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For release on delivery
8 3 0 p m EST
December 2, 1997

Remarks by
Alan Greenspan
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before
The Economic Club of New York
New York, N Y
December 2, 1997

Dramatic advances in the global financial system have enabled us to materially improve
the efficiency of the flows of capital and payments Those advances, however, have also
enhanced the ability of the system to rapidly transmit problems in one part of the globe to
another, The events of recent weeks have underscored this latter process The lessons we are
learning from these expenences hopefully can be applied to better the workings of the
international financial system, a system that has done so much to foster gains in living standards
worldwide
The current crisis is likely to accelerate the dismantling in many Asian countries of the
remnants of a system with large elements of government-directed investment, in which finance
played a key role in carrying out the state's objectives Such a system inevitably has led to the
investment excesses and errors to which all similar endeavors seem prone
Government-directed production, financed with directed bank loans, cannot readily adjust
to the continuously changing patterns of market demand for domestically consumed goods or
exports Gluts and shortages are inevitable The accelerated opening up in recent years of
product and financial markets worldwide offers enormous benefits to all nations over the long
run However, it has also exposed more quickly and harshly the underlying rigidities of
economic systems in which governments—or governments working with large industrial

-2groups—exercise substantial influence over resource allocation Such systems can produce
vigorous growth for a time when the gap between indigenous applied technologies and world
standards is large, such as in the Soviet Union in the 1960s and 1970s and Southeast Asia in the
1980s and 1990s But as the gap narrows, the ability of these systems to handle their
increasingly sophisticated economies declines markedly
In western developed economies, in contrast, market forces have been allowed much freer
rein to dictate production schedules Rapid responses by businesses to changes in free-market
pnces have muted much of the tendency for unsold goods to back up, or unmet needs to produce
shortages Recent improvements in technology have significantly compressed business response
times and enhanced the effectiveness of the market mechanism
Most Asian policymakers, while justly proud of the enormous success of their economies
in recent decades, nonetheless have been moving of late toward these more open and flexible
economies Belatedly perhaps, they have perceived the problems to which their systems are
prone and recognized the unforgiving nature of the new global market forces Doubtless, the
current crises will hasten that trend While the adjustments may be difficult for a time, these
crises will pass Stronger individual economies and a more robust and efficient international
economic and financial system will surely emerge in their wake

-3While each of the Asian economies is unique in many important respects, the sources of
their spectacular growth in recent years, in some cases decades, and the problems that have
emerged are relevant to a greater or lesser extent to nearly all of them
Following the early post World War II period, policies generally fostering low levels of
inflation and high rates of savings and investment—including investment in human capital
through education—contributed to a sustained period of rapid growth In some cases this started
in the 1960s and 1970s, but by the 1980s most economies in the region were expanding
vigorously Foreign net capital inflows grew, but until recently were relatively modest The
World Bank estimates that net inflows of long-term debt, foreign direct investment, and equity
purchases to the Asia Pacific region were only about $25 billion in 1990, but exploded to more
than $110 billion by 1996, less comprehensive data suggest that inflows rose to a still higher rate
earlier this year
Sustained, spectacular growth in Asian economies fostered expectations of high returns
with moderate nsk Moreover the global stock market boom of the 1990s provided the impetus
to seek these perceived high returns As that boom progressed, investors in many industrial
countnes found themselves more heavily concentrated in the recently higher valued secunties of
companies in the developed world, whose rates of return, in many instances, had reached levels

-4perceived as uncompetitive with the earnings potential in emerging economies, especially in
Asia The resultant diversification induced a sharp increase in capital flows into those
economies To a large extent, they came from investors in the United States and western Europe
A substantial amount came from Japan, as well, owing more to a search for higher yields than to
rising stock prices and capital gains in that country The rising yen through mid-1995 also
encouraged a substantial increase in direct investment outflows from Japan
In retrospect, it is clear that more investment monies flowed into these economies than
could be profitably employed at reasonable risk It may have been inevitable in those conditions
of rapid growth, ample liquidity, and an absence of sufficient profitable alternatives, that much
investment moved into the real estate sector, with an emphasis by both the public and private
sectors on conspicuous construction projects that had little economic rationale These real estate
assets, in turn, ended up as collateral for a significant proportion of the assets of domestic
financial systems In many instances, those financial systems were already less than robust,
beset with problems of poor lending standards, weak supervisory regimes, and inadequate
capital
At the same time, rising business leverage added to financial fragility Businesses were
borrowing to maintain high rates of return on equity and weak financial systems were poorly

-5disciplining this process In addition, explicit government guarantees of debt or, more often, the
presumption of such guarantees by the investment community, encouraged insufficient vigilance
by lenders and hence greater leverage But high debt burdens allow little tolerance for rising
interest rates or slowdowns in economic growth, as recent events have demonstrated
Moreover, the rapidly growing foreign currency denominated debt, in part the result of
pegged exchange rates to the dollar, put pressure on companies to earn foreign exchange But
earning it became increasingly difficult The substantial rise in the value of the dollar since
mid-1995, especially relative to the yen, made exports of the Southeast Asian economies less
competitive In addition, in some cases, the glut of semiconductors in 1996 and the accelerated
drop in their prices suppressed export earnings growth, exerting further pressures on highly
leveraged businesses
In time, the pressures on what had become fixed exchange rate regimes mounted as
investors, confronted with ever fewer profitable prospects, slowed the pace of new capital
inflows Fearing devaluation, many domestic Asian businesses sought increasingly to convert
domestic currencies into foreign currencies, or, equivalently, slowed the conversion of export
earnings into domestic currencies To counter pressures on exchange rates, countries raised
interest rates For fixed-exchange-rate, highly leveraged economies, it was only a matter of time

-6before slower growth and higher interest rates led to difficulties for borrowers, especially those
with fixed obligations
Particularly troublesome over the past several months has been the so-called contagion
effect of weakness in one economy spreading to others as investors perceive, nghtly or wrongly,
similar vulnerabilities This is an age old phenomenon When investors are unsettled by
uncertainties and fears, they withdraw commitments on a broad front, the finer distinctions
between countries and currencies are lost There is a flight to safe-haven investments, many of
which are in developed nations
Perhaps, given the circumstances, it was inevitable that the impressive and rapid growth
expenenced by the economies in the Asian region would encounter a temporary slowdown or
pause I say temporary because there is no reason that above-average growth in countries that are
still in a position to gain from catching up with the prevailing technology cannot persist for a
very long time, provided their markets are opened to the fall force of competition Nonetheless,
free-market, even partially free-market, economies do penodically run into difficulties because
investment mistakes invariably occur And, as I noted earlier, many of these mistakes arose from
government-directed or influenced investments When this happens, pnvate capital flows may
temporarily turn adverse In these circumstances, individual companies should be allowed to

-7default, private investors should take their losses, and government policies should be directed
toward laying the macroeconomic and structural foundations for renewed expansion New
growth opportunities must be allowed to emerge
Although the economies of the troubled Asian countries were usually characterized by a
combination of current account deficits, large net foreign currency exposures, and constraints on
exchange rate fluctuations, one cannot generalize that these are always signs of impending
difficulties
Large current account deficits, per se, are not dangerous if they result from direct
investment inflows that are not subject to rapid withdrawal and that generate an increase in
income sufficient to compensate the investors Foreign currency exposures need not be a
problem if positions are properly managed and the risks are recognized Fixed exchange rates,
also, are not necessarily a problem Indeed, if they can be sustained, they yield extensive
benefits in lower risk and lower costs for all international transactions But a small open
economy can maintain an exchange rate fixed to a hard currency only under certain conditions
Both Austria and the Netherlands, for example, have been able to lock their currencies against
the deutsche mark because their economies are tightly linked through trade with Germany, they
mirror the Bundesbank's monetary policies, and they are perceived to engage in prudent fiscal

-8policies Were it not for issues of national identity and seignorage, they could just as readily
embrace the DM as their domestic currency without any economic disruption Other economies,
such as Argentina and Hong Kong, have fixed their exchange rates essentially through currency
boards Changes in dollar reserves directly affect the monetary base of those economies
But when exchange rates are fixed, with or without currency boards, should monetary and
fiscal policies diverge significantly from those of the larger economy, the currency lock of the
smaller economy would be difficult to hold irrespective of the size of reserves Large reserves
can delay adjustment They cannot prevent it if policies are inconsistent, or prices in the smaller
country are inflexible
A well-functioning international financial system will seek out anomalies in policy
alignments and exchange rates and set them right In such a system, the exploitation of above
normal profit opportunities, that is, arbitrage, will force prices to change until expected returns
have been equalized To policymakers in the country whose currency is not appropnately
aligned, capital outflows are too often seen as attacks by marauding currency speculators There
have no doubt been some such attempts on occasion But speculators rarely succeed in
dislodging an exchange rate that is firmly rooted in compatible policies and cost structures
More often, speculation forces currencies through arbitrage into a closer alignment with

-9underlying market values to the benefit of the international economic and financial system as a
whole We used to descnbe capital flight as "hot money" But we soon recognized that it was
not the money that was "hot," but the place it was running from
The prodigious expansion of cross-border financial transactions in recent years has
tightened and refined the arbitrage process significantly But, to repeat, the inestimable
advantages that it brings to trade and standards of living also carry a pnce The inevitable
investment mistakes and governmental policy failures are more rapidly transmitted to other
markets by this process than was the case say twenty, or even ten, years ago Moreover, there is
little evidence to suggest that the rate of increase of financial transactions will slow materially in
the years immediately ahead
Technology will continue to reduce the costs of finding and exploiting perceived
differences in risk-adjusted rates of return around the world, helping to direct capital even more
to its most efficient use Already, covered rates of return on actively traded interest-rate
instruments have been equalized among many industrial countnes
But the broader merging of world savings and investment markets, clearly, has not been
achieved, largely because investors are fearful of investing in countnes they do not understand to
the extent that they do their own, or are uninformed of the opportunities

-10One measure of this so-called home bias in world investments is the degree that
portfolios remain substantially local Foreign investments, on average, represent less than
10 percent of U S portfolios, for example The percentage of Japanese portfolios is only slightly
higher, and 15 percent of German portfolios is in foreign assets The partial exception is Great
Britain, where, with a longer history of global financial involvement, one-third of portfolios is
invested in foreign assets
Home bias in investments is considerably less than it was ten years ago, but we are still
far from full globalization Unless government restnctions inhibit the expansion of ever more
sophisticated financial products that enable savers in one part of the world to reduce risk by
investing in another, the bias will continue to diminish and the size of the international financial
system will continue to expand at a significant pace It is this overall diversification, and hence
lowering of risk, that an effective international financial system offers It facilitates the ever
more efficient functioning of the global economic system and, hence, is a major contnbutor to
rising standards of living worldwide
Nonetheless, there are those who ask whether the price of so sophisticated a financial
system is too high Would it not be better to slow it down a bit, and perhaps achieve a system
somewhat more forgiving of mistakes, even recognizing that such a slowing may entail some

-11shortfall in long-term economic growth?
Even if we could implement such a tradeoff, with only minor disruption, should we try?
For centuries groups in our societies have railed against, and endeavored on occasion to destroy,
new inventions Fortunately for us the Luddites and their ilk failed, and recent generations have
enjoyed the fruits of those technologies
Moreover such a slowdown may not even be possible-at least without major disruption
and cost Newer technologies, especially advanced telecommunications, make it exceptionally
difficult for open markets, with associated opportunities, to be suppressed Price and capital
controls, which might have been feasible a half century ago, would be very difficult to
implement in today's more technologically advanced environment. Tinkenng at the edges of our
system in order to produce a less frenetic pace of change would be easily circumvented
Arguably, it would take massive government controls to substantially slow the advance toward
greater efficiency of our systems This would surely produce a far more negative impact on
economic growth than would be acceptable to even the most ardent advocates of reigning in the
rapid expansion of our international financial system
If, as I suspect, it turns out after due deliberation and analysis, that slowing in the pace of
financial modernization is not in fact seen as a feasible alternative, what policy alternatives

-12confront the international financial community to contain the periodic disruptions that are bound
to occur in any free market economy?
A financial system, like all structures, is as strong as its weakest link As the
international financial system has become even more complex, the particular areas of weakness
to be addressed have changed At the nsk of oversimplification, let's examine some of the key
links of our current infrastructure
Today the organized exchanges and over-the-counter markets of industrial countries can
handle massive volumes of transactions Even in emerging countries exchanges are developing
and expanding In contrast, during the world-wide stock market crash of October 1987, the
transactions systems were under severe stress and, indeed, some broke down, incapable of
handling the enlarged volumes At that time, the Hong Kong stock exchange could not open for
several days The New York Stock Exchange was straining badly under the near 400 million
daily share volume of late October 1987, with long reporting delays creating uncertainties that,
doubtless, exaggerated the price declines Those weaker links have since been strengthened by
large infrastructure investments Almost 1 2 billion shares traded on the NYSE on October 28 of
this year, three times the 1987 volumes with no evident problems or delays
Our equity, debt, and foreign exchange trading systems, and their peripheral futures and

-13options markets have functioned well under stress recently These systems are not weak links in
the developed economies, nor, for the most part are they in other economies
Neither is the payment system, that complex network, which transfers funds and
secunties in huge and growing volumes domestically and internationally, rapidly and efficiently
The pnvate and public sectors across the globe have endeavored diligently for years to expand
the capacity of the system to meet the increasing demands put upon it And they have initiated
and strengthened procedures for reducing nsk in settling transactions, and diminishing
uncertainties That they have generally succeeded is evident from the smoothness with which
huge volumes of funds produced under recent stressed market conditions were transferred and
settled with finality, through vanous netting and cleanng arrangements
Banks are another matter These are highly leveraged institutions, financed in part by
interbank credits and, hence, prone to cnses of confidence that can quickly spread In most
developed nations banking systems appear reasonably solid Japan has been somewhat of an
exception, but there have been some positive signs there, as well Banks have been recognizing
losses, and the government seems finally to be appropnately addressing their problems In a
large number of emerging nations, as I indicated previously, banks are in poor shape Lax
lending has created a high incidence of nonperforming loans, supported by inadequate capital,

-14leaving banks vulnerable to declines in collateral values and nonperformance by borrowers
How can such deficient institutions be elevated to a level that would allow their
economies to function effectively in our increasingly sophisticated international financial
system? Certainly, improved cost and risk management and elimination of poor lending
practices are a good place to start
But these cannot be accomplished overnight Loan officers with expenence judging
credit and market risks are in very short supply in emerging economies Training will require
time The same difficulties confront bank supervision and regulation Important efforts in this
area have been underway for several years through the auspices of the Bank for International
Settlements, the International Monetary Fund, and the World Bank But again, it will take time
to develop adequate systems and trained personnel
Moreover, robust banking and financial systems require firmly enforced laws of contract,
and transparent, market oriented systems of corporate reporting and governance The current
crisis in Asia is, to a much greater extent than many previous cnses, one of pnvate not public
debts, at least de jure Arguably, the absence of efficient and transparent work-out arrangements
for troubled pnvate borrowers makes the problems more difficult to deal with Efficient
bankruptcy arrangements reduce disruptions to economic activity that often anse when losses

-15have to be imposed on creditors Many developing countries do not have good work-out
arrangements for troubled debtors, and, as a result, governments in these countries often feel
compelled to bail them out rather than accept the consequences of defaults
The most troublesome aspect of many banking systems of emerging countries, to expand
on the issue I raised earlier, is the widespread prevalence of loans dnven by "industrial policy"
imperatives rather than market forces
What is wrong with policy-that is, politically driven—loans? Potentially nothing if they
were made to firms to finance expansions that just happened to coincide with a rise in consumer
or business or overseas demand for their newly produced products In these circumstances, the
loan proceeds would have been profitably employed and the loan repaid at matunty with interest
Unfortunately, this is often not the case Policy loans, in too many instances, foster misuse of
resources, unprofitable expansions, losses, and eventually loan defaults In many cases, of
course, these loans regrettably end up being guaranteed by governments If denominated in local
currency, they can be financed with the printing press—though with consequent nsk of inflation
Too often, however, they are foreign-currency denominated, where governments face greater
constraints on access to credit
Restructunng of financial systems, while indispensable, cannot be implemented quickly

-16Yes, the potential risks to the banking systems of many Asian countries and the potential
contagion effects for their neighbors, and other trading partners, should have been spotted earlier
and addressed But flaws, seen clearly in retrospect, are never so evident at the time Moreover,
there is significant bias in political systems of all varieties to substitute hope (read, wishful
thinking) for possibly difficult preemptive policy moves, both with respect to financial systems
and economic policy There is often denial and delay in instituting proper adjustments Recent
propensities to obscure the need for change have been evidenced by unreported declines in
reserves, issuance by the government of equivalents to foreign currency obligations, or
unreported large new forward short positions against foreign currencies It is very difficult for
political leaders to incur what they perceive as large immediate political costs to contain
problems they see as only prospective
Reality eventually replaces hope, and the cost of the delay is a more abrupt and disruptive
adjustment than would have been required if action had been more preemptive Increased
transparency for businesses and governments is a key ingredient in fostering more discipline on
private transactors and on government policymakers Increased transparency can counter
political bias in part by exposing for all to see, the risks of current policies to stability as they
develop Under such conditions, failure to act would also be perceived as having political costs

-17We should strongly stress to the newer members of the international financial system-the
emerging economies-that they should accelerate the restructuring of their financial systems in
their own interests But having delayed timely restructuring, many now find themselves with
major shortfalls in bank liquidity and equity capital that put their systems at severe risk of
collapse before any full restructuring is feasible The IMF, the World Bank, and their major
shareholders, the developed countnes, may wish to facilitate adjustment through temporary loans
to governments and the encouragement of pnvate equity infusions to these banking systems
Since any severe breakdown can have contagion effects on a world-wide basis, it is in our
interest to do so
These loans must be judged in their entirety They transform short-term obligations into
medium-term loans, but they do so contingent on the country using the time to reform financial
systems as well as adopt sound economic policies Such conditionally accelerates the
adjustments in financial systems needed to lay the foundation for resumption of robust,
sustainable, growth, while cushioning to some degree the economic effects of the immediate
crisis Assistance without further reform of financial systems and economic policies would be
worse than useless since it would foster expectations of being perpetually bailed out That, in
turn, could induce perverse behavior on the part of emerging nations' governments and of pnvate

-18sector investors in emerging nations Believing that the international financial community will
support these economies, in part by backstopping the obligations they incur, induces investors to
commit more than they would otherwise This has tended in the past to push the expansion of
investment beyond prudence-given the limit of profitable opportunities
As the international financial system becomes ever larger and more efficient, the size of
the financial response—whether to help banks or to add to foreign currency reserves—may have to
be correspondingly larger per unit of cnsis, if I may put it that way—unless we alter our approach
While it is precarious to generalize from one observation, it is likely that the Mexican financial
cnsis of the 1980s was broader than in 1994-95, but the size of the assistance program, to set
things nght, was much larger in the latter than in the former case The reason appears to be that
the increased efficiency of the financial system created a larger negative spillover, which had to
be contained Among other developments, the marked shift from bank credits in the earlier
cnsis, to a more securitized, anonymous, set of liabilities made workouts far more complex
It is, hence, all the more essential that the weaker links in our international financial
system, the banking systems of the emerging nations, be strengthened Preventive programs
should be accelerated sufficiently far in advance of the next cnsis to effectively thwart or contain
it

-19Moreover, it is incumbent on governmental policymakers to insure that unstable
economic environments do not induce or exacerbate international financial disruptions But
governments and international financial institutions should be brought on the scene only rarely
To do otherwise nsks the perverse incentives I spoke of earlier Markets should be allowed to
work
Recent events in Asia have sharpened our understanding of the complexity of today's
international capital flows and, presumably, of similar episodes that may emerge in the future
The rapid integration of national financial systems has fostered the growth of trade and
standards of living worldwide It has also forced a review of the soundness and viability of our
burgeoning financial systems We should welcome such pressures even as they impose
challenges to all of us The end result is very worthwhile having