speeches · September 22, 1998
Speech
Alan Greenspan · Chair
For release on delivery
2 00 p m EDT
September 23, 1998
Statement by
Alan Greenspan
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before the
Committee on the Budget
United States Senate
September 23, 1998
The crisis in emerging market economies that began in Thailand a little over a year ago,
spread to other economies in East Asia and Russia, and has most recently been pressunng a
number of economies in Latin America There is little evidence to suggest that the contagion has
subsided
Moreover, the declines in Asian export markets only added to the difficulties in Japan,
which was struggling with a preexisting set of corrosive banking problems Those difficulties
have contributed to that economy's most protracted recession in the postwar era
As I indicated several weeks ago to a university audience, it is just not credible that the
United States, or for that matter Europe, can remain an oasis of prospenty unaffected by a world
that is experiencing greatly increased stress
With few signs that the financial crisis that started in Asia last year has subsided, or is
about to do so, policymakers around the world have to be especially sensitive to the deepening
signs of global distress, which can impact their own economies
In emerging markets, after about six months of relative stability, heightened perceptions
of credit nsk erupted in mid-August when Russia, which seemed to have been making progress
toward greater stability, fell into renewed crisis
Russia is not large in the world's trade accounts or cntical to the stability of the
international financial system Nevertheless, the seventy of its crisis and the authonties' inability
to contain it reflected a significant jump of contagion out of East Asia, which, until then, had
been assumed to have gone into remission
The shock drove yields on dollar-denominated debt securities of emerging market
economies sharply higher across the globe, engulfing economies that are as radically different as
Korea, Brazil, Poland, South Africa, and China To be sure, some yields have increased only one
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to two percentage points, while others have risen ten points or more But all these economies
have experienced stress The flight to safety has significantly augmented the demand for U S
Treasury securities, whose yields have declined in tandem with the increases in yields on most
dollar-denominated sovereign debt in international bond markets
In recent weeks, that shift internationally has also been accompanied by a rising concern
for risk in the United States, presumably reflecting the fear that the contagion would adversely
affect our economy
When I testified before the Congress in July, I noted that some of the effects of the
international crisis had actually been positive for the U S financial markets and economy, for
example, by lowering long-term interest rates paid by our households and businesses However,
the most recent more virulent phase of the crisis has infected our markets as well Concerns
about business profits and a general pulling back from nsk-takmg in the midst of great
uncertainty around the globe have dnven down stock prices and pushed up rates on the bonds of
lower-rated borrowers Flows of funds through financial markets have been disrupted, at least
temporarily Issuance of equity, and of bonds by lower-rated corporations, has come virtually to
a halt, even investment-grade companies have cut back substantially on their borrowing in
capital markets Banks also are reportedly becoming more cautious and more expensive lenders
to many companies
There is little evidence to date, however, that foreign problems or the tightening in
financial conditions in domestic markets have produced any significant underlying weakness in
the American economy as a whole Moreover, labor markets remain tight and hourly
compensation has continued to grow more rapidly Nonetheless, the increases in overall costs
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and the CPI have been held to modest levels by reasonably good productivity advances, lower oil
prices, and foreign competition
However, looking forward, the restraining effects of recent developments on the U S
economy are likely to intensify As I noted in congressional testimony last week, we can already
see signs of the erosion of production around the edges, especially in manufacturing
Disappointing profits in a number of industries and less rapid expansion of sales suggest some
stretching out of capital investment plans in the months ahead Lower equity pnces and higher
financing costs should damp household and business spending, and greater uncertainty and nsk
aversion may also lead to more cautious spending behavior
When I testified on monetary policy in July, I explained that the Federal Open Market
Committee was concerned that high—indeed rising—demand for labor could produce cost
pressures on our economy that would disrupt the ongoing expansion I also noted that a high real
federal funds rate was a necessary offset to expansionary conditions elsewhere in financial
markets By mid-August the Committee believed that disruptions abroad and more cautious
behavior by investors at home meant that the risks to the expansion had become evenly balanced
Since then, deteriorating foreign economies and their spillover to domestic markets have
increased the possibility that the slowdown in the growth of the American economy will be more
than sufficient to hold inflation in check
As I have indicated in earlier presentations, the dramatic advances in computer and
telecommunications technologies over the last decade have fostered a marked increase in the
degree of sophistication of financial products A vast new array of debt, equity and hybrid
instruments, as well as newly crafted derivative products have fostered an unbundling of risks,
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which, in turn, has enabled investors to optimize (as they see it) their portfolios of financial
assets This has engendered a set of market prices and interest rates that have guided business
organizations increasingly toward producing those capital investments that offer the highest
long-term rates of return, that is, those investments that most closely align themselves with the
prospective value preferences of consumers This process has effectively directed scarce savings
into our most potentially valuable productive capital assets The result, especially in the United
States, where financial innovations are most advanced, has been an evident acceleration in
productivity and standards of living, and, owing to the financial sector's increased contribution to
the process, a greater share of national income earned by it over the past decade
The new financial innovations, which have spread at a quickened pace, have facilitated a
rapid expansion of cross-border investment and trade, and almost surely, as a consequence, a
significant increase in standards of living for those nations that have chosen to participate in what
can appropnately be called our new international financial system The system is new in the
sense that its dynamics appear somewhat more accelerated relative to the international financial
structure of, say, fifteen or twenty years ago Owing to the newer technologies, market prices
have become more sensitively tuned to subtle changes in preferences and, hence, react to those
changes far faster than in previous generations The system is productive of increased standards
of living and more sensitive to capital misuse It is a system more calibrated than before to not
only reward innovation but also to discipline the mistakes of pnvate investment or public policy
Thus, the crises that have emerged out of this new financial structure, while sharing most
of the characteristics of past episodes, nonetheless, appear different in important ways It is not
yet clear whether recent crises are deeper than in the past, or just triggered more readily
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In early 1995, I characterized the Mexican crisis as the first crisis of this new
international financial system The crisis that started in East Asia more than a year ago, is its
second
Since the Mexican crisis, policymakers have been engaged in an accelerated learning
process of how this new system works
There are certain elements that are becoming evident
The sensitivity of market responses under the new regime has been underscored by the
startling declines of exchange rates of some emerging market economies against the dollar, and
most other major currencies, of 50 percent or more in response to what at first appeared to be
relatively modest financial difficulties Market discipline appears far more draconian and less
forgiving than twenty or thirty years ago
Capital, which in an earlier period may have flowed to a "merely adequate" profit
environment, owing to a lack of information or opportunity, now shifts predominantly to those
ventures or economies that appear to excel This capital, in times of stress, also flees more
readily to securities and markets of unquestioned quality and liquidity
It has taken the longstanding participants in the international financial community many
decades to build sophisticated financial and legal infrastructures that buffer shocks Those
infrastructures discourage speculative attacks against a well entrenched currency because
financial systems are robust and are able to withstand vigorous policy responses to such attacks
For the more recent participants in global finance, their institutions, until recently, had not been
tested against the rigors of major league pitching, to use a baseball analogy
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The situation in many emerging market economies is illustrative Under stress, fixed
exchange rate arrangements have failed from time to time Consequently, domestic currency
interest rates, reflecting devaluation probability premiums, are almost always higher in emerging
market economies with fixed exchange rates than in the economy of the major currency to which
the emerging economy has chosen to peg That currency is often the dollar
This phenomenon, and its risky exploitation, is one important element in the current crisis
and a symptom of what has gone wrong generally What appeared to be a successful locking of
currencies onto the dollar over a period of years in East Asia and elsewhere, led, perhaps
inevitably, to large borrowings of cheaper dollars to lend at elevated domestic interest rates, with
the intermediary pocketing the devaluation risk premium When the amount of unhedged dollar
borrowings finally became excessive, as was almost inevitable, the exchange rate broke
Incidentally, it also broke in Sweden in 1992 when large borrowings of DM to lend in krona at
higher interest rates met the same fate Such episodes are not uncommon, suggesting that
investors, even sophisticated ones, are prone to this type of gambling
This heightened sensitivity of exchange rates of emerging economies under stress would
be of less concern if banks and other financial institutions in those economies were strong and
well capitalized Developed countries' banks are highly leveraged, but subject to sufficiently
effective supervision so that, in most countries, banking problems do not escalate into
international financial crises Most banks in emerging nations are also highly leveraged, but their
supervision often has not proved adequate to forestall failures and a general financial crisis The
failure of some banks is highly contagious to other banks and businesses that deal with them
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This weakness in banking supervision in emerging market economies was not a major
problem for the rest of the world prior to those economies' growing participation in the
international financial system over the past decade or so Exposure of an economy to short-term
capital inflows, before its financial system is sufficiently sturdy to handle a large unanticipated
withdrawal, is a highly risky venture
It, thus, seems clear that some set of standards for participation in the new highly
sensitive international financial system is essential to its effective functioning There are many
ways to promulgate such standards without developing an inappropriately exclusive and
restrictive club of participants
One is far greater transparency in the way domestic finance operates and is supervised
This is essential if investors are to make more knowledgeable commitments and supervisors are
to judge the soundness of such commitments by their financial institutions A better
understanding of financial regimes as yet unseasoned in the vicissitudes of our international
financial system also will enable counterparties to more appropriately evaluate the credit
standing of institutions investing in such financial systems There is no mechanism, however, to
insulate investors from making foolish decisions, but some of the ill-advised investing of recent
years can be avoided in the future if investors, their supervisors, and counterparties, are more
appropriately forewarned
To the extent that policymakers are unable to anticipate or evaluate the types of complex
risks that the newer financial technologies are producing, the answer, as it always has been, is
less leverage, i e less debt, more equity, and, hence, a larger buffer against adversity and
contagion
I must also stress the obvious necessity of sound monetary and fiscal policies whose
absence was so often the cause of earlier international financial crises With increased emphasis
on pnvate international capital flows, especially interbank flows, pnvate misjudgments within
flawed economic structures have been the major contnbutors to recent problems But
inappropnate macropolicies also have been a factor for some emerging market economies in the
current crisis
Improvements in transparency, commercial and legal structures, as well as supervision
that I, and my colleagues, have supported in recent months cannot be implemented quickly
Such improvements and the transition to a more effective and stable international financial
system will take time The current crisis, accordingly, will have to be addressed with ad hoc
remedies It is essential, however, that those remedies not conflict with a broader vision of how
our new international financial system will function as we enter the next century
Cite this document
APA
Alan Greenspan (1998, September 22). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19980923_greenspan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_19980923_greenspan,
author = {Alan Greenspan},
title = {Speech},
year = {1998},
month = {Sep},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19980923_greenspan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}