SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Gold/Mining/Energy : Gold Price Monitor -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Alex who wrote (14354)7/10/1998 6:47:00 PM
From: C Hudson  Respond to of 116759
 
Here is the report from Veneroso Associates:

Global Economy
ÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿ South East Asia
ÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿ ú A Major Call to Buy Emerging Asia

ÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿ It has been our view that the economies of Thailand, Indonesia,
and Korea would remain in serious trouble until the disastrous deflationary
policies of the IMF and the US Treasury were abandoned.ÿ Our reasons for this
are spelled out in our early 1997 piece, A Long Run Perspective on Asia , and
in our paper, The Asian Crisis: The High Debt Model Versus the Wall Street-
Treasury-IMF Complex .ÿ Our associate Robert Wade repeated our arguments in a
recent "personal view" column in the June 23 Financial Times entitled "Asian
Water Torture".ÿ In recent days we have seen the first moves toward a
departure from deflationary IMF policies.
Indonesia is cutting interest rates despite high inflation and will have a
budget deficit of 8.5% of GDP.ÿ Of greater significance has been similar moves
in Korea to lower interest rates and cut taxes, thereby raising the fiscal
deficit from 1% to 4% of GDP.
SEOUL, July 8 (Bloomberg) - The South Korean government urged banks to cut
lending rates to help stem bankruptcies and encourage companies to make
investments that can revive a shrinking economy.
"I understand many banks already mapped out plans to lower prime lending
rates," said Chung Keun Yong, the head of the financial policy division of the
Finance and Economy Ministry, speaking on Korean television.
The proposal comes as banks have cut the annual interest they pay on deposits
to as low as 12% while maintaining average lending rates above 17%.ÿ To help
lower market rates, the Korean government will discuss ways to expand money
supply as well as revise economic policies and targets during meetings with an
International Monetary Fund delegation from today, a ministry official said.
The government cut market rates to as low as 12% by the end of next month,
local newspapers said.ÿ The IMF has said it is happy for rates to come down
over time provided this doesn't weaken the currency and make it harder for
Korea and its companies to repay its debts.ÿ The won strengthened 30% against
the dollar in the past six months, prompting speculation the Korean central
bank may sell won for dollars to stem its rise.
ÿÿÿÿÿÿ Lower rates will help stem a raft of corporate defaults by reducing the
cost of repaying an estimated $600 billion of corporate debt and making it
cheaper for companies to borrow more money for investment.ÿ Korea needs to
boost spending to stimulate its economy, which may have contracted at an
annual rate of at least 4% in the first half of the year, its deepest
recession in four decades.

ÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿ It appears that Korea has taken these steps without IMF
approval.ÿ It also appears that the IMF is acquiescing.ÿ The Koreans and the
IMF probably both now realize that the IMF and US Treasury policies have been
disastrous.ÿ We do not fear that lower interest rates in Korea will weaken the
Korean won.ÿ In a recent conference at the World Bank, chief economist Joseph
Stiglitz argued that there is no empirical evidence that lower rates weaken a
currency.ÿ In the case of South East Asia, it is now clear that high real
rates, by creating bankruptcies and depression, have caused foreign capital to
flee the region, thereby weakening local currencies.ÿ Interest rates in Korea
have been falling for many months and the won has rallied from 1800 to 1300.
The Koreans cutÿ interest rates yesterday and the won rallied from 1330 to
1300.ÿ Yet lower interest rates in Asia will strengthen the Asian currencies.
We are surprised that Korea has made these moves.ÿ Kim Dae Jung was following
the US Treasury line more closely than any other Asian leader.ÿ To us this
shows that the need for reflationary policies is so obvious that they will be
adopted, and to an increasing degree, in ASEAN and Korea.ÿ This is what is
needed to generate a recovery in emerging Asia.ÿ We believe that the steps now
being taken in Japan will have a more positive effect on the Japanese economy
than market participants expect.ÿ Simon Hunt reports that China is now moving
to increase its pump priming with the objective of raising economic growth
above an 8% rate by late this year.ÿ The regional Asian economic environment
should be more supportive of recovery in ASEAN and Korea as the year
progresses.ÿ
There are additional reasons for expecting an abandonment of the disastrous
policies of the IMF and US Treasury in Asia.ÿ We are seeing more and more open
discussion in the editorials in Asian newspapers of the critique of IMF
policies made months ago by Jeff Sachs, James Tobin, Martin Feldstein, Jagdish
Bhagwhati and ourselves.ÿ UNCTAD's chief macro economist has recently
published a paper with the same assessment.ÿ We have no doubt that, at the
level of policy makers throughout Asia, this same assessment is being made.
Faced with the disastrous consequences of their actions, the IMF and Treasury
are slowly caving to this emerging new consensus about the Asian crisis.
This assessment was presented to Treasury Secretary Rubin on July 1st by the
Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU).ÿ Their document was not a mere
trade union position paper.ÿ It wasÿ extremely comprehensive and intelligently
argued.ÿ A document of this sophistication could only be the result of a
consensus among Korea's best minds in economic policy circles in government,
universities, and corporations as well as the labor unions.ÿ This document
also demonstrates how this new assessment with its critique of IMF/Treasury
policies now dominates the thinking of grass roots political organizations
that heads of states and policy makers in Asia are accountable to.ÿ When a new
consensus runs this deep politically, it wins the day.ÿ We have been concerned
that rising unemployment in Korea could create serious civil strife emanating
from Korea's militant labor unions.ÿ The balance and intelligence of this KCTU
document allays our fears over labor unrest in Korea
Looking further forward, we expect more dramatic developments.ÿ In our
January piece, "A Long Term Perspective On Asia", we argued that Asians know
that the Asian development model works and that they would not abandon it as a
result of pressure from the IMF and the US Treasury.ÿ Ultimately, this would
require a regional balance of payments finance facility that would accommodate
Asian financial structures rather than imposing Western (Basle) parameters of
financial prudence.ÿ Last fall the Asian nations under Japanese leadership
moved to create such a facility, only to be met by especially fierce US
opposition.ÿ

ÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿ Lastly, there is a need to recognize the unintended ill-
effects---unforeseen aggravation---of the IMF's traditional prescription and
mode of intervention in the Asian crisis.ÿ The Asian development model, while
containing some of the key elements which gave rise to the current crisis,
also contains the very dynamic elements which made the 'miraculous' growth
over such a short period.ÿ The effort to consolidate on the unique positive
elements---while making efforts to eradicate the negative aspects at the same
time---can contribute to the balanced development in the world economy.ÿ The
IMF policy regime, however, has overlooked---or it may lie beyond capacity to
handle appropriately---the positive and dynamic elements in its virtual
blanket disavowal of the Asian economy---especially financial---system and
practice.
ÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿ In this light, it may be important for Asian nations and
peoples to develop and construct a basis of cooperation and mutual assistance
and support---both material and spiritual---amongst themselves.ÿ It may be
necessary, therefore, for Asian nations to build a body--- an Asian version of
IMF or an Asian regional organization of the Fund which enjoys a significant
level of autonomy---which can serve as an Asian monetary fund.ÿ If the US
government supports the idea of a worldwide convergence based on the respect
for cultural and regional differences, and, furthermore, recognizes that the
potential of each member in a community can be maximized on the basis of the
respect for diversity, then, it will be possible for the US to make a
significant contribution---as she has in building up APEC---towards the
creation of an "Asian Monetary Fund".
The Korean labor union confederation made the following statements on this
issue to Rubin on July 1, 1998.

We expect that the issue of an Asian regional balance of payments finance
facility will come up shortly and will eventually become a reality.ÿ When
market participants perceive this, there will be a dramatic change in capital
flows to Asia.ÿ Western bankers, fearful of losing the Asian markets to Asia,
will fall all over themselves to lend to Asia once again.ÿ Portfolio managers,
seeing an improvement in Asian currencies and financial access will run to get
on board the new Asian recovery bandwagon.ÿ A hesitant currency and stock
market recovery based on an economic recovery once the IMF-US Treasury noose
is relaxed could quickly become a run on the part of Western short term
capital to get back into Asia before Asia closes its doors.ÿ "