Globalization of capital investment and finance has surfaced for a long period of time in the world of global financial market. Capital flow liberalization has brought up the importance of capital controls for some countries to achieve their economic growth. This paper will explain briefly about capital controls and seeks the relationship of capital controls with two main elements of economic policy such as monetary policy and fiscal policy. The use of capital controls with the economy policy will be explained together with the benefit of capital controls. Finally there will be an example of a country that uses capital controls for achieving its development and economic growth.
Since the failure of Bretton Woods system in 1971, the international capital movements within developed and developing countries become unstable and for some countries the capital flows need to be controlled. Capital controls are restrictions to regulate the movement of capitals which are flowing in or out of the country. Capital flows may be in forms of bank loans, portfolio investment and foreign direct investment. The controls of short terms portfolio investment and bank loans are quite necessary since they are quite risky because of the roll-over risks. For long term credits and FDI are less risky if they are politically guaranteed.
Looking back to the history of capital controls there were two different perspectives. The first was Keynes who was the pioneer of the capital controls regime. Keynes was supported by other known economists such as James Tobin, Dani Rodrik and Joseph Stiglitz. The main ideas behind their view are that financiers are really powerful to pursue profits in every part of the world and ignoring other factor such as labor (Carlos F. Liard-Muriente, 2007). Keynesian view assumes that a fragile financial system is caused by the free movement of capital as volatile capital flows and it will lead to destructive of important asset prices such as exchange rate, equities and real estate. The second was neoclassical view which supports capital liberalization. Neoclassical view considers capital controls as a bad policy because they are not effective and not useful because markets are perfect and that financial and real assets have no differences (Singh, 2000).
Economic policy is a policy that analyzes the action in public economies. It analyzes three different stages such as the choice of the level of institution, the preferred choices of government and the identification of objectives and social preferences (Nicola Acocella, 2005). In relation with capital controls the main of economic policy that will be discussed are monetary policy and fiscal policy.
2.1 Monetary Policy
Monetary policy is tasked mainly to control supply of money and interest rate. The capital flows have to be under controlled by a prudent monetary policy and capital controls. Monetary policy should control interest rate to achieve low inflation and stability of financial economic system. One of the main instruments of monetary policy is the exchange rate. The exchange rate is used to defend the national currency with domestic inflation rate. There are two purposes of exchange rate:
In order to fulfill those purpose, exchange rates needs to combine high competitiveness such as current account surplus with stable nominal exchange rate and low inflation rate with interference of capital controls to avoid current account deficit and control depreciation.
In developing countries monetary policy should aim to stable nominal currencies, monetary policy needs to be subjected to exchange rate target. Monetary policy will be deteriorated if such exchange rate peg is in constellation of domestic currency’s full convertibility. Such examples will be high real of interest, the fragile economic situation such as big amounts of short term portfolio investment and short term bank credits that needs the usage of capital controls to stabilize the situation. In addition for those countries that implement inflation targeting as part of the monetary policy strategy, selective capital controls are also needed.
2.2 Fiscal Policy
Fiscal policy is policy that related with the government revenue, spending, taxation and borrowing for the economy. Government revenues contain the current revenues and the capital account revenues. Current revenues are resulted in direct and indirect taxes and social security contributions. Capital account revenues are resulted in public sector enterprises, sale of government property and repayment of loans. Government revenues may support the domestic investment with the proper policy and stability. With capital controls such as government tax and quantitative restrictions, capital flows can be controlled to insulate the domestic economy from the foreign shock. Capital controls will restrict the quantity of borrowing of domestic residents and government in the world market to preserve the domestic real interest rate. There are two elements for domestic real interest rate which are world real interest rate and transactions that being charged by government in form of licensing fee in the international ca
Capital controls can be used effectively as part of the state intervention’s strategy with the combination of other complementary policy measures, and then capital controls can bring benefits to the economies in few ways (Kavaljit Singh, 2000).
China has been successful to avoid the Asian financial crisis in 1997 with the help of implementing capital controls. China governments have supported financial stability by using independent monetary policy and fixed exchange rate. The use of capital controls mainly use to reduce the capital flight by restricting short term inflows and outflows and encouraging long term capital inflows. China has received mostly its capital flows in form of foreign direct investment. The policymakers have been encouraging inflows of FDI by reducing tax policies and other regulation. China has been tightly enforcing restrictions in international capital flows via issuance and investments in bond and equities, implementing strict limits on quantity of money that can be taken in and out by its citizens, and cross border fund raising and bank lending. Those strategies have supported China to build its enormous foreign reserves, current account surplus, and large domestic savings.
Capital controls have been implemented for some countries in order to achieve their economic growth. It can be concluded that capital controls are indeed useful for supporting the economic policy and may bring benefits to the countries. It is essential to know that capital controls should be used as part of the government development plan and the intervention strategy to achieve the development growth. One example will be China which successfully develops its economic growth with the help of capital controls.
Acocella, Nicola. 2005. “Economic Policy in the Age of Globalization”. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Greenwood, Jeremy and Kimbrough, Kent P. 1985. “Capital Controls and Fiscal Policy in the World Economy”. Canadian Journal of Economics, Canadian Economics Association, vol. 18(4), pages 743-65.
Hansjörg, Herr and Priewe, Jan. 2005. “Beyond the Washington Consensus:
Macroeconomic Policies for Development”, Nomos Baden
Muriente, Carlos F. Liard. 2007. “Capital Controls: Theory and Practice”. Journal of Business and Public Affair volume 1 issue 1.
Nembhard, Jessica Gordon. 1996. “Capital Control, Financial Regulation and Industrial Policy in South Korea and Brazil”. Westport, Ct: Praeger Publishers.
Singh, Kavaljit. 2000. “Taming Global Financial Flows: Challenges and Alternative in the Era of Financial Globalization, a Citizen’s Guide”.
Xiao, FengJuan and Kimball, Donald.2006. “Effectiveness and Effects of China’s Capital Controls”. http://www.karyiuwong.com/confer/beijing06/papers/xiao-kimball.pdf.
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