Prof. Nelson Barbosa São Paulo School of Economics (Getulio Vargas Foundation), Brazil

Similar documents
Exchange Rate, Inflation, Growth and Development in Brazil

Income Inequality and Labor Market Dynamics in Brazil

Contents. HSBC Group in the world. HSBC in Brazil. New Economic Scenario / Macroeconomic Forecasts

MANAGING CAPITAL FLOWS

Online Course on Debt Sustainability Analysis (DSAx) Part 1: Principles of Debt Sustainability

1. Generation One. 2. Generation Two. 3. Sudden Stops. 4. Banking Crises. 5. Fiscal Solvency

P R O J E T A THE ECONOMIST

Lecture 7. Unemployment and Fiscal Policy

Objective; Introduction; Maximizing shareholder value and the corporate dynamics; Macroeconomic instability in emerging economies; Concluding remarks.

Macro Pre-conditions for Rupee Internationalisation

The Financial Crisis, Global Imbalances, and the

Open Economy AS/AD: Applications

19.2 Exchange Rates in the Long Run Introduction 1/24/2013. Exchange Rates and International Finance. The Nominal Exchange Rate

Are BRIC countries currencies to play. a dominant role in the system? A Brazilian perception

Macroeconomic Accounts and Policies: Introduction and Internal and External Balances(*)

Global Financial Crisis and China s Countermeasures

Export Group Meeting on the Contribution and Effective Use of External Resources for Development, in Particular for Productive Capacity Building

Supply and Demand over the Business Cycle

Suggested Solutions to Problem Set 4

Government Debt After The Crisis

Exchange Rate and Fiscal Policies in developing countries: leaning against the wind?

Minsky s Financial Instability Hypothesis in the new financial institutional framework. What are the lessons for developing countries?

Economics 1012A: Introduction to Macroeconomics FALL 2007 Dr. R. E. Mueller Third Midterm Examination November 15, 2007

1. Structuralist Development Economics (The Pioneers of Development)

Other similar crisis: Euro, Emerging Markets

ECO 403 L0301 Developmental Macroeconomics. Lecture 8 Balance-of-Payment Crises

Minsky, Financial Governance, Banking, and Financial Instability in Brazil

International Finance and Macroeconomics (Econ 422)

DISCUSSION PAPER NO 1 TEXTO PARA DISCUSSÃO NO 1 FINANCIAL FRAGILITY, INSTABILITY AND THE BRAZILIAN CRISIS: A KEYNES-MINSKY-GODLEY APPROACH

Provision of FX hedge by the public sector: the Brazilian experience

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS. Economics 134 Spring 2018 Professor David Romer LECTURE 19

Cross-border spillovers of monetary policy: what changes during a banking crisis?

International macroeconomics has been profoundly affected by the emerging

Financial Instability and Overvaluation of the Exchange Rate in Latin America: Analysis and Policy Recommendations

Goals of Topic 8. NX back!! What is the link between the exchange rate and net exports? How do different policies affect the trade deficit?

Christopher Balding Assistant Professor HSBC School of Business Peking University Graduate School Shenzhen

Development Policy Macro Management and Development Macro Stability and Growth: Case Study of Vietnam

China s macroeconomic imbalances: causes and consequences. John Knight and Wang Wei

International Trade. International Trade, Exchange Rates, and Macroeconomic Policy. International Trade. International Trade. International Trade

International financial crises

Reforms in a Debt Overhang

Global Imbalances and Current Account Imbalances

Intesa Sanpaolo S.p.A.

Globalization. International Financial (Chap. 8) and Monetary (Chap. 9) Relations

The International Financial System

LONG-TERM EFFECTS OF A CHILD LABOUR BAN: EVIDENCE FROM BRAZIL

Session 16. Review Session

The Great Depression, golden age, and global financial crisis

ECONOMY. Designing a new future THE BRAZILIAN

Maynard s Revenge: Keynesianism and the Crisis. Lance Taylor New School for Social Research

EXPECTATIONS AND THE IMPACTS OF MACRO POLICIES

Do high interest rates stem capital outflows?

Macroeconomic paradigms, policy regimes and the crisis: The origins, strengths & limitations of Taylor Rule macroeconomics

B.Sc. International Business and Politics International Economics Copenhagen Business School. Final Exam October 22, 2010

Econ 340. Recall Macro from Econ 102. Recall Macro from Econ 102. Recall Macro from Econ 102. Recall Macro from Econ 102

CAPITAL FLOWS TO LATIN AMERICA: CHALLENGES AND POLICY RESPONSES. Javier Guzmán Calafell 1

EXPECTATIONS AND THE IMPACTS OF MACRO POLICIES

Asset Price Bubbles and Monetary Policy in a Small Open Economy

Presentation. The Boom in Capital Flows and Financial Vulnerability in Asia

Topic 8: Financial Frictions and Shocks Part1: Asset holding developments

Evaluating the international monetary system and the availability to move towards one single global currency

Working Paper. Maio de The access to demand. Luiz Carlos Bresser-Pereira

The Economic Consequences of the Real. Economic Department

Chapter 21 - Exchange Rate Regimes

Chapter 18. The International Financial System

Brazil Currency Crisis

The Economics of International Financial Crises 3. An Introduction to International Macroeconomics and Finance

Minister of Finance. Brazilian economic. challenges ahead. Guido Mantega

UC Berkeley Fall Final examination SOLUTION SHEET

Unemployment that occurs at the natural rate of output is called:

14.02 Solutions Quiz III Spring 03

Problem Set 3. Thomas Philippon. April 19, Human Wealth, Financial Wealth and Consumption

Global Imbalances and Structural Change in the United States

The Macro-economy and the Global Financial Crisis

Political Economy of Brazil

14.02 Quiz 3. Time Allowed: 90 minutes. Fall 2012

Learning from History: Volatility and Financial Crises

Challenges of financial globalisation and dollarisation for monetary policy: the case of Peru

Global Imbalances and Structural Change in the United States

Public budget accounting and seigniorage. 1. Public budget accounting, inflation and debt. 2. Equilibrium seigniorage

internationa macroeconomics

Policy in Papua New Guinea: releasing the golden bullet

Monetary Policy, Capital Flows, and Exchange Rates. Part 2: Capital Flows and Crises

Fiscal and Monetary Policies: Background

NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES A BRAZILIAN DEBT-CRISIS MODEL. Assaf Razin Efraim Sadka. Working Paper

Global Imbalances and Spillovers

Carry Trades, Monetary Policy and Speculative Dynamics

LACEA/LAMES Implications for Latin America: BRAZIL" 05/10/2007

MARX, KEYNES, LEVY, KALECKI, STEINDL, MINSKY ON PROFIT. Jan Toporowski. School of Oriental & African Studies, University of London

Lecture 1: Traditional Open Macro Models and Monetary Policy

Chapter 29 The Global Economy and Policy Principles of Economics in Context (Goodwin et al)

Economics of International Financial Policy: ITF 220

The Mundell-Fleming Model

Capital Controls and Optimal Chinese Monetary Policy 1

Confronting the Global Crisis in Latin America: What is the Outlook? Coordinators

Economic Policy in the Crisis. Lars Calmfors Jönköping International Business School, 2 November 2009

A Vertical Social Accounting Matrix of the U.S. Economy

Dr Piketty on wealth and capital: Accumulation vs. finance

The Economics of the European Union

Policy in Papua New Guinea: recent shocks, new directions

Transcription:

11 th UNCTAD Debt Management Conference 13 15 November 2017 Palais des Nations, Geneva Financing for Development: Beyond Business as Usual by Prof. Nelson Barbosa São Paulo School of Economics (Getulio Vargas Foundation), Brazil The views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of UNCTAD.

Finance for Development and Debt Management Nelson Barbosa Professor at Fundação Getúlio Vargas, Brasília nelson.barbosa@fgv.br and @nelsonhbarbosa 11 th UNCTAD Debt Management Conference Geneva, November 13-15, 2017 2

Finance with Endogenous Money Money is endogenous (credit-driven) The base interest-rate is the main instrument variable of the central bank (from Wicksell to Woodford in 100 years) No government can go broke in its own currency (endogenous money/mmt) But it can do so in foreign currency (the BoPC) There is no limit no the amount of money that can be printed with fiat currency (post Bretton-Woods system) But there is a limit to the amount of goods and services that money can buy (the real constraint) And before that, finance itself can also be halted by excessive leverage (the financial constraint) 3

Limits of Foreign Finance (international leverage) Decades of open-economy macro with floating ER taught us something First: current-account sustainability requires an RER and/or growth rate that does not lead to a Ponzi position (Thirlwall s Law + the financial BoPC) x t ε t m t = (h t f v,t ) + 1+r t 1+g t d F,t + v t Second: the real exchange rate depends on interest-rate arbitrage (Dornbusch/UIP) and the state of long-term expectations (yes, Keynes is still valid) e ε t = r ft + σ t r t + ε t+1 carry-trade factor N e = ε t+n+1 + (r f,t Long-term RER expectation 0 e e + σ t r t ) carry-trade expectations 4

jan/06 jul/06 jan/07 jul/07 jan/08 jul/08 jan/09 jul/09 jan/10 jul/10 jan/11 jul/11 jan/12 jul/12 jan/13 jul/13 jan/14 jul/14 jan/15 jul/15 jan/16 jul/16 jan/17 jul/17 140 130 120 110 100 90 Brazil: Terms of Trade and Real Exchange Rate 140 130 120 110 100 90 80 70 80 60 ToT RER Source: BCB and IPEA 5

4,9 Ln(RER) 4,8 4,7 y = -29,486x 3 + 416,91x 2-1965,5x + 3094,1 R² = 0,5108 4,6 4,5 4,4 4,3 Ln(ToT) 4,2 4,55 4,6 4,65 4,7 4,75 4,8 4,85 4,9 6

Why international reserves? The currency crises of late 20 th and early 21 st centuries showed (once more) that international liquidity assistance is not there when needed 45 Brazil: foreign debt, reserves and current-account deficit 40 35 30 1st oil shock Debt crisis 1 Debt crisis 2 Brazilian ER crisis Lula's Election 2008 crisis TODAY 25 20 15 10 5 0-5 -10 1974 1982 1987 1998 2002 2008 2017 Gross Foreign debt Foreign reserve assets Current account deficit 7

Exchange-Rate Dominance in Developing Countries There is a clear hierarchy from the exchange rate, to the interest rate to the primary balance (fiscal policy) In countries that do not issue foreign-reserve currency, the UIP determines the RER, which in its turn influences both economic growth and inflation The inflation target (seigniorage) and the natural rate of interest determine the primary balance of the government necessary to stabilize public debt in terms of GDP But the same primary balance is compatible with different sizes or roles of the State (political economy) What should be the size and functions of the State? 8

Limits of Domestic Public Finance Public financial stability is usually defined as a stable debt/gdp ratio (the required primary surplus) b t = r t g t 1+g t d G,t 1 s t The limit on government domestic finance comes from expected primary surpluses and seigniorage (forward solution) N e d G,t = j=1(b t+j e + s t+j ) 1+g e 1+r j + e dg,t+n+1 1+g e 1+r N+1 Too much public debt can be restrictive because of the fear of drastic adjustment, even before the economy reaches full capacity ( capital flight to real or foreign assets). The long-term primary balance sets the limit to the government s leverage, and its tax base limits its spending (balanced multiplier) 9

85 Brazil: Net and Gross Public Debt of the General Government (in % of GDP) 75 65 55 45 35 25 Gross debt Net det 10

Limits of Domestic Private Finance By analogy, private debt and equities are claims on expected future income (Tobin s q and leverage) q t P t K t P t Y t = d p,t + w p,t d p,t + w p,t = [π e LR v g e + δ ] 1+ge r g e Expected growth and profits are what backs and generates finance in a system of endogenous money (Keynes/Minsky) There may be a trade-off between growth and profitability (Marx, Sraffa, Kalecki, Goodwin) if productivity does not accelerate. Too much debt represents too much fixed-income claims on little expected income, which can stop an expansion before full employment 11

Effective demand, profits and expectation cycles 12

Beyond Business as Usual Expected growth and profits mobilize finance in a world of endogenous money, not the other way around Proper fiscal policy can boost growth and profits without creating unsustainable fiscal imbalances Proper financial regulation and real-wage growth can also push profits, productivity and growth up without excessive leverage (virtuous cycle) But without this, speculative finance becomes the only autonomous growth-generating engine the bubble economy subject to long booms and sudden stops + high inequality 13