Must-read.  Barron's.  As the Developing World Burns, the Fed Refuses to Fiddle With Rates [Note: This probably changed based on Greenspan's speech in Berkeley on Friday night.]
  interactive.wsj.com
                    September 7, 1998                      
                                      By Robert J. Barbera
                    Pity Alan Greenspan. Just one year ago, he adorned the cover of                   BusinessWeek, anointed as the premier architect and champion of a brave                   new world vision. Savvy corporate managers, exploiting new information                   technologies and untapped emerging economies were set to deliver an                   inflation-free, earnings-rich supercycle of economic boom. Today, the tragic                   irony is that Greenspan has had to stand idly by as much of the developing                   world crumbles. The Fed chairman controls the printing press that delivers                   U.S. dollars to the world. His charge as head of the Fed, however, ties his                   decisions to the American economy. Emerging nations, caught in a downward                   spiral and saddled with dollar-denominated debt, confront a parochial, and                   therefore unyielding, Fed. Malaysia's move to impose capital controls stands                   as evidence that the developing world is ready to quit the game. Quite                   straightforwardly, Greenspan's brave new framework is coming apart because                   the world lacks a global lender of last resort.
                    "We have the right stuff -- the technology, the money and the business                   knowhow -- for creating wealth and lifting living standards in your country.                   Welcome us in, play by our rules, and you'll profit with us." This, in effect, was                   the offer the U.S., Europe and Japan made to the emerging world, on the                   heels of communism's collapse. In Asia and Latin America and among former                   communist-bloc nations, the offer was resoundingly accepted.
                    Emerging-economy stock markets have led                   commodities up and down. 
                    In the developed world, communism's collapse led to the firing of country-risk                   analysts. Investments in the developing world were judged on their                   micro-merits. When you eliminate worries about government stability and                   focus on $10-a-month labor, almost every project is approved. Enthusiastic                   borrowers and lenders generated an enormous north/south flow over the first                   half of the 1990s.
                    Institute for International Finance reports show net inflows from developed to                   developing economies growing at unprecedented rates. The $300 billion                   inflow in 1996 was 15 times the size of the previous cycle's peak, reached in                   1989. The boom in finance for emerging nations engendered a real economic                   boom for them as well.
                    Eighteen months ago, it was reasonable to label entrepreneurial capitalists as                   agents of change for the better in the developing world. Success, however, led                   to excess. Crony capitalism, empty office buildings, golf courses a thousand                   miles from nowhere. Late-in-the-game projects were being approved that                   benefited a handful of individuals and had little economic justification. When                   the excesses began to appear, investors started backing out. As                   disappointments multiplied, they sold indiscriminately. In the past six months,                   in fact, capital flight from emerging nations has produced a self-fulfilling                   prophecy, as the resultant surge in interest rates in developing nations all but                   dooms them to sharp deterioration in their economic fundamentals.
                    Remember the junk-bond collapse in 1990? It began when a substantial                   number of leveraged-buyout credits collapsed under the weight of                   deteriorating fundamentals and extreme interest burdens. As the selling                   momentum built, however, all junk credits came under pressure. Panic selling                   drove borrowing costs for all high-yield credits to pernicious levels. In the                   end, selling on the speculation that all junk credits would disappoint became a                   self- fulfilling prediction. Unbearable interest rates led to changes for the                   worse in the fundamentals of all junk credits.
                    In the U.S., in late 1990, as the debacle was in full force, most every junk                   credit was labeled hopeless; Citibank was trading at $10 a share. But the                   American economy didn't collapse; the federal funds rate did. An engineered                   decline of this risk-free rate, to 3% from 8%, prevented a debt-deflation                   depression. By collapsing the risk-free rate, the Fed forced money back out                   along the risk curve. Excessive junk investments failed. Many S&Ls were                   closed. But the majority of high-yield investments avoided bankruptcy, the                   financial system endured and recession, not debt-deflation depression, was                   the price paid in the real economy.
                    Today, in the developing world, the same sort of brutal cleansing of excesses                   is going on. As an unavoidable byproduct of entrepreneurial capitalism, this is                   to the good. But the violent loss of appetite for risk among                   developed-economy investors in the developing world has created a                   downward spiral for these economies that only a radical reduction in the                   risk-free borrowing rate can change.
                    And since these developing economies have dollar-denominated debt                   burdens, they need the risk-free rate on dollar assets-the fed funds rate-to                   collapse. Again, however, Fed decisions pivot on domestic considerations.                   And in the U.S., despite the free fall in the developing world, creeping wage                   pressures, a supertight labor market and, through midyear, an irrepressible                   stock market, have conspired to keep the Fed on hold.
                    Quite perversely, panic in the developing world during the first half of 1998                   energized much of America's economy and helped to catapult the U.S. stock                   market to breathtaking heights. Fed policy kept short rates high, but violent                   capital inflows pushed down long rates dramatically, engendering a boom for                   housing not seen since the early 'Eighties. Laid alongside hourly earnings gains                   of 4%, the collapse of gasoline prices and the sharp fall in the cost of goods                   made in Asia translated to a whopping 3% gain for real wages in the first                   half-the biggest jump seen since the mid-1960s. Safe-haven buying also                   contributed to the Dow's big runup.
                    With housing booming, real wages soaring and Wall Street setting records,                   small wonder that real consumer spending in the U.S. grew faster in the first                   half than it had at any other time in the 1990s expansion.
                    For the Fed, all this had, until last week, conspired to squelch any talk of                   ease. The August employment report tells a real-economy story of more of                   the same. U.S. financial markets, however, now are loudly telling a different                   story. The spectacular inversion of the yield curve, the skyrocketing widening                   of government/corporate bond spreads, and, of course, the break in the U.S.                   equity market all strongly suggest a turn for the worse in the American                   economy.
                    Nonetheless, historically, financial-market signals of impending changes in the                   real economic fundamentals haven't triggered policy changes at the Fed. Only                   when the data break does the Fed reverse course. Thus, U.S. economists,                   tied to data flow, protest the notion of any imminent easing by the Fed.
                    Where does that leave the developing world? One step from quitting the                   game. Celebrated economist Paul Krugman broke ranks with most of his                   profession a few weeks ago by putting his imprimatur on capital controls. And                   last week, Malaysia put them into place. Capital controls, quite                   straightforwardly, allow an emerging nation to engineer its own interest-rate                   relief, without suffering from capital flight. How? By refusing to let foreign                   investors take their money out. One can argue, on moral grounds, that capital                   controls are the developing world's way of saying, "Hey, we're in this                   together!" [Fascinating]
                    What about the downside of freezing flows? As Krugman wryly noted in his                   defense of this strategy: "After Mexico imposed exchange controls during the                   1982 debt crisis, it went through five years of stagnation -- a dismal result, but                   when your GDP has contracted by 5%, 10% or 20%, stagnation looks like a                   big improvement."
                    But the downside to capital controls goes much deeper. Entrepreneurial                   capitalism did, until some 18 months ago, deliver on its promise of rapid                   economic growth in the developing world. Moreover, it was the instrument                   that exported American values around the world.
                    However, investors from America and other developed countries are unlikely                   to return to emerging economies for a long time if governments freeze their                   funds over the next several quarters. In the intermediate term, much-reduced                   access to financing from the developed world radically reduces the developing                   world's upside. Put simply, a world stripped of globe-hopping entrepreneurs                   reverts to one in which official capital flows bear the burden of reducing                   north/south, rich/poor disparities. And that would be a pity. A central banker                   with a global vision simply wouldn't stand for it.
                    ROBERT J. BARBERA is chief economist of Hoenig & Co., a brokerage                   firm based in Rye Brook, New York.
                    Return to top of page | Format for printing                   Copyright c 1998 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    |