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~This
Issue's Index~
Counterbalence:
The
Euro in Asia
By
Ramkishen Rajan
The 1990s have been among
the more turbulent decades for the international monetary
system. The virtual breakdown of the European Exchange
Rate Mechanism (ERM) in 1992-93 was followed in 1994-95
by the Mexican peso crisis, and the accompanying spillover
affected both Argentina and Brazil. In July 1997, the
Thai baht was devalued after repeated speculative attacks.
The crisis quickly spread throughout the rest of East
Asia. As the crisis-hit economies saw a single year
capital reversal of approximately US$105 billion between
1997 and 1998, the socio-political repercussions that
the crisis has had on the East Asian countries have
yet to be calculated.
Most policy-makers
and businessmen in Asia have been understandably preoccupied
with the on-going crisis and have not paid much attention
to developments in the European Union. This neglect
is unfortunate, as on January 1, 1999, selected EU economies
introduced a common currency-a momentous and historically
unprecedented event in the international monetary system.
About 66%
of global foreign reserves (excluding gold) are denominated
in dollars, about 50% of world exports are invoiced
in dollars, and slightly more than 40% of foreign exchange
turnover involves the dollar. The corresponding figures
for the EU currencies in aggregate are 25%, 34%, and
31.5% respectively. With the entire EU constituting
about one fifth of global output, two fifths of world
trade, and half of the global foreign exchange turnover,
the euro is expected to overtake the Japanese yen as
the world's second most important currency, and possibly
challenge the hegemony of the dollar. Neglect of the
EMU will be strategically disadvantageous for Asia.
The debates
over whether the EMU will prove positive or negative
to the participating European economies, and whether
the euro will be a strong or weak currency are far from
settled. From the perspective of extra-EU actors, however,
the relevant issue is the inevitability of the euro.
Ill-advised or not, the euro cannot be ignored.
Regional
Self-Help
At the most general level,
concerns about the smooth introduction and functioning
of the euro, participation of the UK and the other "outs,"
and expansion of the EU will remain highest on the agenda
of European policy-makers. This focus on euro-centric
issues implies that attention will be diverted from
both the Asian economic crisis and reform of the international
financial system. It is possible that international
agencies and the world financial community will also
focus on the euro and related issues, such as euro-dollar
and euro-yen exchange rates. In fact, in early 1999,
much attention was devoted to how volatility among the
dollar, yen, and euro might be reduced.
Asia, therefore, needs to intensify efforts to establish
economic self-help mechanisms to deal with the current
crisis and avoid future problems. It must also recognize
that all the major currency crises of the 1990s have
revealed the relevance and pervasiveness of regional
contagion or negative spill-over effects. Regardless
of the exact transmission mechanisms and definitions
of contagion, economic policy slippage in any one country
reverberates rapidly to nearby countries, with the result
that currency crises tend to be largely regional.
It is therefore particularly important to ensure that
there is some sort of peer pressure or club spirit that
promotes the pursuit of sustainable and prudent macroeconomic
policies across the region. This suggests that Asia
should resuscitate Japan's proposal for an Asian Monetary
Fund (AMF). The stated aims are to provide a pool of
available funds for quick disbursal to alleviate regional
currencies under acute selling pressure. It would also
provide emergency balance of payments support for crisis-hit
economies, similar to the US Treasury's Exchange Stabilization
Fund for Mexico.
The East
Asian economies enthusiastically welcomed the AMF. While
Japan agreed to provide the bulk of financing, China,
Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Singapore also pledged to contribute.
The fund was estimated at US$100 billion. The US Treasury,
however, saw the fund as a threat to its influence in
Asia, and effectively killed the proposal. The IMF was
also opposed to the AMF, because it was concerned about
the compromise of its own authority and the willingness
of regional crisis-hit countries to follow through with
the necessary austerity measures.
Asian
Monetary Union
Today, discussion abounds
in Asia about the merits of maintaining different exchange
rate regimes, as well as the costs and benefits of restraints
on capital flows. In this climate, it may be useful
to pay close attention to the European experience with
monetary union. Indeed, following the successful introduction
of the euro and the economic turbulence of the Asian
financial crisis, ASEAN agreed to study the feasibility
of a common currency and exchange rate system. There
has also been popular discussion about the economic
and political feasibility and desirability of forming
an Asian Monetary Union (AMU) similar to the EMU.
To be sure,
the conceptual framework within which the costs and
benefits of the EMU have been discussed would be just
as pertinent in analyzing the feasibility of an AMU,
or even global monetary union. Some analysts have already
concluded that East Asia satisfies the standard optimum
currency area criteria for the adoption of a common
monetary policy as well as Western Europe does. Its
small, open economies would benefit from the reduction
in uncertainty that would result from the creation of
a durable peg. Most economists would agree, however,
that the necessary political solidarity and institutional
framework for contemplating such a union does not yet
exist in Asia. Other issues, including acute income
disparities, are working against the AMU in the foreseeable
future.
The AMF-which
would ideally play a complementary role to the IMF-may
be a useful first step on the road to greater monetary
cooperation and possibly integration. In addition to
the greater trust and understanding which countries
achieve by working together, the institutional arrangements
that develop around the AMF may be extended to facilitate
the convergence and synchronization of regional economic
policy. Conversely, if Asian governments are unable
to cooperate at the level of regional surveillance and
pooling of funds, AMU would look much less practical.
Away
from the Dollar
In discussing the euro's
potential as a reserve currency relative to the dollar
and yen, few realize that the decisions Asian governments
make determining the mix of their reserve holdings will
make a major difference. Specifically, Japan and China,
which have the two largest foreign exchange reserves
in the world, together hold about US$350 billion in
foreign currency. The other newly industrialized Asian
economies hold about US$300 billion in aggregate. In
comparison, the US holds US$65 billion, and the EU about
US$400 billion.
The percentage of Asian countries' currency reserves
have risen from less than 50% in 1980 to about 60% today.
In contrast, the yen's share has stayed constant at
about 13-15%, while the European currencies in aggregate
constituted 25% in 1995, down from about 35% in 1980.
Thus, if the euro proves to be a stable currency, portfolio
diversification gains could be attained by shifting
some of Asia's foreign reserves to the euro and away
from the dollar, which is over-represented in most portfolios.
Should Asian governments do so, it would significantly
strengthen the euro relative to the dollar. Given this,
recent speculation that China will convert a portion
of its reserves into euros is significant.
The mix of
reserve currencies in Asia will depend partly on the
type of exchange rate regime chosen. Assuming the goal
is to maintain a pegged exchange rate, consideration
should be given to maintaining a basket peg with appropriate
weight given to the euro. The disproportionate weight
given to the dollar by regional economies has been among
the primary causes of the crisis in East Asia. For instance,
the dollar constituted some 85-95% of the total Thai
baht basket system, while the yen contributed the remaining
5-15%. This was despite the fact that Thailand's trade
with the EU and Japan was as high as that with the US
and the rest of East Asia. Indeed, the Japanese government
has recently advocated the use of a tri-currency basket
peg in East Asia, evenly divided between the dollar,
yen, and euro.
The establishment
of a single euro bond market, with breadth, depth and
liquidity comparable to the US, will provide funding
opportunities for Asian governments and businesses to
diversify their liabilities. The relative size of the
euro-bond market in terms of all publicly issued bonds
will be about US$6 trillion, two-thirds that of the
US and double that of Japan.
Asian investors have already begun to exploit the opportunities
offered by the integrated euro capital markets. For
instance, Japanese investors have gradually shifted
from US Treasury bills to European ones. The Singapore
International Monetary Exchange recently offered a euro-yen
futures contract. The Hong Kong company Hutchinson Whampoa
launched the first non-Japanese euro denominated bond
in London. This was followed almost immediately by the
300 million euro sovereign bond offer by the Philippines
government, making it the first Asian country to float
a euro currency bond.
Thus, as
Asian economies shift some of the external debt liabilities
to euros, there will concomitantly be even greater incentive
to reduce the dollar reserve holdings in favor of euros.
Coming to
Terms with the Euro
Asian companies that have or aim for significant market
shares in Europe or strategic partnerships with European-based
businesses will have to consider dealing with the euro
in their transactions. This ought to reduce currency
risks, while also ensuring that Asian companies are
not at a strategic disadvantage to Eastern and Central
European competitors, whose countries are expected to
closely peg their currencies to the euro as a possible
prelude to full monetary integration.
The EU has not been a major recipient of direct foreign
investment from Asia, receiving only some 5% of total
flows from developing Asia and 18% of Japan's total
flow between 1991 and 1995. Recent data, however, suggest
an increased interest in the EU. Since most Asian investments
in Europe have been concentrated in the UK, the successful
introduction of the euro on one hand and the non-participation
of the UK in the EMU on the other, may prompt Asian
investors to modify their strategy in the region.
Just as in
the case of international trade, Asia will need to recognize
the EMU as a single, major player in the global financial
markets. Accordingly, attention must be focused equally
among the euro and the European monetary authorities:
the dollar, the Federal Reserve, and Treasury Department
on the one hand, and the yen, Bank of Japan, and Ministry
of Finance on the other.
Japanese
authorities have somewhat belatedly recognized the possibility
of the euro surpassing the yen as the world's number
two currency, and the possibility of the dollar and
euro monopolizing international monetary and financial
transactions. In response, they have recommended the
internationalization of the yen and particularly enhancing
the yen's role in intra-Asian transactions. The promotion
of a tri-currency basket peg in East Asia is consistent
with the goal of maintaining the regional and global
role of the yen. Similarly, Japan's AMF scheme may also
be seen as a way of promoting the use of the yen. Some
have even proposed the establishment of a yen reserve
fund to be used in emergencies by regional countries
faced with liquidity crises and as a means of promoting
the internationalization of the yen following the peso
crisis.
The ERM crisis
in 1992-93 led most observers (particularly among those
outside Western Europe) to prematurely conclude that
the goal of creating the EMU was unrealistic for the
foreseeable future. Paradoxically, however, the crisis
seems to have provided the impetus for Western European
governments to see the process through to the implementation
of monetary union. It is interesting to observe that
while the ERM crisis seems to have fortified the links
between the European economies, the East Asian crisis
may have done just the reverse.
While the East Asian financial and economic crises have
obviously monopolized the time and energy of regional
policy-makers and businessmen, the potential significance
of the euro in the global economy and a financially
integrated European market-at least in the medium- and
long-terms-dictates that they pay far greater attention
to the EMU than has hitherto been the case.
~This
Issue's Index~
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