Interesting post from the Lowy Institute blog about some push back against academic economics on capital flows:
The traditional conventional view among policy and academic
economists was that capital flows were unambiguously a Good Thing, a
beneficial element of globalisation. The policy prescription which
followed was that emerging economies should open the capital markets to
foreign flows. The promise was that, provided they let their exchange
rates float, things would work out well.
The experience of the past two decades has been less benign. The
sloshing backwards and forwards of foreign capital has typically been
driven by the abnormal circumstances in advanced economies, rather than
by macro-policy mistakes in the emerging economies. A policy framework
that presumes these flows to be beneficial is irrelevant to the policy
challenge the emerging economies face.
Over the past decade, the policy debate has been inching forward to
incorporate the inconvenient reality that the flows may be disruptive.
Olivier Blanchard, recently retired as the IMF chief economist, has
co-authored two papers from his new base in the Peterson Institute. As
he did at the IMF, Blanchard continues to strive to bring the consensus
policy framework closer to the real world.
One paper argues
that capital inflows can push up asset prices in the recipient country,
over-stimulating domestic demand in the process. This might seem like
an obvious-enough insight, but is the opposite of the conventional
academic model on which much policy prescription had been based.
The second paper argues
that foreign exchange intervention can be effective in stabilising the
exchange rate in the face of excessive capital flows. Again, this
contradicts most academic models, which see intervention as futile or
distortionary.
I think I posted once about Krugman musing about the value of a more "hands on" approach to capital flows, too.
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