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A financial agenda for India's G-20 presidency
Jun 05,2023 - Last updated at Jun 05,2023
By Barry Eichengreen and Poonam Gupta
BERKELEY/NEW DELHI — On December 1, India assumed the presidency of the G-20. It is not exactly a propitious time to take on the role. A global economic slowdown is coming. The war in Ukraine continues to upend energy, food, and commodity markets. The climate crisis looms. Mounting US-China tensions threaten to throw a wrench into global trade and investment.
Not even the best-prepared G-20 presidency could address the totality of these problems. Uncertainty and international division are bound to hinder efforts in many areas.
But modern international financial problems are an exception. They have been studied intensively since the Asian financial crisis of the 1990s, and there is now a surprising degree of consensus among economists and policymakers. No, we’re not kidding. There actually is a well-defined agenda for the Indian presidency to pursue.
First, central-bank currency swap lines, and dollar swaps by the Federal Reserve (Fed) in particular, have proven highly effective in calming financial markets. Unfortunately, the Fed and other central banks provide these facilities to only a limited set of partners.
The G-20 should therefore encourage central banks to broaden their swap networks and make temporary arrangements permanent. The Fed can extend swaps to additional central banks without assuming balance-sheet risk, since many potential recipients have other, sometimes illiquid assets to offer as collateral.
Second, the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF’s) Flexible Credit Line and Precautionary and Liquidity Line, designed to help emerging markets without access to central-bank swaps, have not lived up to expectations. Only eight countries have sought approval for these lines, and only three have actually tapped them. Countries with strong policies do not see the need. Others fear that applying will send a negative signal to investors.
Countries with strong policies should therefore apply for contingent lines as a way of weakening the adverse signaling effect. Even better, the IMF could unilaterally prequalify countries, rather than requiring them to apply. Lines could disburse automatically when a “global sell-off event” is identified by IMF staff and certified by the executive board.
Third, the $650 billion of IMF special drawing rights (SDRs, the Fund’s reserve asset) authorised in 2021 could be reallocated to developing countries, as originally promised. The IMF has created a Resilience and Sustainability Trust to lend high-income countries’ SDRs. But borrowing requires a government to request an IMF programme, which acts as a deterrent. Because access is capped at 150 per cent of a country’s IMF quota, the Fund foresees reallocating at most $42 billion. Worse, only six members have signed agreements to lend their SDRs, worth a measly $20 billion. Clearly, the 150 per cent cap should be lifted, and more G-20 governments should join the six pioneers and contribute to the trust.
Fourth, many low-income countries, when borrowing abroad, still have no choice but to borrow in foreign currency. Currency-hedging instruments would go a long way toward mitigating the associated exchange-rate risk. Entities such as Currency Exchange Fund NV, or TCX, have shown how such instruments can be underwritten, thereby offering low-cost financial protection to developing countries.
TCX backs its currency swaps in part with capital subscribed by four G-20 governments. But its $1.1 billion of capital supports a balance sheet of swaps worth $5 billion. A G-20 agreement to provide funding for TCX to scale up significantly would go a long way toward addressing the currency-mismatch problem that plagues developing countries.
Fifth, climate change poses special risks for the developing world, where a climate-related disaster can turn into a financial disaster when countries are unable to meet their obligations and have their capital-market access curtailed. The G-20 should therefore encourage wider issuance of bonds with clauses providing for the suspension of payments in the event of a costly climate event, along the lines of Barbados’s pioneering disaster bond. Fitch Ratings assigned a B rating to Barbados’s bond, confirming the existence of a market. But that market will be deeper and more liquid if more governments issue such bonds.
Finally, the Common Framework for Debt Treatments agreed by the G-20 must be fixed. That framework was designed to give the Chinese government, a key creditor, a seat at the table, and to ensure that all creditors were treated comparably. Yet, more than two years on, only three countries have applied for debt relief through the Common Framework, and only one, Chad, has actually obtained it.
The case for relief is now urgent. The heads of the World Bank and the IMF have suggested that distressed debtor countries seeking relief under the Common Framework should receive statutory protection from asset seizures by national courts when suspending debt-service payments. Relieved of legal risk, more countries will apply. But such protection needs to be implemented by creditor-country governments through legislation or executive order. The G-20 should commit to this.
There actually is very little disagreement over the elements of this agenda. Implementing it would be true to the G-20’s mission and help it renew its sense of purpose.
Barry Eichengreen, professor of Economics at the University of California, Berkeley, is the author, most recently, of “In Defense of Public Debt“ (Oxford University Press, 2021). Poonam Gupta, director general of the National Council of Applied Economic Research, is a member of the Economic Advisory Council to the prime minister of India. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2022.