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UN Themaic Dialogue on Financial Crisis

March 31, 2009 1 comment

Sixty-third General Assembly

Thematic Dialogue on World 

Financial Crisis (AM)

DEEP REFORMS OF GLOBAL FINANCIAL SYSTEM INEVITABLE RESPONSE TO PROTRACTED CRISIS, 

BUT QUESTION IS WHETHER THEY WILL BE AD HOC OR ORDERLY, GENERAL ASSEMBLY HEARS

Expert Commission Chief Says Both Immediate Economic Stimulus, Redesigned ; Financial Regulatory Schemes Needed, as Three-Day Run-Up to June Event Concludes

Fundamental reforms in the global financial system were inevitable given how deep and prolonged the economic crisis facing the world community would be, the General Assembly was told today as it concluded its three-day interactive dialogue on the World Financial and Economic Crisis and Its Impact on Development.

“These reforms will occur and the only question is whether they will occur in a random and ad hoc way or if they will be orderly,” Nobel Laureate Joseph Stiglitz said in his capacity as Chairman of the Commission of Experts of the President of the United Nations General Assembly on Reforms of the International Monetary and Financial System.  He said the Commission believed the more proactive approach of a top-down global strategy was preferable.

The interactive dialogue was intended to help Member States define a common position for taking stock of the crisis, evaluating alternative short-term emergency measures and shaping an effective approach for longer-term efforts to restore dynamism, revive employment and enhance equity in the world economy.  Its deliberations centred around a set of draft recommendations made by the “Stiglitz Commission”, which will provide a final set of prescriptions before the high-level United Nations conference on the economic crisis scheduled from 1 to 3 June.

In his closing comments, Mr. Stiglitz said a dichotomy had surfaced in the Assembly’s discussions between immediate economic stimulus or a redesign of financial regulatory regimes, but it was a false dichotomy, as both actions were needed.  Moreover, while it was prudent to make use of existing institutions, it was important both to reform them and create new ones.

Among the new institutions, the Commission was calling for a global economic coordination council at the level of the General Assembly or Security Council; a global reserve system; a new credit facility to provide developing countries with greater resources; a financial products safety commission; a global financial regulatory authority; a global competition authority; and an international bankruptcy court.

Mr. Stiglitz argued that the critical difference between the current crisis and past ones, like the Asian crisis when talk of reform had been mere words, was the developed world’s position at the epicentre.  “This is not a downturn that happened on the periphery.  It began in the centre and has gone to the rest of the world with devastating effects on the periphery.”

In that way, the crisis had exposed flaws in the global economic system and in globalization, making a return to the world of the past impossible, he said.  It was, therefore, in the interest of every country — rich and poor, debtor and creditor alike — to create the kind of strong institutions the Commission had proposed.  Indeed, since instability in the international economic structures affected each country, global action would be critical.

He acknowledged that the Commission’s goal had been ambitious of diagnosing the problem, prescribing immediate remedies and instigating long-term structural reform to prevent the problem’s recurrence through a list of 20 recommendations.  But something as complex as what to do in the current crisis could not be summarized in 20 points.  Nor could the task of reforming the global economic institutions be accomplished in a month, six months or even a year.  But the Commission intended for its recommendations to serve as a framework to guide thinking for the long-term undertaking ahead.

In this, the most difficult part would be political -– and it would be the work of Member States to reach the necessary compromises and make the tough choices.  While it might be a long, unpredictable journey, he said “there is no certainty except the certainty that we can and must do better than we have”.

Echoing that sentiment, Assembly President Miguel D’Escoto Brockmann said the urgency of the unfolding economic and financial crises was unmistakable and made clear just how critical the reform of the financial infrastructure was.

It was time, he emphasized, for the General Assembly to rise to that challenge, giving adequate weight to its collective responsibility to be the voice of “we the peoples…” and to ensure that the common good was paramount over petty self-interest.  The rights of the world’s most vulnerable to full participation in the global economy must be defended.  They could no longer be seen as scapegoats or victims, but as legitimate stakeholders.

He said that, for growth, prosperity and progress to benefit everyone, they could not be based on patterns of insatiable greed and consumption, but on sound internationally-regulated financial and monetary institutions.  Those institutions should enable inclusive and people-centred development policies; fair and equitable trade regimes; ecological and sustainable food systems; and labour regimes that addressed the special needs of women.

During the wide-ranging panel discussion on the Commission’s recommendations earlier this morning, several speakers debated how the mix of responses should be appropriately divided on the national, regional and international levels.  Getting the balance right was necessary to properly mitigate the especially dire impact on the developing countries, many said.

As they had the day before, a few speakers focused on the Commission’s call for a new global reserve system.  Pointing out that there was no reference to an international reserve currency in the Commission’s report, one delegate wondered if the Commission would consider that in the framework of a global reserve system.

One Commission member, who is the former chief economist for the United States Senate Banking Committee, explained that the Commission had recommended a new global reserve currency on grounds that it would relieve deflationary pressures.  He also underlined the “mutual stake” the United States and creditor countries — which included Japan, China and the oil producers — had in price stability, suggesting the timing of any evolution in the “international store of value” would be determined by the United States and large creditor nations, the foremost of which was China.

Another Commission member, who is also the Director of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences’ Institute of World Economics and Politics, speaking in his personal capacity, noted that the Governor of the People’s Bank of China had recently called for the creation of a new reserve currency to replace the dollar.  Its base, he said, should be broadened to include all major currencies. 

Panel

The panel today dealt with macroeconomic measures in response to the crisis, the international financial architecture and re-regulating the financial system.  It was moderated by Claude Heller (Mexico) and featured presentations by Jean-Paul Fitoussi, Professeur des Universités, IEP de Paris; Robert Johnson, head economist of the United States Banking Committee; Yu Yongding, Director, Institute of World Economics and Politics, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences; and Benno Ndulo, Governor of the Bank of the United Republic of Tanzania.

In opening remarks, Mr. HELLER said that, when it came to the global financial architecture, international consensus had emerged on the need for reform.  “We are all aware it will be a complex process,” he said, although it seemed clear that an international financial and economic system that could promote development was imperative.  There also appeared to be broad consensus in acknowledging that a root cause lay with the flaws of the regulatory system, particularly in developed countries.  It was important to move forward swiftly and decisively.

Speaking first on macroeconomic measures in response to the crisis, Mr. FITOUSSI discussed the reasoning behind the recommendations presented yesterday.  There were three components to today’s crisis:  financial, economic and intellectual, and the interplay among them had had disastrous social consequences on the most vulnerable populations.  The intellectual component would be the most difficult to remedy, given the dominance of the intellectual doctrine that had existed before the crisis.

Addressing aggregate demand, he said all economic strategies developed in the last three decades had eventually led to insufficient aggregate demand.  Excess savings was hidden by bubbles, a course run for capital gain rather than earnings from work.  Also, confidence had been lost in the international system and labour markets.  It would be difficult to prove any relationship between a Chief Executive Officer’s salary and his or her productivity, which was the basis of market equilibrium.  It began with fiscal and social competition, whose pretext was globalization.  There was an urgent need to improve coordination, as solutions would be unlikely without it.

On fiscal policy, he said there was an assumption that responsible Governments, properly coordinated, could use fiscal stimulus intelligently.  However, some economists did not believe in Governments’ ability to reverse tax cuts or spending increases.  Inflation would increase, and that would lead to currency depreciation.  They argued against using discretionary fiscal policy.  The Commission did not share that view.  “We have to remind ourselves that democracy is the only self-correcting institution that we know,” he said.  It repaired its own mistakes.  Regarding the “stability pact”, he said, “we are not advocating tax cuts, but for the poorest part of the population, as a means to decrease inequality.  We favour the building of new capital -– of human capital, assets, environment and fighting climate change.”

Regarding monetary policies, he said policymakers must not only look at price stability, but at real stability, including people’s security.  It was a multidimensional construct, and could not be summarized by a single statistic, like the consumer price index.  He urged re-evaluating inflation targeting, which was based on such a statistic.  On solidarity and social protection, he said belief in the superiority of market outcomes had decreased both those phenomena.  Social protection was a stabilization tool in times of crisis.  There must be understanding that the system was comprised of the market principle and the democratic principle.  If States were unable to mix those principles, the crisis would not be solved.

Mr. JOHNSON said that, in the years leading up to the current crisis, the perspective of most economists had been far from scientific.  Rather, it had merely reinforced the position of those in power.  Now, the externalities, or side effects, of the actions and failures of the financial sector had spread around the planet.  To say that was unforeseeable, like a hurricane or a tornado, was intellectually dishonest.  The financial sector had been cheered by the media, given the go-ahead by lax regulatory regimes and justified by the academy.  But unfortunately, when financial sectors failed, it was nearly impossible to make guarantees to bail them out or to restructure them.  Citizens were now outraged because the people who received the benefits of the boom years were now being bailed out at the expense of those people whose lives had already been restructured many times by the crisis.

Turning to the Commission’s recommendations, he said the Commission had specifically looked at ways to alleviate the scenario whereby the United States’ consumer was the “buyer of last resort”.  As Joseph Stiglitz had suggested yesterday, credit innovation in the United States had allowed ever greater consumption even though wages had not kept pace with productivity, and that innovation had to be incorporated in future reform.  The Commission’s recommendations also focused on macroeconomic policy that advocated spending rather than tax cuts -– the fallback policy in the United States — to provide stimulus.  It further emphasized that because impacts from stimulus packages would be felt in any given country engaged in international trade, awareness of those externalities would allow for more open and effective trade.  He had been encouraged by recent steps in China that appeared to be in line with the Commission’s recommendation for Keynesian deficit-spending stimulus.

The danger of poorly designed bailouts of the financial sector was that there was not an infinite ability to borrow, he said.  Faulty bailouts would cost too much, leading to a diminished appetite for the stimulus of aggregate demand.  That process was well under way in the United States, where people were daunted by the size of the bailouts and were cutting back on programmes that could actually contribute to stimulus.  Market fundamentalism was always invoked to relieve constraints and regulations and maximize the freedom of those in the financial sector.  But in reality, anyone who had worked in that sector knew that, in the case of a catastrophe, they would be bailed out.  That created a moral hazard in which financiers felt freer to take dangerous risks.  In the United States, consumer protection schemes had been designed to protect those who might be persuaded to invest in situations that were less than ideal.

Noting the Commission’s recommendation for the establishment of a global coordinating authority, he said its guidelines would hopefully reduce resistance by some to arbitrage.  The Commission had also stressed that, in its current arrangement, the Financial Stability Forum’s representation was not adequate.  Further, so-called “innovations”, such as credit-default swaps, were in too many cases off-balance-sheet mechanisms or were designed to skirt regulations.  OTCs [over-the-counter derivative instruments] should be traded on exchanges, thereby forcing them to have real prices.  Where that did not happen, the Commission was recommending that the risks should be evaluated and capital charges applied.

He said “democratic capitalism” was challenged in the realm of finance by the ability to buy and sell the rules.  In the United States, the remedy for such a situation was most clearly defined as campaign finance reform.  On the issue of expertise, too many vulnerable citizens were told they should not tamper with the system, but should defer to the experts.  “I believe the experts have failed the democracy profoundly,” he said, encouraging citizens around the world to “stiffen their spine and not defer”. 

Mr. YONGDING fully endorsed the Commission.  Clarifying that he was not speaking on behalf of the Chinese Government, he said the crisis had hit the Chinese economy severely.  The Government’s response had been swift; after two months, it had introduced a stimulus plan.  The Government was targeting 8 per cent growth in gross domestic product.  While there were doubts about that, he was confident it could be achieved.   China was in a good position.  The budget deficit was very low, and last year had seen a surplus.  The banking system, after fundamental reform, was also good.  The country had not suffered from a liquidity shortage or credit crunch.  The domestic market was big, and demand for consumer goods was strong.  Also, the Government had paid attention to structural reform.   China must use domestic demand to replace external demand, as dependency on external demand had been too high.   China would try to increase imports and reduce its trade surplus to contribute to the global economy.

He said the international financial architecture had been characterized by the United States dollar as the single currency.  As such, the United States had run account deficits for more than two decades.  The fact that it borrowed from the world’s poorest countries was both “ridiculous” and “unacceptable”.  While he believed assurances that there would be no dramatic fall in the dollar in the future, he also was nervous.  Citing a Chinese adage that “you should not give up trying to kill a dead horse”, he said that, in that spirit, the international financial architecture must be reformed.  The Governor of the People’s Bank of China had called for the creation of a new reserve currency -– a kind of special drawing right (SDR) -– to replace the dollar.  Its base should be broadened to include all major currencies.  There were options for China in the reform process.   China would continue to engage in creation of a regional financial architecture -– the Chiang Mai Initiative.   China also could speed the renminbi’s nationalization.  Everybody was in trouble, including China, and there would be a unique opportunity to more constructively reform the international financial architecture.

Mr. NDULO said that, during yesterday’s discussion, one key question had been whether the existing financial institutions could be strengthened so as to engage in their own reform.  Two short articles had appeared in the Financial Times earlier this week by the German Economic Minister and by Sir Nicholas Stern, both talking about those issues and both remarkably close to the Commission’s proposal to create new institutions rather than remaking existing ones.

For his part, he said there were actually two major conditions that tended to favour setting up new institutions:  they would be less prone to political “capture” and more likely to promote even-handed censure.  There should be separation between lending and policy functions.  As Sir Stern had written, “The institution making the analysis and judgments must not have anything other than its own reputation riding on its assessment; in particular, its own policies or lending should not be shaped in any way by its judgment”; it must be democratically governed and free of restrictions to make assessments and issue early warnings, without peer pressure.  Its governance must also be free of dominance by systemically significant countries.

If those conditions were taken as important criteria, it would seem that the proposals for setting up the economic coordination council, the global regulatory authority and the global competition authority would meet them, he said.  The option of having the global fund under the World Bank would present a conflict of interest.  Indeed, he believed a separation was important.  He had served in those institutions and knew the problems of disclosure.

Discussion

In the ensuing discussion, the representative of the Dominican Republic asked Mr. Johnson for information on corrective measures to address poverty. 

The representative of Bangladesh asked about the implications of bailout programmes.  Also, to what extent were externalities being considered in stimulus packages?  Regarding alternative reserve currencies, he said that idea merited consideration.  There was no reference to an international reserve currency in the Commission’s report, and he asked if the Commission would consider it in the framework of a new global reserve system.  United States Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner was stubbornly against the idea, so how then would it proceed?

The representative of Pakistan quoting the United States Treasury Secretary, who said that the system had failed in fundamental ways and that addressing it would require fundamental reform, asked if the Commission’s recommendations had been able to propose that kind of reform.

The representative of Brazil said that, in addition to short-term measures, major reforms might be needed to address the root causes of the crisis.  On the regulation of the financial system, he said re-regulation was a tendency, but he wondered whether the locus of reform should originate at the local level or be coordinated internationally.  Also, how urgent was it to implement such reforms?

The representative of Benin said the role of international institutions in managing external debt was problematic.  He asked for more information on debt management and how to reform management mechanisms to give poor countries a chance in the international system.

Commission member PEDRO PAEZ, former Minister for Economic Coordination for Ecuador, said the world was facing just another case of market failures or floors.  There were many mechanisms that could change the current situation, but they did not exist.  One of the political decisions that could result from meetings such as this one, where 192 countries were represented, was to find something viable to ensure that the markets finally worked in textbook fashion.  Specifically, a mechanism was needed to generate rates that would allow all the Third World debt to be recouped.  That would generate better fiscal conditions, not only in the poorest countries, but in middle-income ones, and allow for the implementation of counter-cyclical measures.  That would also allow for the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals, and provide the developing world the opportunity to catch up to the developed world.  But that would only be possible if there was political will that went beyond the hypocrisy that reigned in certain circles and made the human cost the main concern.

Emphasizing that the current crisis had not been caused by the poorest developing countries, he said reform was primarily needed in the political arena.  Poor and middle-income countries needed to be given the room to manoeuvre so they could defend themselves against the crisis.  A global reserve system would make that possible.  Progress was also being made towards a new financial architecture in the South, where contacts with Asia were growing.  Stressing the need for greater accountability mechanisms, since matters of governance and due diligence would be crucial in recovering a civilized economic order, he particularly underlined the role of regional mechanisms.

FRANCOIS HOUTART of Belgium said he had doubts about the concept of capitalist democracy.  It was important to distinguish between capitalism and real capitalism.  He was chair of the Permanent People’s Tribunal, and there were 44 claims against European multinationals that dealt with the destruction of nature and human rights.  Some 43 claims had to be accepted, as the behaviour of those institutions had violated human rights, in full contradiction of democracy.  If capitalism excluded the calculation of externalities –- the destruction of nature, for example -– the logic of the capitalist system must be discussed.  That was related to the definition of the economy.  If “economy” was defined simply as human activity that created the basis for people’s lives, then thinking beyond capitalism was needed to restore democracy.

The representative of the United Republic of Tanzania questioned the validity and practicality of bailing out businesses that were no longer viable.  He asked the panellists, particularly Mr. Johnson, to comment on that.

Responding to the questions, Mr. JOHNSON referred to how to protect smaller countries during economic crises.  Capital flight from developing countries occurred during periods of shock, instability and recession.  The Bretton Woods institutions had set up a system in which multilateral institutions put money back into developing countries when rich nations pulled their money out.  Capital in developing countries was counter-cyclical.  Developing countries had little or no representation in the current voting structures of the Bretton Woods institutions, but they were subjected to many conditionalities that did not reflect the externalities –- or positive benefit of having such peripheral countries remain buoyant.  Giving developing nations a greater voice in international institutions was at the core of the reform process.

The Turner report, which advocated greater banking regulation in the United Kingdom and a move away from riskier practices, had made a strong call for regulation, he said.  While remaining critical of the United States’ financial bailout structures, he lauded the proposals by United States Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner for greater regulation.

In terms of whether financial regulatory reform should begin at the local level or be coordinated internationally, he said there must be international agreement and standards.  The world was organized as nations and it needed a mix of primarily national regulations that were harmonized and consistent.  It was better to get the reform process right than to hastily enact the wrong changes.  But “analysis paralysis” should not be allowed either. 

There was a need to foster fair competition and continued liberalization, not in the ideological sense, but in a way that took into account countries’ constraints.  Too often, capital liberalization had disadvantaged developing countries.  Countries must coordinate their stimulus packages.  Debates on that were under way between the European Union and the United States, but they were focused on accounting rather than substance.  The problem, however, was that accounting was not the issue.  There should not be a debate over whether to impose regulation or stimulus packages because both were needed.  Good and efficient regulation at home was essential.  It was very difficult to devise a good regulation system, but some basic principles must be inherent in any system.  He asked why countries still had tax havens, since it would really be better for the global economy as a whole to eliminate them. 

He said reform must be radical because the crisis was radical.  Major reform was needed since the financial system was not an end in itself but a means to an end.  Inequalities had been redistributed in reverse and had created agricultural deficiencies.  The crisis would recur if those imbalances were not addressed.  He asked if one could imagine a system that favoured productivity rather than lower taxes or a system that would avoid tax competition.  Large environmental problems must be addressed through energy efficiency.  There was a need to spend properly.  The world had a real opportunity to make decisions that reaped both short- and long-term gains.  Economic reforms should foster democracy, or they should not be implemented.

A representative of Social Watch, a coalition of civil society organizations monitoring poverty eradication and gender equality worldwide, pointed to comments yesterday by the Governor of the Bank of the Republic of Tanzania about the mandate and surveillance role of international financial institutions to avoid crisis.  He said those institutions that should have warned about the crisis had the power to control small and developing countries’ economies.  But they lacked the courage to tell the rulers of the world’s most powerful economies what was going wrong.  That was what had led to the current crisis.  It was important to look at oversight mechanisms.  A system was needed whereby the tide lifted all boats.  The world had been led to believe that globalization would do that.  But it was now experiencing a “titanic” in which only the big boats and the women and children travelling in first class survived, while those in steerage did not.  Many big reforms must be implemented to correct that.

The “trickle down” economic philosophy had its origin in the kind of thinking that opening capital accounts and liberalizing the economy was like joining the mafia, he said.  If the philosophy did not work, no one got a resignation letter.  That was what was happening now during the financial crisis.  Developing countries were being taken hostage, but what they really needed was a witness protection programme where capital controls were created to shield them from harm.

The representative of China said an unregulated financial system would have serious consequences.  Hedge funds were the cause of the Asian financial crisis and were not subjected to regulation.  Overlooking the risk factor had led to today’s crisis.  She asked about the insufficiency of measures taken at the national level and what could be done at the international level to improve them.

The representative of Thailand, regarding the reference to the Asian Monetary Fund, asked Mr. Yu about the path that had led to the Asian financial crisis.  She also wondered about early warning systems, specifically how the panellists viewed them, and whether a regional context could help.

The representative of Qatar said the report contained useful recommendations, and agreed that solutions were needed to contain the crisis.  Creating a just, sustainable world order was important.  At the follow-up International Conference on Financing for Development, an appeal had been launched to elaborate a new world order that would include all countries.  As the United Nations had been the appropriate forum for creating the international financial order, it was logical that it foster reform, and the high-level conference organized by the General Assembly President would enable the Organization to contribute to improved governance.

Responding to the query on the international reserve system, Mr. JOHNSON said the Commission had recommended the new global reserve currency on grounds that it would relieve deflationary pressures.  It was propitious that the Chinese delegate had brought that question to bear.  The United States and creditor countries — which included Japan, China and the oil producers — had a mutual stake in price stability.  The timing of the evolution of the “international store of value” would be determined by the United States and large creditor nations, the foremost of which was China.

Regarding the regulatory environment and hedge funds, he said creditor nations had a very strong stake in the financial integrity of the United States.  In the United States, the “too-big-to-fail institutions” had disproportionate political power, and could exact excessively costly influence on the bailout.  The integrity of the financial resolution process in major countries was intertwined with the “store of value” internationally.  Creditor countries had an important role to play in the future integrity of the system.

Mr. YU noted that, while theoretically there were problems between regional and global cooperation, in reality in East Asia, cooperation among countries in building a regional financial architecture would foster that at the global level.  There were no conflicts at this stage.  Asians were eager to cooperate, as they were disappointed at the International Monetary Fund’s performance.   China would seek to further the Chiang Mai Initiative.  Countries in the region were pooling funds, an important contribution to the creation of the global financial architecture.

Regarding early warning systems, he said economists could not give early warnings.  He urged not listening to the doctrine to completely liberalize the financial sector.  It was important to concentrate on further reform of the regulatory system and cross-border capital flows, rather than pin hopes on the brilliance of economists.

Taking the floor to comment, Commission member YAGA VENUGOPAL REDDY, former Governor of the Reserve Bank of India, said capital account management involved external debt management.  The existing institutional structure lacked governance and people’s confidence.  “Can we afford to use the same institutions,” he wondered.  There was an “angered necessity” to consider alternative arrangements.  There was also an urgent need to reform banking regulations, he added.

Source: http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2009/ga10817.doc.htm

No labourers to go to Malaysia without availability of jobs: Dhaka, Kuala Lumpur reach understanding

March 30, 2009 Leave a comment

Bangladesh yesterday reached an understanding with Malaysia to tighten laws to ensure that Bangladeshi labourers are not sent to manufacturing and plantation sectors in Malaysia without the availability of jobs.

Malaysia’s Human Resource Minister Dr S Subramaniam said that Bangladesh has assured them of enforcing legislation in Bangladesh to monitor the activities of recruiting agencies in the country, Malaysia’s official news agency Bernama reported yesterday.

Dr Subramaniam told reporters at the Parliament lobby in Kuala Lumpur that the discussions centred on the issue of Bangladeshi workers in Malaysia and problems associated with the current global economic challenges.

The statement came after Expatriates’ Welfare Minister Khandaker Mosharraf Hossain held a meeting with Subramaniam following Malaysia’s cancellation of 55,000 work visas to Bangladeshis on March 10.

Mosharraf left for Malaysia on March 28. Foreign Minister Dipu Moni, who went to Malaysia on March 25, has already held meetings with high officials of the country to solve the labour related issues.

The human resources ministry suggested that Bangladesh contact the Manpower Department directly to resolve the workers’ issues more effectively, Dr S Subramaniam told reporters at the Parliament lobby in Kuala Lumpur.

Meanwhile, Malaysia’s Home Minister Datuk Seri Syed Hamid Albar said yesterday that his government was taking decisions on foreign workers in Malaysia in accordance with the country’s law.

“We still use foreign workers, including from Bangladesh. Both countries have cordial relations and we will ensure that our actions are in accordance with the law,” he said.

Around 450,000 Bangladeshis work in Malaysia, the third largest labour market for Bangladesh. Many have become jobless and are not able to renew their work permits due to cutbacks forcing many workers to return home almost empty-handed.

Meanwhile, another 62 workers returned home yesterday; 45 from Malaysia, 15 from the United Arab Emirates and two from Saudi Arabia.

Internalising external concerns

March 30, 2009 Leave a comment

The Group of 20, comprising the world’s most powerful countries and representing 85 percent of the world economy, is scheduled to meet for a one-day summit in London tomorrow to help revive the world economy.

The G20 was formed following the Asian financial crisis in 1999 to discuss concerns tied to the then financial crisis. It sought international cooperation among finance ministers and central bankers to take their downbeat financial systems out of the crisis.

In the backdrop of the global financial crisis, the gathering of the G20 leaders is meant to boost confidence of global leaders and ensure that they stand united in tackling the economic crisis.

So what are the issues and concerns dominating the agenda for the G20 meeting? Many multidimensional issues are likely to be discussed. Five key issues need immediate attention and a prescription for revival. Firstly, it is imperative, just like in any aftermath of financial crises to revive the nearly stagnated world economy (some may even say that the world economy is at stagnation, but I do not have sufficient evidence to support such a claim).

Though there are ‘automatic fiscal stabilisers’ in European countries — in other words whenever there is an economic slowdown some European countries get a programmed boost form of government’s cash injections — the IMF has predicted despite such mechanisms in place, by 2010 there will only be a weak global stimulus.

A huge amount of money has already been committed in financial support for bailing out banks and the governments of the US and the UK have pledged to provide about $11 trillion in this regard. With regard to fiscal packages, governments around the globe are spending billions of dollars to encourage economic growth and till date, nearly $2 trillion have been spent to stimulate economic activities.

Secondly, the summit will seek to restore confidence in lending. In spite of the huge amounts of cash flows in many developed and developing countries, banks are still holding many ‘toxic’ assets and the G20 meeting is likely to stress the importance of solving this situation by the respective members’ governments. Thirdly, the G20 summit will dig in the root causes of this economic tornado and it can be safely assumed that it will recommend regulating all financial institutions that pose a risk to the macroeconomic system.

There will also be plans for global oversight of the various risks that the financial system is surfacing as a whole, so-called ‘macro-prudential regulation’.

The IMF has already bailed out seven countries (to the tune of $46 billion) between September 2008 and February 2009. It will be strategically vital to enhance its role in monitoring risks within national banking systems.

The IMF still has about $150 billion left that it could lend this year to countries facing a choked financial system. The World Bank has already forecasted that an extra 50 million people will fall into poverty because of the enduring global recession. The ODI has estimated that at least $50 billion will be required to help sub-Saharan African countries battle the effects of the crisis.

Taking this background, one is compelled to inquire how far Bangladesh has been able to cope with the financial crisis. Has the crisis had an impact on the country’s economic performance? Will the G20 summit shed some rays of hope that would really help a developing country like ours which is treading on the development path and, whose economic growth in recent times has been attributed to the amiable nature of the global market, to survive the economic tornado?

Professor Mustafizur Rahman, the executive director of Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD), has categorised the impacts of global financial crisis in three forms — starting with the financial predicament in the US mortgage market, which turned into a credit crisis and the latter’s impacts subsequently transmitted through the consumer economy. This latter wave of the financial crisis may be starting taking its toll on the Bangladesh economy. While the overall export of Bangladesh during the first half of fiscal 2008-09 was still maintaining the recently achieved levels, some slowdown can be discerned when export performance in recent months is taken into account. In December 2008, overall exports declined by 10.1 percent when compared to the same month of the previous year though it started gaining momentum once again by January, on the account of export growth in apparels.

The October-December data of FY2008-09 reveals that while exports of primary products declined on the one hand (excluding raw jute and tobacco), manufactured exports posted a positive growth, though slower when compared to recent years (woven 6.4 per cent, and knit 4.7 per cent).

The leather sector was particularly hit by the crisis which saw a negative growth decrease of more than 50.0 percent in the quarter under review.

Although Bangladeshi exports (of goods) are not yet fully feeling the pinch of the global economic tornado (perhaps due to the inelastic nature of demand for the country’s products), services exports may come under severe pressure in the immediate outlook. Even though Bangladesh ranked one of the top ten countries, which the highest amount remitted in 2008, evidence suggests a daunting year ahead. Bangladeshi workers in affected countries are experiencing retrenchment.

For example, 55 Bangladeshi workers employed in the Tunnel & Shaft construction company in Singapore have returned home after working there for only seven months. Some Middle East employers are becoming reluctant to issue new job permits. Malaysia has announced retrenchment of about 45,000 workers. According to the figures from the Bureau of Manpower Export and Training, 13,530 workers have returned home in the last three months.

The G20 summit represents a symbol of hope for the developing countries in general. It will probably provide the impetus for reviving the world economy and making financial systems more transparent and the authorities more accountable. It can also be hoped that the Doha Round of trade negotiations, which was launched in 2001 under auspices of the WTO, may be revitalised which has been stalled as a result of this group of countries’ concerns with the agriculture text.

If the G20 is not able to tackle the problem and rushes in the opposite direction, many authors have apprehended a reincarnation of protectionism and even, the Great Depression. For now, it is hoped that our country’s policymakers make an attempt to craft policies that aspire to accommodate the rapidly changing economic landscape in which the advancement of technology, establishment of effective infrastructure, and in general galvanising the economic status quo of the country, ought to be given due priority.

To carry out such a task especially in the backdrop of Bangladesh’s increasingly globally integrated economy, internalising the external concerns (worldwide increase of fiscal stimulus packages and plausible protectionist policies) will be the first step forward.

Written By: Hasanuzzaman is a researcher at the Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD).   Published in The Daily Star, 31 March 2009

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Saarc in talks to liberalise trade in services: Ann/The Island

March 30, 2009 Leave a comment

South Asia has commenced negotiations in to incorporating trade in services to the South Asia Free Trade Agreement (SAFTA) but a lack of data could slow things down, a senior economist said.

“So far there have been three meetings and the possible initial lists for exchange have been identified without any commitments,” Dr Saman Kelegama, Executive Director of the Institute of Policy Studies (IPS) told the Island Financial Review.

He said that now was the best time to incorporate trade in service in to Safta which would facilitate the trade in goods and strengthening the regions economy though enhanced integration now that the world is engulfed in a global economic crisis.

“This is the time we should be looking at developing intraregional trade with Asia expected to maintain healthy growth while traditional export markets in the US and EU are experiencing a slump,” Kelegama said.

The economies of the South Asian Region are bolstered by the services sector contributing about 55 to 60 percent to the region’s GDP, far above manufacturing and agriculture, but trading of services between the countries is small.

“It only makes sense that the main source of economic growth is made tradable,” Kelegama said.

He said the nexus between trade in goods and services was an important factor to consider as services such as banking, insurance, shipping and aviation go a long way in boosting the movement of goods and enhancing payment channels.

But the problem with the Saarc process is that political issues take precedence of economic matters.

For as long as India and Pakistan remain at loggerheads with one another, many economists in the region say Saarc will not be able to deliver the economic benefits to its people which is the ultimate objective of the regional grouping.

“Unfortunately, it is a characteristic of this part of the world where political interests come before economic interests,” Kelegama said.

It is hoped that Safta would fully liberalise trade in the region by 2016.

But this may never happen as non-tariff barriers, high tariffs rates and the non-availability of a mechanism to bind countries to their commitments has made Safta non-existent.

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Area-wise poverty map suggested to eradicate the curse

March 30, 2009 Leave a comment

Economist Dr Atiur Rahman yesterday urged the government to consider introducing an area-wise poverty mapping for proper distribution of wealth. “A poverty map can help eradicate poverty better,” Rahman told a workshop on “Steps needed for empowering ultra-poor women” at the Cirdap in Dhaka. He said the intensity of poverty differs for various areas. So wealth, such as for the 100-day programme, has to be distributed on the basis of intensity of poverty, he added.

Anneshon, a non-governmental organisation, organised the workshop in collaboration with Manusher Jonno Foundation. Former adviser to the caretaker government Sultana Kamal moderated the discussion, also addressed by other women leaders Ayesha Khanom, Momtaz Begum and Segufta Yasmin Emily MP. Sharifa Naznin, coordinator of Anneshon, presented a paper at the discussion.

Atiur Rahman said poverty has many facets. A crisis of money is not the only reason behind poverty. He said women in Bangladesh are poorer than their male counterparts.

Momtaz Begum asked the government to formulate laws to implement the national women policy. She hoped the political parties would show their willingness to take forward the country’s womenfolk.

Ayesha Khanom said women organisations have to develop their network to help the government implement the direct election of 100 seats for women. In her paper, Sharifa Naznin mentioned women are tortured most in their families in Bangladesh. Women from various parts of the country attended the workshop and shared their experiences.

Source: The Daily Star, 31 March 2009

Public procurement law to be amended:Says finance minister; seeks more time to improve power situation

March 30, 2009 Leave a comment

The government is going to bring fresh amendments to the Public Procurement Act, which was made to bring transparency in government expenditure under donors’ pressure.

“Public Procurement Regulation (Now Public Procurement Act) is an impediment to implementation of government’s development programmes including those in power sector… So, it would be revised,” Finance Minister AMA Muhith said yesterday at a pre-budget discussion with Economic Reporters’ Forum (ERF).

Muhith also said he approved yesterday a Tk 243-crore ‘arrear’ cash incentive in export sector as part of the bailout package to face the impact of global recession.

“We took a decision in this regard in the March 24 taskforce meeting, and today (Monday) we approved it. It shows that we tried to respond quickly to the problem,” the finance minister said at the discussion held at the NEC auditorium.

The ERF members came up with various recommendations for the next fiscal year’s budget.

In response, Muhith said, “Our most problematic sector is power. Development of non-farm sector is talked about much, but first we need power to attain development in any sector.

“Many poles are standing tall, but we are unable to supply power. I don’t know when we make power available. Earlier, it was thought that (required) power supply could be ensured in three years. But now it is clear it is not possible. More time is needed.”

He mentioned that the government would give more emphasis on increased investment in power sector.

Planning Commission officials present at the discussion said they have already sought opinion from different ministries on amending the PPR.

Meanwhile, the PPR was made in 2003 when the BNP-led four-party alliance was in power to meet the WB condition for development credit support. Many of the then ministers and top government officials strongly opposed it.

Muhith said proper steps would be taken in the current boro season to ensure that farmers get fair price of their produce.

Turning to the impact of global meltdown, the minister said revenue collection in the current fiscal year may be Tk 400 crore less than the targeted Tk 54,500 crore. And implementation of the Tk 25,600 crore ADP may be 10 per cent less.

“The size of the next budget is estimated to be Tk 99,962 crore. In the revised budget, the figure may stand at Tk 95,000 crore to Tk 96,000 crore.” Muhith said.

They are formulating the budget in light of their election manifesto, and would increase allocations for subsidies, social safety net and agriculture sector, he added.

The prime minister’s Finance and Planning Adviser Moshiur Rahman said Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics would be strengthened further to help formulate right policies.

Finance Secretary Mohammad Tareq said wide gap between rural areas and urban areas in secondary education has to be closed down for implementing the government’s politics of change.

NBR Chairman Mohammad Abdul Mazid and Planning Commission Member AKM Zafar Ullah Khan were among the high officials present.

Soruce: The Daily Star, 31 March 2009

Agriculture needs massive investments to face odds : Suggests FAO country chief

March 30, 2009 Leave a comment

Khawaza Main Uddin

 

Bangladesh needs massive investments in agriculture and agro-processing to attain their higher growth, create employment opportunities and deny possible impacts of the current global recession on this key sector, says the country chief of the Food and Agriculture Organisation.
Ad Spijkers further suggests arrangement for bringing consumer groups at the doorsteps of the farmers to ensure fair prices of the agricultural produces as incentive for gaining higher farm production and productivity.
As the still unfolding financial crisis worldwide is set to have negative impacts on Bangladesh’s different sectors including remittances and agriculture, he feels that the country must be adequately prepared with long-term vision to make sure that ‘agriculture is the backbone of the economy.’
Currently, there are apprehensions that possible decline in remittances earning and exports of jute, jute goods, frozen foods and leather products may deal severe blows — both in terms of prices of products and investments required for farming — to the country’s agriculture, which accounts for approximately 20 per cent of gross domestic product but employs more than 60 per cent of the national workforce.
‘Investment and technologies in agriculture is the most important issue to face the future challenges for sustainable agriculture system,’ Spijkers told New Age in an exclusive interview.
‘Investment in agriculture is essential for intensification, diversification, sustainability and resilience of the food production system as well as to maximise the role that agriculture can play in promoting economic growth and food security.’
 The Bangladesh chapter of the UN body, which is mainly a technical, specialised agency, is supporting the Bangladesh government, seeking external funds for agriculture, to mobilise development partners, including multilateral financial institutions, to funnel resources to the farm sector, the FAO official said. He referred to his recent talks with the World Bank and Danish, US and British donor and lending agencies in this regard.
The FAO, having the mandate of giving technical assistance in broader agriculture including livestock, fisheries and forestry, provides assistance for several programmes on food policy, food safety and natural resources management and is directly involved in helping 1.5 million farmers after the twin floods and cyclone Sidr in 2007.
Dwelling on the dilemma between providing fair crop prices to farmers and keeping food prices lower for the vulnerable groups, Spijkers, who earlier served the FAO in East Asia (Vietnam, China and Cambodia) before the Bangladesh mission in late 2006, expressed his views that input pricing should be efficient and cost-effective while there should be good incentive through fair out prices.
‘You have to keep the farmers smiling. Last harvesting season, they got incentive for Tk 28 per kilogram rice price,’ he said also suggesting that Bangladesh could replicate a Netherlands model to link consumers’ groups to the market close to the farm gates to address the huge trade gap between farmers’ level prices and the ones in any kitchen market in the metropolis.
In this context, the FAO representative favoured pilot project on making crop insurance work because, he pointed out, crop insurance schemes were difficult to design and deliver, especially in fragmented agricultures. He still maintained, ‘Farmers should be kept insured in any way in terms of their production and marketing.’
He also emphasised the need for promoting strong farmers’ organisations, such as Farmers’ Field School, that had already worked successfully in many countries and in Bangladesh as well. ‘Collective organisation of the farmers is crucial not only for fair pricing but also to protect various interests of farmers in terms of information, technologies, inputs and marketing.’
The FAO believes Bangladesh has immense scope to attain self-sufficiency in foods and also significantly increase crop production particularly, wheat, maize, potato, pulses, oil seeds and vegetables. Spijkers is for renewed emphasis of high value added products such as vegetables, fruits, pulses, spices, fishery, poultry and livestock.
He recommended resource endowment in research and extension, education to farmers, diversifying crops, introduction of different crops in changing climatic conditions, cost-effective irrigation and efficient management of water for farming, use of fallow land, and balanced use of fertilisers to improve soil fertility to achieve the goal of exploiting maximum potentials of agriculture.
The country is also said to have a huge prospective of improving the agro-based industries and of creating employment opportunities and avenues of exports. ‘The future thrust of the agro-based industries depends mostly on advance research and marketing,’ noted the FAO official.
His suggestions for the government include allocation of more resources, especially increasing revenue budget to invest in the farm sector, apart from encouraging private sector investments in agriculture with proper support and regulation.
Spijkers maintained that urgent attention should be given to safety nets for the bigger segment of the (rural) poor who are ‘food insecure and do not have the purchasing power to buy adequately the food it needs.’

Source: The Daily New Age, 30 March 2009

2 million children wasting in Bangladesh, UN warns

March 30, 2009 Leave a comment

30 March 2009 – Two million children are suffering from acute malnutrition in Bangladesh, where one-quarter of all households are hungry, according to a United Nations-backed study released today.

 The report – by the UN World Food Programme (WFP), the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and the Institute of Public Nutrition (IPHN) – illustrates the clear link between malnutrition and food insecurity, with hungry households having a higher percentages of wasting children.

 The survey was carried out during a harvest season from November 2008 to January 2009, and it cautioned that malnutrition levels are expected to be even higher during food scarcity periods.

 Out of the two million wasting children between the ages of six months and five years, 500,000 are suffering from severe acute malnutrition, or severe malnutrition, according to the report, which was conducted to assess the impact of soaring food prices in Bangladesh in 2008.

 Nearly 60 per cent of the households surveyed said they had insufficient food over the past 12 months, with real household income plunging 12 per cent between 2005 and 2008. At the end of last year, nearly two-thirds of income was spent on food, 10 per cent higher than the 2005 average. Many are in debt, coping with higher food prices, the survey said.

 “Even if the prices of food are now falling, the crisis is far from being over,” said John Aylieff, WFP Representative in Bangladesh, warning of the impact that the current global financial crisis will have on the poor.

 Nearly half of the children surveyed have stunted growth, representing a very high prevalence of chronic of malnutrition in South Asia, while over one third of them are also underweight, the report noted.

 “The situation of child malnutrition in this country is a silent emergency,” said UNICEF Representative Carel de Rooy.

 Malnutrition, which can directly cause death, affects child development and increases the risk of women dying during pregnancy and childbirth, he added. “In fact, it impacts on the society at large, affecting school performance, healthcare costs and productivity.”

 Mr. de Rooy warned that unless the current malnutrition level is addressed, Bangladesh, which has a population of over 150 million according to the UN, is unlikely to achieve and sustain the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), the eight ambitious anti-poverty targets with a 2015 deadline.

 Almost half of all children between the ages of 6 months and 2 years – a critical age for development – were found to be not receiving the minimum meal frequency, with two-thirds of them not meeting the minimum dietary diversity of at least four food groups daily.

 Further exacerbating the nutritional situation are poor infant and young child feeding practices, noted the survey, which said that half of mothers exclusively breastfeed children under six months. Although nearly 90 per cent of mothers continue to breastfeed their children to the recommended age of two years, complementary foods are introduced inappropriately and with insufficient dietary diversity.

 The report called for expanded efforts to promote exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months of a child’s life and for education for families on how the best feeding practices. Additionally, routine food security and nutrition surveillance should be strengthened for early detection of fluctuations in nutrition, health and food security status.

 It recommends that routine food security and nutrition surveillance be strengthened to allow early detection of changes in nutrition, health, and food security status. Such surveillance systems should be integrated into government structures.

 Although Bangladesh has effective social safety nets in place, the new study suggested that they be widened and targeted towards areas where malnutrition and household food insecurity are most frequent.

 Source: UN News Centre :::: http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=30329&Cr=bangladesh&Cr1=

No envoys in 12 countries

March 28, 2009 Leave a comment

Diplomatic relations and efforts to safeguard interests of expatriate Bangladeshi workers are being hampered as Bangladesh has no ambassador in 12 countries, including Malaysia, Belgium and Switzerland.

Three ambassadors have already been called back while the posts of six others will fall vacant by this year, diplomatic sources said.

They said it might affect the interests of Bangladesh that has 47 missions abroad.

Bangladesh’s mission in Brussels remains without any ambassador since December 23 last year when the then ambassador, AHM Moniruzzaman, went on Leave Prior to Retirement (LPR) on December 31.

Bangladesh’s ambassador to Egypt Nasima Haider also went on LPR leaving the post vacant since January 12 this year.

Additional Foreign Secretary MAK Mahmud was appointed ambassador to Germany on June 29 but he is yet to take charge. The post became vacant on January 15 last year.

Dhaka got embarrassed over the matter as Berlin has already approved his appointment as the Bangladesh ambassador, they added.

Earlier on June 12, 2007, Mahmud was appointed ambassador to Bahrain, but he did not join there.

The post of ambassador to Indonesia fell vacant after the tenure of Salma Khan, appointed ambassador to the country on contract, expired on June 4 last year. The Bangladesh mission in Jakarta remains without any ambassador since then.

Bangladesh also has no top diplomat in Tehran since February 25 after the then ambassador to Iran Shamim Ahsan was transferred to Brunei.

The Bangladesh mission in Kuwait also remains without any ambassador since April 3 last year, while Rear Admiral M Rahman, appointed as the ambassador to Libya, is yet to join the post that fell vacant on March 23, 2007.

The post of high commissioner in Kuala Lumpur remains vacant since March 1 as the government called back Maj (retd) Khairuzzaman, an accused in the jail killing case. The High Court acquitted him on January 13.

The authorities also decided to reinstate Gen Abu Rushd Rokonuddoula, earlier appointed as the ambassador to Myanmar, to his post in the army.

Besides, Humayun Kabir, Bangladesh ambassador to the USA and Maruf Zaman, ambassador to Vietnam, have been called back to Dhaka on emergency basis in mid-February.

Bangladesh’s permanent representative in New York, Ismat Jahan, has also been called back and might be posted to Brussels, sources said.

The post of Bangladesh’s permanent representative and ambassador to the UN in Geneva will fall vacant on April 1 as Dr Debapriya Bhattacharya, appointed to the post by the immediate-past caretaker government, resigned after Awami League government assumed power. His resignation letter has already been accepted.

The new Bangladesh mission in Athens is yet to get an ambassador.

High Commissioner in London Shafi U Ahmed went on LPR on November 4 last year, leaving the post vacant since then.

Meanwhile, the tenure of Bangladesh Ambassador to Bhutan AKM Atiqur Rahman will expire on July 15 while the post of Bangladesh high commissioner to India will fall vacant on May 14 as the present high commissioner Liakat Ali Chowdhury is scheduled to go on LPR on that day.

Md Saiful Amin Khan, the Bangladesh ambassador to Spain, will go on LPR on May 31 leaving the post vacant while the tenure of high commissioner to Pakistan, Yasmin Morshed, appointed on a two-year contract, ends on November 30.

The post of Bangladesh ambassador to Japan will also fall vacant in October.

When contacted, Foreign Secretary Touhid Hossain told The Daily Star that the posts fell vacant at the end of the tenure of the immediate-past caretaker government, which wanted the next political government to make the appointments.

“This is very usual. There is nothing to do research on it,” he said.

The process of filling the vacant posts has already started and it will be done as usual, Touhid said. “There is nothing to hurry,” he added.

Source: The Daily Star, 29 March 2009

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Visas of 55,000 Workers: Malaysia assures Bangladesh of all cooperation

March 28, 2009 Leave a comment

Malaysian Minister for International Trade and Industry Mohd Yassin has assured Bangladesh of his government’ s all possible cooperation regarding visas of 55,000 Bangladeshi workers.

The assurance came on Friday when Foreign Minister Dipu Moni, now in Kuala Lumpur to attend a three-day general assembly of Malaysia’s ruling party, met Yassin, the next deputy prime minister of Malaysia.

Dipu Moni also called on Malaysian Prime Minister Dato’ Seri Abdullah Haji Ahmad Badawi and handed over a letter of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to Badawi, reported BSS.

The foreign minister informed Yassin about the current status of Bangladeshi workers and said they usually work in the sectors where Malaysian workers normally do not work, said an official release.

“So, there should not be any misconception regarding loss of jobs,” the release added.

When the foreign minister requested him for reconsidering the Malaysian government’s decision, Yassin assured her of all possible cooperation in this regard.

Dipu Moni also urged the Malaysian minister to make efforts to increase investment in Bangladesh.

In response, Yassin said, “Increased Malaysian investment in Bangladesh would be one of my priorities.”

He also stressed the need for growing cooperation between the two countries in trade and commerce at this time of financial crisis.

Dipu Moni congratulated him on his election as the deputy leader of the ruling party and hoped that bilateral relations between the two countries would be strengthened further in the future.

Source: The Daily Star, 29 March 2009