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An Evaluation of the Devaluation
by: Sam Vaknin, Ph.D.
A Minister of Finance is morally
right to lie about a forthcoming devaluation and a woman has the
right to lie about her age. This is the common wisdom.
Rumours about a devaluation of the
Macedonian Denar versus the major currencies were in the air during
the last few weeks. Still, no government official had to lie. The
market just did not believe it. The unofficial exchange rate stayed
put at 27 MKD to the Deutschmark even as the devaluation was taking
place.
This is strange. Devaluation
rumours are usually reflected in the street exchange rates. The MKD
has held its turf against other currencies in the last three years.
A devaluation seemed like a reasonable proposition - or was it?
Why do governments devalue?
They do it mainly to improve the
balance of trade. A devaluation means that more local currency is
needed to purchase imports and exporters get more local currency
when they convert the export proceeds (the foreign exchange that
they get for their exports). In other words: imports become more
expensive - and exporters earn more money. This is supposed to
discourage imports - and to encourage exports and, in turn, to
reduce trade deficits.
At least, this is the older,
conventional thinking. A devaluation is supposed to improve the
competitiveness of exporters in their foreign markets. They can even
afford to reduce their prices in their export markets and to finance
this reduction from the windfall profits that they get from the
devaluation. In professional jargon we say that a devaluation
"improves the terms of trade".
But before we examine the question
whether all this is true in the case of Macedonia - let us study a
numerical example.
Let us assume that we have a
national economy with for types of products:
Imported, Exported, Locally
Produced Import Substitutes, Locally consumed Exportable Products.
In an economy in equilibrium all four will be identically priced,
let us say at 2700 Denars (= 100 DEM) each.
When the exchange rate is 27 MKD/DM,
the total consumption of these products will not be influenced by
their price. Rather, considerations of quality, availability,
customer service, market positioning, status symbols and so on will
influence the consumption decision.
But this will all change when the
exchange rate is 31 MKD/DM following a devaluation.
The Imported product will now be
sold locally at 3100. The Importer will have to pay more MKD to get
the same amount of DM that he needs to pay the foreign manufacturer
of the product that he is importing.
The Exported products will now
fetch the exporter the same amount of income in foreign exchange.
Yet, when converted to MKD - he will receive 400 MKD more than
before the devaluation. He could use this money to increase his
profits - or to reduce the price of his product in the foreign
markets and sell more (which will also increase his profits).
The Locally Produced Import
Substitutes will benefit: they will still be priced at 2700 - while
the competition (Imports) will have to increase the price to 3100
not to lose money!
The local consumption of products
which can, in principle, be exported - will go down. The exporter
will prefer to export them and get more MKD for his foreign exchange
earnings.
These are the subtle mechanisms by
which exports go up and imports go down following a devaluation.
In Macedonia, the situation is less
clear. There is a great component of imported raw materials in the
exported industrial products. The price of this component will
increase. The price of capital assets (machinery, technology,
intellectual property, software) will also increase and make it more
difficult for local businesses to invest in their future. Still, it
is safe to say that the overall effect of the devaluation will
favour exporters and exports and reduce imports marginally.
Unfortunately, most of the imports
are indispensable at any price (inelastic demand curve): raw
materials, capital assets, credits, even cars. People buy cars not
only to drive them - but also in order to preserve the value of
their money. Cars in Macedonia are a commodity and a store of value
and these functions are difficult to substitute.
But this is all in an idealized
country which really exists nowhere. In reality, devaluation tends
to increase inflation (=the general price level) and thus have an
adverse macro-economic effect. Six mechanisms operate immediately
following a devaluation:
- The price of imported products
goes up.
- The price of goods and services,
denominated in foreign exchange goes up. An example: prices of
apartments and residential and commercial rentals is fixed in DEM.
These prices increase (in terms of MKD) by the percentage of
devaluation - immediately! The same goes for consumer goods, big
(cars) and small (electronics).
- Exporters get more MKD for their
foreign exchange (and this has an inflationary effect).
- People can convert money that
they saved in foreign exchange - and get more MKD for it. A
DEVALUATION IS A PRIZE GIVEN TO SPECULATORS AND TO BLACK MARKET
OPERATORS.
- Thus, the cost of living
increases. People put pressure on their employees to increase
their salaries. Unfortunately, there is yet no example in history
in which governments and employers were completely successful in
fending off such pressures. Usually, they give in, wholly or
partially.
Certain countries tried to contain
such wage pressures and the wage driven inflation which is a result
of wage increases.
The government, employee trade
unions and representatives of employers’ unions - sign "economic
pacts or package deals".
The government undertakes not to
raise fees for public services, the employers agree not to fire
people or not to reduce wages and employee trade unions agree not to
demand wage hikes and not to strike.
Such economic pacts have been very
successful in stabilizing inflation in many countries, from Israel
to Argentina.
Still, some of the devaluation
inevitably seeps into the wages. The government can effectively
control only such employees as are in its direct employment. It
cannot dictate to the private sector.
- Inflation gradually erodes the
competitive advantage awarded to the exporters by the devaluation
which preceded it. So devaluations have a tendency to create a
cancerous chain reaction: devaluation-inflation followed by more
devaluation and yet by more inflation.
Arguably, the worst effect of a
devaluation is the psychological one.
Macedonia has succeeded where many
other countries failed: it created an atmosphere of macro-economic
stability. It is a fact that the differential between the official
and non-official exchange rates was very small (about 3.5%). This
was a sign of trust in the macro-economic management. This
devaluation had the effects of drugs: it could prove stimulating to
the economic body in the short term - but it might be harmful to it
in the longer term.
These risks are worth taking under
two conditions:
- That the devaluation is part of
a comprehensive economic program intended to stimulate the economy
and mainly the export sector.
- That the devaluation is part of
a long term macro-monetary plan with clear, OPENLY DECLARED,
goals. In other words: the government and the Central Bank should
have designed a multi-year plan, stating clearly their inflation
objectives and by how much they are going to devalue the currency
(MKD) over and above the inflation target. This is much preferable
to "shock therapy": keeping the devaluation secret until the last
minute and then declaring it overnight, taking everyone by
surprise. The instinctive reaction is: "But if the government
announces its intentions in advance - people and speculators will
rush to take advantage of these plans. For instance, they will buy
foreign exchange and put pressure on the government to devalue by
dilapidating its foreign currency reserves".
If so, why didn’t it happen in
Israel, Argentina, Chile and tens of other countries? In all these
countries, the government announced inflation and devaluation
targets well in advance. Surprisingly, it had the following effects:
- The business sector was able to
plan its operations years in advance, to price its products
properly, to protect itself by buying financial hedge contracts.
Suddenly, the business environment became safe and predictable.
This had an extremely favourable micro-economic effect.
- The currency stabilized and
displayed qualities normally associated with "hard currencies".
For instance, the New Israeli Shekel, which no one wanted to touch
and which was immediately converted to US dollars (to protect the
value) - became a national hit. It appreciated by 50% (!) against
the dollar, people sold their dollars and bought Shekels - and all
this with an inflation of 18% per year! It became a truly
convertible currency - because people could predict its value over
time.
- The consistency, endurance and
resilience of the governments in implementing their macro-economoic
agendas - made the populace regain their trust. Citizens began to
believe their governments again. The openness of the government,
the transparency of its operations and the fact that it kept its
word - meant a lot in restoring the right, trusting relationship
which should prevail between subjects and their administration.
That strict measures are taken to
prevent the metamorphosis of the devaluation into inflation. The
usual measures include a freeze on all wages, a reduction of the
budget deficit, even temporary anti-import protective barriers to
defend the local industries and to reduce inflationary pressures.
Granted, the government of
Macedonia and its Central Bank are not entirely autonomous in
setting the economic priorities and in deciding which measures to
adopt and to what extent. They have to attune themselves to "advice"
(not to say dictates or conditions) given by the likes of the IMF.
If they fail to do so, the IMF and the World Bank will cut Macedonia
off the bloodlines of international credits. The situation is, at
times, very close to coercion.
Still, Macedonia could use
successful examples in other countries to argue its case. It could
have made this devaluation a turning point for the economy. It could
have reached a nationwide consensus to work towards a better
economic future within a national "Economic Agenda". It is still not
to late to do so. A devaluation should be an essential part of any
economic program. It could still be the cornerstone in an export
driven, employment oriented, economy stimulating edifice.
About The Author
Sam Vaknin is the author of "Malignant Self Love - Narcissism
Revisited" and "After the Rain - How the West Lost the East". He
is a columnist in "Central Europe Review", United Press
International (UPI) and ebookweb.org and the editor of mental
health and Central East Europe categories in The Open Directory,
Suite101 and searcheurope.com. Until recently, he served as the
Economic Advisor to the Government of Macedonia.
His web site:
http://samvak.tripod.com |
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