An Asian Monetary Fund - More Harm Than Good?
Summary
Thailand is again promoting the establishment of an Asian Monetary Fund (AMF) amid increasing regional support, including from the International Monetary Fund. The AMF, an emergency fund for ailing Asian economies, will be a key issue at two upcoming Asian economic meetings in October and November. With Southeast Asian currencies coming under increasing pressure, this fall's meetings will test whether Asia is truly committed to an AMF, or whether the idea will once again fall victim to individual political and economic interests.
Analysis
Thai Deputy Prime Minister Supachai Panichpakdi called for Asia to seriously consider an Asian Monetary Fund during a Sept. 19 seminar in Bangkok on ASEAN economic cooperation. Supachai serves as Thailand's commerce minister and will be the next director-general of the World Trade Organization. He said an Asian fund, distributed under the guidance of Asian governments, is necessary because "IMF resources might be inadequate one day." He also said he would raise the issue at the Oct. 2-7 ASEAN economic ministers meeting in Chiang Mai, Thailand.
Supachai's comments come as the AMF and similar systems are gaining support, even from former opponents like the IMF. The AMF and regional currency-swap arrangements are set to be discussed at both the October ASEAN meeting and a November ASEAN summit in Singapore that will also include China, Japan and South Korea. With some Asian currencies dropping to their lowest level since the 1997 economic crisis, these meetings will reveal whether Asia is truly committed to an AMF, or if domestic political and economic interests once again preempt regional cooperation. __________________________________________________________________
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Japan initially raised the concept of an Asian Monetary Fund during the Asian financial crisis in 1997. The concept was soundly rejected by the United States, which feared that an AMF would undermine the IMF and thus weaken the impetus for enacting strict austerity measures. Despite the initial opposition, the idea has been resurrected several times and in several guises. It is now gaining broader acceptance.
In addition to the Asian Monetary Fund, an expanded ASEAN currency- swap agreement is being investigated. Among ASEAN's founding members, a pool of $200 billion for currency intervention has long been established. However, the miniscule size of the fund makes it next to useless for any real intervention. In Chiang Mai in May, the ASEAN nations - along with Japan, South Korea, and even China - agreed to work toward an enhanced ASEAN swap agreement with reciprocal agreements to Northeast Asia.
The fund increased to $1 billion initially and is in effect an AMF by another name. Even so, the IMF, and even U.S. Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers, offered at least measured support for this so called "Chiang Mai Initiative," which will again be discussed at the upcoming ASEAN meeting. __________________________________________________________________
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Support for an AMF itself has also recently increased. Economist Jeffery Sachs, former Taiwanese President Lee Teng-Hui, and delegates at the recent First International Conference of Asian Political Parties in Manila have all expressed support for some version of the AMF.
Even former opponents of the Asian Monetary Fund are changing their minds. In a Sept. 20 press conference, IMF Managing Director Horst Koehler, who replaced Michel Camdessus after the Asian economic crisis, said the proposal for an AMF that runs parallel with the IMF was a positive step, as it fostered regional integration, according to Kyodo. The Australian Associated Press reported that on Sept. 4, the Reserve Bank of Australia Deputy Governor Stephen Grenville said his country should "keep an open mind" not only about the formation of an AMF but also about potentially joining it.
The growing international support for a regional mechanism to stave off another currency crisis, however, comes as the Philippine peso is daily setting record lows. The Thai baht, which triggered 1997's financial meltdown, is trading at the lowest level in 25 months. And the Indonesian rupiah, despite a slight rebound in August, has been losing value for the past 11 months. __________________________________________________________________
The fall of these currencies is raising concern as to their affect on domestic interest rates, and thus economic growth and recovery. All three nations have intervened in their currencies over the last year, to little avail. Each is blaming the fall in its own currency primarily on the general regional malaise, suggesting there is little domestically they can do to stop the decline. Further, Asian stock markets are facing pressure, and post-crisis economic restructuring has slowed or stalled in many areas.
The upcoming ASEAN finance ministers meeting and the subsequent ASEAN summit present East Asia with a challenge. The growing support for a regional currency-defense system gives Asia the opportunity to finally implement Japan's longstanding proposal of an AMF and thereby stave off another regional crisis.
The current ASEAN swap-agreement fund, however, stands at just $1 billion. This is significantly less than necessary to stabilize the region. Without a massive financial commitment from Asian nations, implementing such a small fund could cause more harm than good. With Asian currencies moving closely together, a regional intervention of substance would require simultaneous moves in several countries.
The tiny regional fund would quickly be drained and have only short-term effect. Earlier interventions in Indonesia, Thailand and the Philippines have had little more than a daylong effect on the currency and have failed to affect the overall depreciating trends. Rather than supporting the region, the fund only creates a false sense of security among Asian nations. With regional currencies nearing crisis levels again, and Thailand, Indonesia and the Philippines facing political turmoil, the potential for a relapse of the Asian flu is growing. _____________________________________________________________
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