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1 Sudden Stop anno 2008: Why Emerging Europe was different Erik Berglof Chief Economist European Bank for Reconstruction and Development Sudden Stop anno 2008: Emerging Europe was different Percentage changes in external assets of BIS-reporting banks Per cent 15 Avg 2007Q4/2008Q1 Avg 2008Q4/2009Q1 10 5 0 -5 -3.4 -4.4 -7.8 -10 -11.1 -11.9 -15 Emerging Europe CA and Caucasus Russia & Ukraine Latin America Emerging Asia Why Emerging Europe was different • Massive output decline, but • No traditional emerging market “twin crises” - Despite magnitude of shock Why? • Nature of European financial integration • Policy response – massive and comprehensive Outline 1. Financial integration and the European transition model: introduction 2. Did financial integration have any tangible benefits? 3. What role did financial integration play in the transmission of the crisis? 4. Did financial integration generate macrofinancial vulnerabilities? 5. Policy Response and Lessons The three pillars of the European transition and convergence model Political, legal-regulatory integration with EU Trade integration (both opening, and specifically with the EU) Financial integration – Growing external assets and liabilities (but primarily liabilities: via FDI and debt inflows) – Growing role of EU banking groups Political, trade, and financial integration have gone hand in hand Exports to the EU (left axis) Assets of EU banking groups (right axis) Per cent of total exports 100 Per cent of GDP 200 80 150 60 100 40 50 20 0 0 New EU Members Official EU Candidates EU Aspirants* Eastern Partnership Countries Other Financial integration has been rapid, with a boom period from 2004 onwards. External assets and liabilities as a share of GDP Per cent 250 CEB EEC Turkey 200 SEE* Russia CA 150 100 50 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 0 In CEB and SEE, financial integration has been led by foreign banking groups Foreign bank asset share, 1998-2008 Per cent 100 80 CEB EEC Turkey Foreign bank asset share, end-2008 SEE Russia CA Per cent 100 CEB SEE EEC Other 80 60 60 40 40 20 0 0 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 Sl ov Es aki to a A ni Li lba a th ni ua a C nia r R oa om ti a C an ze i a H ch un R . B ga ul ry g Po aria la Se nd rb La i a U tvi k a A rain rm e K e yr n gy ia z R R us . K T sia az ur ak ke hs y ta n 20 Outline 1. Financial integration and the European transition model: introduction 2. Did financial integration have tangible benefits? 3. What role did financial integration play in the transmission and magnitude of the crisis? 4. Did financial integration generate vulnerabilities that aggravated the crisis? 5. Policy Response and Lessons The ultimate objective of financial integration: economic growth Loosen domestic savings constraints to allow more investment Financial development – Access to credit allows individuals to access entrepreneurial and educational opportunities, – Reduced macroeconomic volatility encourages investment Transfer of skills, technology, and institutions (corporate governance) via FDI Growth in transition has been associated with capital imports—unlike other regions Current account balance, per cent of GDP (simple average) 10 5 0 -5 -10 -15 1994 1997 Latin America 2000 2003 Emerging Asia 2006 CEB + SEE Rising current account deficits have reflected mainly higher investment Saving and investment, per cent of GDP Current account balance, per cent of GDP 35 0 30 -5 25 20 -10 15 10 -15 1994 1997 Saving 2000 Investment 2003 2006 Current account (right scale) In non-transition developing countries, CA surpluses correlated with higher growth … but not in the European transition region. Transition sample 14 14 12 12 y = 0.1681x + 5.0106 R2 = 0.1201 10 10 8 8 6 6 4 4 2 2 0 0 -2 -2 -20 -10 0 10 CA/GDP, % (av. 1994-2008) Growth GDP per cap, PPP (av.1994-2008) Growth GDP per cap, PPP (av.1994-2008) Non-transition sample 20 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 20 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 y = -0.3442x + 5.2813 R2 = 0.2697 -15 -10 -5 0 5 CA/GDP, % (av. 1994-2008) 10 Did capital inflows and financial integration cause higher growth in transition countries? Two approaches Growth regressions – Used standard set of controls: initial GDP per capita, life expectancy, trade openness, fiscal balance to GDP ratio, measure for institutional quality Sector approach – Key idea: if FI has benefits, it should make sectors with high dependence on external finance grow faster – Controls for full set of industry and country dummies Examine effect of capital inflows; levels of financial integration; and asset share of foreign banks Results: robust evidence backing growth effects of FI in transition economies Find growth effects in both approaches, and across several proxies for financial integration Size of growth effect is respectable – 1 percent of GDP in capital inflows raised average annual growth by 0.15-0.4 percentage points per year – 10 percentage point higher asset share of foreign banks raised average growth by 0.2-0.4 percentage point per year – Output in manufacturing firms with average financial dependence grew faster by about 1.5 percentage points per year in high capital inflow countries (75 percentile) than in low capital inflow countries (25 percentile) No such effects found in non-transition sample Why is the transition region different? Hypotheses: Higher level of financial development Better institutions (or EU commitment) effect Threshold effects in financial integration Find some support for the last idea (with respect to foreign bank presence) Conclusion (1): Financial integration had tangible growth benefits in the EBRD region Supported by econometric tests using several methodologies Magnitude is economically significant Outline 1. Financial integration and the European transition model: introduction 2. Did financial integration have tangible benefits? 3. What role did financial integration play in the transmission and magnitude of the crisis? 4. Did financial integration generate vulnerabilities that aggravated the crisis? 5. Policy response and lessons Financial integration was one of the conduits of the international crisis… But outflows were comparatively modest in parts of the region Percentage changes in external assets of BIS-reporting banks Per cent 15 Avg 2007Q4/2008Q1 Avg 2008Q4/2009Q1 10 5 0 -5 -3.4 -4.4 -7.8 -10 -11.1 -11.9 -15 Emerging Europe CA and Caucasus Russia & Ukraine Latin America Emerging Asia …so was the collapse of trade in Q4 and Q1… Index 240 220 Index 110 Trade credit* Commodity price World trade volume EU real GDP (right axis) 108 200 180 106 160 140 120 104 102 100 20 04 20 Q4 05 20 Q1 05 20 Q2 05 20 Q3 05 20 Q4 06 20 Q1 06 20 Q2 06 20 Q3 06 20 Q4 07 20 Q1 07 20 Q2 07 20 Q3 07 20 Q4 08 20 Q1 08 20 Q2 08 20 Q3 08 20 Q4 09 20 Q1 09 Q 2 80 100 …resulting in a sharp economic contraction in many countries in the region. Chart 1: Real GDP Growth (Year-on-year, in percent) 10 5 0 -5 -10 -15 Q4 2008 Q1 2009 Q2 2009 -20 Source: EBRD. Note: For Armenia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, FYR Macedonia, Serbia, and Moldova 2009 Q2 numbers are EBRD projections. Belarus Moldova Mongolia Bulgaria Romania Serbia FYR Mac. Slovak Rep. Poland Russia Kazakhstan Croatia Czech Rep. Slovenia Lithuania Armenia Georgia Hungary Turkey Ukraine Estonia Latvia -25 Statistical analysis suggests that foreign bank presence attenuated the outflow Robust effect – True for both transition sample and broader developing country sample – True for both initial shock (Q4 2008 outflows) and Q4 and Q1 2009 combined Higher foreign bank share of 10 percentage points of assets attenuated Q4 lending outflow by 1.4 percentage points* *average outflow in transition region was about 6 percent in Q4 2008. Foreign bank presence is associated with better output performance during the crisis Output growth over Q4/08Q1/09, qoq, s.a. 5 5 Alb Pol BiH Mne Geo Kaz Kgz Srb FYR Blr Hun Cze Aze BgrHrv Taj Rom Svk Tur Mol Slv Rus Est Ltu Arm Lva 0 -5 -10 -15 -20 0 -5 -10 -15 -20 Ukr -25 -25 0 20 40 60 80 100 Foreign bank ownership, 2007 120 However, external debt levels are a robust predictor of worse output declines in crisis Output growth over Q4/08- Q1/09, qoq, s.a. 5 Pol BiH Geo FYRM Kaz Kyr Bel Hun Ser Cze Azer Ro Bul Taj Cro Slk Sln Mol Ru Tky Lit Est Arm Alb 0 -5 -10 -15 Lat -20 Ukr -25 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 External debt in percent of GDP, 2007 Both effects hold up when considered jointly, and with other controls. Conclusion (2): Financial integration had a mixed direct role in the crisis 1. Provided a conduit for financial shocks; (obvious: in financial autarky, no contagion) 2. Some aspects of financial integration made the crisis worse: external debt 3. However, foreign bank presence mitigated the output decline – Interpretation: foreign banks buffered the financing shock because of commitments to subsidiaries. Outline 1. Financial integration and the European transition model: introduction 2. Did financial integration have tangible benefits? 3. What role did financial integration play in the transmission and magnitude of the crisis? 4. Did financial integration create vulnerabilities that aggravated the crisis? 5. Policy response and Lessons Financial integration and crisis vulnerabilities: potential channels 1. Led to higher private external debt: a direct expression of financial integration 2. Did financial integration fuel credit booms? Higher output declines (cf. private external debt) 3. Did financial integration bias the currency composition of borrowing toward FX? No statistical link with output declines; but probably exacerbated decline in some countries, and complicated the management of the crisis Capital inflows strongly correlated with credit growth during 2005-08 (Per cent) 90 90 Average credit growth between mid-2005 and mid2007 Ukraine R2 = 0.2988 80 Azerbaijan 70 70 Kazakhstan Albania 60 Romania 60 Latvia Lithuania Serbia 50 Estonia 80 50 Russia 40 40 Tajikistan Bulgaria Moldova FYR 30 30 BiH Croatia 20 Poland Slovenia Czech Rep. Hungary 20 10 10 0 -20 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 Median growth of BIS lending between mid-2005 and mid-2007 160 180 0 200 1996 - 2001 2002 - 07 Kyrgyz Rep. Georgia Armenia Mongolia Ukraine Turkey SEE Russia Moldova Kazakhstan Albania Romania Bulgaria CEB Serbia FYR Macedonia Lithuania Czech Rep. Slovak Rep. Hungary 7 Poland Latvia Estonia Croatia Slovenia Number of credit boom years (= year with credit growth > 2 p.p. of GDP) EEC and other 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Did financial integration contribute to (excessive) credit booms? 1996-2001 External Foreign Assets + bank share Liabilities 2002-07 External Foreign Assets + bank share Liabilities Relative frequency of credit boom years (%) 1 Initial levels of financial integration below median 10.9 at or above median 13.8 10.1 14.5 29.0 39.1 36.2 31.9 Change in financial integration below median 10.9 at or above median 13.8 14.5 10.1 26.1 42.0 34.1 34.1 Cross country-correlations with number of credit boom years Initial levels Change -0.03 0.14 0.08 0.09 0.04 0.52 0.01 -0.10 Did financial integration encourage FX lending? Background Standard causes of “liability dollarisation”: 1. Low monetary policy credibility and/or high inflation volatility; 2. Moral hazard associated with pegged regimes (implicit guarantees) Did foreign financing make liability dollarisation worse? If foreign financing is in FX (either through parent bank or wholesale market), and banks want to avoid mismatch, they may want to push FX lending. Foreign bank presence is correlated with a higher share of lending in FX Share of foreign currency lending in total domestic lending (but so is L/D ratio, and various other measures of foreign financing) 1.0 LAT BUL EST CRO SER ALB 0.8 0.6 UKR LIT HUN KAZ ARM MOL TUR POL FYRM RUS AZE 0.4 0.2 SLV 0.0 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 Asset share of foreign-owned banks Did financial integration encourage FX lending? Approach: 1. Firm level regressions based on BEEPS data for 2002-05 LHS variable is currency denomination of last loan Firm level controls; standard macro + institutional controls (inflation volatility, exchange rate volatility …); add FI variables 2. Test robustness using macro data for same period LHS variable is FX share of bank lending 3. Macro regression over longer (2000-2008) period. Did financial integration encourage FX lending? Results: Clear evidence that financial integration had an effect over and above standard causes Approaches disagree on which measure is main (culprit): – Firm level regressions: foreign banks (even controlling for other FI measures) – Macro regressions: more mixed results – Measures of debt inflows (BIS; L/D ratio) matter more than gross financial integration levels Conclusion (3): Did financial integration generate macro-financial vulnerabilities? Yes, but … • Drivers of credit booms and FX lending were fast inflows, not so much higher levels/stocks • To the extent that stocks were a problem, it was debt, not FDI stocks • Results not conclusive on role of foreign banks – Contributed to vulnerabilities as conduits of credit and foreign financing, but little evidence of other effects – Firm-level evidence on contribution to FX lending – but not always robust in macro regressions Outline 1. Financial integration and the European transition model: introduction 2. Did financial integration have any tangible benefits? 3. What role did financial integration play in the transmission of the crisis? 4. Did financial integration generate macrofinancial vulnerabilities? 5. Policy response and Lessons Crisis response has been impressive… • Mature domestic (home and host) policies • Massive & coordinated international support – IMF resources increased from $250 to $750 bn – EU BOP support raised from €25 to €50 bn – G20 held out substantial rise in MDB funding • Parent bank engagement • A new coordination platform – IFI “Vienna Initiative” filled institutional vacuum The magnitude of official support unprecedented Official support (percent of GDP) Q2 2009 Q1 2009: Drop in foreign inflows and trade Q4 2008: Gov. support for large US, UK and Swiss banks Q3 1998: Russia default, Braz. stock market crash, LTCM Q2 1998: Social unrest in Ind., Russian stock market crash Q1 1998: Social unrest in Ind., Korean debt restructuring, Korea Thailand Philippines Indonesia Hungary Latvia Romania Ukraine Q4 1997: Closure of Ind. and Thai financials, Korean won devalues Q3 1997: Asian currencies devalue sharply 0.0 1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0 6.0 7.0 …yet no time to be complacent • Second and third round effects of the crisis – Quality of banking portfolios uncertain; rising NPLs – Risks of credit crunch – Rising unemployment • Regulatory framework still uncertain => Use crisis response institutions to mitigate risks to recovery The Vienna Initiative: Basic Approach • Incentivise banks (do internalise spillovers) – Regulatory incentives (IMF/EU programs) – Capital infusions (Joint IFI Action Plan) – “Naming/shaming” (memoranda of understanding) • Intensified collaboration among IFIs – Information-sharing – Within IMF/EU programs (Serbia, Romania…) Vienna Initiative – next steps • • • • • Weather “second round” effects Group “stress testing” – reduce uncertainty Manage “controlled deleveraging” of banks Restructure real sector and FX exposures Build local currency markets (Vienna Plus) Remaining challenges • Find appropriate regulatory framework • Counter unavoidable rise in unemployment • Shift from private to public sector crisis – Fill large fiscal gaps emerging (Ukraine, Latvia…) – Ensure fiscal burden of bailouts end up in the West • Build local capital markets… EC and ECB much needed EC to lead EU response, particularly on fiscal issues; competition policy evolving ECB targeted liquidity support outside Euro zone (see Denmark, Sweden or US Fed to Mexico, Brazil) Reaffirm Euro entry objectives with clear timetable (no rule change) and De-dollarise and develop domestic capital markets Lessons • • • • • Financial integration worked but must mitigate risks Rebalance growth model: more domestic sources Revamp cross-border collaboration: crisis model IFI collaboration part of new financial architecture European integration come out stronger from crisis … but this is far from over - focus on the next steps… ANNEX Unfolding of the crisis in the region Unfolding of the crisis in the region Unfolding of the crisis in the region