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ENHANCING EAST ASIAN ECONOMIC INTEGRATION Some Observations and Notes

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Title: ENHANCING EAST ASIAN ECONOMIC INTEGRATION Some Observations and Notes


1
ENHANCING EAST ASIAN ECONOMIC INTEGRATION Some
Observations and Notes
  • Fourth East Asian Congress, ISIS Malaysia, Kuala
    Lumpur, 3-5 December 2006
  • J. Soedradjad Djiwandono
  • Professor, IDSS-NTU, Singapore

2
INTRODUCTION
  • Since I dont have any original thoughts to offer
    in the subject, I dont dare to use the subtitle
    strategic issues, critical imperatives in my
    presentation as originally asked by the
    organizer.
  • Instead I will merely present my personal
    observations and notes on the issues, based on
    published reports and studies by others.

3
INTRODUCTION-2
  • The organization
  • SOME CAVEATS
  • NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS
  • CURRENT STATUS
  • SALIENT POINTS FOR ENHANCEMENT
  • ONCLUDING NOTES

4
NOTES AND CAVEATS
  • Economic integration and cooperation could mean
    different things for different people.
  • Basically regional integration is de facto
    economic integration within a geographic region,
    while cooperation refers to policy measures
    jointly undertaken by a group of countries to
    achieve some objectives (ADB,2005)
  • Economic integration could be market- driven and
    privately led or policy-induced unilateral
    action or through economic cooperation, whether
    bilateral, regional or multilateral

5
NOTES-2
  • Regionalization is market-driven integration
    arising from unilateral reforms of individual
    economies within a region, while regionalism is
    formal economic cooperation and economic
    arrangements of countries aimed at regional
    integration.
  • We have observed through times the development of
    the framework from closed regionalism of the
    Latin American model in the 60s to open
    regionalism of Asia Pacific and others in the 90s.

6
NOTES-3
  • Economic integration through trade relations
    could take the simple form of getting away with
    trade barriers among members in Preferential
    Trading arrangement (PTA) to Free Trade Area
    (FTA) -gtCustom Union -gt Common Market -gtand
    Economic Union.
  • In the last one member countries form a common
    market and agree on harmonization of monetary and
    fiscal policies. (ADB, 2005)

7
OVERVIEW AND CURRENT STATUS
  • Economists like to look at an economy as two
    sectors, real and monetary. Money and finance are
    there to support the real sectors production,
    consumption, investment and trade.
  • ADB publications use 4 pillars
  • (1) Regional and sub-regional cooperation
  • through cross-border infrastructures,
  • (2) Trade and Investment,
  • (3) Money and Finance, and
  • (4) Cooperation in public goods

8
OVERVIEW-2
  • There are various cooperation on infrastructure
    and related software development, which increase
    connectivity and contribute to economic
    integration.
  • There have also been issues and challenges of
    public goods and bads, which stimulate regional
    debate and cooperation communicable and
    infectious diseases, the haze problems, and
    others.

9
OVERVIEW-3
  • ADB 2005 and 2006 discussed issues and prospects
    of sub-regional and infrastructure development as
    well as cooperation in regional public goods,
    including cooperation and integration of poverty
    eradication
  • The reports also discussed relationships among
    the four pillars.

10
OVERVIEW-4
  • Focus on issues of economic integration as
    opportunities and challenges in the real sectors,
    particularly the trade and investment, and the
    monetary and finance sectors.
  • East Asian economic integration is a testament of
    the interdependence within the region in the
    process of globalization.

11
OVERVIEW-5
  • The process of integration and cooperation
    enhancement includes insurance against crisis,
    crisis management as the adverse implications of
    global imbalances and their unwinding
  • Economic cooperation and integration in these
    aspects are aimed at growth and development
    (welfare), stability as well as risk management.

12
STATUSTRADE AND INVESTMENT
  • Intraregional Trade Share,
  • Region 1980 1990 2004
  • EA 15 35 43 55
  • EA Japan 22 33 44
  • Asean3 30 29 39
  • Asean10 18 19 24
  • NAFTA 34 38 46
  • EU 15 61 66 62
  • EU 25 61 67 68
  • Source adapted from table 3, ADB,2006

13
STOCK OF IN-OUTWARD FDIas of GDP
  • Economy 1980 1990 2004
  • Japan 0.3/1.8 0.3/6.6 2/8
  • Korea 2/0.2 2/0.9 8/6
  • PRC 0.4/-- 5.4/1.2 15/2.4
  • Sin 53/32 83/21 150 /95
  • Malaysia 21/0.8 23/6 40/11
  • Indonesia 6.5/-- 8/0.1 8/5 (05)
  • Cambodia 1.8/-- 2.2/-- 47/6
  • Source adapted from table 2, Kawai, 2006

14
OBSERVATIONS
  • Intra regional trade as a share of East Asias
    total trade has risen from 22 in 1980 to 44 in
    2004 (including Japan, from 35 to 55).
  • These figures are less than EU, but higher than
    NAFTA and other groupings
  • Asean 3, from 30 to 39
  • Asean, from 18 to 24

15
OBSERVATIONS-2
  • The degree of EA economic integration through
    trade is high. And this has not been at the
    expense of extra-regional trade
  • In general FDI to EA economies has been on the
    rise. Outward FDI has also been increasing
  • Trade and Investment, both market driven and
    policy-stimulated have contributed substantially
    EA integration

16
OBSERVATIONS-3
  • FDI inflows into EA quadrupled from 1980 to 2005.
    Its 21 of World FDI recently (Kawai, 2006)
  • EA FDI outflows also increased from 5 to 14,
    most of them within EA, from Japan NIEs to
    China and Asean, and from Asean to Asean and PRC
    (Kawai,2006)

17
OBSERVATIONS-4
  • Pattern
  • MNCs investments in manufacturing for export
    contributed highly on EA openness and integration
    through production network and supply chain
  • It started with Asian NIEs, followed by Asean and
    then PRC

18
OBSERVATIONS-5
  • The process of integration started with market-
    driven, private-led of FDIs and trade, following
    unilateral liberalization in the 80s and since
    90s supported by regional cooperation
    (AFTA-CEPT,1992)
  • After the Asian crisis unilateral liberalization
    on non-discrimination trade policies have been
    substituted by FTAs, which are discriminatory
    (Sally,2006)
  • Nonetheless EA share of global GDP had increased
    from 17 in 1980 to 29 in 2005, due
    significantly from trade and investment

19
Trade and FDI Regimes(Sally,2006)
  • Asean free trade Singapore, other old Asean
    relatively liberal trade policy and FDI regime
    (ave tariffs under 10, low non-tariff barriers),
    with pockets of protection in agriculture and
    services. And new Asean are still highly
    protected
  • PRC has swung from extreme protection to rather
    liberal
  • Japan and South Korea reluctant to further
    liberalize trade and FDI, while Taiwan did
    liberalize substantially in the run up to its WTO
    accession

20
MONEY AND FINANCE
  • Monetary and financial cooperation and
    integration have been attracting a wider region
    and involving bigger number of countries /
    economies
  • May be it is partly due to the fact that they
    started to become an agenda after the Asian
    financial crisis that affected badly many
    economies in EA

21
MONEY-2
  • In fact, the prominent motivations of monetary
    and financial cooperation and integration have
    been the building of financial architecture to
    insure against the reappearing of crises and to
    cope with them when arise
  • Recently, the issues of global imbalances and how
    to address the adverse effects of their unwinding
    have been added to the discussions on monetary
    and financial cooperation and integration

22
MONEY-3
  • Motivations
  • Externally, the success of EU, which was crowned
    with the introduction of Euro in 2001 coupled
    with the fear of being marginalized.
  • Internally, the devastation of the financial
    crisis, which was generally accepted as
    significantly caused by weak financial sector,
    unsustainable external exposures of the private
    sector in addition to inflexible ER regimes.

23
MONEY-4
  • As mentioned before, recently the fear of the
    adverse effects of the global imbalances also
    motivates cooperation
  • Of course regional monetary and financial
    integration is also a natural outcome of the
    financial globalization process

24
WAYS AND MEANS
  • Two institutional frameworks have been
    instrumental in functioning as vehicles here,
    ASEAN3 finance ministers who meet annually since
    2000 and EMEAP (the executives meeting of East
    Asian and Pacific Central Banks) among central
    bankers since 1991 (Nesadurai, 2006)

25
WAYS-2
  • Financial integration proposed and formed through
    the two institutional frameworks covers 4 areas
    (Montiel,2004)
  • Resource pooling
  • Surveillance
  • Capital market development,
  • Exchange rate cooperation

26
WAYS-3
  • Resource pooling
  • With the backdrop of the crisis the need to
    minimize ER volatility, and to support stronger
    financial sector in the face of contagion several
    concepts have been ushered in, from the unborn
    AMF to the CMI (Asean 3 Finance Minister in
    2000)
  • Followed by bilateral swap arrangement (BSA)
  • Proposals to make BSA multilateral

27
WAYS-4
  • Surveillance
  • Concepts of self help mechanism, peer group
    review (group therapy?) to effectively review
    economic development and policies of member
    countries have been floating around since the
    crisis began
  • Need to resolve in effort to strengthen present
    mechanism of Asean Surveillance Process (ASP) of
    the Asean Secretariat and Regional Economic
    Monitoring Unit (REMU) of the ADB
  • IMF medium-term strategy of multilateral
    surveillance

28
WAYS-5
  • Capital Market Development
  • High savings and high investments pre crisis,yet
    private sectors had to tap London or New York
    capital markets for financing as well as
    investing (Sheng).
  • Asian Bond Fund ABF1 and ABF2
  • Issues needs for means of financing or
    channeling saving, liquidity or long term
    investment?

29
WAYS-6
  • Global imbalances, identified as current account
    deficits and surpluses and their counterparts,
    the saving gluts (Bernanke) or liquidity
    gluts (Rajan, 2006) and investment deficient
    (Rajan,2006)
  • Weak investment that goes hand in hand with high
    savings reflects weak capital market,
    characterized by the lack of high grade equities
    (Eicengreen,2005). Is there problem of market
    failure? (Crockett, 2006)
  • Or the possibility that financial intermediation
    is not up to the task of mediating desired
    domestic savings and investments (Sheng, 2006).

30
Ways-7
  • Exchange Rate cooperation
  • There have been various arguments showing the
    post crisis trend of ER pattern in EA
  • The bi polar system (Mussa,2000, Fisher 2001),
  • the return of the Bretton Woods System or
    otherwise also known as Bretton Woods II (Dooley,
    Landau and Gerber, 2003 and 2006),and
  • the prevailing Asian Dollar System (McKinnon,2004)

31
Prevailing ER Regimes
  • The Asian ER regimes could be grouped
  • Pegged or fixed system in different versions
    (Hong Kong, Malaysia and PRC before July 2005)
  • Freer floating system (Thailand, South Korea,
    Indonesia)
  • Exchange rate band (Singapore, PRC and Malaysia)
  • The diverse ER regimes in EA shows that there is
    neither cooperation nor coordination in ER

32
ENHANCING-1
  • Trade and Investment
  • making soft and partial FTAs to be effective and
    minimizing the noodle or spaghetti bowl effects
    of proliferating FTA in the region
  • Reviving the enthusiasm of trade policy reforms
    (Sally,2006). PRC (and India) could lead this
    move, which would motivate other economies to
    follow.

33
ENHANCING-2
  • SURVEILLANCE
  • The trauma from the devastation of Asian
    contagion, still fresh to some, like Indonesians,
    has recently revived at least to some as the
    possibility of a new crisis from hard unwindings
    of global imbalances
  • The good news is that monetary authorities in the
    region seem to be very aware of this and
    responsive to the regional surveillance as
    proposed in the IMF

34
ENHANCING-3
  • CAPITAL MARKET
  • Theres been substantial progress in deepening
    Asian bond markets in terms of size, issuer base,
    market infrastructure, legal and regulatory
    framework (Kawai,2005).
  • But more needs to be done to reap the benefits of
    deepening of bond market for both channeling
    savings and means of financing.

35
ENHANCING-4
  • A robust capital market that makes financial
    intermediation effective is very much needed to
    address the problem of finance
  • pre crisis Asia EA savings went to New York and
    London and coming back as short term capital
    inflows.
  • post crisis Asia to correct market failure and
    to contribute to soft unwinding global imbalances

36
ENHANCING-5
  • ER COOPERATION
  • Economic argument would aim to the ideal world of
    the creation of monetary union. But, we have
    observed how monetary authorities in the region
    cautiously stated that even this could only be
    achieved in a distance future
  • The current diverse ER regimes in EA have been
    proceeding with the tendency for most countries
    to accumulate high international reserves

37
ENHANCING-6
  • So the world as it is approach would look at
    the ER regime (s) suitable for the region in the
    future with a view to the above conditions.
  • The past experience (and current?) of different
    versions of dollar-pegged regimes plus the
    concern of the US source of global imbalance
    would motivate EA to adopt more than one
    currency-pegged system.

38
ENHANCING-7
  • Kawai (2006) has been arguing for different
    basket of currencies to peg, like dollar-euro-ACU
    basket
  • In the recent conventional wisdom of inflation
    targeting some argue for the new holy trinity
    of combining fiscal anchor, floating ER and IT or
    flexible ER,IT and monetary rule (Taylor)

39
ENHANCING-8
  • What PRC would do with its ER and the management
    of its more than one trillion US dollar reserves
    would be important factor to ER arrangement
  • Will any decision come on this with the US latest
    effort to pressure PRC on more appreciation of
    RMB?

40
CONCLUDING NOTES
  • In all cases the issue is on how to manage and to
    develop current arrangements and frameworks
    already in place or operation before venturing to
    new ones
  • Policies must be predicated not on ideal world,
    but on the world as it is (Azis,2006). These
    require consideration on the status of
    institutions, limitations constraining the
    working of any arrangement, whether sequencing is
    called for,etc.

41
CONCLUDING NOTES
  • Progressing on stages, the use of multi- speed
    and multi-track approach have been proposed by
    many, which seems to be the right approach
    suitable with the issues mentioned before
  • After all pragmatism or eclecticism has been the
    trademark of Asia.
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