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Maymester:Singapore Maymester 2015 Information Session: October 28 th 4-5 pm, VKC 300a Or contact Ashley Bonanno at bonanno@usc.edu Application due Nov. 14th Application Requirements: GPA above 3.2 IR Courses:210, and on East Asia Program Costs: 4 units of Spring 2015 Tuition: $6408 Room/Board: +/-$1300 Airfare and miscellaneous costs will be discussed at the information session/please contact Ashley Bonanno. Possible funding: SOAR, various centers on campus and Asian Foundation
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IMF and the Financial Crises Lecture 18 Guest: Bozovic 10/28/14
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Recap Why did Mexico get into trouble? IMF role in helping Mexico? Today: – Asian Financial Crisis – Eurozone Crisis – Role of IMF 3Lecture 18
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Asian Financial Crisis Foreign currency reserves http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HiphWQfB6 J0 Using reserves to stabilize currency http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TZ7d5kjAlQ w Lecture 184
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Asian Financial Crisis Speculative attack on currency http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P2IWGlR1S Hs&feature=relmfu Lecture 185
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Epicenter: Thailand Capital inflow Expanding banking sector, loose regulation Real estate bubble, non-productive sector Issues: – Dollar appreciation = baht appreciation – Slowing economy – Real estate sector in trouble – About to take banking sector down with it Lecture 186
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Epicenter: Thailand The conditions mentioned before set the stage for a speculative attack Asian Financial Crisis http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lA3sjWwu5- s&feature=relmfu Lecture 187
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Thailand goes down 1997 Insufficient foreign currency reserves Over-leveraged banks – Bad loans – Owe a lot in $$$ Current account deficits increased – High consumption/spending during “good”times – Appreciating currency Lecture 188
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Asian Financial Crisis Contagion – Malaysia, Indonesia, Korea, Philippines – Investors start pulling out of Asian economies – Herd mentality don’t have time to wait for bad information; pull out before we get hurt Lecture 189
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IMF response Influx of money to generate confidence – Staves off capital flight – Problem: bailout for international banks Pro-cyclical fiscal policies – Policies: increase interest rates, cut spending – Problem: slows the economy, you need deficits during recessions – Counter: too late for that, drives up risk Lecture 1810
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IMF response Restructuring – Policies: closing banks, liberalizing markets – Problem: controversial, beyond IMF scope – Counter: ensures future ability to repay Encouraging openness – Policies: liberalization and restructuring – Problem: volatility, they already had a lot of savings – Counter: openness is a good thing for access to capital. Problem is too little regulation Lecture 1811
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Consequences Eventual devaluations Unemployment soared, benefits cut GDP plummeted (graph: GDP growth) Banks closed Parallels? Lecture 1812
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Consequences in Thailand Lecture 1813
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Model Lecture 1814
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Eurozone Crisis Why single currency? What made the markets excited about Greece? – Entry into the EU – Euro benefits – Signals potential future wealth Lecture 1815
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Epicenter: Greece Loss of confidence by the investors – New party declares the deficit numbers wrong – Capital flight and sovereign risk – Greece refuses to come to terms with this Contagion – Spain – Portugal – Italy 7 th largest economy Fears among investors IMF does not have enough money to bail out Europe Lecture 1816
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Eurozone Consequences? Why can’t they just print money? Lecture 1817
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Eurozone Why isn’t austerity working? – You raise taxes and cut spending – This causes more recession – When the economy slows you raise less in tax revenue (less production and earnings) – Must raise taxes and cut spending even more – Causes mass protests and strikes Lecture 1818
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Role of the IMF “Troika” – IMF + EC + ECB Lending – Strengthening the banking sector, influx of capital Expertise – Monitoring and policy advice Legitimacy – Credibility vis-à-vis private investors – Independent of European national politics – Telling Germans to “tone down” their austerity demands Lecture 1819
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Critique Not putting as many conditions on new loans Relaxing the rules on involvement – High probability of debt sustainability does not hold in the case of Greece, Ireland, Portugal – Debt restructuring kicked down the street Lecture 1820
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