The Macroeconomics of Financial Integration: A European Per

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The Macroeconomics of Financial Integration: A European Perspective Prepared for the DG ECFIN Annual Research Conference Philip R. Lane Trinity College Dublin October 2008

Introduction European experience with international financial integration quite different to patterns elsewhere Net capital flows from advanced to emerging member countries Impact of increased cross-border investment positions on macroeconomic interdependence Shifts in external adjustment mechanisms

Financial Integration and Convergence Global evidence very mixed: Prasad et al (2007), Rodrik and Subramainan (2008), Gourinchas and Jeanne (2007) Emerging Asia running surpluses; Africa: low growth and high aid-financed deficits Emerging Europe: large and persistent deficits Blanchard and Giavazzi (2002), Abiad et al (2008), Herrmann and Winkler (2008)

Why is Europe Different? Kose et al (2008): institutional environment central in determining relation between financial integration and growth Institutional anchor of EU membership a key differentiating factor Other emerging regions do not have close substitutes to assist institutional development

Features of EU Membership multi-dimensional institutional commitment; deep-rooted; irreversible Complementarities between free capital mobility and other freedoms (trade, labour, establishment) Harmonisation between advanced and emerging member countries Monetary anchor: the euro Financial anchor: EU FSAP and other initiatives Surveillance

The First Wave: The Club of Four Greece, Ireland, Portugal, Spain Deficits in 1970s/1980s but not persistent Required financial integration in 1990s before persistent net capital flows possible Also improvement in macroeconomic discipline

The Second Wave: Central and Eastern Europe Persistent and large current account deficits since late 1990s High FDI component Prominent role for foreign-owned banks Differences with other emerging market economies not explained by country-level fundamentals Accelerates convergence but also increases vulnerability to sudden stops Financial transformation of CEE not complete: catalytic impact of euro membership (Masten et al 2008)

Current Account Balances 1986-2007

Net External Positions, 1986-2006. Note: Ratios of net foreign assets to GDP. Source: Updated version of Lane and Milesi-Ferretti (2007a).

Chinn-Ito Index for EU4

International Financial Integration:EU 4 Group. Note: Author s calculations based on extended version of dataset reported in Lane and Milesi-Ferretti (2007a).

Financial Development: EU4. Note: Ratio of Private Credit to GDP, 1970 to 2006

Trends in International Financial Integration, 1998-2006.

Chinn-Ito Index: Emerging Market Groups.

Current Account Balances, 1998-2006

Net Foreign Asset Positions, 1998-2006

Table: Level and Composition of Foreign Liabilities 1998 Shares FLY PEQL FDIL DEBTL CEEC 57.3 5.4 31.8 62.8 Em. Asia 54.0 6.1 28.0 65.9 LAC 60.0 7.3 29.4 63.2 CIS 52.2 0.3 31.0 68.7 SEE 51.0 2.3 15.4 82.3

Table: Level and Composition of Foreign Assets 1998 Shares FAY PEQA FDIA DEBTA FXRES CEEC 50.9 5.8 15.8 40.2 38.3 Em. Asia 50.0 2.1 8.2 27.4 62.4 LAC 36.9 9.8 19.6 42.5 28.1 CIS 56.3 2.5 2.5 63.2 31.8 SEE 55.3 2.5 6.7 42.9 48.0

Table: Financial Development Indicators Year CEE Em.Asia LAC CIS SEE Private Credit 1998 26.6 61.5 36.4 8.1 28.7 2006 52.7 58.1 34.8 23.1 39.2 Stock Market Capitalisation 1998 10.8 27.0 20.7 1.2 3.7 2006 31.1 57.5 40.1 14.3 38.3 Debt Securities 1998 44.6 54.9 40.5 29.7 2006 66.0 70.8 60.7 51.2

Table: World Bank Institutional Quality Indicators. CEE Em. Asia LAC CIS SEE Governance Indicator 1998 62.0 44.3 48.8 33.3 36.0 2006 63.0 41.3 45.8 33.0 44.8 Doing Business Rank 2006 45.0 88.6 90.5 96.3 99.8

Europe and Financial Globalisation Current International Financial Linkages: Europe and the rest of the world Future Trends

International Financial Linkages Global integration versus Regional integration: greater scope for diversification; facilitates globalisation of production But greater exposure to external shocks Growth in global cross-border investment positions Asymmetric: global imbalances Asymmetric: Long Equity, Short Debt Indirect channels

Europe s External Linkages Intra-European bias: gravity factors Currency bias: big shift to euro Divergence between advanced and developing regions Limited level of direct holdings Main channel indirect: global pricing factors

Global Imbalances. Note: Current Account Balances, scaled by global GDP. Source: IMF s World Economic Outlook (April 2008).

Global Configuration of Net Foreign Asset Positions. Note: Scaled by global GDP. Source: IMF s World Economic Outlook (April 2008)

Table: Geographic Distribution of International Investment Position of the Euro Area EU27 US China Japan ROW Offshore FDIA 36.7 19.9 0.8 2.2 29.5 10.8 FDIL 44.6 23.8 0.1 2.8 16.0 12.7 PEQA 24.2 33.3 1.7 9.0 21.0 10.8 PDA 36.4 32.1 0.1 3.3 14.1 12.8 OIA 52.0 13.3 0.6 1.7 21.4 10.0 OIL 47.7 12.8 0.5 2.4 21.0 14.2

Table: Foreign Currency Exposures. Note: FX AGG is index of aggregate foreign currency exposure; NETFX is aggregate foreign currency exposure, scaled by GDP. Source: Lane and Shambaugh (2008). NETFX Bulgaria 3.6 5.3 Czech Republic 17.4 26.8 Slovak Republic 1.1 1.7 Estonia 2.4 4.8 Latvia -11.2-18.5 Hungary -11.2-18.0 Lithuania -8.7-8.5 Slovenia 8.3 11.7 Poland -10.5-10.1 Romania -3.0-2.4 FX AGG

Future Trends Financial and institutional development: convergence in external balance sheets between advanced and developing regions Shift in direction of net capital flows: China the world s biggest debtor? (Dollar and Kraay 2006) International crisis management

Financial Integration and External Adjustment Cross-border financial impact of currency movements Cross-border financial impact of asset price movements (equity, FDI, debt securities) Leverage in external positions and liquidity risk

Exchange Rates and the Valuation Channel Differences between advanced and emerging economies (US this decade versus East Asia in 1990s) Intra-EMU: cross-border positions largely in euro: insulation Aggregate Europe exposed to dollar but not as much as Emerging Asia Euro Area: currency losses of 5 percent of GDP over 2000-2006 (ECB)

Asset Prices and the Valuation Channel Textbook model: external debt pays non-contingent fixed interest rate Increasing importance of tradable assets in international balance sheets Also increase in variable-return FDI State-contingent returns: potentially good for risk sharing Relation between growth and external sustainability altered Also volatility in net external position

External Leverage Positive expected returns from long equity, short debt position Risk: exposure to liquidity run on liability side Foreign-currency debt: a problem Intra-EMU: country-specific liquidity problem Lessons from current crisis

Conclusions European success in facilitating downhill capital flows Shifting nature of European role in global financial system: direct and indirect linkages External adjustment dynamics altered by international financial integration