- Published on Tuesday, 04 December 2012 17:32
- Written by Bloomberg News
The
International Monetary Fund (IMF) endorsed nations’ use of capital
controls in certain circumstances, making official a shift, which has
been in the works for three years, that will guide the fund’s advice.
In
a reversal of its historic support for unrestricted flows of money
across borders, the Washington-based IMF said controls could be useful
when countries have little room for economic policies, such as lowering
interest rates or when surging capital inflows threaten financial
stability.
Still, it said the measures should be targeted, temporary and not discriminate between residents and
non-residents.
non-residents.
“Capital
flows can have important benefits for individual countries across the
fund membership and the global economy,” IMF staff wrote in a report
discussed by the board on November 16 and published on Tuesday. They
“also carry risks, however, as they can be volatile and large relative
to the size of domestic markets.”
Countries
from Brazil to the Philippines have sought in recent years to manage
inflows of capital that put upward pressure on their currencies and
threatened to create asset bubbles.
The
new guidelines will enable the fund to provide consistent advice,
though rules prevent it from imposing views about managing capital flows
on its 188 member-nations.
IMF
Managing Director Christine Lagarde has cited the shift on capital
controls as an illustration of the fund’s attempts to modernize.
In
some cases “temporary capital controls might prove useful,” Lagarde
said in a November 14 speech in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, a country that
implemented such measures during the Asian financial crisis of the late
1990s and turned down IMF assistance. “Malaysia was ahead of the curve
in this area.”
Not
all countries welcomed the new guidelines. Paulo Nogueira Batista, who
represents Brazil and 10 other nations at the IMF’s executive board,
said that despite some progress from earlier work, the report puts too
much emphasis on the benefits of capital flows and on their recipients
and still shows a bias against capital controls.
“Any
attempt to come up with recommendations should have been preceded by a
deeper and broader analysis and much more empirical work, allowing the
fund to draw on country experiences,” he said in a statement sent by
e-mail. “Our chair does not consider itself part of this ‘institutional
view.’”
The
guidelines are “not set in stone” and will be reviewed and updated in
the light of new experience and research, Vivek Arora, an assistant
director in the IMF’s strategy, policy and review department, told
reporters on a conference call on Tuesday.
The
report cautions countries against substituting capital controls for
policies it says are needed first, such as currency appreciation or the
buildup of foreign reserves. It also says capital controls are rarely
sufficient on their own.
While
the new guidelines represent a “major step forward” from the 1990s, the
range of circumstances deemed acceptable for using capital controls is
too narrow, said Kevin Gallagher, an associate professor of
international relations at Boston University.
That makes it difficult for countries to fall into the right category, he said.
“It
could have a chilling effect on countries’ ability to put in place
regulations,” Gallagher said in a phone interview. “It will be tacitly
endorsed by a lot of central banks and it will have an impact.” (Bloomberg News)
In Photo: Lagarde (Bloomberg)
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