RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan on Monday said the world is
facing "increasingly dangerous situation" and a new international
agreement on the lines of Bretton Woods is needed to prevent central banks from
adopting policies that could hurt other economies.
"What I have in mind (is that we) will eventually
require a new international agreement along the lines of Bretton Woods, and
some reinterpretation of the mandates of internationally influential central
banks," he said in a commentary posted on the website of Project
Syndicate.
He said that central banks in developed countries find
"all sorts of ways" to justify their policies, without acknowledging
the unmentionable - that the exchange rate may be the primary channel of
transmission.
"If so, what we need are monetary rules that prevent a
central bank's domestic mandate from trumping a country's international
responsibility," Rajan said.
Setting the rules will take time, he said, adding the
international community has a choice.
"We can pretend all is well with the global monetary
non-system and hope that nothing goes spectacularly wrong. Or we can start
building a system fit for the integrated world of the twenty-first
century," Rajan added.
He said the world is facing an increasingly dangerous
situation and both advanced and emerging economies need to grow in order to
ease domestic political tensions.
"If governments respond by enacting policies that
divert growth from other countries, this 'beggar my neighbour' tactic will
simply foster instability elsewhere. What we need, therefore, are new rules of
the game," Rajan added.
The Bretton Woods conference led to the setting up of IMF,
World Bank.
He said to bring growth back to pre-2008 levels, the remedy
may be to write down the debt to revive demand.
"It is uncertain whether write-downs are politically
feasible or the resulting demand sustainable. Moreover, structural factors like
population ageing and low productivity growth - which were previously masked by
debt-fuelled demand - may be hampering the recovery," Rajan said.
Politicians, he said, know that structural reforms - to
increase competition, foster innovation, and drive institutional change - are
the way to tackle structural impediments to growth.
"But they know that, while the pain from reform is
immediate, gains are typically delayed and their beneficiaries uncertain,"
Rajan added.
All monetary policies have external "spillover"
effects, Rajan said, adding circumstances today are, however, not normal and
domestic demand may not respond to unconventional policy.
"To use a traffic analogy, policies with few adverse
spillovers should be rated "green"; those that should be used
temporarily could be rated "orange"; and policies that should be
avoided at all times would be "red".
He said globally countries are far from having clear
agreement on the colour of policies today, even with the best data, models, and
empirical work.
"So we must begin a discussion. We could start with
background papers from eminent academics and move on to multilateral
institutions such as the International Monetary Fund and the G-20.
"There will be a lot of fuzziness initially, but
discussion will lead in time to better models and data - and will push
policymakers to stay out of the clearly red," he said.
Central bankers face a different problem: inflation that is
flirting with the lower bound of their mandate.
"With interest rates already very low, advanced
economies' central bankers know that they must go beyond ordinary monetary
policy - or lose credibility on inflation. They feel that they cannot claim to
be out of tools.
"If all else fails, there is always the 'helicopter
drop' whereby the central bank prints money and sprays it on the streets to
create inflation," he added.
He admitted that setting such a rule will take time.
"But the international community has a choice. We can pretend all is well
with the global monetary non-system and hope that nothing goes spectacularly
wrong. Or we can start building a system fit for the integrated world of the
21st century".
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