 1995 and 1998, operating procyclically.
While  private  sector  flows  increased,  public  debt  fell.  The  Chilean
government reduced new credits from international financial institutions
and made sizable prepayments, particularly in 199596.
The Response of Macroeconomic Policy and Its Effects
Monetary authorities in Chile deployed a wide range of measures to
regulate the surge in financial capital in 199095. The Central Bank took
steps  to  discourage  inflows  of  short-term,  liquid  capital  by  means  of  the
unremunerated reserve requirement. At the same time, it kept the doors
open for FDI risk capital. It moderated the impact of those waves of cap-
ital by intervening in the foreign exchange market to prevent an overabun-
dance  of  foreign  currency  from  appreciating  the  real  exchange  rate  too
much and by sterilizing the monetary effects of the rapid accumulation of
international reserves.
31
Three other policies contributed to the success in managing capital in-
flows. First, fiscal policy was very cautious. Increases in social spending were
financed with new taxes. Consequently, Chile had a significant nonfinan-
cial  public  sector  surplus  of  1  or  2  percent  of  GDP. This  prudential  ap-
proach, which included observing the regulations of a stabilization fund for
public copper revenues, facilitated the monetary authorities task of regulat-
ing capital inflows, and it contributed to preventing excessive exchange rate
appreciation in the first half of the decade. Of course, running a fiscal sur-
plus does not guarantee financial stability. The great 1982 crisis occurred
despite Chiles having had several years of budget surpluses. The same thing
happened in Mexico with tequila crisis and in Korea with the Asian crisis. In
all three cases, the external deficit was led by the private sector.
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  uiiiniiro  raiia :
30. Some analysts maintain that foreigners who become pessimistic about a country generally sell
their ADRs on the U.S. stock market, and the sale therefore has no impact on domestic stock and for-
eign exchange markets. This argument disregards the fact that when firms issue ADRs, the prices of
securities on the domestic and U.S. markets tend toward equality through arbitrage. In fact, equity
price  movements  of  Chilean  firms  that  have  issued  ADRs  on  U.S.  markets  are  closely  linked  with
movements on the Santiago exchange.
31. See Ffrench-Davis, Agosin, and Uthoff (1995).
Second,  prudential  banking  regulations  had  been  introduced  in  re-
sponse  to  the  banking  crisis  of  198283,  and  the  regulatory  system  had
then  been  improved  over  the  years.  Authorities  effectively  resisted  pres-
sures to weaken supervision when lobbying sectors argued that the system
was  mature  enough  to  self-regulate;  in  fact,  prudential  supervision  was
strongly intensified. This made it difficult for capital inflows to trigger an-
other credit boom in the commercial banks, which in turn helped keep the
current  account  deficit  and  exchange  rate  within  sustainable  limits  until
1995. It is important to note that a significant share of financial flows is
not channeled through local banks. This phenomenon became decidedly
more pronounced in the 1990s, with the development of portfolio invest-
ment funds and derivatives markets. Nevertheless, fiscal responsibility and
effective prudential supervision of the financial system are two very impor-
tant complements in regulating capital flows.
Third,  authorities  continually  monitored  aggregate  demand  and  its
consistency with productive capacity. Consequently, macroeconomic dis-
equilibria were not allowed to accumulate. Some overheating occurred in
1993, but the authorities conducted a downward adjustment. When the
tequila  crisis  exploded,  Chile  had  a  moderate  external  deficit,  large  re-
serves, and space for increasing economic activity. Those conditions would
not have been feasible without regulating capital inflows, managing the ex-
change rate flexibly, and pursuing an active monetary policy.
32
ioiic\ ioi xaxacixc caiirai ixiiows Strategic features of the policies
used  went  against  the  fashion  of  capital  account  liberalization. The  two
main targets of exchange rate and inflows management policies were, first,
achieving sustained macroeconomic stability in an economy prone to huge
cycles  (Chile  experienced  the  sharpest  recessions  in  all  Latin  America  in
1975  and  1982)  and,  second,  supporting  the  growth  model  adopted  by
the authorities, which gave the expansion and diversification of exports a
crucial role.
In the face of a plentiful supply of foreign funds, Chilean authorities
opted  to  regulate  the  foreign  currency  market  in  order  to  prevent  large
misalignments in the real exchange rate relative to its medium-term trend.
The natural short-term horizon of financial markets can lead to exchange
rate values that are inconsistent with medium- and long-run trends, which
caiirai  suici  xaxacixixr  ix  cuiii ,
32. Good luck also played a role, with a sharp improvement in the terms of trade in 1995. Even so,
the other factors provided strong macroeconomic insurance.
negatively  affects  decisions  in  the  productive  sector.
33
The  authorities
sought to preserve the predominance of medium-term fundamentals over
short-term factors influencing the exchange rate.
In June 1991, the financial environment featured accelerating growth
in available external funds and a high copper pricefactors considered to
have a significant transitory component. The authorities reacted by estab-
lishing  an  unremunerated  reserve  requirement  of  20  percent  on  foreign
credit (covering the entire spectrum of foreign credit, from that associated
with FDI to trade credit). The reserve was to be on deposit at the Central
Bank for a minimum of 90 days and a maximum of one year, according
to the time frame of the operation. At the same time, a tax on domestic
loans of 1.2 percent for operations of up to one year was extended to for-
eign loans. The reserve requirement, an option of paying its financial cost,
and the tax on foreign credits all involved zero marginal cost for the loans
outstanding after a one-year term. The first two, however, were heavily on-
erous for very short-term inflows.
Since capital inflows persisted, the reserve requirement was tightened
and extended to almost all international financial transactions. In May 1992
the requirement was raised to 30 percent and was extended to cover time de-
posits in foreign currency, and in July 1995 it was extended to the purchase
of Chilean stocks (secondary ADRs) by foreigners.
34
The term of the deposit
was raised to one year, independent of the maturity of the loan. With some
lag, authorities took measures to eliminate a loophole that made it possible
to circumvent the reserve requirement by means of FDI (since risk capital
was exempt). This was accomplished by scrutinizing FDI applications. Per-
mission for FDI exemptions from reserve requirements was denied when it
was  determined  that  the  inflow  was  disguised  financial  capital.  In  these
cases, foreign investors had to register their funds at the Central Bank as fi-
nancial investments subject to the reserve requirement.
Beginning in 1991, measures were put in place to facilitate capital out-
flows as a way of lightening pressure on the exchange rate.
35
Specifically, a
series of incremental changes allowed Chilean pension funds to invest up
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  uiiiniiro  raiia 
33. Ffrench-Davis (2000, chap. 6); Ffrench-Davis and Ocampo (in this volume); Zahler (1998).
34. It is not difficult to impose reserve requirements on foreign portfolio investments. If funds to
be invested are deposited in a Chilean bank, they remain subject to the reserve requirement there. For
funds  not  using  a  Chilean  bank  as  an  intermediary,  the  reserve  requirement  can  be  enforced  at  the
time the asset is registered to a party with a foreign address. Registration with the Central Bank is also
necessary when converting securities into ADRs.
35. See Ffrench-Davis, Agosin, and Uthoff (1995).
to 6 percent of their total assets abroad as of 1995.
36
Expeditious access to
the formal foreign currency market was provided for residents wanting to
invest abroad (chapter XII of the exchange regulations), which had the ad-
ditional  benefit  of  encouraging  the  development  of  Chilean  firms. This
was effective in stimulating considerable flows of FDI, as well as acquisi-
tions by Chilean firms in neighboring countries.
37
Still, the greater profit-
ability  of  financial  assets  in  Chile  compared  to  financial  investments
abroad, along with expectations of an appreciating exchange rate, discou-
raged foreign investments by pension funds and by the mutual funds cre-
ated at that time.
The  immediate  effect  of  deregulating  outflows  was  probably  to  en-
courage new inflows thanks to the greater certainty that it gave potential
investors coming into Chile. This scenario may actually produce the op-
posite  of  the  desired  effect,  because  the  market  takes  advantage  of  the
opportunity to move foreign currency abroad when expectations of appre-
ciation  are  replaced  by  expectations  of  depreciation,  which  is  precisely
when the economy is most vulnerable and likely to suffer from speculative
attack.
38
The progressive deregulation of outflows can thus imply a risk of
capital flight not only from the sudden exit of capital that previously came
in,  but  also  from  domestic  funds  seeking  to  speculate  against  the  peso.
This procyclical feature makes it particularly dangerous to facilitate out-
flows by domestic investors, since it weakens the effect of measures such
as the reserve requirement on inflows, as was proved in 199899.
ixcuaxci iari ioiic\ Exchange rate policy also underwent a substan-
tial shift after the 198283 crisis. From 1984 on, authorities used a crawl-
ing band, which was widened to 5 percent in 1989. The official rate was
devalued daily, according to an estimate of net inflation. Discrete nominal
devaluations were added at various junctures, serving to achieve the not-
able real depreciation of 130 percent between 1982 and 1988.
Chile was thus coming out of the depths of a debt crisis faced with de-
preciation. The  real  exchange  rate  had  reached  historic  highs,  such  that
there was room for some appreciation. However, the economy was mov-
ing from a shortage to a very abundant supply of foreign savings, and au-
thorities wanted to avoid an excessive and overly rapid adjustment in the
caiirai  suici  xaxacixixr  ix  cuiii ,
36. It was argued that this would contribute to diversifying risk and increasing the profitability of
the private pension system.
37. Caldern and Griffith-Jones (1995).
38. Williamson (1992); Labn and Larran (1997).
exchange  rate.
39
One  particularly  problematic  aspect  of  the  situation  in-
volved foreign expectations: as pessimism turns to optimism, foreign in-
vestors  tend  to  rapidly  define  a  new  stock  of  desired  investments  in  the
emerging  market;  this  generates  excessive  inflows  of  capital,  whose  high
levels are naturally transitory, not permanent.
The  crawling  band  was  broadened  to  10  percent  in  January  1992.
This produced a wave of revaluatory expectations fed by capital inflows.
The flows were stimulated by the knowledge that the Central Bank would
not intervene within the set band. For many months, a proposal had cir-
culated at the Central Bank to initiate a dirty or regulated float within the
band. Proponents of such intramarginal intervention argued that given an
increasingly active informal foreign exchange market and a more porous
formal  market,  the  current  pure  band  led  to  an  observed  exchange  rate
with a tendency toward the extremes of the band (the ceiling in 198990,
the floor shortly thereafter). The sudden revaluation of almost 10 percent
in the observed rate between January and February 1992 contributed to
the Banks initiating the dirty float in March. The observed rate then fluc-
tuated  within  a  range  of  1  to  8  points  above  the  floor  of  the  bandin
other words, generally off the bottom of the band and always with active
purchases by the Bank, though also with sales from time to time.
The initial broadening of the band had created expectations that the
Bank had renounced the attempt to avoid revaluatory pressures and sus-
tain the export strategy, instead giving the marketwhich was dominated
by  short-term  participantsthe  job  of  determining  the  observed  rate
within a very wide range. By establishing the regulated float, the Central
Bank regained a greater role, which allowed it to strengthen the long-term
variables that determine the exchange rate facing producers of exportables
and importables.
In  subsequent  months,  U.S.  interest  rates  continued  to  fall,  putting
pressure on the Central Bank. Nevertheless, the Chilean economy had a
notable boom, with a GDP increase firmly in the double digits. The Bank
therefore wanted to raise rather than lower domestic interest rates to pro-
mote macroeconomic balance. To deter arbitrage, it decided to increase the
reserve requirement on capital inflows. The effectiveness of the reserve re-
quirement and its flexible application at that juncture facilitated monetary
policy and avoided accumulation of macroeconomic imbalances.
Finally, in July 1992, the dollar was replaced by a basket of currencies
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  uiiiniiro  raiia o
39. See Zahler (1998).
as the currency standard for the exchange rate. This measure was intended
to introduce greater exchange rate uncertainty in short-term dollar-based
operations,  thereby  reducing  incentives  for  interest  rate  arbitrage,  given
the daily instability governing the international values of the currencies in-
cluded (namely, the dollar, the deutsche mark, and the yen). At the same
time, replacing the dollar with the basket meant greater stability for aver-
age peso values of returns on exports. Unlike financial operations, which
are denominated largely in dollars, trade is geographically diversified and
thus operates with a more diverse mix of currencies.
The actual market performance strongly indicates that the exchange
rate appreciation during this period represented equilibrating movements.
This is consistent both with the disappearance of the effects of the 1980s
crisis, allowing the elimination of the overdevaluation then required, and
with net improvements of productivity for Chilean tradables. A revealed
proof  is  the  fact  that  the  current  account  deficit  was  very  moderate:  2.5
percent GDP in 199095.
srioxcii naxxixc suiiivisiox The  Chilean  banking  crisis  of  1981
86, which followed on the heels of a massive capital surge in the late 1970s,
carried a number of valuable lessons that were reflected in Chilean legisla-
tion.
40
Some of the elements of prudential supervision adopted include the
continuous monitoring of the quality of bank assets; strict limits on banks
lending to related agents; automatic mechanisms to adjust banks capital
when its market value falls beneath thresholds set by regulators; and the
authority to freeze bank operations, prevent troubled banks from transfer-
ring funds to third parties, and restrict dividend payments by institutions
not  complying  with  capital  requirements.  Chiles  financial  markets  had
also become deeper; this allowed the orderly infusion of new funds, as well
as  their  withdrawal,  without  significantly  affecting  the  quality  of  bank
portfolio.
41
Despite  the  quality  of  prudential  supervision,  however,  macroeco-
nomic  imbalances  that  suddenly  lead  to  massive  devaluations  and  very
high interest rates can unexpectedly affect the quality of banks portfolios,
as  can  exploding  bubbles  in  asset  markets.  Sustainable  macroeconomic
balances are an essential partner of sustainable prudential supervision.
caiirai  suici  xaxacixixr  ix  cuiii ;
40. See Daz-Alejandro (1985); Held and Jimnez (2001); Reinstein and Rosende (2000); Valds-
Prieto (1992).
41. C. Larran (1995); Aninat and Larran (1996).
Effectiveness of Policies for Stabilizing Macroeconomic Variables
The Chilean mechanism for prudential macroeconomic regulation at-
tracted considerable international attention, and many studies attempt to
measure its effectiveness.
42
Various tests seek to determine how the reserve
requirement affects the composition and volume of flows, as well as their
impact on the exchange rate, the authorities ability to make monetary pol-
icy, and the aggregate demand. There is ample evidence that Chiles regu-
lations  on  foreign  capital  changed  the  maturity  structure  of  inflows,
reducing the short-term component.
43
This evidence points to a very pos-
itive feature of the instrument, since the liquidity of foreign liabilities is a
major factor in the probability and severity of crises.
44
Disagreement  arises,  however,  on  the  effect  of  the  overall  volume  of
flows, since some econometric studies fail to find that these instruments
affected the total volume or exchange rates, though they do find an effect
on the composition of flows.
45
The implication here is a high substitution
between short- and long-term flows. Part of this compensatory phenome-
non between flows of different maturities is to be expected, in the sense
that long-term investors prefer a more stable country (as results from the
reserve requirement). In fact, FDI was predominant in Chile, whereas in
Latin America as a whole it accounted for only one-fourth of total flows
in the first half of the 1990s.
46
The flows, however, do not encompass the
same money or the same investor; it is a different investor with a different
behavior, closely connected to productive investment. On the one hand,
FDI creates new capacity, which contributes to capital formation and also
increases importation, in particular of capital goods. Given the size of the
inflows, therefore, the foreign currency market experiences a smaller excess
supply  than  in  the  case  of  financial  inflows.  On  the  other  hand,  FDI  in
Chile has behaved as a permanent variable, while other flows have acted
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  uiiiniiro  raiia 
42. References  to  Chilean-style  policy  for  dealing  with  capital  flow  instability  are  frequent  in  the
main circles where these issues are discussed, for example, by people such as Andrew Crockett, Paul
Krugman,  Dani  Rodrik,  and  Lawrence  Summers.  See,  for  example,  Stiglitz  (1998),  then  vice  presi-
dent of the World Bank; see also El Diario, Santiago, March 30, 2000, which quotes Horst Koehler,
the recently appointed managing director of the IMF.
43. De  Gregorio,  Edwards,  and  Valds (2000);  Edwards  (1999b);  Le  Fort  and  Lehman  (2000);
Schmidt-Hebbel, Hernndez, and Gallego (1999).
44. See, for instance, Rodrik and Velasco (1999); Tapia (2000).
45. De Gregorio, Edwards, and Valds (2000); Edwards, (1999b); Valds-Prieto and Soto (1998).
46. It  should  be  pointed  out  that  loans  associated  with  FDI  remained  subject  to  the  reserve  re-
quirement. Since the average maturity of these loans was around seven years, the cost incidence was
small, while it did minimize the risk that short-term loans would be disguised as long-term flows.
as transitory disturbances.
47
Because FDI is much less volatile than other
types of incoming capital, macroeconomic regulatory policies such as re-
serve requirements that are based on short-term or volatile inflows will en-
courage long-term stability over continued volatility.
Some observers have stated that the effectiveness of measures to dis-
courage capital inflows is only temporary, since private sector agents gen-
erally  find  ways  around  such  measures.
48
In  principle,  a  number  of
loopholes  facilitate  such  evasion.  One  is  to  underbill  imports  or  overbill
exports. Another is to delay payment for imports or accelerate export re-
ceipts.  A  third  possibility  is  to  bring  in  funds  through  the  informal  cur-
rency market. Fourth, short-term funds can be registered as FDI, although
this was a costly option since Chilean law required FDI to remain in the
country for at least a year. Nonetheless, this method was becoming an im-
portant loophole, so the authorities agreed to eliminate it. Fifth, business
partners may arrange back-to-back operations in which, for instance, one
party pays for imports with a local bank deposit in Chilean pesos rather
than foreign currency, while the exporter is then paid in foreign currency
through a bank in his or her country. All of these tactics (and others) are
possible, but they all imply costs, and some may have undesirable reper-
cussions on the tax liabilities of those employing them to circumvent re-
serve requirements. Though a certain level of evasion is inevitable, there is
no evidence suggesting large-scale evasion of measures to discourage short-
term capital, as shown by the reserve deposits actually made and the col-
lection of the equivalent fee by the Central Bank.
The most recent studies tend to confirm that the reserve requirement
also  reduced  total  inflows  and  moderated  exchange  rate  appreciation.
49
Qualitative analysis reinforces the conclusion: Chile confronted a supply
of foreign funds that was greater (in relation to its GDP) than other Latin
American  countries,  owing  to  its  more  attractive  economic  performance
and its greater political stability in the early 1990s. Nevertheless, exchange
rate appreciation and the current account deficit (as a fraction of GDP or
exports) were smaller, on average, than in the other countries in the region
that received large amounts of foreign capital.
50
All  of  these  studies  coincide  in  their  assessment  that  the  reserve  re-
quirements  maintained  an  adequate  spread  between  domestic  and  inter-
caiirai  suici  xaxacixixr  ix  cuiii ,
47. Agosin and Ffrench-Davis (2001); Le Fort and Lehmann (2000).
48. See, for example, Valds-Prieto and Soto (1998).
49. Le Fort and Lehmann (2000); Schmidt-Hebbel, Hernndez, and Gallego (1999).
50. See Ffrench-Davis (2000, chap. 10).
national interest rates and thus provided room for monetary policy. This
factor was important in the process of sustained growth seen throughout
the  decade,  since  frequent  mini-adjustments  by  the  Central  Bank  pre-
vented the need for maxi-adjustments and allowed the economy to remain
persistently at or near its productive capacity or production frontier. Ac-
tual output thus coincided with potential output. The resulting perception
of real sustainable stability stimulated capital formation and the growth of
productive capacity and employment.
51
The  combination  of  policies  used  involved  financial  costs  for  the
monetary  authority,  since  accumulation  of  large  volumes  of  foreign  cur-
rency  implies  a  significant  cost. This  also  generates  a  social  cost  for  the
economy, since the profitability of these assets abroad is naturally less than
interest  payments  on  the  Central  Bank  liabilities  issued  to  sterilize  the
monetary effects of accumulating reserves. The losses for the Central Bank
are estimated at 0.5 percent of GDP annually. Evidence shows that disin-
centives to short-term, liquid capital inflows tended to reduce the magni-
tude  of  the  financial  costs  of  sterilization  and  generated  substantial
macroeconomic  benefits.  Even  more  flexible  and  timely  management  of
the intensity and coverage of the reserve requirement and additional mech-
anisms  by  the  monetary  authority  would  undoubtedly  have  kept  the  fi-
nancial costs lower.
52
Furthermore, the existence of high levels of reserves
has frequently been a very important stabilizing factor in emerging econ-
omies facing crisis situations, as was proved in Chile in the next episode.
Domestic Strengths and External Vulnerability: 199697
The previous section examined how prudential policy in the first half of
the 1990s was effective in achieving objectives of macroeconomic sustain-
ability during a capital surge. In 1995, the year in which the tequila crisis
erupted, GDP dropped in Mexico and Argentina by 6.1 percent and 3 per-
cent, respectively, whereas output rose 10 percent in Chile in a great show of
external strength (helped by a positive terms-of-trade shock).
53
Paradoxi-
cally,  satisfactory  performance  was  one  of  the  causes  of  the  disequilibria
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  uiiiniiro  raiia ,c
51. Agosin (1998); Ffrench-Davis and Reisen (1998).
52. Another potential source of real compensation for the Central Bank losses is the exchange rate
band, which allows the exchange rate board to buy cheap (near the floor) and to sell expensive (near
the top). This would generate profits only if there is not an excessively strong revaluation of the band.
53. A negative impact was felt only on the stock market. See Ffrench-Davis (2000, chap. 10).
built  in  199697.  In  the  first  place,  foreign  investors  confidence  in  the
strength  of  the  Chilean  economy  encouraged  them  to  invest  massively,
which created additional pressure on the exchange rate and tested the econ-
omys  capacity  for  efficient  absorption.  Second,  a  generalized  optimism
characterized the world financial environment, based on the notion that the
international community had been learning how to handle international
crises  and  that  virulent  crises  were  gone  forever.  One  reflection  of  this
was the attempt by the IMF, at its annual meeting in Hong Kong in Octo-
ber 1997, to achieve a mandate to promote capital account liberalization
among member countries. Lobbying pressure and a strong fashion toward
financial  liberalization  were  enormous  factors  that  were  well  received  in
Chile, where many actors felt themselves immune from the effects of finan-
cial crises. Third, some officials understandably let themselves be swayed by
this euphoric atmosphere, accepting as sustainable a rising external deficit
and the sharp appreciation of the real exchange rate.
Chile thus gave in to the pressures of the dominant international and
domestic environment at the time. It indeed managed to reduce inflation
quickly, but it paid a price in the form of the imbalances this generated.
54
The general policy was kept in place, against the fashion, but the author-
ities failed to strengthen measures in the face of the very abundant supply
of capital during 199697. The combination of policies and the intensity
with which they were applied remained constant. The surge clearly weak-
ened the fundamentals of the Chilean economy: the current account def-
icit  rose,  the  exchange  rate  appreciated,  and  the  stock  of  liquid  foreign
liabilities  grew  somewhat.  The  deterioration  certainly  could  have  been
checked  during  the  boom  by  means  of  higher  reserve  requirements  and
other measures. Nevertheless, a notorious complacency reigned while the
new boom made the country increasingly vulnerable to external shocks.
The effects of contagion from the Asian crisis began in late 1997 and
were felt strongly in 199899. This time, Chile experienced a sharp drop
in the terms of trade, equivalent to 3 percent of GDP per year. At the same
time, the large 199697 capital inflows gave way to outflows of domestic
and  foreign  funds,  and  the  nominal  exchange  rate  began  to  depreciate.
This  correction  process  interrupted  the  most  successful  period  of  eco-
nomic growth recorded in Chiles history, which lasted from 1991 to 1998.
caiirai  suici  xaxacixixr  ix  cuiii ,:
54. An overwhelming proportion of operators pushed for greater deregulation and maintained that
larger external deficits were sustainable. Following the crisis, most of them blamed what they called
excessive fiscal spending as the source of the subsequent recessive adjustment. This hypothesis has no
empirical support, however, as shown below.
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  uiiiniiro  raiia ,:
The New Wave of Capital
As shown in figure 3-2 above, the tequila crisis led to a considerable re-
duction in net capital inflows to Chile. This is mostly explained by the be-
havior of portfolio flows, which entirely disappeared in Chile, as in the rest
of Latin America. Despite the reduction in the most volatile flows, the con-
fidence of long-term investors was striking, as reflected in increased FDI.
Capital flows returned to the region shortly after the tequila crisis. Net
inflows to Latin America grew from U.S.$30 billion in 1995 to U.S.$80
billion in 1997. Of this, a larger share than in the preceding years went to
Chile. The image of a successful country on solid footing attracted foreign
investors in massive quantities. In 1997, net inflows climbed to more than
10 percent of GDP.
The foreign capital boom of 199697 involved some changes in com-
position. FDI remained high. Portfolio flows increased sharply, however,
despite  the  fact  that  these  were  subject  to  the  reserve  requirement. The
progressive increase of investment abroad, which started at the beginning
of the decade, reached considerable levels. Some of this investment was in-
creasingly funded by borrowing abroad. At the same time, the main insti-
tutional  investorsthe  private  pension  fundshad  placed  only  slightly
over 0.5 percent of their assets abroad by mid-1997.
In  1998,  for  the  third  time  in  sixteen  years,  financial  flows  to  Latin
America  underwent  a  drastic  reversal  and  actually  became  negative. The
crisis was ameliorated by the presence of FDI, however. In 1982, most of
the loans were bank loans with variable interest rates. This time, the bulk
of flows were from FDI, which tends to be a more friendly component in
periods of crisis, and these remained high in Chile. The behavior of FDI
also tends to be anticyclical, reducing the amount of profit that can be sent
abroad.  In  fact,  FDI  remittances  fell  from  U.S.$1.9  billion  in  1997  to
U.S.$1.1 billion in 1999.
Investment  abroad  intensified  even  more.  Devaluatory  expectations
(starting in late 1997) triggered a massive exit of funds through those open
channels. Pension fund outflows, for example, increased notably starting
in late 1997, when expectations shifted from appreciation to depreciation.
Outflows from January 1998 to June 1999 peaked at the equivalent of 4.8
percent of 1998 GDP, or 12 percent of the funds.
55
The 10 percent drop
55. A hurried financial deregulation runs the risk of leaving too many exit doors open, which can
be a massive oversight when the market is nervous and expectations are shifting to the devaluatory side
(as was duly advised in Ffrench-Davis, Agosin, and Uthoff, 1995). This tends to make it more diffi-
in aggregate demand, and the recession it generated, were partly associated
with the monetary contraction resulting from additional devaluating pres-
sures caused by these outflows.
Policy after the Success of 1995
The  set  of  policies  available  to  authorities  in  the  second  half  of  the
1990s was relatively unchanged, including responsible surplus-based bud-
get management. However, the use of such tools had strongly different fea-
tures  compared  with  the  previous  episode,  and  the  economic  approach
thus  constituted  a  different  variety  of  policy.  In  particular,  authorities
demonstrated a marked passivity at the time that the imbalances were gen-
erated, and their highly risky nature was underestimated. A proof is that
the target for a sustainable current account deficit was raised from 3.5 per-
cent to 5 percent of GDP. This contrasts with the active management of
the previous capital boom of 199194, and it highlights the fact that the
survival of macroeconomic balances requires a highly pragmatic and pru-
dent approach to episodes of financial euphoria.
As  in  the  previous  episodes,  the  cycle  closed  with  negative  external
shocks. This time, the shock came from Asia and was very intense, but the
breadth  of  its  repercussions  was  closely  linked  to  the  Chilean  economys
degree of exposure.
ioiiciis  ioi  iicuiarixc  caiirai  ixiiows An  examination  of  capital
inflow regulation does not reveal significant changes, despite strong pres-
sures by lobbyists pushing for full liberalization of the capital account. Not
bending to those pressures deserves clear recognition, given the world en-
vironment of financial euphoria. The reserve requirement stayed at 30 per-
cent  with  a  one-year  term  for  much  of  the  period,  with  only  minor
adjustments.
56
Still, there was a radical shift in how the problem was ap-
proached. As analyzed above, the authorities made explicit efforts in the
caiirai  suici  xaxacixixr  ix  cuiii ,,
cult to sustain exchange rate and macroeconomic stability, and it makes international financial crises
more painful. Such was the case in Chile in 199899, when the pension funds and chapter XII in-
vestors were responsible for the capital flight that worsened the external imbalance. Curiously, analysts
have practically ignored this highly significant fact.
56. In June 1996, the possibility of renewing a trade credit more than once a year was eliminated
to close a loophole. A threshold (U.S.$200,000) under which small transactions were not subject to
reserve requirements was set in December 1996 to help reduce the operating costs of the instrument.
This  exemption  became  a  source  of  evasion,  however,  and  then  the  threshold  was  lowered  to
U.S.$100,000 in March 1997.
first half of the 1990s to address the stability of key macroeconomic prices
and not to create vulnerability to eventual external shocks; these efforts in-
cluded limiting the growth of the current account deficit and restraining
currency revaluation.
57
The external accounts and the exchange rate were
monitored  continuously,  and  there  was  ample  willingness  to  refine  the
tools by increasing their coverage and evaluating their effects. The various
instruments used were not ends in themselves, but only means to achiev-
ing the objectives mentioned.
The  approach  was  rather  different  after  the  tequila  crisis.  Chiles
strength in the tequila crisis sent a signal of invulnerability to many. The
perception of Chile as solid and different from the rest of Latin America
provoked doubt about the need to use the prudential macroeconomic in-
struments, which many analysts considered inefficient or unnecessary for
a modern country. The result was a complacent attitude on the part of the
authorities, who failed to prevent the development of evident imbalances
in 199697, on account of the abundant inflows, and then took no meas-
ures to solve them when it was possible to do so, namely, during the boom.
On the contrary, the prevailing trend was to modernize the management
of the capital account and to take advantage of currency appreciation in
the fight against inflation, as had been done two decades earlier.
As a part of the move toward financial integration, measures were taken
to facilitate the investment of Chilean capital abroad. The percentage of for-
eign investment authorized to pension funds was raised from 6 percent in
1995 to 12 percent in April 1997, and new alternatives for such investment
were opened up.
58
Rather than discouraging entry, the changes encouraged
exit. This was supposed to diversify risk. Given the extremely optimistic ex-
pectations about the national economy and the opportunities for profit that
the domestic markets offered in 199697, the outflows of funds were mod-
est  until  expectations  shifted  to  devaluation  (see  figure  3-3).  While  the
changes did allow the funds to diversify risk as intended, they clearly in-
creased risk for the economy as a whole, as demonstrated in 199899.
Throughout this period, the Central Bank did not dismantle policies.
The government, for its part, forcefully defended the reserve requirement
in  negotiations  of  a  free  trade  agreement  with  Canada. When  the  Asian
crisis  began  to  be  strongly  felt,  portfolio  and  other  short-term  inflows
plummeted. The  Central  Bank  confronted  this  phase  of  the  cycle,  com-
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  uiiiniiro  raiia ,
57. See Ffrench-Davis, Agosin, and Uthoff (1995) for more detail.
58. The limit was raised to 16 percent in January 1999.
Figure 3-3. Chilean Pension Fund Outflows and Real Exchange Rate
Source: Central Bank of Chile; Superintendencia de Administradoras de Fondos de Pensiones de Chile (SAFP).
104
99
94
89
84
79
74
16
14
12
10
8
6
4
2
Pension funds external portfolio
(percent of total)
Real exchange rate
(1986  100)
June
1994
Dec.
1994
June
1995
Dec.
1995
June
1996
Dec.
1996
June
1997
Dec.
1997
June
1998
Dec.
1998
June
1999
Dec.
1999
Devaluation zone Appreciation zone
Real
exchange
rate
(right axis)
Limit to
external
portfolio
External
portfolio
(left axis)
bined with a depressed external capital supply, by lowering the reserve re-
quirement to 10 percent in June 1998 and then to 0 percent in Septem-
ber.  Authorities  stated,  however,  that  this  was  only  a  resetting  of  the
parameters and that its use would continue to be relevant for confronting
renewed capital surges.
59
ixcuaxci iari ioiic\ The plentiful supply of capital flows after 1995
kept  the  exchange  rate  close  to  the  floor  of  the  band  until  the  end  of
1997. Given the overwhelming expectations of appreciation following the
tequila shock, the large spread between the expected profitability of peso-
denominated and dollar-denominated funds (along with a good outlook
for large Chilean firms) offered foreign portfolio and short-term investors
a  potentially  very  lucrative  opportunity  despite  the  reserve  requirement
they paid to enter the domestic financial market.
Although  the  Central  Bank  formally  adhered  to  a  crawling  band  in
199697, the flexibility of the exchange rate was, in fact, increasing. Thus
the  Bank,  as  well  as  most  observers,  gradually  moved  toward  one  of  the
caiirai  suici  xaxacixixr  ix  cuiii ,,
59. Massad (2000).
two corner solutions that was increasingly in fashion: full foreign exchange
flexibility. For instance, to lower the floor of the band (beyond a formal
broadening of the band to 12.5 percent in early 1997), authorities made
contradictory adjustments in the weights assigned to the currency basket,
causing a loss of credibility for the basket.
60
The external inflation used to
calculate the referential exchange rate was overestimated, which generated
considerable additional revaluation of 10 percentage points between 1995
and 1997. Furthermore, an annual 2 percent appreciation of the reference
rate had been set in November 1995, based on the assumption that Chi-
lean productivity would grow more rapidly than that of its main trading
partners.  At  the  same  time,  however,  the  Bank  accumulated  significant
amounts of international reserves.
When  exchange  rate  expectations  shifted  in  Chile  in  late  1997,  the
Central Bank operated asymmetrically. It now strongly held back depre-
ciating pressures by selling abundant reserves, thus preventing a correction
of the exchange rate value. The authorities argued that accepting a sharp
devaluation would be significantly inflationary in an economy operating
on the productive frontier and with a high external deficit. In our view, an
ambitious  anti-inflationary  objective  was  again  predominant.  In  mid-
1998, the band was drastically shortened right at the moment of greatest
uncertainty, and the macroeconomic adjustment process was led by inter-
est rate hikes; this intensified the monetary effects of outflows. The Central
Bank was sending a signal that it would not give in to devaluatory pressures
in the market. The band was widened again at the end of 1998 and then
suspended in September 1999 to allow the exchange rate to adjust, now in
the context of strongly depressed domestic absorption (see table 3-5).
The Consequences of a Prone-to-Risk Policy
Macroeconomic policy in 199697 proved unable to prevent the crea-
tion of imbalances in the external sector. As discussed above, the financial
environment was characterized by an overoptimistic mood of success and
invulnerability. Most participants seemingly ignored the danger of a finan-
cial crisis, which is always present in todays volatile world.
The  economy  took  in  large  inflows  in  the  form  of  FDI,  which  sur-
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  uiiiniiro  raiia ,o
60. In  November  1994,  the  weight  of  the  dollar  was  reduced  from  50  percent  to  45  percent,  re-
flecting the declining influence of that currency in Chile trade. It was arbitrarily raised to 80 percent
in January 1997. For a comparative analysis of bands in Chile, Israel, and Mexico, see Helpman, Lei-
derman, and Bufman (1994). On Chile, Colombia, and Israel, see Williamson (1996).
passed  all  previous  records  when  they  reached  6.8  percent  of  GDP  in
199697. The signs of solvency and stability that Chile exhibited in the
tequila crisis no doubt contributed to attracting these funds. The supply
to  emerging  economies  also  underwent  a  significant  positive  shift  that
heightened  the  country-specific  trend.  At  the  same  time,  portfolio  flows
experienced  unusual  growth  despite  the  cost  of  the  reserve  requirement.
The evidence thus indicates that entry to the market was considered cheap
in  comparison  with  the  very  positive  economic  parameters  and  a  strong
likelihood that the real exchange rate would appreciate as a result of the
large  supply  of  foreign  capital.
61
This  is  a  classical  case  of  an  imbalance
creating bubbles in the exchange rate market and in aggregate demand.
The  Central  Bank  made  heavy  purchases  of  foreign  currency,  but  it
was unable to avoid a very significant real exchange rate appreciation (16
percent between the 1995 average and October 1997). The appreciation
and the creation of liquidity by the inflows, in turn, sharply stimulated ag-
gregate demand and biased it towards tradables. The current account def-
icit  thus  rose  to  5.7  percent  of  GDP.  Key  macroeconomic  prices  had
clearly become outliers, and instruments for dealing with excessive finan-
cial flows needed to be strengthened. The Central Bank, however, declared
itself unable to fulfil its commitment to defending a more stable and com-
caiirai  suici  xaxacixixr  ix  cuiii ,;
61. See Herrera and Valds (1997). Country risk was again reduced; the Euromoney index, for in-
stance, improved from 72.9 in 1995 to 79.0 in 1997.
Table 3-5. Asian crisis in Chile, 1996-99
Indicator 1996 1997 1998 1999
GDP
a
7.4 7.4 3.9   -1.1
Aggregate expenditure
a
7.9 9.1 3.9   -10.0
Fiscal expenditure
a
9.6 6.1 6.3 5.7
Exports
a
11.8 9.4 5.9 6.9
Imports
a
11.8 12.9 5.4   -14.3
Current account deficit
b
5.8 5.7 6.2 0.2
Real exchage rate
c
84.7 78.2 78.0 82.4
Terms-of-trade effect
d   -
3.4 0.6   -3.0 0.2
Source: Based on data from the Central Bank of Chile; DIPRES (2000); Ffrench-Davis (2001).
a. Official figures at 1986 constant prices, annual growth (percent).
b. Current prices, percent of GDP.
c. Index, 1986 = 100.
d. Current prices, percent of GDP.
petitive long-term exchange rate.
62
Instead, it gave priority to the inflation-
ary goal, which was facilitated by the appreciating trend.
The  situation  called  for  a  demand-reducing  adjustment  focused  on
the control of the external imbalance. Given that the large supply of cap-
ital inflows was the source of the disequilibrium, measures were needed to
increase the cost of inflows, to devalue the real exchange rate, and not only
to raise the cost of domestic credit (that is, the interest rate). The mainte-
nance of a constant rate and coverage of the reserve requirement, without
the implementation of additional measures, became insufficient for deal-
ing with the massive capital inflow in 199697.
63
If the prudential regu-
lation  of  inflows  had  been  strengthened  in  199697,  it  would  have
accomplished the triple goal of regulating the growth of the stock of liq-
uid external liabilities, softening appreciation, and moderating the increase
in aggregate expenditure.
A controversial issue involves the level of fiscal responsibility for the
excess  aggregate  demand  of  199697.  An  expansionary  fiscal  policy  was
recorded  in  the  period,  with  government  expenditure  rising  somewhat
faster than GDP (7.9 versus 7.4 percent a year). However, several points
have to be taken into account to fairly assess this fact. First, the fiscal ex-
penditure  with  macroeconomic  effects  represents  only  one-fifth  of  the
economy. The large majority of the pulls behind the 8.5 percent growth
in  domestic  aggregate  demand  in  the  period  were  in  the  private  sector,
which accounted for 90 percent of the expenditure increase. A fiscal con-
tribution  to  moderating  total  expenditure  would  thus  have  been  insuffi-
cient.  Second,  the  main  components  in  the  increased  fiscal  expenditure
were  education,  justice,  and  infrastructure.  All  three  areas  underwent
major  and  widely  demanded  transformations,  with  a  political  consensus
around increasing expenditure on them. Third, the fiscal budget showed
a surplus over 2 percent GDP and, consequently, overfinanced its expen-
diture.  Moreover,  the  government  stopped  borrowing  from  the  World
Bank and the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) and prepaid debt.
Fourth,  the  measured  fiscal  surplus  does  not  include  resources  accumu-
lated in the Copper Buffer Fund. 
Here again, imbalances were externally generated and overwhelmingly
private.  The  governments  responsibility  in  this  case  lay  in  its  failure  to
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  uiiiniiro  raiia ,
62. See, for example, the president of the Central Banks statements in the Chilean business news-
paper Estrategia, October 16, 1997.
63. Le Fort and Lehmann (2000, p. 33) offer a similar assessment. Le Fort was at that time the di-
rector of the Central Banks International Division.
enforce  coordination  between  the  Central  Bank  and  the  Ministry  of
Finance.
64
This shortcoming was related to the Central Banks autonomy.
Authorities need to recognized that there is not a single form of autonomy
in the world, but rather several alternative ones.
As a result of the lack of timely and sufficiently strong measures, the
Asian crisis found Chile with a significantly appreciated exchange rate, an
overstimulated aggregate demand, and a high current account deficit that
was double the 199095 average. This all added up to a level of vulner-
ability that was unprecedented in the decade, and Chile received a strong
trade shock. Nevertheless, if the reserve requirement had not been main-
tained, portfolio inflows would have been much greater, the overall flow
more significant, and the exchange rate appreciation more marked.
65
Financial  capital  began  to  flow  out  in  late  1997  and  accelerated  in
199899. The nominal exchange rate depreciated to correct for misalign-
ment.
66
This time, the impact of the exit of foreign capital was aggravated
by the outflows associated with pension funds, which intensified the de-
valuating pressures on the exchange rate. The channels that had been pro-
gressively  opened  up  over  the  course  of  the  decade,  under  the  argument
they would moderate the abundance of foreign currency in boom periods
and diversify risk, were effectively used only during the bust. Thus the ob-
jective was not achieved during the boom. Rather, the mechanism caused
a  significant  loss  of  international  reserves  during  the  crisis,  a  monetary
contraction, and a sharpening of the recessionary adjustment in 199899.
The  cumulative  current  account  deficit  was  moderate  during  the
decade thanks to the active management of inflows in the first half of the
1990s and the persistence of regulations in the following years with only
gradual  liberalization.  The  stock  of  foreign  liabilities  was  relatively  low,
and volatile funds played only a minor role, creating external imbalances
only in 1996 and 1997. These conditions, together with the countrys con-
siderable international reserves, put Chile on a better footing than in the
caiirai  suici  xaxacixixr  ix  cuiii ,,
64. The lack of coordination between the Central Bank and the government was evident. As men-
tioned,  the  Central  Bank  authorities  expressed  no  concern  about  imbalances  in  the  external  sector,
while the Minister of Economics, for instance, held that it is necessary to intensify and strengthen
policies such as the reserve requirement to reduce exchange rate appreciation. Estrategia, September
26, 1997.
65. Schmidt-Hebbel, Hernndez, and Gallego (1999); Le Fort and Lehmann (2000).
66. The real exchange rate reached its peak for 1999 in November. This depreciation represented a
movement toward equilibrium, in correction of the disequilibrium of 199697. The real exchange rate
actually recovered its 1995 average level; this real rate tended to prevail in the second semester of 2000,
after strong swings during the first semester.
previous crises for confronting the hardships of trade and financial shock
caused by the Asian recession. The domestic financial system did not suf-
fer radically, as a result of the strictness of the Chilean banking commis-
sion. Nonperforming loans as a percentage of total loans rose from 0.97
percent  in  December  1997  to  1.8  percent  at  its  worst  moment  in  April
1999a level comparable to 1992, a crisis-free year.
67
This is remarkable
given that aggregate demand fell by 10 percent.
Still, the social and economic costs were significant. Production under-
utilization in 1999 fell by about U.S.$7 billion, opening a gap of approxi-
mately 10 percent between actual GDP and productive capacity that year.
Together with the increase in interest rates, this gap caused gross fixed in-
vestment to fall 17 percent, jeopardizing the potential GDP growth of 7
percent on average. Unemployment exceeded 10 percent of the labor force
in 19992000, which reversed some of the progress that had been made in
reducing poverty and inequality since 1990.
68
Concluding Remarks
The  rich  experience  of  Chilean  policy  in  managing  foreign  capital
surges throws light on key principles and specific instruments for exploit-
ing the benefits and minimizing the costs of financial globalization. De-
spite the extent to which globalization reduces the space for action, there
is still room for each country to foster its objectives. In this sense, a coun-
try that falls victim to a financial crisis of external origin is never blame-
less. We have solid evidence that market imbalances in the exchange rate,
high current account deficits, and excessive shares of short-term or liquid
funds make a small, open economy vulnerable in a crisis. The challenge,
then, is to fight worsening in these parameters.
Exchange rate policy has proved to be one of the key elements in the
development of recent crises in Chile. Freezing the exchange rate as part of
a price stabilization policy in the late 1970s and keeping it frozen for three
years entailed a very significant outlier real price of the dollar, based on an
unsustainable level of capital inflows. The discrepancy stimulated and fi-
nanced a high current account deficit up to 1981, and a correction was to
be  expected. When  it  occurred  in  1982,  the  economic  and  social  results
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  uiiiniiro  raiia :cc
67. SBIF (2000).
68. See Ffrench-Davis (2001, chap. 9).
were  very  negative:  GDP  fell  17  percent,  and  the  unemployment  rate
jumped to over 30 percent. In the 1990s, policy aimed at preventing a re-
peat performance. The use of a managed crawling band reduced exchange
rate volatility while moderating its appreciation up to the mid-1990s. This
supported the target of maintaining an exchange rate that was consistent
with the export model, at the expense of the objective of reducing inflation
more quickly. The approach was successful in the first-half of the 1990s.
69
After the tequila crisis, however, the Central Bank did not check the large
appreciation. Monetary authorities gave precedence to achieving more am-
bitious inflation goals despite an increased current account deficit and an
excessive aggregate demand, thus repeating risky behavior of the past.
A curious fact of the Chilean case is that the three financial boom epi-
sodes generated different outcomes with the consistent use of certain tools
to regulate capital inflows, in particular, an unremunerated reserve require-
ment on short-term capital. The main lesson is that an instrument that al-
ters relative prices in the market, as does the reserve requirement, cannot
remain unchanged in the face of a changing supply of foreign funds. Fur-
thermore,  a  policy  of  sustainable  macroeconomic  balances  must  not  rest
solely on one inflexible instrument, excellent though the instrument may
be.  A  reserve  requirement  was  clearly  ineffective  in  saving  the  economy
from the debt crisis in 1982, while in 199697 its impact was insufficient
for  staving  off  contagion  from  the  Asian  crisis.  However,  one  might  ask
what would have happened if it had not been applied in those cases. Em-
pirical evidence indicates that the imbalances would have been worse, es-
pecially  with  regard  to  the  Asian  crisis. The  effectiveness  of  this  sort  of
instrument depends, first, on the values set for its parameters and the de-
gree of coverage, and, second, on complementary policies that support the
strategy, as in the first half of the 1990s. These policies include fiscal re-
sponsibility and effective prudential supervision of the financial system.
Regulatory  instruments  such  as  a  reserve  requirement  have  costs.
70
Quasi-fiscal losses stemming from excessive accumulation of reserves and a
lower GDP growth rate owing to higher interest rates are those most often
mentioned.  A  serious  assessment  requires  weighing  these  effects  against
their  macroeconomic  benefits. The  benefits  are  extensive,  deriving  from
caiirai  suici  xaxacixixr  ix  cuiii :c:
69. The economys performance in that period was quite satisfactory, with dynamic exports and a
gradual but large reduction of inflation. Sebastin Edwards summarizes this point well: Given the rel-
ative success of the Chilean band system, it is surprising that more countries have not adopted this
type of regime (1999b, p. 37).
70. Schmidt-Hebbel, Hernndez, and Gallego (1999) summarize and measure these costs.
the  notable  imperfections  of  international  financial  markets  (including
high volatility and information asymmetry). By helping to counterbalance
these market imperfections, measures to drive capital flows at a sustainable
level and moderate exchange rate instability reduce both the likelihood of a
crisis and its potential costs. They are also associated with gains in growth
because of their positive impact on resource allocation and export develop-
ment. Finally, economic growth benefits enormously when monetary au-
thorities  are  given  room  to  regulate  spending  and  smooth  the  cyclical
behavior of the economy. These benefits are difficult to quantify, since the
moderation of cyclical behavior not only creates a better environment for
productive investment and growth, but also favors social development by
improving  conditions  of  poverty,  income  distribution,  and  welfare  pro-
grams, a dimension which is highly sensitive to economic fluctuations.
71
In liberalizing the capital account, a dose of prudence is also in order
with regard to outflows. Observers and lobbyists argue that the funds are
too  big  for  Chile  and  that  profitability  is  increased  by  investing  abroad.
Chile is a capital-scarce country, however, and the return of capital tends to
be higher in Chile than in developed countries. Hence, it is questionable
whether funds saved by Chileans and held by pension funds should be en-
couraged to move abroad rather than preferentially invested domestically.
The issue is particularly controversial when macroeconomic risk diversifi-
cation is achieved at the expense of macroeconomic sustainability because
of its procyclical nature. This issue requires further discussion and analysis.
Another of the dimensions that make Chile an interesting case study
is the development of its domestic financial institutional structures. The
deregulation of banking activity in the absence of a proper framework of
prudential  regulation  in  the  1970s  was,  without  a  doubt,  a  destabilizing
element  that  contributed  to  an  overborrowing  syndrome.
72
Moreover,
progress made to address the weakness contributed to the development of
one of the healthiest financial markets among emerging countries and fos-
tered macroeconomic stability throughout the 1990s. It would be a mis-
take,  however,  to  emphasize  this  dimension  as  the  sole  explanation  of
financial crisis in Chile. In the three episodes examined here, the domes-
tic financial market operated as the channel for only a portion of the funds
coming into the country. This was particularly relevant in the 1990s, when
bank  loans  constituted  a  minority  of  inflows.  As  the  events  of  199899
iicaioo  iiiixcu-oavis  axo  uiiiniiro  raiia :c:
71. See Rodrik (2001).
72. McKinnon and Pill (1997).
showed, the high quality of Chiles domestic financial market did not pre-
vent  the  country  from  becoming  quite  vulnerable  to  external  financial
shocks. This point must be stressed, given the persistence of the danger-
ous hypothesis that efficient banking supervision is enough to impede the
absorption of excessive inflows.
The fact that fiscal policy did not play a leading role in managing the
Chilean crises may seem unusual, especially considering the broad litera-
ture that explains external sector crises as a result of unsustainable budget
deficits. In the three Chilean episodes discussed here, however, the fiscal
situation was solid, with surpluses each year.
73
Deficits were registered only
in 1982 and 1999, and these were the result of the crisis conditions, not
the cause. They were thus associated with external disequilibria during the
previous booms. Once more, the lesson is not to trust in a single funda-
mental of the economy as adequate protection.
The challenge of making good use of foreign capital in emerging econ-
omies,  ensuring  the  healthy  domestic  absorption  of  funds,  and  keeping
vulnerability to external factors low requires a comprehensive set of meas-
ures. It is indispensable to take an active, pragmatic approach to checking
the development of imbalances, to respond to shifts in domestic and ex-
ternal  variables,  to  work  in  close  coordination  with  a  solidly  structured
financial sector, to implement a foreign exchange policy that prevents ex-
cessive misalignment of the real rate, to design fiscal and monetary poli-
cies  that  keep  a  handle  on  spending,  and  to  take  a  flexible  approach  to
managing the capital account so that measures taken are consistent with
the realities of a developing country where capital is not only scarce in ab-
solute terms but minuscule in comparison with the volume of capital that
can flood a country through an imperfect and volatile international finan-
cial market. Chiles experience shows that all of this is possible and that the
challenge  is  ongoing.  New  problems  will  always  arise,  and  dangerous
temptations can exact a heavy price tomorrow for todays success.
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4
:c;
I
n the early 1990s, after almost a decade of economic
decline  and  high  inflation,  the  Mexican  economy
appeared to be on its way to recovering economic growth and price stabil-
ity. Privatization revenues and a Brady agreement had facilitated a large re-
duction in domestic and external public debt, and a successful stabilization
program was expected to finally allow the economy to take advantage of
the structural reforms undertaken since the mid-1980s. Or so it appeared
to  the  many  observers  who  believed  that  Mexico,  a  model  reformer  and
successful  emerging  market,  was  to  become  a  Latin  American  economic
miracle. Optimistic expectations became even more widespread when the
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) was approved in 1993.
The optimistic view was further reinforced by the fact that the Mexican
government had complemented wide-ranging economic reforms with an
anti-poverty  program  aimed  at  meeting  the  countrys  pressing  needs  in
health and education infrastructure. To many, then, Mexico appeared to
be on a firm path toward economic and social modernization.
By the end of 1994, however, the Mexican economy was in a finan-
cial crisis and entering its worst recession since the Great Depression of the
;aixi ios
*
From the Capital Surge to
the Financial Crisis and
Beyond: The Mexican
Economy in the 1990s
*I am grateful to Maiju Perala for research assistance and to Ricardo Ffrench-Davis and participants
at seminars held at the United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean
(ECLAC) in Santiago, Chile, for helpful comments.
1930s. The Mexican government was unable to roll over its debt follow-
ing the December devaluation of the peso. Amid surging fears of default,
an unprecedented international rescue package was implemented in early
1995 to stop panic selling of Mexican debt. The country also experienced
political turmoil and violence throughout 1994: an armed uprising by the
Zapatistas in January (on the day NAFTA came into effect), the assassina-
tion of the presidential candidate in March and of the Secretary General
of  the  Partido  Revolucionario  Institutional  (PRI)  in  September,  and  the
resignation in November of the Assistant Attorney General who had been
in charge of investigating the latter assassination.
The country was considered one of the most successful emerging mar-
kets, and it was supposed to be entering a period of sustained prosperity,
yet in the mid-1990s it became immersed in the worst economic crisis of
the last seventy years. How could the Mexican government find itself on
the brink of default just four years after the first Brady agreement, despite
having significantly reduced its external and domestic debt? These are the
issues addressed in this paper. The following section reviews the episode of
massive  capital  inflows  of  the  early  1990s  and  discusses  the  financial  re-
forms that preceded it. The paper then examines how the success of the
Mexican economy in attracting foreign capital itself undermined the fun-
damentals of the economy by causing a large appreciation of the peso, a
misallocation of resources, and increasing financial fragility. The next sec-
tion analyzes how these three consequences of the capital surge combined
and interacted to produce the crash landing that was to follow, and com-
pares our interpretation to other explanations of the crisis. The final sec-
tion looks at the performance of the economy after the crisis and discusses
its medium-term prospects.
Financial Liberalization, Debt Reduction, and 
the Capital Surge
While the capital surge of the early 1990s extended to most countries
in Latin America and other developing regions, Mexico had a prominent
place in this episode: nearly half of the capital inflows to Latin America in
the period 199093 went to Mexico (see table 4-1). These massive inflows
had their origin in a diversity of circumstances: almost all of the various
internal and external determinants of capital movements had a positive ef-
fect on inflows. The external environment was characterized by the con-
;aixi  ios :c
tinuous reduction of foreign interest rates through early 1994, a U.S. re-
cession in the early 1990s, and regulatory changes introduced by the U.S.
Securities  Exchange  Commission,  all  of  which  were  favorable  to  an  in-
crease in U.S. investment abroad.
1
In addition, improved terms of trade in
the late 1980s and the debt relief agreement with creditor banks led to a
reduction in Mexicos risk premium.
2
The favorable domestic factors arose out of the new institutional en-
vironment that characterized the Mexican economy as a result of the struc-
tural  reforms  initiated  in  the  mid-1980s.  The  reforms  that  were  most
directly relevant to the capital surge include the liberalization of domestic
financial markets and their opening to foreign investors, as well as the der-
egulation of foreign direct investments (FDI). Starting in 1988, a succes-
rui  xixicax  icoxox\  ix  :,,cs :c,
1. The  regulatory  changesregulation  S  and  rule  144Astimulated  portfolio  investment  in  de-
veloping countries through the issue of American depository receipts (ADRs) on the New York stock
market and the development of country funds in U.S. financial markets. See ECLAC (1995, 1998);
Ffrench-Davis  (2000,  chap.  5).  See  also  Banco  de  Mexico,  Informe  Anual,  1993, available  at  www.
banixco.org.mx.
2. The Brady Plan was announced in March 1989 and an agreement in principle was signed in July
1989. Mexico became the first country to sign a debt agreement with commercial banks under the
United States-sponsored plan in February 1990.
Table 4-1. Capital Inflows in Mexico and Latin America, 197795
Billions of dollars, except as indicated
Capital inflows 197781 198389 199093 199495
Total annual capital inflows (net)
Latin America 28.86 8.15 45.89 38.55
Mexico 8.15   -0.66 22.50 3.60
Mexico as percent of total 28.3   -8.1 49.0 9.3
Foreign direct investment
Latin America n.a.  n.a.  11.43 17.28
Mexico n.a.  n.a.  4.05 6.99
Mexico as percent of total n.a.  n.a.  35.4 40.4
Other capital inflows (net)
Latin America n.a.  n.a.  34.46 21.27
Mexico n.a.  n.a.  18.45   -3.39
Mexico as percent of total n.a.  n.a.  53.5   -15.9
Source: United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC),
Amrica Latina y el Caribe: polticas para mejorar la insercin en la economa mundial, 2d ed.,
Santiago: Fondo de Cultura Econmica and ECLAC, 1998, tables 9.1 and 9.4.
;aixi  ios ::c
sion of measures relaxed reserve requirements, credit quotas to high prior-
ity sectors, and controls on interest rates; unified the controlled and free
exchange  rates;  and  abolished  the  exchange  controls  that  were  adopted
during the 1982 crisis. Restrictions on foreign investments in the domes-
tic bond and stock markets were eliminated in 1989 and 1990.
3
Through-
out the 1980s, the De La Madrid and Salinas de Gortari administrations
liberally interpreted the Foreign Investment Law of 1973 and adopted a
series of regulatory changes to facilitate the inflow of FDI. These changes
culminated  with  a  new  Foreign  Investment  Law  in  1993. The  new  Law
opened  areas  that  had  previously  been  closed  to  foreign  companies  and
eliminated the clause that restricted foreign participation in local firms to
49 percent. Other relevant policy changes include the privatization of the
banking system and telecommunications in 199192. In addition to dem-
onstrating the governments commitment to market-oriented reforms, pri-
vatization provided the government with large revenues that were used to
sharply reduce the burden of domestic and external debt in the fiscal ac-
counts (see table 4-2).
These domestic reforms and positive external shocks, together with the
initiation of NAFTA negotiations in 1990, contributed to the surge of cap-
ital inflows through three channels. The first was a sharp reduction in the
countrys risk premiumthe improved image of Mexico as a good place to
invest. The debt relief agreement, the fall in foreign interest rates, and the
use of large privatization revenues to repay external debt in 199192 pro-
duced a substantial reduction of interest payments both as a percent of ex-
ports and as a percent of gross domestic product (GDP) (see table 4-3).
These indicators, which are conventionally used by national and foreign in-
vestors  to  evaluate  country  risk,  fell  in  the  1990s  to  levels  below  those
achieved in the mid-1970s before the onset of the balance-of-payments cri-
sis that was under gestation in the period 197476.
4
Moreover, privatiza-
tion  revenues  also  financed  a  sharp  reduction  of  domestic,  as  well  as
external, government debt. By the first quarter of 1993, domestic debt was
down to half its real value in mid-1990. Total government debt had there-
fore fallen from 55 percent of GDP in 1990 to 35 percent in 1993, which
3. A decree in May 1989 liberalized the neutral-investment regime to promote the entry of foreign
investors into the local stock market. By late 1990, restrictions on the foreign purchase of domestic
bonds (largely government bonds) had been eliminated.
4. From 1990 to 1993, Mexicos foreign debt was upgraded by foreign risk evaluators, and in the
case of two Mexican development banks, it was given an investment grade rating (see Gurra, 1995).
This  occurred  despite  the  emergence  of  the  first  symptoms  of  serious  financial  vulnerability,  as  dis-
cussed below.
rui  xixicax  icoxox\  ix  :,,cs :::
is about half the average for the member countries of the Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) and less than a third of
that for Italy or Belgium.
A second channel was the opening of domestic financial markets, which
had the same effect as a shift in the portfolio preferences of foreign investors
between domestic and foreign assets. In an earlier study of the determinants
of capital inflows, I find that the opening of the bond market accounts for
most of the shift in asset preferences during the period.
5
Only after 1994
the year NAFTA went into effect and a year after Congress approved the
new Foreign Investment Lawdid FDI become significantly more impor-
tant than in the 1960s and 1970s. This partly accounts for the heavy con-
centration of capital inflows in portfolio investments through late 1993.
The third channel, which interacted with the reduction in the risk pre-
mium, was the real appreciation of the peso and the very high interest rates
5. Ros (1994b).
Table 4-2. Mexico: Use of Privatization Revenues, 199192
Destination of revenues 1991 1992 1991 1992 199192 199192
Total revenues from 
privatization
a
3.3 3.3 9.42 10.74 20.16 100
Financial deficit
b
1.4 0.1 4.02 0.28 4.30 21.3
Net reduction of debt 1.9 3.2 5.39 10.46 15.85 78.6
External 1.5 0.8 4.39 2.55 6.94 34.4
Central Bank 1.9 0.2 5.49 0.70 6.19 30.7
Private sector total
c
-1.6 2.2   -4.48 7.21 2.73 13.5
Residents
d
1.8 1.5 5.03 4.94 9.97 49.5
Nonresidents
e
-1.2   -2.7   -3.54   -8.77   -12.31   -61.1
Commercial banks  -2.1 3.4   -5.97 11.04 5.07 25.1
Source: J. Ros, Mercados financieros y flujos de capital en Mxico, in Los capitales externos en
las economas latinoamericanas, edited by J. A. Ocampo, Bogot: Fedesarrollo and Inter-American
Development Bank (IDB), 1994. Calculations based on data from Banco de Mxico, Informe
Anual, 1991 and 1992, available at www.banixco.org.mx.
a. Includes cash revenues (or amortization of the banking privatization bonds) and reduction of
the domestic or external public sector debt as a result of the reclassification of Mexican
telecommunications as a private enterprise.
b. Accrued public financial deficit. Includes the accrued nonpaid interests that are only
incorporated to the financial deficit at the time of liquidation.
c. Banking and nonbanking (includes nonresidents).
d. Nonbanking. Obtained as a residual of private sector debt reduction.
e. Foreign portfolio inflows to the money market (displayed with a negative sign).
Percent 
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;aixi  ios ::
that prevailed during the initial stages of the disinflation program of late
1987. The annual real interest rate on three-month Treasury bills (CETES)
in mid-1989 was still on the order of 19 percent to compensate for the in-
flation  uncertainty  that  accompanied  the  disinflation  process. The  rapid
success of the counterinflation program, which required a significant ap-
preciation of the peso in real terms, implied extremely high ex post dollar
interest rates on short-term domestic securities.
The magnitude and composition of the inflows were key elements for
the  macroeconomic  consequences  of  the  capital  surge.  Gross  inflows  in-
creased  tenfold  from  U.S.$3.5  billion  in  1989  to  U.S.$33.3  billion  in
1993,  before  falling  sharply  in  1994.
6
Net  inflows  rose  from  negligible
numbers to 12.6 percent of GDP at their peak in 1993. During the capital
surge,  the  inflows  were  strongly  biased  toward  highly  liquid  assets. The
composition of these short-term investments changed over time. In the in-
itial stages of the surge (1989 and 1990), inflows involved foreign loans to
the private sector and the acquisition of bank deposits, but the liberaliza-
tion of the domestic money and stock markets redirected inflows toward
government  bonds  and  stocks. Throughout  the  period,  portfolio  invest-
ments  in  the  stock  market  increased  rapidly  and  represented  the  largest
component at the peak of the surge in 1993. From the end of 1990 to the
end of 1993, the market value of the accumulated portfolio investments
in the  stock  market  jumped  from  U.S.$4.5  billion  to  U.S.$54.6  billion.
In 1993  alone,  the  flow  of  portfolio  investments  in  the  stock  market
amounted to U.S.$28.4 billion.
7
Short-term outflows were dominant dur-
ing the contraction after 1994: average portfolio investments fell to around
1.7 percent of GDP from 1994 to 1998, well below FDI (3.3 percent of
GDP on average and about 20 percent of private domestic investment).
The cycle of capital movements appears to be especially marked in the
case of Mexico, which has a history of being the main beneficiary of inflows
during booms and the most vulnerable country during contractions. Dur-
ing periods of expanding capital inflows, the Mexican economy has tended
to absorb a large share of the portfolio inflows into Latin America, much
larger than its fraction of the less volatile FDI flows. This concentration of
inflows in liquid assets increases Mexicos financial fragility relative to other
countries, such that the downturn catches Mexico in a very vulnerable po-
sition. The result is that the country is generally one of the most severely hit
by the reversal of the portfolio inflows and receives a very small share dur-
6. Banco de Mexico, Informe Anual, 1994, available at www.banixco.org.mx.
7. See Gurra (1995).
rui  xixicax  icoxox\  ix  :,,cs ::,
ing the period of contraction. The recent past has been an exception to this
pattern. Financial turbulence started in East Asia and later in Russia and
Brazil, while Mexico maintained a relatively solid position.
How Success Undermined the Fundamentals
The magnitude and composition of capital inflows should have raised
three  legitimate  sources  of  concern  for  economic  policy:  the  continuous
appreciation of the peso in the midst of a rather radical trade liberalization
process; an allocation of resources biased toward consumption rather than
investment and toward the production of nontradables, which originated
in the difficulties of adequately intermediating such massive inflows and
resulted in slow economic expansion; and the increasing financial fragility
that resulted from the concentration of inflows in highly liquid assets and
the progressive deterioration of the banks balance sheets. This section dis-
cusses these three consequences of the capital surge.
Capital Inflows, Financial Markets, and the Real Appreciation 
of the Peso
The capital surge episode featured a large real appreciation of the peso:
from 1988 to 1993, the real value of the peso increased by more than 40
percent (the real exchange rate fell by 30 percent; see table 4-3). The pro-
cess of appreciation appears to have been even more dramatic if measured
by  the  ratio  of  tradable  to  nontradable  goods  prices:  the  ratio  fell  from
140.9  in  1988  to  74.3  in  1993  (Gurra,  1995).
8
This  section  presents  a
formal  analysis  of  the  mechanisms  at  work  behind  the  real  appreciation
and of the macroeconomic adjustment problem it generated. The analyt-
ical framework is based on a model of the goods and financial markets in
which the exchange rate and the interest rate have a dual role, as key prices
in the allocation of resources and as prices of financial assets.
9
First, they
8. In 1981, in the eve of the 1982 currency devaluations, the ratio was 98.1.
9. The  model  draws  on  Branson  (1985),  with  elements  borrowed  from  Ros  (1994b,  1995a)  and
Ros and Skott (1998). It differs from Branson in two major areas. First, relative prices respond asym-
metrically to excess demand and supply. While an increase in the demand for nontraded goods leads
to a real appreciation of the currency (an increase in the relative price of nontraded goods), an excess
supply leads to a downward output adjustment (leaving the real exchange rate, at least temporarily, at
its initial level). Second, the model attributes an important role to changes in the position of the mar-
ginal investor in explaining the behavior of asset prices.
Figure 4-1. Financial and Goods Markets
e
r
IX
1
2
FM
clear the goods market, that is, they guarantee the flow equilibrium of the
economy, through their effects on desired investment, savings, and net ex-
ports.  Second,  they  ensure  financial  equilibriumthe  stock  equilibrium
of the economythrough their role as prices of financial assets.
Figure 4-1 shows the flow and stock equilibria of the economy at the
intersection of two curves (the IX and FM curves in Bransons terminol-
ogy).
10
The first curve (IX) is a locus of real exchange rate and real inter-
est rate combinations along which desired investment is equal to savings
(national  plus  foreign).  Investment  depends  positively  on  the  real  ex-
change  rate  (on  account  of  its  positive  effects  on  profitability)  and  in-
versely on the real interest rate. Given total employment, this locus is one
along  which  the  nontraded  goods  market  clears  through  changes  in  the
real exchange rate. It therefore has a positive slope in figure 4-1: a fall in
the interest rate raises investment and creates excess demand for goods; the
relative  price  of  nontraded  goods  increases  to  clear  the  market  for  non-
traded goods. Moving along the curve, lower values of the real exchange
rate cause the current account deficit to increase, as the fall in the real ex-
change rate (appreciation of the domestic currency) leads to a larger gap
between the demand for and domestic supply of traded goods.
;aixi  ios ::o
10. See the appendix for a full exposition of the model.
The second curve (FM) is a locus of financial market equilibrium. In
portfolio balance, the interest rate differential between domestic and for-
eign short-term securities, adjusted for exchange rate expectations, is equal
to the risk premium on domestic securities. This premium is assumed to
be a function of an exogenous component reflecting investors subjective
perceptions of country risk and the stock of external liabilities. With re-
gressive expectations about the real exchange rate (see appendix), the locus
slopes downward. An appreciation of the domestic currency tends to gen-
erate  expectations  of  depreciation,  which  requires  an  increase  in  the  do-
mestic interest rate to maintain financial market equilibrium.
Consider now the situation in mid-1989. The current account deficit
was on the order of 2.6 percent of GDP (roughly the average of the past
three decades), and the real exchange rate was at its 1978 value (the aver-
age of the 197094 period). There were no significant expectations of real
depreciation, and a high risk premium accounted for the large real inter-
est  rate  differential  between  domestic  and  foreign  securities.
11
Let  these
conditions be described by point 1 in figure 4-1. Starting with the debt re-
lief agreement and the beginning of NAFTA negotiations in mid-1990, a
series  of  positive  shocks  disturbed  the  initial  stock  equilibrium.  These
shocks reduced both the real interest rate and the real exchange rate; they
also reduced the risk premium and shifted the FM curve down and to the
left. As the FM curve shifts downward, the short-term equilibrium value
of the domestic currency appreciates along the IX curve. The anticipation
by financial markets of a fall in interest rates (and thus in the real exchange
rate), as a result of the downward shifts in the FM curve, generates short-
term expectations of real appreciation. Falling interest rates, real apprecia-
tion  of  the  peso,  and  continuous  expectations  of  real  appreciation  were
indeed key features of Mexicos financial markets from mid-1990 to mid-
1992.
12
By mid-1992 the process of reducing domestic and external govern-
ment liabilities ended, and the FM curve stopped shifting down. Exchange
rate expectations then came to be dominated by the increased gap between
rui  xixicax  icoxox\  ix  :,,cs ::;
11. See Ros (1994b). The expected rate of real depreciation is obtained from the interest rate dif-
ferential between CETES and the dollar-indexed Tesobonos and from the inflation expectations im-
plicit in the differential between CETES and indexed Ajustabonos. Because the differential between
Ajustabonos and CETES includes an inflation-uncertainty premium, the risk premium also reflects
an inflation-uncertainty premium. Uncertainty about inflation was large in 1989, since the heterodox
stabilization program launched in December 1987 had yet to prove its success. This contributed to
the high measured risk premium between domestic and foreign securities.
12. Ros (1994b).
the exchange rate and its expected long term value.
13
At this point, the real
interest rate would have to increase again to compensate for expectations
of  depreciation,  which  is  what  happened  between  the  second  and  third
quarters of 1992 when the expected rate of depreciation turned from neg-
ative to positive.
Subsequently, however, real interest rates remained surprisingly stable
and  low  (until  the  political  shocks  of  1994),  and  the  persistent  gap  be-
tween the current and long term real exchange rates failed to be reflected
in  higher  interest  rates. This  appears  to  have  been  the  consequence  of  a
change in the position of the marginal investor (at the margin between do-
mestic and foreign short term securities), as the stock of domestic govern-
ment bonds changed hands between the bearish domestic wealth holders
and the bullish foreign investors.
14
Adjustments in the Goods and Labor Markets
Consider now the evolution of the goods and labor markets. The styl-
ized  facts  here  are,  first,  the  rapid  and  unprecedented  contraction  of
manufacturing  employment  and  the  expansion  of  underemployment  in
commerce and agriculture. These trends are shown in table 4-4, together
with output and productivity performance during the crisis and post-crisis
periods (199397). As shown in the table, the reduction in manufactur-
ing employment is the result of a very high growth rate of labor produc-
tivity  (6.0  percent  per  year)  in  the  face  of  a  rather  slow  rate  of  output
growth (4.2 percent per year).
Second,  wage  inequality  in  the  labor  market  increased  in  the  early
1990s. Figure 4-2 shows the decline since 1988 in the relative labor earn-
ings of the low wage sectors (namely, agriculture, construction, commerce,
and services). Wage inequality also increased within sectors as the wage pre-
mium for skilled labor rose. Figure 4-3 illustrates the rising trend of white-
collar wages relative to blue-collar wages in all manufacturing industries,
while table 4-3 (above) tracks the redistribution between skilled and un-
skilled labor earnings that took place from 1988 to 1994. Other evidence
reported in a number of studies similarly documents the increase in wage
dispersion and shows that it largely revolved around the increase in skilled
;aixi  ios ::
13. Formally, this is equivalent to an upward shift in the FM curve.
14. Bulls and bears are defined here according to their perceptions about the future of the exchange
rate. See Ros (1994b); Ibarra (1997).
relative to unskilled labor incomes.
15
As a result of these trends, the Gini co-
efficient of wage inequality increased from 0.46 in 1989 to 0.49 in 1992,
and then to 0.53 in 1994.
16
The increase in wage inequality is, in turn, the
single major factor behind the worsening of income distribution during the
period.
17
These stylized facts can be explained as consequences of trade liberal-
ization  and  the  real  overvaluation  of  the  peso,  which  caused  intensified
competition  from  imports  and  thus  accelerated  the  rate  of  technology
adoption and reduced the demand for low skilled workers in manufactur-
ing. This hypothesis can be elaborated in the framework of a two-sector
model (tradables and nontradables) in which tradable goods are produced
under  imperfect  competition  with  unskilled  labor  as  the  variable  factor,
while skilled labor is largely fixed in the short run, since it is complemen-
tary to physical capital. Trade liberalization implied greater competition in
rui  xixicax  icoxox\  ix  :,,cs ::,
15. See Hanson and Harrison (1995); Cragg and Epelbaum (1996); Alarcn and McKinley (1997).
16. Lustig and Szkely (1998), based on income and expenditure household surveys.
17. Ros and Lustig (1999).
Table 4-4. Mexico: Output, Employment, and Productivity Growth,
198897
Average annual growth rates 
Sector 198893 199497 198893 199497 198893 199497
Total  3.1 3.2 3.7 2.4 0.6   -0.8
Mining
a
-7.4 8.8 2.0 4.1 9.4 4.7
Manufacturing   -1.8 4.9 4.2 4.7 6.0   -0.2
Agriculture 5.8 0.5 1.9 1.7   -3.9 1.2
Nontradable goods 3.6
c
3.9
c
3.1 1.8   -0.5   -2.1
Construction 4.1   -1.7 4.9 0.1 0.8 1.8
Transport and 
communication 5.0 2.7 4.1 5.0   -0.9 2.3
Commerce
b
5.1 3.4 4.3 1.0   -0.8   -2.4
Services 3.0 5.5
d
3.9 1.6
d
0.9   -3.9
Government 0.8 n.a. 0.9 n.a. 0.1 n.a.
Source: INEGI, National Accounts, various years; INEGI, National Survey of Employment, 1997.
a. Includes electricity.
b. Includes restaurants and hotels.
c. Includes unspecified activities.
d. Includes government.
Productivity growth Output growth Employment growth