OPINION
GUEST ESSAY
The U.S. Wants to Tackle Inflation. Here’s Why
That Should Worry the Rest of the World.
April 28,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/04/28/opinion/fed-inflation-interest-rates-third-world-debt.html
Credit...Adam
McCauley
By Jamie
Martin
Dr. Martin
is an economic historian at Georgetown University.
As the
Federal Reserve begins to raise interest rates to tackle the highest inflation
the United States has seen in decades, it confronts a growing risk that it will
spark a recession in the process.
The
trade-off faced by the Fed — between price stability and employment — is
usually framed in strictly domestic terms. But aggressive efforts to quell
inflation in the United States can have major, unpredictable effects around the
world, often with long-lasting, negative consequences for countries in the
Global South. And the United States will not be immune to worldwide economic
trends. The inflation hawks should consider all of this as they figure out how
to address rising prices in the United States today.
History is
a good guide to how destructive the Fed’s policies can be for the rest of the
world. Just look back to the 1980s. After several years of rising prices,
President Jimmy Carter appointed Paul Volcker to lead the Fed in 1979. Mr.
Volcker raised the federal funds rate — the interest rate that banks charge one
another for short-term borrowing and which guides other interest rates — up to
nearly 20 percent. By the end of 1982, unemployment had reached 10.8 percent in
the United States, but inflation slowed, and Mr. Volcker acquired a mythic
status as a farsighted leader unafraid to make tough decisions. That’s why he
is cited in so many calls for the Fed to aggressively tackle inflation today.
But the
effects of Mr. Volcker’s decisions were felt beyond the United States’ borders.
As interests rates rose, debts accrued by foreign countries became more
difficult to service. This led to a wave of defaults among countries that had
borrowed heavily on international markets in the years before, beginning with
Mexico in 1982 and then spreading throughout Latin America and beyond.
In
developing countries, the debt crisis that followed the so-called Volcker shock
was profoundly traumatic. Across Latin America, it led to a collapse in G.D.P.,
rising unemployment and skyrocketing levels of poverty, from which the region
made a slow and imperfect recovery over the “lost decade” that followed. Even
those who claim Mr. Volcker made the right decision admit that he precipitated
what may have been the “worst financial disaster the world had ever seen” in
Latin America — the consequences of which were even worse than those of the
Great Depression. Among heavily indebted states in Africa, the effects were
similar. But American policymakers at the time did not give much attention to
the global repercussions of their decisions. As Mr. Volcker himself later
admitted, “Africa was not even on my radar screen.”
An even
more relevant example may be from the early 20th century. The first time that
the Fed — along with other major central banks — helped spark a global
recession was in 1920. By the end of World War I, two years earlier, the world
was facing a serious inflationary crisis caused by many of the same forces at
work today: global supply chain disruptions, shipping shortages and loose
monetary policies. Then, as now, the price of wheat soared as Russian sources
disappeared from global markets. From the Gold Coast (now Ghana) to Argentina,
food, fuel and clothing became unaffordable, at the same time that an influenza
pandemic killed millions. As wages failed to keep pace with rising costs of
living, a wave of uprisings, racist mob violence and mass strikes broke out
around the world.
The
immediate cause was the war’s effects on trade, shipping and finance. But even
after the war’s conclusion, these inflationary pressures did not subside. In
early 1920 the Fed, alongside other major central banks, sharply raised
interest rates. This reined in inflation, but it came at the cost of a
worldwide recession: In 1920-21, unemployment in Britain reached heights
rivaling those of the Depression; the United States saw a deep, though
relatively short-lived, deflationary crisis.
The
longest-lasting effects of this recession were in poorer, non-industrialized
economies throughout Europe’s colonial empires and Latin America. When
commodity prices collapsed, the producers and exporters of goods like wheat,
sugar and rubber were devastated. The long-term effects of the crash of 1920-21
on these economies was similar to those of the Depression and the slump of the
1980s.
What will
be the effects of the Fed’s efforts to tackle inflation today? It’s not just
distant history that counsels caution. In 2013, the slightest hint by Ben
Bernanke, then the chairman of the Fed, that monetary tightening was around the
corner was enough to send many emerging market economies into a tailspin. The
prospect of higher borrowing costs led to capital outflows and currency
instability that battered Indonesia, Brazil, India, South Africa and Turkey
with particular severity. The decade that followed saw sluggish performance for
many emerging market economies.
.
Conditions
are now ripe for the Fed to precipitate another global crisis. Of particular
concern are extremely high levels of emerging-market debt. The International
Monetary Fund estimates that about 60 percent of low-income developing
countries are experiencing debt distress or are close to it. Sri Lanka’s recent
default may be the first domino to fall. Tighter monetary policy in the United
States will push many other countries to raise their interests rates to prevent
capital flight and currency instability. But this will contract their
economies, threatening recovery from the pandemic and delivering another blow
to their long-term growth.
These
conditions should give pause to the inflation hawks calling on the Fed to act
aggressively. Yet the institution has a mandate that is nationally bound: to
promote price stability and maximum employment in the United States alone. What
this means is that the Fed is a national institution that, in effect, sets
monetary policy for the entire world.
This should
add urgency to thinking about alternative measures for dealing with inflation.
Interest rates are often treated as the only available tool, but the federal
government has other ways to contain rising prices that are more targeted than
the blunt tools of aggressive monetary tightening. For example, the government
can also intervene in sectors prone to severe inflationary pressures, like
health care and housing. In the longer term, investment in infrastructure could
prevent the kind of bottlenecks wreaking havoc on the economy today.
But the
truth is that a problem created by the Fed may have to be dealt with by someone
else. If and when the Fed does slam the brakes on the economy, a robust
international response will be needed. Traditionally, the International
Monetary Fund has dealt with the fallout of global debt crises, but its
reputation has been tarnished by its eagerness to enforce austerity and painful
reforms on countries reeling from financial crisis — the last thing their
economies need for sustained growth. The Group of 20, which handles questions
of sovereign debt relief, has been hobbled by worsening conflict among its most
powerful members.
If
institutions of global economic governance are to cope with the risks posed by
sharp rate hikes in the United States, they need to change how they mobilize
and distribute resources and treat their most vulnerable member states. One
start would be for the I.M.F. to expand its issuance of special drawing rights,
which provide a financial lifeline to member states without strings attached —
but which Congress has opposed out of fear that the money will go to strategic
rivals. The I.M.F. should also reduce the punitive surcharges it demands of
vulnerable debtors, which add an enormous burden to their already crushing debt
loads. The United States, which has tremendous influence over the I.M.F.,
should help push for this — especially since it could be decisions made in
Washington that make such reforms urgent right now.
There’s
little question that inflation is real and painful today. But great care is
needed to ensure that the United States’ response to it does not lead, as it
has in the past, to yet another lost decade for much of the world.
Jamie
Martin (@jamiemartin2) is a history professor at Georgetown University and the
author of the forthcoming book “The Meddlers: Sovereignty, Empire and the Birth
of Global Economic Governance.”
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