speeches · May 20, 1998
Speech
Alan Greenspan · Chair
For release on delivery
10 30 am EDT
May 21, 1998
Statement of
Alan Greenspan
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before the
Committee on Agriculture
U S House of Representatives
May 21, 1998
The global financial system has been evolving rapidly in recent years New
technology has radically reduced the costs of borrowing and lending across traditional
national borders, facilitating the development of new instruments and drawing in new players
Information is transmitted instantaneously around the world, and huge shifts in the supply and
demand for funds naturally follow, resulting in a massive increase in capital flows
This burgeoning global system has been demonstrated to be a highly efficient structure that
has significantly facilitated cross-border trade in goods and services and, accordingly, has
made a substantial contribution to standards of living worldwide Its efficiency exposes and
pumshes underlying economic imprudence swiftly and decisively Regrettably, it also
appears to have facilitated the transmission of financial disturbances far more effectively than
ever before
Three years ago, the Mexican crisis was the first episode associated with our new
high-tech international financial system The current Asian crisis is the second
We do not as yet fully understand the new system's dynamics We are learning
fast, and need to update and modify our institutions and practices to reduce the risks inherent
in the new regime Meanwhile, we have had to confront the current crisis with the
institutions and techniques we have
Many argued that the Asian crisis should be allowed to run its course without
support from the International Monetary Fund or the bilateral financial backing of other
nations They asserted that allowing this crisis to play out, while doubtless having additional
negative effects on growth in Asia, and engendering greater spill-overs onto the rest of the
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world, would not likely have a large or lasting impact on the United States and the world
economy
They may well have been correct in their judgment, and some would argue that
events over the past six months have proved them right, we have so far avoided the type of
continuing downward spiral that some feared There was and is, however, a small but not
negligible probability that the upset in East Asia could have unexpectedly large negative
effects on Japan, Latin America, and eastern and central Europe that, in turn, could have
repercussions elsewhere, including the United States Thus, while the probability of such an
outcome may be small, its consequences, in my judgment, should not have been left solely to
chance We have observed that global financial markets, as currently organized, do not
always achieve an appropriate equilibrium, or at least require time to stabilize Moreover,
the effects of the Asian crisis on the real economies of the immediately affected countries, as
well as on our own economy, are only now just being felt
Opponents of IMF support for member countries facing international financial
difficulties also argued that such substantial financial backing, by cushiomng the losses of
imprudent investors, encourages excessive risk-taking There doubtless is some truth in that,
though arguably it has been the expectation of governments' support of their financial systems
that has been the more obvious culprit, at least in the Asian case In any event, any
expectations of broad bailouts have turned out to have been disappointed Many if not most
investors in Asian economies have to date suffered substantial losses
Moreover, the policy conditionally, associated principally with IMF lending,
which dictates economic and financial discipline and structural change, helps to mitigate some
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of the inappropriate risk-taking on the part of governmental authorities At the root of the
problems has been poor public policy that has resulted in misguided investments and very
weak financial sectors Convincing a sovereign nation to alter destructive policies that impair
its own performance and threaten contagion to its neighbors is best handled by an
international financial institution, such as the IMF What we have in place today to respond
to crises should be supported even as we work to improve those mechanisms and institutions
Some observers have also expressed concern about whether we can be confident
that IMF programs for countries, in particular the countries of East Asia, are likely to alter
their economies significantly and permanently My sense is that one consequence of this
Asian crisis is an increasing awareness in the region that market capitalism, as practiced in
the West, especially in the United States, is the superior model, that is, it provides greater
promise of producing rising standards of living and continuous growth
Although East Asian economies have exhibited considerable adherence to many
aspects of free-market capitalism, there has, nonetheless, been a pronounced tendency toward
government-directed investment, using the banking system to finance that investment Given
a record of real growth rates of close to 10 percent per annum over an extended period of
time, it is not surprising that it has been difficult to convince anyone that the economic
system practiced in East Asia could not continue to produce positive results indefinitely
Following the breakdown, an increasing awareness, bordering in some cases on shock, that
their economic model was incomplete, or worse, has arguably emerged in the region
As a consequence, many of the leaders of these countries and their economic
advisors are endeavoring to move their economies much more rapidly toward the type of
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economic system that we have in the United States The IMF, whatever one might say about
its policy advice in the past, has played an important role in this process, providing advice
and incentives that promote sound money and long-term stability The IMF's current
approach in Asia is fully supportive of the views of those in the West who understand the
importance of greater reliance on market forces, reduced government controls, scaling back
of government-directed investment, and embracing greater transparency-the publication of all
the data that are relevant to the activities of the central bank, the government, financial
institutions, and private companies
It is a reasonable question to ask how long this conversion to embracing market
capitalism in all its details will last in countries once temporary IMF financial support has
come to an end We are, after all, dealing with sovereign nations with long traditions, not
always consonant with market capitalism But my sense is that there is a growing
understanding and appreciation of the benefits of market capitalism as we practice it, and that
what is being prescribed in IMF-supported programs fosters their own interests
Similarly, it is a reasonable question to ask whether the U S authorities should not
seek greater assurance that the ongoing process of reform in the IMF's policies and
operations will produce additional concrete results before we agree to augment the IMF's
resources I have reason to believe that the management and staff of the IMF are committed
to a process of change We face a somewhat more difficult task in convincing the IMF's
membership as a whole of the need for change However, I am confident that our leverage
in this regard would be reduced if the United States failed to agree promptly to the proposed
increases in the IMF's resources
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Accordingly, I continue fully to back the Administration's request to augment the
financial resources of the IMF by approving as quickly as possible U S participation in the
New Arrangements to Borrow and an increase in the U S quota in the IMF Hopefully,
neither will turn out to be needed, and no funds will be drawn Although the tendency in
recent months toward stabilization in the East Asian economies is encouraging, clearly those
economies are not out of the woods as recent events attest Moreover, we have not yet put
in place the strengthening of the international financial architecture that would enable us in
the future to place less reliance on the IMF to deal with potential systemic crises Thus it is
better to have the IMF fully equipped if a quick response to a pending crisis is essential
Cite this document
APA
Alan Greenspan (1998, May 20). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19980521_greenspan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_19980521_greenspan,
author = {Alan Greenspan},
title = {Speech},
year = {1998},
month = {May},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19980521_greenspan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}