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Transcript
TheArgentinebankingcrisesof1995and2001:Anexplorationinto
theroleofmacro-prudentialregulations.
PabloGuidotti
UniversidadTorcuatoDiTella
and
JuanPabloNicolini
FederalReserveBankofMinneapolis
Firstdraft,May20th,2016
Abstract
ThispaperdealswithtwobankingcrisesthattookplaceinArgentinain1995andin2001,when
theeconomywasfunctioningunderafixed-exchangerateregimecalledConvertibility.Thetwo
crisistookplaceinadecadeofsignificantreformsinthemacro-prudentialframework.The
experiencewascontrasting.Whilethe1995bankingcrisiswasvirulentbutwassuccessfully
containedbythepolicyresponse,thebankingsystemcouldnotescapetheeffectsofthe2001
macroeconomiccrisis,eventuallyleadingtodefaultandtheabandonmentofConvertibility.We
focusonthemacro-prudentialregulationsputinplace,onthecrisisresponsebythecentralbank,
andonsomeimportantinstitutionalreformsdesignedtoresolvemoreefficientlybanking
problems.Weanalyzethedynamicsofcrisesand,inparticular,thebehaviorofdepositors,aswell
astheeffectsthatthecrisesandtheregulatoryframeworkhadontheevolutionoftheArgentine
bankingsystem.Finally,wedwellonwhatadditionalreformsandprudentialregulationscould
havepreventedthe2001outcome.
1
Introduction
Foralongtime,Argentinahasbeenacasestudyforeconomists.Fordecadesitseconomywas
characterizedbystagnation,volatility,fiscalindisciplineandhighinflation,oftengroundedin
chronicpoliticalinstability.Asaresult,acountryrichinnaturalresourcesandwidelyperceived
withthepotentialofprovidingitscitizenswithahighlivingstandardfellbehindexpectations.
In1991,withtheimplementationofConvertibility,historyappearedtochangeasArgentina
embarkedinanambitiousreformprogramwhiletacklinginflationheadonanchoredonaquasi
currencyboardsystem.Optimismalsocoincidedwiththeadventofglobalizationandasurgeof
capitalflowstoemergingmarketeconomies.
Argentina’seconomicperformanceduringmostofthe1990swasindeedimpressiveonanumber
offronts.Inparticular,theConvertibilityregimewasabletowithstandsuccessfullyasevere
bankingcrisisthatoccurredatthebeginningof1995,followingtheMexicandevaluationof
December1994.AsanexampleofthehighregardArgentina’sreformsweregeneratinginthe
internationalcapitalmarketaswellasintheinternationalofficialcommunity,ontheoccasionof
theAnnualMeetingsoftheIMFinOctober1998,theIMF’sManagingDirectorMichelCamdessus
described“theexperienceofArgentinainrecentyears”as“exemplary”andstated“Argentinahas
astorytotelltheworld:astorywhichisabouttheimportanceoffiscaldiscipline,ofstructural
change,andofmonetarypolicyrigorouslymaintained.”1
However,asisbynowwell-known,thestoryhadasourending;Argentinamanagedtobacktrack
oncemoreandfellintoaseverecrisisattheendof2001andthebeginningof2002.Thatcrisis
wascharacterizedbyatrilogy:defaultonthepublicdebt,currencydevaluation,andmandatory
conversionofforeign-currencycontractsintopesos(“pesification”).Thetrilogyslashedthenewly
acquiredcredibilityandseriouslydisruptedtheruleoflaw.
Inthispaper,wefocusmainlyononeaspectofthereformprocesscarriesoutin1990s,thatof
bankingandmacro-prudentialregulation.Althoughtheevolutionofthebankingsystemcannot
beentirelydisentangledfromtherestofthemacroeconomy,thereareimportantlessonsthatcan
belearnedfromthereformsundertakenaswellasfromthosethatwerenotputinplace.In
reviewingthefactsaroundthe1995and2001bankingcrises,weanalyzetheinteractionbetween
theprudentialregulationputinplace,thebehaviorofdepositors,thestructureofthebanking
sector,andthemacroeconomicpolicyresponse,withparticularemphasisontheroleofthe
centralbank.
Thepaperisorganizedasfollows.Insection1wesetouttheinitialconditionsthatthe
Convertibilityplanof1991encountered.Insection2,wediscusstheregulatoryandsupervisory
reformsadoptedintheearly1990s,aswellastheevolutionoftheArgentinefinancialsystemuntil
theendof1994whenthesuddendevaluationoftheMexicanPesowouldsetinmotionthefirst
episodeoffinancialcontagionthatwouldmarkemergingmarketsinthesecondhalfofthe1990s.
Section3analyzesthe1995bankingcrisis,anddiscussestheroleoftheregulatoryframeworkin
1
Seethe“ReportontheEvaluationoftheRoleoftheIMFinArgentina,1991-2001”,issuedbytheIMF’sIndependent
EvaluationOfficeonJuly2004.
2
place,andthepolicyresponsethatmadeitpossibletosuccessfullyovercomeavirulentbanking
runwithlittlefiscalcosts.Thesectiondiscussesthebehaviorofdepositors.Theevidencesuggests
thatthe1995crisisreflectedmainlyinternalweaknessesofthefinancialsystemanditwas
overcomebyanefficientpolicyresponsethatdidnotendangeredmacroeconomicstability.In
section4wefocusonthelessonsofthe1995crisisandontheregulatorychangesthatwereputin
placeasaresult.Weshowthatthe1995crisis,combinedwiththechangesinmacroprudential
regulations,hadasignificantimpactonthestructureoftheArgentinebankingsystem.The
financialsystembecamemoreresilient,bothintermsofcapitalizationandliquidity.However,as
section5discusses,thatgainedstrengthwouldbeseriouslytestedin2001.The2001crisis
exemplifiesthat,nomatterhowstrongabankingsystemis,iteventuallycannotsurviveafullblownmacroeconomiccrisis.Thedifferencesbetweenthebehaviorofdepositorsin2001as
comparedto1995arestriking.
Insections6and7,wedealwiththequestionofwhatmacroprudentialregulationswouldhave
helpedtomitigatethe2001/2002crisisoutcome.Inparticular,withthebenefitofhindsight,we
trytoanswerthedifficultquestionofwhetherthe2001/2002crisiscouldhavebeenavoidedwith
additionalordifferentmacro-prudentialregulations,anddiscussalternativecoursesofactionthat
wereavailabletothegovernmentinordertoavoidormitigatethecrisis.Section8concludes.
3
1. Background.Fromhyperinflationtopricestability:theConvertibilityplanof1991.
EversincepermanentlyabandoningthegoldstandardaftertheGreatDepression,theArgentine
economyexhibitedchronicallyhighinflationrelativetotheUSorEurope.Butextremelyhigh
inflationbecameadailyexperienceforArgentineansstartingin1975.Indeed,whiletheaverage
yearlyinflationratefrom1960to1974wasaround30%andneverexceeded50%,itwas,on
average315%from1975to1991anditreachedamaximumofalmost5000%in1989.
Thetechnicalexplanationofthis,asafirstapproximation,isrelativelysimple.Duringthatdecade
andahalf,thegovernmenthadrunsustainedandchronicdeficitsthatweremostlyfinancedby
moneycreationfromthecentralbank.ThedeficitoverGDPwasonaveragearound7%,witha
minimumof2%andamaximumof12%.Inaddition,startingintheearly80´s,thegovernment
defaultedonitsdebtanddidnotsettledonanagreementtilltheearly90´s,sotherewasno
accesstothecreditmarkettofinancethedeficits.Moneyfinancingwastheonlyavailable
alternative.ThereasonwhyArgentinacouldnotmakeafiscalreformandavoidinflationisa
deeperquestion,beyondthescopeofthispaper.
Asaconsequence,atthebeginningofthe90´sitwasclearwhichbulletwasatthetopofthe
agenda:endinginflation.Itmayevenbemoreaccuratetosaythattheagendahadonlythatone
bullet.Foravarietyofreasons,themonetaryregimethatwaschosentoendinflationatthetime
involvedacurrencyboardthatpeggedthepeso-thelocalcurrency-totheU$dollaratarateof
one.ThismonetarystrategywasapprovedbyCongresswhopassedthe“Convertibility”law.The
nameofthelaweventuallybecamethebrandnametheeconomicprogramwasgiven.
Thecurrencyboardimplied,uptosomelimitedexceptionswewillmentionbelow,thatthecentral
bankcouldprintlocalcurrencyonlytoaccumulatereserves,soitwasmakingmoneyfinancingof
thedeficitillegal.Thefinancialrelationshipbetweenthetreasuryandthecentralbankwere
limitedstrictlytothepurchaseofbonds,markedtomarket,withatightlimit—setinnominal
terms—tothegrowthofgovernmentbondsholdingsbythecentralbank.Asabyproduct,the
centralbankwasbannedfromissuingitsowndebt.
Themainshort-runchallengeforeconomicpolicywasonthefiscalfront:Sinceborrowingwasnot
analternativethenewregimewasonlyconsistentwithaneliminationofthefiscaldeficit.Thiswas
effectivelywhathappened,with1992and1993witnessingfiscalsurpluses.Then,aBradyplanwas
agreedupon,sothegovernmentcouldthenstartfloatingbondsininternationalmarketsand
financedthepositivebutsmalldeficitsthatensuedstartingin1994.
Theprogramwasremarkablysuccessful:In1992theyearlyinflationratewas17%,andby1994it
hadconvergedfrom1993to2001itwasalwaysbelow3%.Itisreasonabletoconjecturethatthe
inflexibilityoftheConvertibilityplanwasanimportantcomponenttofostercredibilityonthe
currencypegitselfandonthefiscaladjustmentrequiredtomakeitsustainable.
Buttheinflexibilitycamewithacost:Byremovingtheabilitytodiscretionallylendtothebanking
sectoritrestrictedseverelythelender-of-last-resortcapabilitiesoftheArgentineancentralbank
makingitsfinancialsectorpotentiallymorevulnerabletobankruns.
4
Intheory,onecouldimaginethatrestrictionnottobeveryimportant,sincethefiscalauthority
couldeventuallyborrow(say,inUSdollars)andusethoseresourcestolendtothecentralbank.
ButitisimportanttorememberthattheGovernmentlaunchedtheprogramwhilestillbeingin
defaultininternationalmarketsandcomingoutoftwodecadesofchronicdeficits.Thus,neither
monetarynorfiscalmeasureswereavailabletoactasalenderoflastresort.Thiswasacriticaland
wellacknowledgedpotentialshortcomingtheConvertibilityplanhadsinceitsinception.Itexplains
manyofthefeaturesofthebankinglegislationputintoplacerightaftertheConvertibilitylaw.
Thelongperiodofveryhighandunstableinflationduringthe80´shadperverseeffectsonthe
functioningofthefinancialsector.Withveryhighandextremelyvolatileinflationrates,the
bankingsectorcouldbarelyfunctionasanintermediarybetweensavings,thatwerelow,and
investment,thatwasevenlower.Itmostlyofferedtransactionalservices.Asaconsequence,total
liabilitiesofthebankingsectorwereverylow.InFigure1,wepresenttheevolutionoftotal
Figure1:TotalLiabilitiesoftheBankingSector
600
500
TotalLiabiliHesoftheBankingSectorin1982MillionU$
400
300
200
0
1970
1972
1974
1976
1978
1980
1982
1984
1986
1988
1990
1992
1994
1996
1998
2000
2002
2004
2006
2008
2010
2012
100
liabilities(inmillionsof1982USdollars)since1982.Asitcanbeseen,thenumbersareverysmall
until1991,theyearinwhichaperiodofspectaculargrowthstarts.Inaddition,duringthe80´s,the
reserverequirementontotaldepositswasveryhigh,gettingtoover90%insomeyears.These
reservespaidinterestrates.Thismechanismwasyetanotherdistortioncreatedbythefiscal
voracityofthegovernmentthatneededfinancingandthereforeusedthebankingsystemasan
intermediarybetweendepositorsandthegovernment.
Tosummarize,then,duringthe80´s,thebankingsectorwasverysmall,issuingdepositsthat
mostlyservedtransactionalpurposes(thematurityofthemajorityofthesedepositswasjusta
weekduringmanyyears)andusingthosedepositsmostlytofinancethegovernmentthrough
mandatoryremuneratedreserves.
Thesearetheinitialconditionsofthebankingsectorthatweanalyzeinthispaper.Thisbanking
sectorgrewinasystemwithalimitedlenderoflastresortandwasthereforemoreexposedto
bankingpanicsthanmostbankingsectoroftheworldatthetime.Twobankingcrisisensued,as
5
wewillexplainandanalyzeindetailbelow,onein1995theotherin2001.Thosecaneasilybe
identifiedinFigure1.
2. Thebankingreformsoftheearly90’sandtheevolutionofthebankingsectortill1994.
TheveryrapidsuccesstheConvertibilityplanhadinreducinginflationtoUSlevelsandtheensuing
reductioninnominaluncertaintychangedthebusinessmodelforbanks.Newsavinginstruments
werecreatedandcredittothedomesticmarketstartedtodevelopasFigure1clearlyshows.At
thesametime,thesigningoftheBradyPlanin1993endedtheexternaldebtcrisisthatstartedin
1982andopenedfortheArgentineeconomytheopportunitytoinitiateaprocessofintegrationto
the international capital market, and carry on major economic reforms that would produce a
significanttransformationinthefunctioningofthebankingsystemanditsregulatoryframework.
From a macroeconomic perspective, the sharp reduction—and eventually the elimination—of
inflation,alargeincreaseincapitalinflowsandforeigndirectinvestment,andthestrengthening
of fiscal policies represent significant achievements for emerging market economies in the first
halfofthe90s.2
AsFigure1intheprevioussectionmakesclearthefinancialsystemwasextremelysmallatthe
beginningofthe1990sinArgentinaand,followingthemacroeconomicstabilization,it
experiencedastrongexpansion.Betweenend-1991andend-1994,depositsincreasedby173%
andmorethandoubledaspercentageofGDP.Suchexpansionwouldcontinueatsimilarpacein
thesecondhalfofthe90s.
Aswementionedabove,amajorpolicyrestrictionfacedbythefinancialsectorwasthevery
limitedabilityoftheCentralBanktooperateasalenderoflastresort.Butthereweretwo
additionalconcernsthatwererelevantinthiscase.
First,asinothercountriesoftheregion,oneofthesalientfeaturesoftheArgentinebanking
systemwasitshighlevelofdollarization,onbothsidesofthebalancesheet.3Theshareofdollardenominateddepositsandcreditincreasedsystematicallysincethebeginningofthe1990s.Bythe
endof1994,theshareofdepositsandcreditthatwasdollar-denominatedstoodabove55%and
above60%,respectively.AscanbeseeninFigure2,dollarizationcontinuedtoincreaseduringthe
entiredecade.Itmustbenotedthat,whiledollarizationseemedanaturalresultofthe
ConvertibilityregimethatencouragedtheperceptionthatapesohadbecomeequivalenttoaUS
dollar,dollarizationposedasignificantbankingrisk.Suchriskderivedfromthefactthatalarge
portionofcredit,althoughdenominatedinUSdollars,wasowedbyfirmsandconsumerswhose
incomewasdenominatedinpesos,hencegeneratingapotentiallydangerousmismatchinthe
eventofalargedevaluation.Aswewillseethiswasacrucialprobleminthemidstofthe20012002crisis.
2
See,forinstance,Guidotti(2007).
Guidotti and Rodríguez (1992) and Calvo and Végh (1992) analyze the phenomenon of dollarization in developing
countries.
3
6
Figure2.DollarizationoftheFinancialSystem(in%)
75%
DollarizaHon
70%
65%
60%
CreditDollarizakon
55%
DepositsDollarizakon
50%
45%
Source:CentralBankofArgentina
Second,theArgentinebankingsectorhadinheritedanumberandsizedistributionofinstitutions
thatgrewoutofthebankingcrisisof1982.Attheendofthe1970s,Argentinahadexperienceda
shortperiodoffinancialderegulation,albeitwithweakbankingsupervision,inwhichthenumber
ofbankshadexploded(therewere469institutionsin1980,ofwhich255werenon-banks).After
thebankingcrisisof1982(seeFigure1)mostofthenon-banksdisappeared,andasmallerbanking
systemevolvedduringtheyearsofhighestinflationrates,mostlyprovidingservicestodefend
againsttheerosioninthevalueofmeansofpayments.
Thetransformationhadbeensubstantialby1991(therewere212institutionsthen,ofwhichonly
45werenon-banks).However,itwasverynaturaltoexpectthat,inspiteofthedramaticgrowth
ofthesector,amajortransformationinthenumberandsizedistributionofinstitutionswouldtake
place.Indeed,thisinitialcompositionwouldsufferdramaticchangesduringthe1990s,asthenew
regulatoryenvironmentputinplacestartingin1993,andthe1995bankingcrisiswewillanalyzein
thenextsection,inducedasignificantfurtherconsolidationoftheArgentinefinancialsystem:By
end-2000,therewere90banksinthesystem,andonly19non-banks.
Thiswasthescenariofacedbypolicyandregulatoryinstitutionsintheearlyquartersofwhat
seemed,atthetime,theperiodinwhichArgentinawouldpermanentlyleavebehinddecadesof
instabilityandstagnation.
Followingthe1992passingbyCongressofanewcentralbankcharter,Argentinainitiatedawiderangingreformofbankingregulationandsupervision,adaptingtointernationalstandardsbutalso
recognizingtheparticularconstraintsimposedbyConvertibilityandthenewmacroeconomicrisks
derivingfromthecountry’sincreasingintegrationtoavolatileinternationalcapitalmarket.The
newcentralbankchartercontainedsomeimportantlimitations:1)itdidnotprovidefordeposit
7
insurance,althoughdepositswerelegallyrecognizedasseniorclaimsonassets,and2)thelenderof-lastresortfunctionofthecentralbankwasverylimited,initiallysettoamaximumof20%of
themonetarybase—latertoincreaseto33%.Furthermore,thecentralbankwasprohibitedfrom
issuingdebt,payinginterestonbankreserves,andwasseverelylimitedinitscapacityofproviding
financingtotheArgentinetreasury.
Inlightofitsnewcharter,theArgentinecentralbankintroducedimportantchangestothebank
regulatoryandsupervisorysystembetween1993and1994.4Thefirststepwastodismantlea
tightapparatusofforeignexchangeandcapitalcontrolsthathadbeeninplaceduringthe1980s.
Suchapparatushaddivertedthesupervisoryresourcesofthecentralbankawayfromthe
assessmentandpreventionofbankingandsystemicriskstowardscontrollingthatindividuals,
firms,andfinancialinstitutionsfullycompliedwiththevagariesofacomplexadministrative
systemofcapitalandexchangerestrictions.Therefore,thecentralbankhadtocarryoutan
overhaulingofitsbankingsupervision,hirenewandprofessionallycompetentstaff,andtrainitto
adequatelymeetthechallengesstemmingfromtheadoptionofinternationalstandardsinbanking
regulation.Suchprocesswascarriedoutwithaspecialassistanceprogramthatthecentralbank
setupwiththeUSOfficeoftheComptrolleroftheCurrency(OCC)andtheFederalReserveBank
ofNewYork(FRBNY)toprovidetrainingforseniorsupervisorystaffandassistintheadoptionof
theCAMELratingsystemforfinancialinstitutions.5
Asregardsregulation,Argentinaadoptedthemaininternationalprudentialstandards,
summarizedinthefollowingfivepillars:1)consolidatedbankingsupervision;2)capital
requirementsemergingfromthe1988BaselAccord;3)regulationsregardingassessmentofcredit
riskandprovisioning;4)limitsonriskconcentration;and5)standardsregardingtransactionsand
relationswithrelatedorconnectedparties.
Althoughbasedoninternationalstandards,theregulatoryframeworkhadtobeadaptedtothe
limitationsimposedbytheabovementionedinitialconditionsoftheArgentineeconomy.In
particular,acapitalrequirementof11.5%ofrisk-basedassetswasadopted,avalueabovethe
Baselparametersofthetime.Moreover,relativelyhigh(non-remunerated)reserverequirements
wereimposedonbanksinrecognitionofthefactthatthecentralbank’slimitedabilitytoactasa
lenderoflastresortneededtobecomplementedbynon-encumberedliquidityatbanks.A
reserverequirementof43%wasimposedonovernightdeposits—i.e.,depositsatcheckingand
savingsaccounts—whilesignificantlyloweranddeclining-according-to-maturityrequirements
wereimposedontimedeposits.Therationaleforsuchstructurereflectedaninterestonthepart
ofthecentralbanktocreateincentivestolengthenthematurityoftimedeposits,whichwasthen
largelyconcentratedat7days.
Thefactofthematteristhattheincentivesimbeddedintheabovementionedstructureofreserve
requirementsdidnotwork,andthematurityoftimedepositsdidnotlengthen.Asaresult,the
4
See Dujovne y Guidotti (2001) for a detailed analysis of the prudential regulation put in place in the 90s. Various
aspectsofbankingregulationandsupervisionarealsodiscussedinGuidotti(1996).
5
CAMELisanacronymthatstandsforCapital,Assetquality,Management,Earnings,andLiquidity,asfiveessentialareas
ofevaluationofbankingrisk.
8
centralbankadoptedin1994arelativelyunorthodoxmeasuretoreduceliquidityrisk:itimposeda
minimum30-daysmaturityontimedeposits,theonlyinterest-bearingdeposits.Therationalefor
suchrestrictionreflectedacoordinationproblem.Nobank,orforthatmatternodepositor,felt
confortableinchoosingalongermaturityfortheirdepositsaslongaseverybodyelsestayedata
shortermaturity.Simply,theydidn’twanttobelastinlineintheeventofabankrun.Hence,the
centralbankactionhadtheeffectofreducingsystemicliquidityriskwithoutaffectingthe
individualliquidityriskperception.Infact,depositinterestratesremainedunchangedafterthe
adoptionofsuchmeasure,indicatingthatnoadditionalliquiditypremiumhadtobepaidasresult
ofthemandatorymaturityextension.Lengtheningmanumilitarythematurityoftimedeposits
fromeffectively7daysto30daysprovedenormouslyusefulincontainingtheliquidityeffectsof
the1995bankingcrisis,asitslowedbyfourtimesthepaceofthedepositsdrainage.
Amongothercomplementaryactionstaken,itisworthmentioningthatalldifferentialtreatment
as regards banking regulations between foreign and domestic banks were removed, and the
central bank initiated with the OCC a program of joint inspections of branches of US banks in
Argentina.
Theabove-mentionedreforms,althoughquiterevolutionaryforLatinAmericaatthetime,were
stilllargelyatanearlystageofimplementationwhentheso-calledTequilacrisiserupted,following
theDecember1994devaluationoftheMexicanPeso.Asthenextsectiondiscusses,the1995
TequilacrisistestedConvertibilityandallthereformsthatweretakingplaceattheprudential
regulatoryandsupervisorylevel.
3. Thecrisisof1995andthechangesinregulationduringthecrisis.Keyelementsthatexplain
thequickresolutionofthecrisis.
FollowingtheMexicandevaluationoccurredattheendofDecember1994,theArgentinebanking
systemexperiencedaprofound,buteventuallyrelativelyshort-livedbankingcrisis.Althoughwe
willprovidesomeempiricalevidencethathelpsdisentanglingtheextenttowhichthebanking
crisisreflectedgeneralmacroeconomicfactorsorreflectedinternalfactorstothefinancialsystem,
itsmostimmediatemanifestationwasthesuddenappearanceofrumorsinthesystemthatafew
wholesale(investment)bankswerehighlyexposedtogovernmentbonds—whosepriceswere
rapidlydecliningbecauseofcontagion—andthatheavylosseswerebeenhiddeninconnected
offshorecompanies.6Theseoffshorecompanieswereunknowntothecentralbankinspiteofthe
consolidatedsupervisionprinciplethatwasbeingadoptedinthenewregulation,simplybecauseit
tooksometimetohaveallfinancialinstitutionstocomplywithit.
Forthemost,wholesalebanksweresmallinstitutionshardlyassociatedwithsystemicrisk.But
soonenough,interestratesintheinterbankmarket,whichhadincreasedsignificantlyjustafter
theMexicandevaluation,collapsed.Themosttypicalindicatorofsystemicliquidityriskhad
stoppedtransmittingtherelevantinformation,asitbecameevidentthattheamountof
transactionsinthatmarkethadcollapsed—thelendingvolumeintheinterbankmarketfellbyover
6
Attheendof1994therewere34wholesalebanksinthesystem,outofatotalof135privatebanks.Wholesalebanks
had very few branches in comparison with retail banks and, hence, represented a small proportion of total bank
deposits.
9
50%--indicatingthatthemarkethadfrozeninresponsetoasharpincreaseincounterpartyrisk.
Wholesalebankswerebeingrationedoutoftheinterbankmarketandhadnoaccesstoliquidity.
Soonafter,stillinearlyJanuary,thefirstindicationsofheavydepositlossesstartedtobecome
evident.Depositsfleeingwholesalebankswerenotfromsmallinvestorsbut,rather,fromlarge
andmoreinformedinvestors,aswellasotherfromfinancialinstitutionsthathadfundedthe
operationsofwholesalebanks.AsshowninFigure3,atthebeginningofthecrisis,wholesale
banksstartedfacingseverelosseswhiletherestofthebankingsystemappearedlargely
unaffected.
Inwasonlyamatteroftimeforpanictostartspreadingfromwholesalebankstoothersmalland
medium-sizebanksofdomesticcapital.AsshowninFigure3,depositorsclearlydifferentiated
acrossbanks,asforeignbanks—andtolesserextentpublicbanks—werequicklyperceivedassafe
heavens.Duringtheentireperiod,depositsatforeignbanksandfederalpublicbanks(e.g.,Banco
delaNaciónArgentina)increased,whiledepositsatprivate-domesticandpublic-provincialbanks
fell,albeitatamuchslowerpacethanatthewholesalebanksandexhibitingsignificantdifferences
acrossthem.Largedomestic-privatebankssufferedsignificantlylessdepositlossesthansmaller
banksand,especially,thancooperativebanks,whichhadamuchlesstransparentcorporate
governanceandmanagementstructure.Duringthefirstthreemonthsof1995,totaldepositsof
theArgentinebankingsystemfellbyanimpressive18%.
Figure3.Tequilacrisis–Evolutionofdeposits
160
Nov94=100
140
Foreign
120
100
Wholesale
80
PrivateNakonal
60
Public
40
Source:CentralBankofArgentina
The banking crisis required central-bank action on several fronts. On the one hand, there was
crisis management. On the other hand, new changes had to be introduced in the prudential
regulatoryandsupervisoryframeworktoaccountforthelessonslearnedfromthecrisis.Thenext
sectiondealswiththelattersubject.
Intermsofcrisismanagement,thefirstchallengefacedbythecentralbankwashowtomanage
systemic liquidity. The Argentine central bank resorted initially to a lowering of reserve
10
requirements, but its effect was short lived. In the way they were structured, reserve
requirements injected liquidity mostly into large retail banks that held a large proportion of
overnight deposits subject to high reserve requirements. But the injection of liquidity did not
arrivesignificantlytowholesalebanks.Thesebankswereexperiencingtheheaviestdepositlosses
andheldliabilitiesthatmostlywereeithernotsubjecttoreserverequirementsorhadlowreserve
requirements.Moreimportantly,wholesalebankswerecutoutoftheinterbankmarket.
This situation called for the central bank to act as a lender-of last-resort and extend emergency
liquidity to affected banks. However, the crisis unveiled the typical shortcomings that central
banksfaceundersystemiccrises,aswellassomeshortcomingsmorespecifictotheConvertibility
regimeanditsmonetaryinstitutions.Thefirstwell-knownproblemisthe“stigma”effectofthe
lender-of-last- resort function. Especially in a situation where banks face different degrees of
deposit losses, banks that need liquidity the most cannot get it in the interbank market and are
reluctant to go to the central bank because they fear sending a clear signal that they are in
trouble. On the contrary, the only banks that would potentially accept liquidity offered by the
centralbankarethehealthybanksthatdon’tneedit.
Toresolvetheproblemsofunequaldistributionofliquidityandthestigmaassociatedwithcentralbank emergency lending, a “safety net” was established at the federal public bank Banco de la
NaciónArgentina.Thissafetynetwasfundedwithanincreaseintheoverallreserverequirement
thatwasdepositedatBancodelaNaciónArgentina,whichinturnmadelendingavailabletothe
banksthatrequiredliquidityassistancethroughtheinterbankmarket.Inanyevent,astherunon
deposits intensified and spread to a larger number of medium banks, the central bank’s
emergencyliquidityprovisionalsoexpanded(Figure4).
Figure4.Emergencycentral-bankliquidityassistance
14
Aspercentofcentralbank'sinternakonalreserves
12
10
8
6
4
2
-
Nov-94Apr-95 Sep-95 Feb-96 Jul-96 Dec-96May-97Oct-97Mar-98Aug-98 Jan-99 Jun-99 Nov-99Apr-00 Sep-00
Source:CentralBankofArgentina
11
Theemergencyliquidityassistancesituatedthecentralbankveryclosetoreachingeventuallythe
legal limit imposed by the 1992 central-bank charter. As Figure 5 shows, the backing of the
monetarybasewithbonds,reached18.5%,almostatthe20%legallimit.
Figure5.TheTequilaEffect(rightscaleinUSDmillion,leftscalein%)
30,000
30
25,000
25
20,000
20
15,000
15
10,000
10
0
0
-5
Dec-95
Dec-96
Dec-97
Dec-98
Dec-99
Sep-00
-5,000
Jan-95
Feb-95
Mar-95
Apr-95
May-95
5
Dec-91
Dec-92
Dec-93
Dec-94
5,000
Monetarybase
backingwithbonds
Internakonal
Reserves
Bankexternal
liquidity
Source:CentralBankofArgentina
As the crisis deepened, the central bank monitored the liquidity position of all institutions that
requiredemergencyliquidityassistanceonadailybasisinordertoestimatehowtobestusethe
limited lender-of-last-resort function legally allowed. Notwithstanding, the central bank relaxed
both the maturity, as well as the collateral requirements, of the emergency liquidity assistance
provided.Inaddition,relyingontheprincipleofsupervisiononaconsolidatedbasis,thecentral
bankcrackeddownonconnectedoffshorecompaniesintheArgentinebankingsystemtoimprove
transparencyandassessthetruesolvencysituationofasignificantnumberofinstitutions.
Buttheabove-mentionedcrisismanagementactionsalonedidnotreversethedepositrun.Soon
enough it became clear that the liquidation of some banks was unavoidable and, hence, a
profoundpolicydiscussionstartedinrelationtothespeedoftheprocess.Atoneextremeliedthe
IMF, recommending a once-and-for-all clean up of the financial system by liquidating about 40
banksinonemove.Butthecentralbank,thoughacknowledgingtheneedtorestructureseveral
banks, favored and pushed for significant institutional changes to correct the shortcomings
stemmingfromConvertibility.
At the worst of the crisis a number of significant reforms to the domestic financial architecture
wereputinplacewiththerapidanddecisivesupportfromCongress.InFebruary1995,thecentral
bank revised the position imbedded in its 1992 charter, and formally reintroduced a privatelyfunded and limited deposit-insurance scheme to inspire confidence in the banking system and
contain the drainage of deposits 7 However, by being privately funded by contributions from
7
Depositinsurancewouldbeprovidedbyanewinstitution,SEDESASA,thatwouldadministerthefundspaidbyall
banks,onamonthlybasis,ataraterangingbetween0.015%and0.06%oftheirdeposits,dependingontheCAMEL
ratingoftheinstitution—i.e.,theriskiertheinstitutionthehigherwasitsdepositinsurancepremium.Inthenew
scheme,depositorswereinsureduptoUSD30.000perperson,providedthattheinterestpaidondepositswaslower
12
withinthebankingsystem,theeffectivenessofnewdepositinsurancewaslimitedatthetimeit
was introduced. Nevertheless, it represented a realistic institutional reform that would play an
importantroleinthefollowingyears.
The most important reform introduced in the midst of the 1995 crisis was the creation of a
mechanism for resolving troubled financial institutions. Such reform was introduced through a
new article in the Law of Financial Entities—known as art. 35bis—which gave the central bank
legal power to extract from certain assets and liabilities from the balance sheet of a bank that
enters the process of liquidation. In particular, on the liability side, senior liabilities—deposits,
laborobligations,andcentralbankemergencyliquidityloans—couldbeextracted,alongwiththe
best quality assets up to an amount equivalent to the extracted liabilities. The residual bank
would then be liquidated through normal bankruptcy proceedings in the justice system. The
package of extracted assets and liabilities, along with the bank’s employees, could then be
auctionedtointerestedbuyersinthefinancialsystem.Asthisrestructuringwasoccurringinthe
midstofabankingcrisis,thegovernmentsetupaFiduciaryFundforBankCapitalization,funded
by an initial USD 500 million loan from the World Bank, to provide the buyer bank the required
regulatory capital—in the form of subordinated or convertible loans—as well as liquidity
assistanceifneeded.
Therationaleforthisinnovativemechanismwastwofold.Firstly,giventhefiscalconstraintsfaced
byArgentina,thebailoutoftroubledfinancialinstitutionscouldresultinahighfiscalcostthatthe
capital market could regard as unsustainable and, hence, could weaken the credibility of the
Convertibility regime. Secondly, it is well known that as soon as a bank enters liquidation, the
value of assets tends to deteriorate rapidly as debtors stop servicing their obligations and the
failedbankhasnoresourcestomonitorthedebtors’compliance.Therefore,art.35bisprovided
anefficientmechanismtorestructureafailingbankthatwouldprotectthevalueofbankassets
and the repayment of senior liabilities with the bank’s existing resources, thus minimizing the
fiscalcostofbankclosuresaswellastheirdisruptiveeffectsoncreditandonemployment.8
The results from the application of the Art. 35 bis mechanism were impressive. It was used to
resolve 19 private financial institutions between 1995 and 1999. About 97% of the deposits at
liquidatedbankswereabsorbedbytheacquiringbank,orbanksyndicateinfewcases.Contraryto
the international experience, where the fiscal costs associated with banking crises often exceed
15%ofGDP,thesuccessfulresolutionoftheArgentine1995bankingcrisisrequiredasmallfiscal
cost,estimatedatjust0.1%ofGDP.9
In parallel to the resolution of private banks through Art. 35 bis, the government actively
promoted the privatization of several provincial public banks. As a result, the number of public
banksfellfrom33institutionsattheendof1994to15institutionsbytheendof1999.
thanarateestablishedbythecentralbank.Thelatterfeaturewasmeanttodiscouragethephenomenonknownas
“gamblingforresurrection”bywhichatroubledbanktriestokeepitsdepositbasebyofferinghigherandhigherinterest
rates.
8
9
SeeDeLaTorre(2000)andDujovneandGuidotti(2001)foramoredetaileddescription.
SeeGuidotti(1996)andIMF(1998).
13
ArgentinawasclearlythecountrymostaffectedbycontagionfromtheMexicandevaluation,and
theConvertibilityregimewasputtoatestbyforeigninvestorsaswellasdepositors.Asaresult,
economicactivitycontracted,asevidencedbya2.8%fallinGDPin1995.Moreover,theleading
stock market index (Merval) fell by 50% and bond prices fell by 45% reaching their trough on
March 8th of 1995. The spread on government bonds over comparable US Treasuries averaged
over1400basispointsduringthefirstquarterof1995.
In addition to the measures taken by the central bank to cope with the banking crisis, the
governmenttookdecisiveactiononthefiscalfront,andsped-uptheprivatizationofseveralstateownedprovincialbanks.10Moreover,inordertoreassureinvestorsaboutthegovernment’sability
to meet its financing needs, in mid-March of 1995, the government signed a program with the
InternationalMonetaryFund(IMF)thatincludeddisbursementsfromthatinstitutionforUSD2.4
billionandloansfromtheWorldBank(WB)andtheInter-AmericanDevelopmentBank(IADB)for
anadditionalUSD2.3billion.Tocomplementtheofficialeffort,anumberofcompaniesandbanks
subscribedtheissueoftheArgentinaBond(alsocalledthe“PatrioticBond”)byanadditionalUSD
2billion.
The combination of official financing and clear and decisive policy actions by the government
producedthedesiredresult:thebankrunceasedandfinancialactivityreturnedtonormallevelsin
thesecondhalfof1995.
Thebehaviorofdepositors:Acloserlook
Oneimportantaspectofthe1995crisisrelatestothebehaviorofdepositorsduringthecrisisand
thenatureofrisksthatbroughtitabout.Ifisoftenverydifficulttodisentanglebankingcrises
formmacroeconomiccrises,asnomatterwhichonestartsfirsttheareoftenseenasinseparable
twins.InthecaseofArgentina,withalonghistoryofeconomicandfinancialinstability,afixed
exchange-rateregimesuchasConvertibilitycouldeasilybeperceivedasanaturalcandidateto
comeundermarketpressureand,inthatcase,thebankingsystemisanaturalweaklink.Inthis
view,thebankingcrisiswouldresultfromalossofconfidenceinthegeneralmacroeconomic
frameworkandnotviceversa.
However,adifferenthypothesiscouldbeconstructed.Itcouldbearguedthatthe1995crisis
reflected,toalargeextent,weaknessesthatwereinternaltotheArgentinefinancialsystem,a
systemexperiencingrapidgrowth,inacontextwhereprudentialregulationwasstillatitsinitial
stagesofdevelopmentandimplementation.
EmpiricalanalysiscarriedoutbyGuidotti(2008)shedslightonthesecompetinghypotheses.His
cross-sectionempiricalanalysis(attheindividualbanklevel)focusesonwhatfactorsexplainthe
depositrun—occurredbetweenDecember1994andApril1995—and,inparticular,whyitwas
differentacrossthevariousfinancialinstitutionsinthesystem.
10
Inadditiontoanumberofexpenditurecuts,includingareductioninpublicsectorwages,thegovernmentincreased
the value-added-tax (VAT) rate from 18% to 21%, increased temporarily import tariffs, partially reversed a previous
reductioninemployers’laborcontributions,andwidenedthetaxbasefortheVATandincometaxes.
14
Totakeintoaccountthevarioushypothesis,theindependentvariablesincludedtoexplainthe
depositlossoccurredbetweenDecember1994andApril1995(i.e.,thedependentvariable)were:
1)theinterestpaidbybanksondepositsbeforethecrisis(atNovember1994);2)theoriginof
bankcapital(domesticorforeign);3)themarketshareofthefinancialinstitution(atNovember
1994);and4)theexposureofbankstothepublicsector(atNovember1994).
Theempiricalresultsarequiteilluminating.Thecoefficientsoffirstthreeexplanatoryvariablesare
statistically highly significant and possess the expected sign.11 Results show that those financial
institutions that were paying the highest interest rates on their deposits suffered the heaviest
deposits losses. This result is consistent with the hypothesis that depositors were aware of the
positive association between interest rates paid and the risk profile of the financial institution.
Thus,assoonassystemicriskincreased,depositorsfledwiththehighestintensityfromthebanks
theyperceivedasmorerisky.
Asregardstheoriginofcapital,resultsalsosuggestthatinternalfactorstothebankingsystem
playedthemostsignificantroleinexplainingthebehaviorofdepositors.Bybeingforeign-owned
abankwasperceivedasalessriskybank,becauseofthepotentialsupportofheadofficesaswell
asbettergovernance.Hence,resultsshowthat—giventheothervariables—depositorstookinto
accounttheoriginofcapitalintheirbehavior,andrunfromdomesticbanksbutnotfromforeign
banks(seeFigure3).
Inasimilarvein,resultsshowthatthesizeofthebankmatteredintheeyesofdepositors.Given
theotherexplanatoryvariables,largerbankssufferedlessdepositlossesthansmallerbanks,as
measuredbytheirmarketsharebeforethecrisis.Onepossibleinterpretationofthisresultrelates
tothewellknowntoo-big-to-failproblem.Largebankswereperceivedashavingsystemic
implicationsand,therefore,wereexpectedtobebailedoutbythecentralbankwithhigher
probabilitythatthatofsmallbanks.Inthisinterpretation,depositorswouldnotbeconcerned
aboutthefiscalcapacityofthegovernmentintheeventabailoutwouldbecomenecessary.
Hence,ifthetoo-big-to-failconceptwaspresentintheperceptionofdepositors,thisresultwould
supportthehypothesisthatthe1995crisisreflected,toalargerextent,factorsinternaltothe
bankingsystemratherthanuncertaintyabouttheArgentinemacroeconomy.
Theaboveviewisalsoconsistentwiththelastresult:thattheexposureofbankstothepublic
sectorturnedoutnotstatisticallysignificantinexplainingthebehaviorofdepositors.Hence,this
resultsupportsthehypothesisthatdepositorsdidnotperceivethefiscalsituation,orapotential
defaultonthepublicdebt,tobeasignificantriskindecidingtheirdepositwithdrawals.
Insummary,the1995bankingcrisisexhibitedthecharacteristicsofaneventgeneratedlargelyby
internalweaknessesofthefinancialsystematatimeofrapidcreditgrowthandachanging
regulatoryandsupervisoryenvironment.Inthiscontext,thesuccessfulmanagementofthecrisis
reflectedtheroleofthereformsputinplace,whichmadethecrisisresolutionconsistentwith
macroeconomicandfiscalsustainability.Thescenariowillbeverydifferentwhen,lateron,wewill
analyzethebankingcrisisof2001.
11
Overall, theregressionhasanR2of51.3%.
15
4. Changesinregulationpost-crisisandtheevolutionofthebankingsectorfrom1995to2000.
Despite the intensity of the 1995 Tequila crisis, the flexibility shown by the economy and the
government’ssuccessinweatheringtheexternalshockwithoutalteringtheConvertibilityregime
boostedsignificantlytheinternationalanddomesticconfidenceintheArgentineeconomy.Such
confidence translated, for instance, into a significant increase in the inflows of foreign direct
investment.ForeigndirectinvestmentthathadtotaledUSD3.6billionin1994almostdoubledin
1996, reaching USD 7 billion. As the Argentine economy recovered, the spread paid by
governmentbondsoverUSTreasuriesfellmarkedly.Thespreadongovernmentbondsthathad
averaged740basispointsduring1994(i.e.,beforetheTequilacrisis)felltoanaverageof450basis
pointsin1997.
Fromthelastquarterof1995tothesecondquarterof1998,Argentina’seconomygrewatafast
pace.Duringthoseelevenquarters,GDPgrowthaveraged1.8%aquarter,equivalenttoanannual
growthrateof7.4%.Asaresult,yearlyGDPgrowthreached5.5%in1996,8.1%in1997,and3.9%
in1998.
Thefastrecoveryoftheeconomyprovidedtheopportunitytodrawfreshlessonsfromthe1995
financialcrisisandstrengthentheprudentialregulationandsupervisionofthebankingsystem.At
thesametime,theregulatorychangesandthecrisisitselfproducedasignificantconsolidationof
theArgentinebankingsystem.
Asregardsprudentialregulationsthemainchangesintroducedbythecentralbankfollowingthe
crisisimpingedonthetwocentralfeaturesofbanking-riskmanagement:capitalandliquidity.
Onceagain,thechangesinprudentialregulationfollowedtheevolvingnatureofinternational
standards,butalsoreflectedthelessonslearnedfromtherecentexperienceinactualcrisis
management.
Bankcapitalrequirementswereincreasedfurtheronaccountof,ontheonehand,the
introductionofaRiskIndicatorinthedeterminationoftherequiredcapitaland,ontheother
hand,theadoptionofcapitalsurchargesreflectingmarketriskandinterest-raterisk,derivedfrom
Baselupgradedrecommendations.
TheintroductionofaRiskIndicatorwasinstrumentalinraisingthecapitalrequirementtoan
effectivelevelof13%to15%ofrisk-basedassets,measuredaccordingtotheBaselmethodology.
TheRiskIndicatorwascomputedasafunctionoftheinterestratechargedbybanksontheirloan
portfolio.Thus,thehighertheinterestratecharged,thehigherwastheRiskIndicator.TheRisk
Indicatorwasthenmultipliedtothebasic11.5%capitalrequirement.12Inaddition,thecentral
12
Although the objective of the Risk Indicator was prudential—so as to require riskier banks to hold more capital, as
measured by a market measure such as the interest rate on loans—some observers interpreted this feature as a
mechanismtoinduceareductionininterestrateschargedbybanksontheirloans.
16
bankintroducedtheCAMELSratingsinthecomputationofcapitaladequacy,thusrequiringmore
capitaltoinstitutionswithlowerratingsfrombankingsupervisors.13
Besidesincreasingthebankcapitalrequirement,theRiskIndicatorintroducedapro-cyclical
elementintoit.14Inpractice,possiblyduetothepro-cyclicalnatureofthecapitalrequirement,
Argentinebanksexhibitedsignificantexcesscapitalization,rangingfromamaximumof39%in
1996toa32%in2000.Theexcesscapitalizationexhibitedbybanksreflectedaprecautionary
motive,asbankersknewthattherequiredcapitalwouldincreaseiftherewereageneralincrease
ininterestrates.Interestingly,suchprecautionarybehavioronthepartofbanksendedup
compensatingthepro-cyclicalfeatureofthecapitalrequirement.
InadditiontotheRiskIndicator,andfollowingtheevolvinginternationaldiscussionleadingto
BaselII,capitaladequacyrequirementsweremodifiedtoincorporatesurchargesforinterest-rate
risk,andmarketrisk.Themostimportantelementinthesemodificationswasthatgovernment
bonds,althoughremainedwithazeroweightintherequirementforcreditrisk,nowbecame
subjecttothesurchargeformarketandinterest-raterisk.Giventhatexposuretogovernment
bondshadbeenimportantdeterminantsinthelossofconfidenceexperiencedbywholesalebanks
inthe1995crisis,thecentralbankdecidedtodepartfromBaselrecommendationsandsubject
governmentbondstoacapitalrequirement.Inparticular,governmentbondshadacapital
surchargethatfluctuatedbetween1%and5%,dependingontheirmodifiedduration.
Recognizingtheimportanceofbankliquiditywhenthecentralbank’sabilitytoactasasystemic
lenderoflastresortislimited,theadoptionofMinimumLiquidityRequirements(MLR)constituted
thesecondpillarofthepost-1995ofthemacro-prudentialframework.
Duringthe1995bankingcrisis,thepolicyofloweringreserverequirementshadplayedan
importantroleincomplementingtheemergencyliquidityextendedbythecentralbank.However,
thatexperienceshowedimportantshortcomingofhowthereserverequirementsweredesigned.
Inparticular,thefactthatreserverequirementswerehighoncheckingandovernightsavings
accounts,butmuchlowerontimedeposits,generatedanunequaldistributionofliquidityinthe
system.Moreover,timedepositsshowedamuchhigherpropensitytofleethanovernight
accountsthatwheremostlytransactionalinnature.Hence,liquiditywasparkedinthewrong
placeand,asarguedearlier,theinterbankmarketprovedtobeapoorchanneloftransmissionof
liquidityacrossinstitutionsinasystemiccrisis.
Twoadditionalshortcomingswerealsoworthconsidering.Firstly,asmandatedbythecentral
bankcharter,reserverequirementswerenon-remunerated.Hence,increasingliquidity
requirementsonfinancialinstitutionsincreasedthecostoffunding.15Secondly,bybeing
13
CAMELSisthesecond-generationofCAMEL,andaddsasixthcomponenttotheoriginalratingtoassessthebank’s
sensitivitytomarketandinterest-raterisk.Themultiplicativefactorenteringthecomputationofthecapitalrequirement
thatwasassociatedwiththeCAMELSratingsvariedfrom0.97foraninstitutionrated1(thehighestrating)upto1.15for
aninstitutionrated5(theworstrating).
14
TheRiskIndicatorwasnottheonlypro-cyclicalfactorinthecapitalrequirement.Alsothesurchargeformarketrisk
playedasimilarrole.
15
See Fernandez and Guidotti (1999), and Guidotti (2003) for an analysis of the effects of capital and liquidity
requirementsonthebankingsystem,andonlendinganddepositinterestrates.
17
depositedatthecentralbank,reserverequirementswherenotregardedasentirelyrisk-freeby
thecapitalmarket.
Therefore,attheendof1995,reserverequirementswerereplacedbythenewlycreatedMLR.
MLRcouldbemetthroughthreemaincomponents:1)reposongovernmentbondswiththe
centralbank;2)holdingsofforeigngovernmentbondswithacreditratingnotbelowAandother
selectedforeignassetsofsimilarcharacteristics;and3)stand-byone-yearlettersofcreditwith
foreignfinancialinstitutionsratedAAorhigher,upto20%oftheMLR.Inordertoensurethat
MLRconstitutedunencumberedliquidityand,inparticular,toavoidback-to-backloans,Deutsche
Bank(NewYorkbranch)waschosenasthemandatorycustodian,withacontractthatcouldbe
monitoredbytheArgentinecentralbank.
Tocomplementsystemicliquidity,thecentralbanksetupacontingentrepolinewithanumberof
largeinternationalbanks,usingitsgovernmentbondholdings.AsshowninFigure6,systemic
liquidityincreasedwiththevariousmeasuresdescribedabovetoover28%oftotaldepositsofthe
Argentinefinancialsystem.TheadoptionofMLRandthecontingentrepolineconstituteda
centralfeatureonthecentralbank’sstrategyinstrengtheningthefinancialsystem’sresilienceto
facevolatility.16
Figure6.SystemicLiquidity(as%oftotaldeposits)
35
28
RepoProgram
Liquiditybills
21
Repos
14
Depositsabroad
7
Depositsat
CentralBank
0
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
Source:CentralBankofArgentina
The financial system’s internal weaknesses exposed by the 1995 banking crisis, and the vast
reform of macro-prudential regulations, were critical factors in explaining the extensive
restructuring and consolidation that occurs in the Argentine banking system after 1995. Such
restructuringandconsolidationmodernizedthebankingsystemandstrengtheneditssolvencyand
liquidity.
16
SeeGuidotti(2003)foradiscussionofhowtobuildaliquidity-managementstrategyinemergingmarketeconomies.
18
TwomainfactsillustratetheextentoftheconsolidationthattookplaceintheArgentinefinancial
systemafter1995bankingcrisis.Firstly,thetotalnumberoffinancialinstitutionsfellsharply,from
212 in 1992 to 109 by end-2000. Secondly, reflecting the significant process of privatization at
provincialpublicbanks,thetotalnumberofpublicbanksfallsfrom33atend-1994to14atend2000.Table1illustratesthemainfeaturesoftheconsolidationprocessthattookplaceafter1995.
Table1.Depositsshare(in%)
Source:CentralBankofArgentina
Theshareofthetenlargestbanksintotaldepositsincreasedfrom35%in1995to51%in2001.
Moreover,theshareofforeignbanksintotaldepositsexpandedasaresultofanumberof
acquisitionsoccurredbetween1996and1998,inparticulartheacquisitionoftwolargedomestic
banks,BancoRioandBancodeCréditoArgentino,bythetwolargestSpanishbanks,Banco
SantanderandBancoBBVA,respectively.Between1995and2001,theshareofforeignbanksin
privatedepositsincreasedfrom25%to56%,andfrom21%to48%intotaldeposits.
Theincreaseinmarketshareexperiencedbyforeignbankshadanimportantimplicationfor
systemicrisk.Undertheassumptionthattheirhomeofficeswouldsupportforeignbanks,
systemicliquidityavailabletodealwitheventualdepositlosseswasperceivedtobelargerthan
thecoverageratiooftheMLR.AsshowninTable2,notonlysystemicliquidityincreasedbythe
adoptionofMLR,itincreasedtoover55%oftotaldepositsoncedepositsatforeignbankswere
excludedfromthecomputation.17
Table2.Foreignbanksandsystemicliquidity
Source:CentralBankofArgentina.
17
Inthesuccessfulresolutionofits2001crisis,theUruguayangovernmentadoptedthecriterionofplacingonhome
officesofforeignbankstheresponsibilityofprovidingliquidityassistancetotheiroperationsinUruguay.
19
Aspreviouslymentioned,thestrongrecoveryexperiencedbytheArgentineeconomyafterthe
1995Tequilacrisisboostedsignificantlytheinternationalanddomesticconfidenceinthe
Convertibilityregime.However,the1996-1998periodofstrongeconomicgrowthwasagain
interruptedbythefalloutfromtheRussiandefaultinAugust1998.AsRussiadeclaredadefaulton
itspublicdebt,Argentinatogetherwithseveralotheremergingmarketeconomieswasaffected
severelybythecontagioneffectsstemmingfromtheRussiancrisis.Asaresult,riskspreads
increasedagainandeconomicgrowthhalted.TheeffectsoftheRussiandefaultcompoundedasa
resultoftheBraziliandevaluationinMarch1999.
Duringtheeight-monthperiodmarkedbytheRussianandBraziliancrises—fromAugust1998to
March 1999—the risk spread on Argentine bonds averaged 800 basis points reaching a peak of
1100basispointsinSeptember1998.AsillustratedinTable3,theincreaseinriskspreadswasa
generalized phenomenon among a large number of emerging market economies and affected
Argentina relatively less than Brazil, Mexico, and the group of countries included in JPMorgan’s
EmergingMarketsBondIndex+(EMBI+)index.
Table3.TheEmergingMarketsBondIndex-PeriodAverage
Period
EMBI+
Latin
Argentina
Brazil
Mexico
Jan ´98 - Jul ´98
535
489
Aug ´98 - Mar ´99
1,210
996
Apr ´99 - Dec ´99
1,069
806
Russia
447
542
413
782
799
1,223
772
5,084
706
943
573
3,527
Source:J.P.Morgan.
Note:LatinAmerica,Argentina,Brazil,MexicoandRussiarefertotherespective
componentsintheGlobalEMBI+index,expressedinbasispoints.
Notwithstanding the increase in risk spreads, bank deposits—unlike what had happened in the
1995crisis—continuedrising,asdidbankcredittotheprivatesector.Thiswasreflectiveofthe
investors’ confidence in Argentina’s convertibility system, which had successfully managed the
Tequilaeffect.
Beyondthevolatilityofriskspreadsonthepublicdebt,confidenceintheArgentineeconomyalso
wasreflectedinthefactthatforeigndirectinvestmentcontinuedtoincreaseduringthatperiod.
Foreign direct investment amounted to USD 7.3 billion in 1998 and USD 24 billion in 1999,
equivalent to 2.4% and 8.5% of GDP, respectively. These foreign direct investment figures
comparefavorablywithanannualaverageofUSD6.3billionintheperiod1994-1997.In1999,the
current account of the balance of payments displayed a deficit of USD 12 billion, equivalent to
4.2%ofGDP.GiventhatduringthatyearinternationalreservesattheCentralBankincreasedby
USD1.5billion,thepresenceofacurrentaccountdeficitwasaclearindicationofthewillingness
of foreign residents to increase their holdings of Argentine assets (as well as of the country’s
abilitytoattractforeigncapital).
Inthesecondhalfof1999,theArgentineeconomywasalreadyrecovering.Industrialproduction
increased markedly by 10% in seasonally-adjusted terms —equivalent to an annualized rate of
increase of 20%— between June and December 1999, while the year as a whole exhibited an
20
increase in industrial production of 6.6% (measured as the change from December 1998 to
December 1999). The favorable perspectives that the Argentine economy was displaying in the
secondhalfof1999alsotranslatedintoalowerspreadthatthegovernmenthadtopayoverUS
Treasuries compared to the risk spread applying to Brazil (283 basis points higher in December
1999), to Russia (2350 basis points higher), and to the average of Latin America (60 basis points
higher in December 1999). The reduction in spreads took place notwithstanding Argentina was
facingpresidentialelectionsaftertwoconsecutivetermsinofficebythenPresidentMenem.By
theendof1999,theriskspreadongovernmentbonds—measuredbytheArgentinecomponent
oftheEMBI+index—hadfallento586basispointsoverUSTreasuries.
InOctober1999,acoalition(theAlianza)composedbytwoparties,UniónCívicaRadical(UCR)and
Frente País Solidario (Frepaso), beat the traditional Peronist party in the general presidential
elections. On December 10, 1999 President Fernando De la Rúa was sworn into office and was
met with a very favorable sentiment prevailing among international investors as Argentina was
seen as leaving behind the effects of the Russian and Brazilian crises. As a result, in the first
quarter of 2000, government’s access to the international capital market was very ample as it
issuednewbondsintheamountofUSD4.1billion.Moreover,riskspreadsongovernmentdebt
continued to decline to an average level of 538 basis points in March 2000, as measured by the
ArgentinecomponentoftheEMBI+index.
An important reason behind the market’s optimism was related to the perception that the
Argentine economy had strong fundamentals and had displayed in its recent past a remarkable
commitmentandabilitytoovercomecrises.Inparticular,thesizesofthepublicdebtandofthe
interestbillmeasuredasaproportionofGDPwereperceivedasmanageable,andwerelowerthan
thelevelsexhibitedbyotheremergingmarketeconomies.18Argentinainitiatedyear2000witha
ratioofpublicdebttoGDPof43%;theaverageinterestratepaidonthepublicdebtwasrelatively
low,anannualrateof7.3%.Innominalterms,grosspublicdebtamountedtoUSD121.9billion,
andtheinterestbillhadamountedin1999toUSD8.2billion,equivalenttolessthan3%ofGDP.
In fact, most analysts at the time considered that Argentina needed only a moderate and
attainablefiscaladjustmenttoensuredebtsustainability.AccordingtoanalystsatJPMorgan,for
instance, the required adjustment was in the order of 1.6% of GDP while according to Deutsche
Bankitwas2.1%.1920Asthesereportswereissued,Argentinawasundertakingafiscaladjustment
ofthatorderofmagnitude.
However,asArgentina’sdomesticcapitalmarketwassmall,thegovernmentdepended
significantlyontheinternationalcapitalmarketforthenecessaryrolloverofitsdebt.Hence,the
economywasvulnerabletoshiftsinexternalinvestors’sentimentandinparticulartosudden
stopsincapitalinflows.21
18
For instance, Brazil exhibited during year 2000 a ratio of public debt to GDP of approximately 74%, and
notwithstandingaprimaryfiscalsurplusof3.5%ofGDP,theinterestbillamountedtoover7%ofGDP.
19
SeeSekiguchiD.,Argentina’sdebtdynamics:Muchadoaboutnotsomuch.September6,2000.
20
SeeGhezzi,P.andL.Leiderman,DebtsustainabilityinLatinAmerica,December20,2000.
21
Thereisbynowavastacademicliteratureonwhat Guillermo Calvo called “sudden stops”.See,forinstance,Calvo
(1998),Mendoza(2001),Guidotti,Sturzenegger,andVillar(2004).
21
Inastablemacroeconomiccontextandwithagrowingfinancialsystem,thenewregulatory
frameworkposedanimportantchallengeforthebankingbusiness:toexpandthedepositbaseas
wellascreditprovisionwouldrequiremorecapital.Iftheadditionalrequiredcapitalwouldnot
comefromnewcapitalinjections,thenitwouldhavetocomefromthereinvestmentofprofits.In
fact,afterthe1995crisis,newcapitalinjectionswereimprobablefordomesticbanks(unlike
foreignbanks),sothatprofitabilitywouldneedtoplayacentralroleinthegrowthofthefinancial
industry.Table4showsthemainchangesinthebalancesheetoftheArgentinefinancialsystem
after1995.
Table4.SimplifiedBalanceSheetoftheFinancialSystem
Source:CentralBankofArgentina
Thefollowingtrendsareworthmentioning.Ontheliabilitiesside,thesystemexperienceda
significantgrowthofdepositsbetween1995and2001.Thedepositsgrowthreflectedincreased
confidenceinthebankingsystemafterthesuccessfulmanagementofthe1995crisis.In
particular,thelowcostexperiencedbydepositors,aswellasbythestate,inthecrisisresolution
contributedtoboostpublicconfidenceinthepost-1995period.
Ontheassetside,twomaintrendsappearclearly.Firstly,liquidityandthebanks’exposuretothe
publicsectorincreasedtheirshareintotalbankassets,reflectinginparttheeffectsofthenew
regulatoryenvironment—i.e.,theintroductionofMLRandtherelativelyfavorabletreatmentof
governmentbondsinthecapitalrequirement.Thebanks’exposuretothepublicsectorincreased
from15%ofassetsin1995to18%ofassetsin2001.Duringthesameperiod,theshareofbank
liquidityintotalassetsincreasedfrom13%to25%,whiletheshareofcredittotheprivatesector
declinedfrom49%to35%.
22
BehindthesetrendsliedthefactthattheArgentinefinancialsystemdidnothavehigh
profitability.Formostofthepost-1995period,thereturn-on-equity(ROE)wasverylow,ranging
between0.6%and6.2%.AlthoughthetenlargestbanksmanagedtoreachROEsbetween8%and
13%,thatprofitabilitycouldnotbesustained,reflectinglargelyhighoperatingcostsandrelatively
highlossesfromnon-performingloans.Partoftheproblemwasthat,byinternationalstandards,
theArgentinefinancialsystemwassmall.
In summary, the new regulatory environment introduced in the 1990s had made the banking
systemmoreresilienttoacrisisoriginatedfrominternalfactors—suchasthe1995crisis—dueto
its high capital and liquidity requirements. However, high dollarization—not discouraged by the
regulatoryframework—impliedapotentiallyhighriskexposuretochangesintheexchangerate,
andhighexposuretothepublicsectorimpliedahighriskintheeventofamacroeconomiccrisis
thatwasexternaltothesystem.Inaddition,thesystem’slowprofitabilitysheddoubtsaboutthe
banks’ ability to generate a dynamic credit growth to the private sector. In these conditions
Argentinebankingsystemwouldfacethedifficulteventsof2001,asubjecttowhichwenowturn.
5. The2001bankingcrisis.
Uncertainty about the evolution of the Argentine economy, as well as the political dynamics
generated within the newly governing coalition that had succeeded the Menem administration
after winning the presidential election of end-1999, tested again the resilience of the Argentine
banking system at the beginning of 2001. In particular, starting in October 2000, the new
governmentfacedasequenceofunsettlingpoliticalevents,summarizedintheresignationofvicepresidentAlvarez(headofoneoftwomainpartiesconformingthecoalition),andsubsequentand
traumaticcabinetreshufflesinOctober2000andMarch2001.Partofthepoliticalcrisisstemmed
from accusation—within the coalition—of a corruption scheme designed to pass a labor reform
throughCongress.
TheapparentpoliticalweaknessofthenPresidentDeLaRúawasnotwhatArgentinaneededata
timewhenemergingmarketswerestillunderpressure—acrisisinTurkeyhadtakenplaceatthe
endof2000—andwhentheConvertibilityregimeseemedparticularlyvulnerabletointernational
capital volatility. After the cabinet crisis of March 2001, which led to the replacement of the
Economy minister just after 15 days of being in office, prompted the first episode of significant
deposits loss in the banking system. Total deposits, which had increased to a level of USD 90
billionattheendofFebruary2001,fellby6.7%inlessthanamonth,andbymid-Maythelosshad
reached 7.6%. Although Argentina had secured a USD 40 billion IMF-led emergency assistance
packageinDecember2000—so-calledthe“Armor”—thelossofbankdepositsreflecteddwindling
confidencebythepublicintheeconomyandinthepoliticalenvironment.
RiskspreadsonArgentinegovernmentbonds—asmeasuredbytheEMBI+--increasedby200basis
pointsintheperiodApril-JunerelativetothevalueofFebruary2001.Nevertheless,riskspreads
remainedbelowthemaximumlevelsreachedduringthe1995TequilacrisisuntilNovember2001.
During the first half of 2001, deposits fluctuated. After the initial fall, they increased by 2.6%
between mid-May and end-June, to fall again in July. Between July and August, deposits fell by
23
11%.AlthoughinSeptemberdepositsrecoveredby3.3%inresponsetoafurtheraugmentationof
theIMFprogram,thedepositlossresumedsoonafter.
AsshowninFigure7,thebehaviorofbankdepositsduring2001showedsignificantdifferencesin
contrastwiththatobservedduringthe1995crisis.Firstly,thedepositrunin1995hadbeenmore
virulent,asittookeightmonthsin2001toreachthe18%depositlossthatin1995hadtakenplace
overathree-monthperiod.22
Figure7.The2001crisis–Evolutionofdeposits
105
100
Feb01=100
95
Foreign
90
85
Private
Nakonal
80
75
Public
70
65
60
2001/2
2001/3
2001/4
2001/6
2001/7
2001/8
2001/9
Source:CentralBankofArgentina
Secondly, in contrast to 1995, deposits fell sharply at public banks in 2001, indicating that fiscal
worries were starting to play a significant role in depositors’ minds. In fact, almost half of the
deposit loss experienced by the system between March and October is explained by the run on
depositsatthetwolargestpublicbanks,BancodelaNaciónArgentinaandBancodelaProvincia
deBuenosAires.
Thirdly, while foreign banks had increased their deposits during the 1995 crisis, this time they
werenolongerconsideredsafeheavensbythepublic.While,bymid-2001,48%oftotaldeposits
were placed at branches and subsidiaries of foreign banks, these banks also faced significant
depositlosses,albeitatarelativelyslowerpacethandomesticbanks.
Althoughthecentralbankprovidedlessemergencyliquidityassistancetobanksthanin1995,in
viewofthesubstantiallyhigherbankliquidity,theperceptionofdepositorsfocusedontherapidly
deteriorating political situation and on the increasing probability of a full-blown macroeconomic
crisisinArgentina.
In such an event—if Argentina would default on the public debt and devalue its currency—all
banks, domestic or foreign, private or public could face serious solvency issues. As illustrated in
22
Byend-Septemberthecumulativedepositlossstoodat12.9%.
24
Figure 7, the last two months before the imposition of restrictions on deposit withdrawals—socalledcorralito—thedepositrunacceleratedespeciallyatprivatedomesticbanks.
Some actions takenby the government in the final days of Convertibility contributed to fuel the
deposit run. In particular, a ceiling on the interest rate banks could offer to depositors had the
counterproductive effect of increasing the run on domestic banks vis-á-vis foreign banks.
Moreover, the introduction of quasi-currencies in several provinces, with the approval of the
federal government, rapidly increased the loss of public confidence in the viability of the fixed
exchangeratethatwasthecornerstoneoftheConvertibility.
6. Lessonsfromtheexperience:Whichadditionalprudential-regulationmeasurescouldhave
helpedinpreventingthe2001crisis?
Asarguedintheprevioussections,duringthe1990sArgentinahadstrengthenedsignificantlythe
prudentialregulatoryframeworkofitsfinancialsystem.Asaresult,thebankingsystemwashighly
capitalizedandheldsignificantliquidityinforeignassets.Hence,itshowedremarkableresilience
evenunderthestressingconditionsthatledtothemacroeconomiccrisisof2001.
However,eventhoughafterthe1995crisisthegovernmentbecameawareofthesystemicrisks
derivingfromtheconnectionbetweensovereigndebtandbankingrisks—andthereforeimposed
capitalrequirementsonbank’sgovernmentbondholdings—itwasnotfullyawareofthebalancesheetrisksthatextensivedollarizationposedforthebankingsystemintheeventofadevaluation.
Atleast,prudentialregulationsdidnotrecognizethisriskexplicitly.
PartoftheproblemwasthatConvertibilitywasdesignedtobeapermanentmonetaryregime.
Andinthatcontextdollarizationwasperceivedtoplayausefulroleinaligninggovernment
incentivesand,therefore,wasperceivedtocontributingtostrengtheningthecredibilityof
convertibility.23
Withthebenefitofhindsightitisclearthattheinadequateattentionpaidbyregulatorsto
exchangeraterisksconstitutedthesinglemostimportantweaknessofthebankingregulatory
framework.Inparticular,therecourseofbankstodollar-denominatedfundingshouldhavebeen
inourviewlimitedtoabank’scapacitytolendtofirmswhoseincomewasgenuinelyearnedin
foreigncurrency(e.g.,exporters).
Thisispreciselywhathappenedafterthe2001/2002crisis,whenbankcreditdenominatedin
foreigncurrencywaslimitedmostlytofundtradefinancing,anddollar-denominateddeposits
weresubjecttoveryhighreserverequirements—i.e.,depositedatthecentralbankandinvested
ininternationalreserves—and,thus,paidextremelylowinterestrates.
Adoptionofsuchregulationinthe1990swouldhavehadprosandcons.Theclearsystemic
advantageisthereductionintheperceivedexposureofthebankingsystemtoexchangeraterisk,
whichwouldhaveplayedasignificantusefulrolein2001.Thedisadvantageliesinthefactthat
peso-denominatedcreditanddepositscarriedhigherinterestratesandlowermaturity.Hence,
23
SeeCalvo(1988)andCalvoandGuidotti(1990)ontheroleofdollarizationinenhancingcredibilityinpricestability.
25
forinstance,thedevelopmentofamortgagecreditmarketwouldhavebeenmuchslowerand
moredifficultthanwhatitwasbyrelyingonforeign-currencydenominatedcontracts.
Amuchmorerevolutionaryreformwouldhavebeenonethatrequiredamodificationinthe
corporatestructureofbanksinordertorecognizethelimitsthatcentralbanksinemerging-market
economieshaveinactingaslenderoflastresort.Acriticalobjectiveofcentralbanksduring
systemiccrisesistoprotectthepaymentssystem.Hence,apossiblewaytoshieldthepayments
systeminasystemicbankingcrisis,asproposedbyGuidotti(2003),istoadoptaspecificcorporate
structurethatfacilitatesresolutionwhileisolatingthebank’stransactionalrolefromthe
credit/intermediationrolethatentersliquidation.24
Accordingtothisproposal,financialinstitutionswouldbeorganizedaccordingtothefollowing
corporatestructure.ABankHoldingCompanywouldown,ataminimum,twoseparate
subsidiaries:aPaymentBankandaFinancialSubsidiary.Typically,toimproveexternaldiscipline,
BankHoldingCompanieswouldberequiredtoissueatleastbetween20%and30%ofitscapitalin
anorganizedexchangemarket.
Liabilities of the Payment Bank would be composed of checking accounts, savings accounts, and
time deposits up to a maximum per depositors. The maximum amount of time deposits per
depositor would be consistent with the amounts covered by the deposit insurance. Thus, the
liabilitiesofthePaymentsBankshouldbeconsideredeitherasdirectedrelatedtothepayments
system,orconnectedtotheobjectiveofprotectingsmalldepositors.
On its asset side, the Payment Bank would only be allowed to hold prime quality (liquid) assets
and, except for overdraft on checking accounts, it would also hold the fixed assets related to its
transactionalrole.1Primequalityassetswouldinclude:1)foreignassets(publicandprivatewith
high credit-risk rating), 2) domestic government bonds, and 3) private domestic assets rated
investmentgradeinternationally.
TheFinancialSubsidiarywouldcontainallremainingbankingassetandliabilities.Therefore,the
Financial Subsidiary would be similar to a normal bank with the exception of the assets and
liabilities directly linked to the payments system that are now located at the Payments Bank.
Figure8showsthecorporatestructureofatypicalBankHoldingCompany.
24
Guidotti’ s (2003) proposal is a direct precedent of the concept of “living wills”, created in response to the recent
globalfinancialcrisis.
1
Emphasisisplacedhereontransparencyinthevaluationofassets.Ofcourse,liquidassetsareprime-qualityassets
bydefinition.
26
Figure8:TheBankHoldingCompany
Intermsofprudentialregulations,thecapitalrequirementwouldapplytotheBankHolding
Company,andapositivecapitalwouldberequiredatthelevelofthePaymentBank,withassets
markedtomarket.TheBankHoldingCompanyandtheFinancialSubsidiarywouldbesubjectto
theprudentialregulatoryframeworkthatwouldapplynormallytofinancialinstitutions.
As regards management, the above-mentioned corporate structure allows for a joint
administration of the Payments Bank and the Financial Subsidiary, in order to avoid costly
overlappingandduplicationoffunctions.However,acriticalelementoftheproposalisthatthe
BankHoldingCompanywouldberequiredtoidentify,exanteandatalltimes,andimplementing
contractsaccordingly,aself-containedmanagementstructureforthePaymentsBankincasethe
Financial Subsidiary would be liquidated or sold. Hence, for instance, although the branch
networkcouldbeoperatedjointly,itwouldneedtoholdseparateaccountingrecords.
The above-mentioned state-contingent corporate structure is a natural extension of the
instruments—suchasArt.35bis—giventothecentralbanktoresolvebankingproblems.Themain
advantagesofsuchcorporatestructureisthatitmaketheprocessofresolutionefficient,without
havingtoresorttoexpostemergencymeasures,andwouldenormouslyfacilitatetheprocessof
dividingassetsandliabilities.
Consider then how the actual mechanics of a liquidation or resolution would work. In the event
the financial institution faces illiquidity problems that exceed the central bank’s emergency
assistancecapability,suchilliquidityislikelytoappearattheleveloftheFinancialSubsidiary.3In
suchanevent,thecentralbankwouldforcetheFinancialSubsidiaryinto“suspension”,whilethe
Payments Bank would continue to operate. During the “suspension” period, when assets are
valuedatliquidationlevels,andequityandsubordinateddebtmaybemarkeddowntozeroand
remainingseniorliabilitieswouldbeconvertedintosharesintheFinancialSubsidiary’sassets,the
centralbankwouldbeabletoapplyArt.35bisontheFinancialSubsidiaryandauction,eitherpart
or its entirety, to interested buyers. Any residual of assets and liabilities would be sent to final
liquidation.
3
Thishappensbecauseoftworeasons:1)becausethePaymentsBankholdsthemostliquidassets;and2)because
empirical evidence suggests that transactional deposits tend to be more stable during bank runs in relation to other
bankliabilities.
27
Theresolutionprocessdescribedabovehastheadvantageofisolatingthepaymentssystemfrom
bank failures, while making efficient the process of transferring assets and liabilities to healthier
financial institutions. As most of bank capital is lost in the process, it would be reasonable to
expectthatthePaymentsBank,thoughoperative,wouldalsobeauctionedtoprospectivebuyers
atthesametime.Inthiscontext,therewouldbecleareconomiesofscaleforabuyertopurchase
theremainsoftheFinancialSubsidiarytogetherwiththePaymentsBank.
7. Wasthe2001/2002crisisavoidable?Twopossiblealternativecoursesofaction.
Acriticalquestionthatariseswhenevaluatingthecourseofeventsleadingtothe2001/2002crisis
is to what extent default could have been avoided and what policy options were open to the
governmentatvariouspointsintime.Twopossiblecoursesofactionareexploredinwhatfollows.
Lettheexchangeratefloat,paythedebt.
In our view, even well into 2001 Argentina could have avoided default by adopting adequate
economic policy measures. The key to the first argument we explore lies in the relative priority
that should have been given to maintaining the convertibility regime on the one hand, and to
avoiding default at all costs on the other hand. All of the alternatives considered by the
governmentaswellasbytheIMFtookforgrantedthatConvertibilitywasgoingtobemaintained.
Noalternativepolicyoptionswereseriouslyconsidered.Forallthatmatterstheauthoritiesand
the international official community treated Convertibility as a taboo and in the end, pushed by
political disarray, default led to the repeal of Convertibility materializing the (avoidable) worst
possible scenario. In this section we will argue and explain why, even in 2001, Argentina could
haveavoideddefaultbyexitingConvertibility.
Inordertoelaboratetheaboveargumentwewillstartbyaddressingthreeissuesthattoppedthe
list of concerns of investors and analysts as Argentina was entering 2001. The first issue was
whetherpublicdebtdynamicsweresustainable.ThesecondissuewaswhetherConvertibilitywas
makingArgentinauncompetitiveand,hence,neededalargecorrectionintherealexchangerate.
ThethirdissuewaswhetherArgentinawasabletoobtaintherequiredfinancingininternational
capital markets to meet its obligations while facing considerable skepticism on the part of
investors.
Let’sstartwithdebtdynamicsandthestanceoffiscalpolicy.AsArgentinaenteredyear2000,the
ratioofpublicdebttoGDPwasabout40%carryinganaverageinterestrateoflessthat7.5%per
annum. Hence, by conventional standards, the size of the public debt and of the interest bill
measuredasproportionofGDPwereperceivedasmanageableand,indeed,theywerelowerthan
the levels exhibited by other emerging market economies. In fact, most analysts at the time
consideredthatArgentinaneededamodestfiscaladjustmenttoensuredebtsustainability.
Theusualcomputationsperformedbyanalystsinthecapitalmarkettogaugedebtsustainability
were favorable and certainly were distant from describing an economy affected by grave or
irresolubleproblems.Reportswrittenbyleadinginternationalplayersinthecapitalmarketcanbe
cited as examples of what actions—in their view—were needed in order to stabilize over time
Argentina’s ratio of debt to GDP. These analyses placed the necessary fiscal adjustment in the
28
primaryfiscalbalanceintherangeof1%to2%ofGDPrelativetotheobservedlevelinyear2000.
WhenexaminingArgentina’sfiscalsituation,JPMorgan25statedthat:
“A primary surplus of 3.1% of GDP, up from the current 1.5% would be sufficient to
stabilize public debt-to-GDP, even assuming that growth remains at the current
depressed levels…Alternatively 4.4% nominal GDP growth would stabilize the
government’s debt ratio…. It is expensive for Argentina to cover its current financing
needs,buttheaverageinterestrateisstilllowat7.9%,anditsincreaseisgradual(pp
1).”
AsimilarviewcanbefoundinaresearchpiecepublishedbyDeutscheBank,26wheretheauthors
statethat:
“The results indicate that a structural primary surplus of 2.9% of GDP is needed to
achievesustainability.Thustheadjustmentthatisrequiredinordertostabilizethedebt
is an increase in 2.1% of GDP in the structural primary surplus beyond its level in year
2000(pp.4).”
Of course, all these analysis were based on assumptions, and a particularly critical one was the
rateofeconomicgrowth.InthecaseofJPMorgan,theanalysiswasbasedonanimprovementin
theprimarysurplusof0.9%tobecarriedoutgraduallybetween2000and2003,assumingarate
ofgrowthof1.8%in2000and3%thereon.UnderthoseassumptionsJPMorganwasprojectinga
slightdeclineintheratioofdebttoGDP.
In the case of Deutsche Bank the projected rate of growth was similar to JP Morgan’s—2.5% in
2000and3%thereon—buttherequiredfiscaladjustmentwaslargerbecauseDeutsche’sanalysis
was based on a higher initial debt stock—50 percent of GDP—on account of implicit debts not
includedintheofficialstatistics.
Theconclusionsreachedbyacademicswhostudiedex-postArgentina’simplosionarenotdistant
fromtheviewsofcapitalmarketparticipantsinyear2000.IntheiranalysisofArgentina’scrisis
HausmannandVelasco27alsodismissthefiscalcausebyarguingthat:
“…In spite of the strong temptation to blame everything on the politician and their
irresponsibility,thesimplefiscalexplanationisalsoinadequate.Thereisnoevidenceofa
spendingboom:asashareofGDP,primaryGovernmentexpenditureremainedroughly
constant in 1993-2001. True, public debt grew rapidly. But this paper shows the
accumulation of debt was driven mainly by the transition costs of the Social Security
system, recession, and recognition of preexisting debts, not by a lack of adjustment
28
efforts…” 25
SeeSekiguchi,David.Argentina’sdebtdynamics:Muchadoaboutnotsomuch,September6,2000.
SeeGhezzi,P.andL.Leiderman.DebtsustainabilityinLatinAmerica,December20,2000.
27
“Hard money´s soft underbelly: Understanding the Argentine crisis”. Kennedy School of Government. Harvard
University.2002.
28
AlsoGuidotti(2006)documentsthesignificantimpacttheSocialSecurityreformonArgentina’sfiscaldynamics.
26
29
Hence,despiterelativelyminorvariations,theprevailingviewwasthatArgentina’sdebtwasnot
clearly unsustainable provided the country could resume its economic growth. 29 On this issue,
however, there was less agreement. The main question was whether Argentina could shortly
resumegrowthwhilemaintainingafixed-exchangerateregimeatamomentwhencapitalmarkets
were unsettled, the US dollar had strengthened against other major currencies, and commodity
pricesweredepressed.Inthisvein,Calvo,IzquierdoandTalvi(2003)concludedthatadevaluation
was inevitable given the size of the external shocks hitting Argentina, and that the government
would have had to acquire additional debts because of the balance-sheet effects on the private
sector,requiringanadditionalfiscaladjustmentof0.6%ofGDPassuminga50%devaluation.
In sum, the concerns regarding fiscal sustainability were not necessarily pointing at fiscal
irresponsibility,butwerefocusedonwhethergrowthcouldberesumedunderConvertibility,and
onwhetherapossibleexitfromthefixed-exchange-rateregimewasmanageable.Andacritical
question here was to evaluate how large a devaluation would have occurred in the case
Convertibilitywasabandoned.Theassessmentofhowundervaluedwasthepesowascentralto
bothconcerns,anissuetowhichwenowturn.
To this effect, we start by examining whether export performance had been weak during
Convertibility.AscanbeobservedinTable4,themonetarysystemimplementedbyArgentinain
April 1991 coexisted with a strong growth in exports, while the real effective exchange rate30
(weightedbyusingtheexportsbasket)appreciatedonlymoderatelycomparedtoothersuccessful
economiesintheregion—despitethefactthatmostofthemhadflexibleexchangerates.
Table4.RealEffectiveExchangeRateandExportsChangebetween2000/1991
Selected countries
Real Exchange Rate *
Real Effective Exchange Rate *
Exports
Argentina
Brazil
Chile
Colombia
Ecuador
Mexico
Peru
Venezuela
Average
35%
6%
10%
22%
3%
17%
-8%
89%
20%
8%
13%
22%
-2%
58%
18%
1%
86%
28%
121%
74%
115%
83%
77%
289%
104%
125%
124%
*January2001/Average1991(+)meansREERappreciation,(-)depreciation
Source:RealEffectiveExchangeRate–J.P.MorganREERIndex,Exports–IMF.International
FinancialStatistics.
Between 1991 (the beginning of the Convertibility regime) and January 2001, the real effective
exchangerateforArgentinasufferedanappreciationofonly8%.31Thestrongexportperformance
displayed by Argentina during Convertibility suggests that the real exchange rate, if moderately
appreciated, was not making Argentina uncompetitive in international trade. The growth of
exports in the period 1991-2001 reflected mostly the increase in exported volumes, rather than
pricechanges.Inparticular,exportsincreasedfromUSD12billionin1991toUSD26.6billionin
29
ItisimportanttostressthattherewasnoconsensusontheroleoffiscalpolicyinArgentina’scrisis.Mussa(2002),for
instance,arguesthatfiscalpolicyhadbeentooexpansionaryoncyclicallyadjustedtermsandthatitleadtoanexcessive
build-upofpublicdebt.
30
TherealeffectiveexchangeratesfiguresarepublishedinBloombergundertheTickerJBXR.
31
Considering that during that decade productivity improved significantly, such moderate appreciation did not affect
Argentina’sexternalcompetitiveness,asshownbyitsexportperformance.
30
2001, at an average annual growth rate of 7.8%. This growth rate can be attributed entirely to
export volumes, as the annual change in export prices averaged -0.1% during the period under
consideration.
However,theevolutionofexportsunderConvertibilitywasnotuniform.Exportperformancewas
particularly strong in the period 1994-1998, growing at an average annual rate of 15.1%, in
comparison with a much weaker performance both in the initial and the latter years of
Convertibility.TheperformanceofArgentina’sexportsalsocomparesfavorablytotheevolutionof
world trade flows. In particular, the share of Argentina’s exports in world exports increased by
26%between1991and2001,increasingfrom0.34%in1991to0.43%in2001.
IndependentassessmentsundertakenbytheinvestmentbankGoldmanSachsinMarch2000are
consistentwiththeabovefindings.TheyshowthatArgentina’srealexchangeratewasovervalued
by just 7.6% compared to the equilibrium level that obtained from their own model, compared
witha22.7%overvaluationoftheMexicanpesoandoneof9.7%oftheChileanpeso.Withthatin
mindGoldmanSachsrecommendedtheirinvestorstotakepositionsintheArgentinepeso.32
The issue whether the Argentine peso was undervalued and by how much has been extensively
analyzedintheaftermathofthe2001/2002crisis.Forinstance,Calvo,IzquierdoandTalvi(2003)
examined in a simple model the relation between the real exchange rate, the balance of
payments,andthedegreeoftradeopenness.Inthatcontextandforasampleofemergingmarket
economies, they estimated the adjustment in the real exchange rate required to eliminate a
currentaccountdeficitintheeventofasuddenstopincapitalflowssimilartothatoccurredafter
the 1998 Russian crisis. In the case of Argentina, the authors estimated that a 46% real
depreciation would have been required to eliminate the current account deficit, a figure that
comparestoa52.5%realdepreciationrequiredinthecaseofBrazil,anda43%anda32.4%real
devaluationsrequiredinthecasesofColombiaandChile,respectively.33
Anotherstudythatfocusedontheovervaluationofthepesoasacauseforthe2001/2002crisis
wascarriedoutbytheIMF’sIndependentEvaluationOffice(IEO)in2004.34Interestingly,theIEO
finds that while today there appears to be a consensus that the peso was undervalued, such
consensusdidnotexistfromthestandpointofyear2000:
“…In the spring of 2000, before the further worsening of economic and financial
conditionsinArgentinaandbeforethefurtherweakeningoftheeurorelativetothe
U:S dollar, there were equally divided views of the peso´s overvaluation. For
example, the overvaluation was estimated to be 7% by Goldman Sachs, 13% by JP
Morganand17%byDeutscheBank.”
32
SeeGoldmanSachs,March2000.
TheCalvo,IzquierdoandTalvi(2003)exercisemaybeconsideredanupperbound,asthecomputedadjustmentwas
consistentwithreducingthecurrentaccountdeficittozero.Inlightofwhathappened,privatecapitalflowstoemerging
marketsfellby55%in1998comparedtothe1997peak,butdidnodisappear.Intheperiod1998-2002privatecapital
flowstoemergingmarketswereonaverage46%smallerincomparisonto1997,andincreasedsharplyagainsince2003
to reach in 2005 a level 75% higher that prior to the Russian crisis. Moreover, considering the depressed levels of
commodity prices, using 1998 as the base for the experiment may overestimate the required change in the real
exchangerate.
34
“TheIMFandArgentina1991-2001”.IndependentEvaluationOffice,IMF,2004.
33
31
Finally, Hausmann and Velasco (2002) even without estimating the size of the overvaluation
concludethatthefixed-exchangerateregimehadamajorroletoplayintheArgentinecrisis:
“There is an unmistakable sense then that Argentina did have an exchange rate
problem. What is much less clear, however, is whether it had an exchange rate
solution available to it. It was the combination of relative price misalignment with
increasinglyscarcefinancingthatmadethesituationvulnerable.And,withalarge
accumulated dollar debt, both private and public, the competitiveness gains of a
potential devaluation had to be weighted against the balance sheet damage it
wouldinflict,andtheadditionalmarketaccessthiswouldbring….”
Insummary,theArgentineeconomyunderConvertibilitycouldhavebenefitedfromexchangerate
flexibility but it can hardly be characterized as an economy in need of a large devaluation. With
thispremiseinmind,wenowturntothepolicyactionsthatwereavailabletothegovernmentin
order to avoid default, and which were anchored in providing flexibility to the exchange rate by
exiting Convertibility. The crucial point here is to establish how Argentina would have had to
manage the exit from Convertibility in a context of significant stress in international capital
markets.Inourview,aswillbediscussedbelow,thegovernmentcouldhaveexitedconvertibility
inanorderlyfashion.
AccordingtotheConvertibilityLawthemonetarybasehadtobebackeda100%inliquidforeign
assets, limiting the central bank’s ability to act as a lender of last resort to the banking system.
However, if the authorities had decided to abandon convertibility when the country still had a
significant amount of international reserves at the Central Bank, then it would have had a
significant amount of funds that—added to those obtained from multilaterals—would have
allowed Argentina to cover all of the debt payment obligations coming due over more than one
yearwithouthavingtoissueasingleUSdollarofnewdebtinthecapitalmarket.Thatperiodof
timewouldhavelikelybeenenoughtorestoreconfidenceinlocaldepositorsaswellasinforeign
investors.
TheConvertibilityLawpreventedthecentralbankfromassistingthefinancialsystemuptoalimit
established in the law. However, once convertibility was abandoned, the ratio of US dollar
reservestothemonetarybasecouldhavebeenreduced,forinstance,upto50%.Moreover,to
theextentthattheauthoritieswouldhaveconsideredadoptingasolutionálaUruguayaccording
to which banks who chose to do so could reprogram the maturity of their time deposits, the
liquidityavailabletothecentralbankcouldhavebeendirectedat,forinstance,coveringuptoa
30%runontransactionaldepositswhileusingtheremainingportiontocoverTreasuryobligations.
It is relevant to examine the amount of funds available to the central bank, including those
availablefromtheContingentRepoFacilitythatthecentralbankhadcontractedwithagroupof
international banks after the Tequila crisis.35 By mid 2001, the amount of funds available under
suchfacilityamountedtoUSD1.2billion.
35
Theterm“repo”standsforrepurchaseagreement.
32
In addition to the funds that would have been freed by abandoning convertibility and to those
available from the repo facility, the government could have had access to the remaining
disbursementsavailableundertheexistingIMFprogram.Takingintoaccounttheamountoffunds
disbursedfromtheIMFbetweenJanuary2000andSeptember2001(SDR4.8billion),theavailable
credit to Argentina at the time when the last IMF agreement was signed in January 2001
amountedtoSDR12.1billion,equivalenttoUSD15.2billion.Ofthisamount,theIMFdisbursed
only SDR 4.9 billion during 2001, remaining available at the year-end about SDR 7.2 billion,
equivalenttoapproximatelyUSD9billion.
Basedonthesefiguresonecanestimatethetotalamountoffundsavailabletothegovernment—
with the already committed IMF support— in order to assure the capital market that it could
service its debt for the significant period of time without resorting to new bond issues. Table 5
shows the results of computing the available funds at various relevant dates during 2001.
Availablefundsaredefinedastheexcessfundsoverthoserequiredtokeepa50%backingofthe
monetary base and to provide the central bank with the additional capacity to provide liquidity
assistancetothebankingsystemforanamountequivalentto30%ofalltransactionaldeposits.
Table5.AvailableFunds
Source:OwncalculationsbasedondatafromCentralBankofArgentinaandtheEconomyMinistry
ForthecomputationstwodifferentexchangeratebetweenthePesoandtheUSdollarwereused:
theone-to-oneexchangerateprevailingunderconvertibility,andanalternativescenarioofa
100%devaluation.36
The analysis shows that, if the exchange rate had devalued by a 100% had convertibility been
abandoned, the government would have had available in June 2001 excess funds for USD 30.4
billion, compared with the USD 18 billion it had under the Convertibility Law. Of course, the
amount of excess funds is larger the earlier the exit from Convertibility would have been taken
36
ThePesoultimatelydevaluedbya100%betweenJanuaryandFebruaryof2002,underquitechaoticcircumstancesof
default,depositfreezing,and“asymmetric”pesification.
33
during 2001. For instance, if Argentina had exited Convertibility in March 2001, excess funds
availableundertheassumptionof100%devaluationwereUSD35.6billion.
Thesefiguresneedtobecontrastedwiththegovernment’sfinancingrequirementsatthetime.In
thisrespect,theArgentinegovernmenthadexplicitlyadoptedafter1995astrategyoflengthening
thematurityofitspublicdebttoreduceliquidityrisk.By2001,theaveragematurityofthepublic
debtexceeded8yearsandthesizeoftheyearlygovernment’sfinancingrequirementhadreached
USD12billionandwouldbebetweenUSD13and14billioninthefollowingtwoyears.37Hence,
theamountofexcessfundsavailabletothegovernmentwaslargeenoughtocoverthefinancing
needs of the following year and a half (without issuing new debt), even after allowing for a
significantlender-of-lastresortcapabilityinhardcurrency.
Withafloatingexchangerateandthefinancingneedscoveredforasignificantperiodoftimein
advance, interest rates would likely have fallen and the economy would have resumed growth.
Hence, it can be concluded that the government had alternative policy options to avoid default,
devaluationandpesification.Attheendofthethirdquarterof2001theCentralBankofArgentina
hadastockofinternationalreservesofUSD21.5billionandthebankingsystemheldforeignliquid
assetsforanadditionalUSD3.3billion.Moreover,theIMFprograminplacehadstilltodisburse
additional funds to the government by USD 9.3 billion. Even in late 2001, such amount of
resources provided the government with significant capacity to manage an orderly resolution of
the economic crisis without having to resort to unprecedented and arbitrary measures such as
asymmetricpesification.
Anotherimportantquestionthatwouldhaveariseninthisscenariowasthatofthepotential
lossesthatadevaluationwouldhavehadonthebankingsystemandwhatwouldhavebeenthe
amountofcapitalthegovernmentcouldhavebeenrequiredtoinjectintothesystem.Inthis
respect,onepossibleroutecouldhavebeentoallowfinancialinstitutionsvoluntarilyto
restructureforeigncurrencyloansofthoseclientswhoserevenuesderivedmostlyfromthenontradablesector(i.e.services)and,hence,weresubjecttoasignificant(buttemporary)adverse
relativepriceshock,andprovidegovernmentfundstorecapitalizethoseinstitutionsthatdidnot
havethecapitaltoabsorbtheresultinglosses.Asignificantdistinctionmayhavebedrawnhere
betweendomesticandforeignbanks,asthelattergroupwouldhavethecapacitytoabsorblosses
providedtheruleoflawwasnotbroken.
As shown in Table 6, the stock of bank loans to the private sector denominated in US dollars
amountedtoUSD34.7billiononDecember31st,2001whilethestockofforeign-currencydeposits
totaled USD 37 billion. On that date, foreign-currency loans provided by foreign banks and
foreign-ownedsubsidiariesamountedtoUSD20.6billionwhileforeign-currencyloansprovidedby
domesticbanksamountedtoUSD14.1billion.
37
Guidotti(2006)documentsthesignificantlengtheningofdebtmaturityoccurredintheperiod1994-2000.
34
Table6.Dollar-denominatedloansintheArgentinebankingsystemin2001
Source:OwncalculationsbasedondatafromCentralBankofArgentina
Moreover,outofthetotalstockofforeign-currencyloanstotheprivatesector,about17.6%was
allocatedtothetradablesector.Toreachthisfigure,averyrestrictivedefinitionoftradablesector
isused,asitcontainsonlyloanstotheprimarysector(holdingashareof8.7%oftheloans)and
manufacturingindustry(holdingashareof9%oftheloans).Assumingthattheproportionof
loansdistributedbetweenthetradableandnon-tradablesectorissimilaracrossforeignand
domesticbanks,weobtainthatthestockofforeign-currencyloansprovidedbydomesticbanksto
thenon-tradablesectorandhouseholdsamountedtoapproximatelyUSD11.6billion.
Hence,toobtainanestimateoftherecapitalizationthatwouldhavebeenrequiredbythefinancial
system under the above-mentioned scenario, we computed the impact that three different loan
restructuring options on bank capital and assumed that the loss faced by domestic banks would
haverequiredrecapitalizationinfull(itisimportanttokeepinmindthatsuchrecapitalizationof
domesticbanksreflectedthelackofadditionalcapitalofdomesticshareholdersandwouldmost
likely have been required independently if banks themselves would have changed ownership or
not).
AfirstoptionconsideredisoneinwhichtherestructuringoftheUSD11.6billioninloanstothe
non-tradablesectorwouldhavelikelyentailedanextensionofmaturityofexistingdollarloansto
5years(withbulletamortization)andareductionofinterestto5%peryear,withagraceperiodof
2yearsinwhichtheinterestcapitalizes.Usingadiscountrateof10%peryear,thereliefreceived
byadebtoramountsto32.7%innetpresentvalue,yieldingabankcapitallossofUSD3.1billion.38
Asecondoptionconsideredisonewhereinterestisreducedto4%peryear,andthematurityis
extendedto10years,witha2-yeargraceperiodandamortizationsdividedinequalinstallments
of12.5%inyears3to10.39Inthisoption,therecapitalizationrequiredwouldhaveamountedto
USD3.3billion.
38
Avariationofthisoptionisonewheretheloanrestructuringentailsareductionoftheinterestrateto3%peryear,an
extension of maturity to 5 years but with amortization in three installments in years 3, 4, and 5. Using the same
discountrate,thisoptionwouldhaveimpliedarecapitalizationofUSD2.6billion.
39
Thisstructurereplicatesthatofthedollar-denominatedbondsthatwereissuedin2002(i.e.,theBoden2012)topay
depositorswhosedepositshadbeenfrozenbythegovernment.
35
Ascanbeseen,thepotentialbankinglossesthatcouldhaveemergedfromadevaluation,andthe
requiredcapitalization,weremanageableundertheassumptionthattheruleoflawwouldbe
maintained.
DollarizewithanagreementwiththeFed?
WhilethealternativeofexitingConvertibilitywasneverseriouslyconsideredbyArgentine
policymakers,afterthe1998Russiandefault,thegovernment—specifically,theeconomyministry
andthecentralbank—initiateddiscussionswithUSauthoritiesonaverydifferentexitstrategy:
thedesignandimplementationofanArgentine-USMonetaryAgreementthatwouldserveasthe
legalframeworkforArgentinatofullyadopttheUSdollarasitsowncurrency.40
ThedollarizationdebateinArgentinareflectedtwocontrastingfactors.Ontheonehand,there
wasageneralperceptionthatConvertibilityhadcontributedtosubstantiallyimprove
macroeconomicperformanceandhadfacilitatedtheadoptionofanumberofstructuralreformsin
connectionwiththegovernment’sobjectiveofincreasingtheeconomy’sintegrationto
internationaltradeandfinance.Ontheotherhand,despitethesuccessfulweatheringofthe1995
Tequilacrisis—whichhadstrengthenedsignificantlydomesticandinternationalcredibilityin
Convertibility—therewasanincreasingperceptionthatArgentinaremainedvulnerabletofinancial
contagion.Hence,thevulnerabilityassociatedwithastillincompletecredibilityinthe
Convertibilityregimetranslatedintoasignificantriskpremiumthathadtobepaidongovernment
andprivatedebts.
Moreover,by1998,theinternationalconsensushadclearlyshiftedinfavoroftheadoptionof
flexibleexchangeratebyemergingmarketeconomies.Tobesure,theso-called“bipolar”viewof
exchange-rateregimes—thatrecommendedeitherflexibleexchangeratesorveryhardpegswas
mostlyadiplomaticefforttoaccountforHongKong‘currencyboardandArgentina’s
Convertibility.41
Inthisvein,in1998,theArgentinegovernmentstartedexploringwiththeUSTreasuryandFederal
Reservetheimplementationofamonetaryagreementbetweenthetwocountries.4243Inaddition
totheadoptionoftheUSdollarasitsowncurrency,thediscussioncontainedanimportant
feature:therebateofseigniorage.Themostinnovativeaspectoftheseignioragediscussionwas
itsuse.TheArgentinegovernmentenvisagedthattherebateofseignioragefromtheUSTreasury
wouldimplyarevenuethatArgentina—thedollarizingcountry—wouldreceivearevenueflowof
USdollarsthatcouldinturnbeusedas(AAA-rated)collateraltoobtainaliquidityfacilityfromthe
40
This section is based largely on Guidotti and Powell (2003) that contains a detailed discussion of the dollarization
debate.
41
SeeFischer(2001)foradiscussionofthebipolarviewonthechoiceofexchange-rateregimes.
42
Other close observers of the Argentine economy suggested full dollarization as another alternative route for the
government to pursue to restore investor confidence and produce a turnaround in the Argentine economy. See, for
instance, Steve Hanke, “Argentina’s Current Political-Economic Crisis,” Statement before the Subcommittee on
InternationalMonetaryPolicyandTrade,CommitteeonFinancialServices,UnitedStatesHouseofRepresentatives,of
March5th,2002.Availableathttp://www.cato.org/testimony/ct-hanke030502.html.
43
The US Senate Banking Committee held hearings on possible dollarization in 1999, see
www.banking.senate.gov/docs/reports/dollar.htm.
36
USFederalReservetotheArgentinecentralbank.Thus,suchcreditlinewouldprovidethe
ArgentinecentralbankwithaUS-dollarcapacitytoactaslenderoflastresortinpotentialsystemic
crises,resolvinganimportantargumentputforwardbycriticsofdollarization:that,under
dollarization,thecentralbankwouldloseitscapabilitytoactaslenderoflastresort.44
GuidottiandPowell(2003)estimatedtheamountofseigniorageassociatedwithfulldollarization
and the potential size of the liquidity facility that could be obtained by collateralizing its rebate.
Although the estimates depend on a number of technical assumptions and the on the discount
(risk-free)rateused,GuidottiandPowell(2003)reachedtheconclusionsthatthepotentialsizeof
theliquidityfacilitywassignificant.EstimatedataroundUSD20billion—equivalenttoabout7%
ofGDP—theliquidityfacilitywouldhavemorethandoubledtheArgentinecentralbank’sabilityto
actasalenderoflastresort,whencomparedtowhatwaslegallypossibleunderConvertibility.
While full dollarization would not resolve the issue of currency overvaluation—although some
arguedthatthegovernmentcouldhavedevaluedbeforedollarizing(theso-calledD&Doption)—
themainbenefitfortheeconomywouldaccruefromareductioninthesovereignriskpremium.45
Therefore,animportantfactorweighingonthedecisionwasbyhowmuchsovereignriskwouldbe
reduced in the event of dollarization. The estimation of the impact of full dollarization on the
sovereignriskpremiumiscomplexastheriskpremiumcontainsbothdevaluationriskanddefault
(or credit) risk. Moreover, the two risks certainly may interact. Given the currency mismatches
existingintheArgentineeconomy,adevaluationofthecurrency,dependingonitssize,mayforce
the sovereign into default. Using different methodologies, Guidotti and Powell (2003) estimated
that full dollarization may have reduced the sovereign risk spread between 120 and 325 basis
points from a spread of about 600 basis points, namely the potential reduction would range
between20%and54%ofthedefaultspread.
Thedollarizationdiscussion,althoughitstimulatedawidedebateinpolicyandacademiccircles,
both domestically and internationally, required significant political actions to take place both in
Argentina and in the US, which involved both Congresses. 46 The timing of the debate was not
alignedwithArgentina’spoliticalcalendarastheMenemadministrationwasenteringitslastyear
in office, with no possibility of re-election. After a new administration took office at the end of
1999,thediscussionoffulldollarizationwasultimatelyabandoned.
44
WhiletheUSresponsetotheseignioragequestionandtothecollateralizedliquidityfacilitywaspositive,threeissues
remained clear from the start: 1) Argentina would get no say whatsoever in the conduct of US monetary policy;
ArgentinebankswouldhavenoaccesstothediscountwindowoftheUSFederalReserve;and3)theUSwouldhaveno
banking-supervisionresponsibilitiesvis-á-visArgentinebanks.
45
ThereductionintheriskpremiumdirectlyrelatedtotheinterestrateconvergencethatthesouthernEUeconomies,
suchasItaly,Portugal,andSpain,hadexperiencedwiththecreationoftheEuro.
46
Aroundthattime,EcuadorandElSalvadorhadunilaterallydollarized.
37
8. Concludingremarks
ThispaperhasanalyzedtwobankingcrisesoccurredinArgentinain1995and2001,inthemidstof
significantreformsintermsofbankingregulationandsupervision,andinamacroeconomic
contextdominatedbya“hardpeg”exchange-rateregimeknownasConvertibility.Asusual,
macroeconomicstressandbankingcrisesareeventsthattendtobecloselyassociatedandwhere
thedirectionofcausalitytendstobedifficulttoidentify.
Thetwocrisesanalyzedinthispaperarearareexamplewhere,fromthebehaviorofdepositors,
wecangetlightonthedirectionofcausalitybetweenmacroeconomicstressandbankingcrises.
Wehaveshownthat,despitethesignificantreformsputinplaceintheearly1990s,thecrisis
experiencedbytheArgentinebankingsysteminearly1995(aftertheDecember1994devaluation
oftheMexicanPeso)canbeattributedlargelytointernalweaknessesofthesystem,whichwas
stillintheprocessofadaptingtothenewprudentialregulatoryenvironment.Inthatcase,as
macroeconomicpolicystayedthecourse,andreformswereconsciouslydesignedtomeetthe
limitationsofthelender-of-last-resortfunctionofthecentralbank,aswellastomaintainfiscal
sustainability,thebankingcrisiswasvirulentbutshortlivedanditssuccessfulresolutiontranslated
intorenewedpublicconfidenceinthesystem.
The2001crisisshowsthereverse.Theconsolidationofthebankingsystemandthenewmacroprudentialregulationsimplementedafter1995hadmadethefinancialsystemmoreresilient,both
intermsofcapitalizationaswellasintermsofliquidity.However,themacroeconomicsideofthe
2001crisisprovedtobeaninsurmountableobstacleforthefinancialsystem,andthe
macroeconomiccrisisledtoabankingcrisisaswell.Aswehavediscussed,Argentinahadpolicy
optionsthatcouldhavemitigatedandevenavoidedthe2001crisis,buttheseoptionsnowremain
aselementsforanex-postanalysisofthecausesofthecrisis,ratherthanpartofitsfactualhistory.
38
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