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Latin American Crisis of the 1980s “The Lost Decade” Econ. 462 Nov. 24, 2009 Edward Kulow John Magallanes Yojasi Lomas Conditions Prior to the Crisis History of L.A. Debt Crisis • Post WWII • Under Bretton Woods Agreement (1944) - International Monetary Fund (IMF) • Economic Policy - Import Substitution Industrialization Model Continued . . . . • Economic Growth - Eurodollar Market - Early 1970s - Latin American exports increase • Western Banks Fund Expansion Private Financing by Commercial Banks vs. IMF - 33% of all financing by 1973 -~50% of all financing by 1976 - 70% of all financing by 1980 Continued . . . . • Oil Prices increase after 1973 (see graph) - Petro – Dollar • US Dollar strengthened in late 1970s due to high interest rates (see graph) Continued . . . . • Oil Prices increase after 1973 (see graph) - Petro – Dollar • US Dollar strengthened in late 1970s due to high interest rates (see graph) Inflation and Interest Rates since 1970 - Inflation -U.S. Interest Rates Contributing Factors Between 1973-1983 external debt rose from $48 billion to about $350 billion (see graph) (about 58% of Gross Regional Product) • Latin American Crisis – August 1982 - Mexican Finance Minister Jesus Silva-Herzog L.A.C. Balance of Foreign Debt (In Millions) Conditions During the Crisis What happened? • Global Economy slows into Recession • Debt Service - $12 Billion in 1975 - $66 Billion by 1983 • Banks react to Mexico’s announcement - Lending Freezes - All loans due immediately! Continued . . . • Situation Worsens - Domino Effect by Oct. 1983 (16 Nations) - Big 4 (Mexico, Brazil, Venezuela, Argentina) owe about $176 Billion (50% of debt) - $37/$176 Billion owed to 8 largest U.S. banks (representing 147% of capital reserves) Conditions After the Crisis Steps to Alleviate Debt Crisis • Bridge Loans - Permitted countries to pay interests only! • Debt-Equity Swap - Transfer of loan to another bank or 3rd party • Restructuring - Extension of terms or payment schedules • Securitization of Loans - Brady Plan • IMF Restrictions Brady Plan • Securitization of sovereign debt - 1989 Nicholas Brady U.S. Sec. of Treasury - Converted loans into bonds backed by U.S. T-bonds (available to general public) IMF Restrictions • Conditional Lending – Increase in Interest Rates to Increase F.D.I. – Devalue Currency to Increase NX – Decrease Government Spending (no subsidies) – Privatization to relief financial burden – Stabilizes Index Prices & Wages to control inflation – Removal of Tariff Barriers (from Import Substitution Industrialization Policy to Export Oriented Trade Policy) L.A.C. Balance of Foreign Debt (In Millions) Conditions Today Where Does L.A. Stand Now? Continued . . . Recent trends in Latin America's Fiscal Performance (OECD) • Since the end of the debt crisis of the 1980s, Latin American Countries have: – reduced deficits – lowered fiscal volatility – increased public expenditure and pioneered fiscal innovations. • However, important problems remain: – revenue generation relies on volatile non-tax sources and regressive indirect taxes, while public spending and social transfers play a very limited Any Questions?