Friday, October 10, 2008

What do you need to receive a Nobel Peace prize?

Oslo has announced that Nobel Peace prize has been given to Martti Ahtisaari, former president of Finland and UN envoy.

Why Mr. Ahtisaari? According to the Nobel Committee, he was commended "for his important efforts on several continents and over more than three decades to resolve international conflicts". He has been the United Nations special envoy for talks on the final status of Kosovo and mediated a 2005 accord in Indonesia's Aceh province.

Why? He has been a "peace negotiator".

Then, why peace making efforts (by force) do not deserve Nobel Peace prizes?

The picture is "Daniel in the Lion's Den" painted in 1600 by Sir Peter Paul Rubens, the man who painted the Monasterio del Escorial and was so expresive in human flesh.

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Schumpeter and Finance for Development

While drafting my PhD dissertation, I often mentioned Schumpeter economic paradigm. To be honest, I didn’t read enough most of the time and was lucky I didn’t get difficult questions on that. It was only afterwards that I read and understood better the implications. 

The Trade and Investment Report 2008 by UNCTAD is out now on this topic. It claims that developing countries are reversing their current accounts and changing their external balances. They can be divided into two groups: firstly, A countries, who are exporters of manufactures export capital; secondly, B countries, who import food and energy. 

The development path for A countries is diversification and industrialization, which cannot be achieved without capital formation and skills acquisition.  For this, investment is critical, needing domestic monetary policy and local financial systems.  Internal capital is mainly built though reinvestment of company profits. 

Such countries are open to a global environment of uncertainty (this word has the highest density in Schumpeter texts). The subprime mortgage crisis has thrown some lessons learned. It has spread the impact of risky investments and it has also proved that current exchange-rate policies are open to speculation, which brings profits for a limited period of time but creates uncertainty on the long run. Speculation typically exacerbates price trends originating from changes in fundamentals.

The most affected sectors are energy and agriculture, very interrelated though biofuel and financial markets. Oil is stabilizing its market price but the index of non-fuel commodity prices has increased by 41.9% (May 07 to May 08). The price stabilization mechanisms of the past have proven unsuccessful in the new century. Uncertainty kills planning, makes management more difficult and has an economic cost.

What is the situation in A countries? Today, for sustainability, national institutional arrangements are in construction (or existing) as buffers between international prices and domestic earnings. In addition, grants and international compensatory finance schemes are only applied in critical moments.

Since 2003, commodity prices and better trade are reversing current accounts. In fact, developing countries are net exporters of capital. For manufacturers, this reversal is driven by real-exchange-rates, whereas for commodity-dependant economies, terms-of-trade are the main factor. Exchange rate has been manipulated, but the world is slowly learning that overvaluation has too often driven to crises.

Schumpeter helped move from the idea that savings drove economy to the idea that decrease in savings can drive to reinvestment of company profits.  This works under the assumption that entrepreneurial decisions are not based on savings but in profit expectations. Then the Keynes-Schumpeter model emphasizes the need for a reliable and affordable financing for enterprises. 

Empirically, domestic resources are more important that foreign ones. From a policy perspective, interest rates need to stay low and individual projects need to contribute to the economy as a whole. Only in critical situations it is recommended to accept foreign capital inflows and ODA.

Official Development Aid (ODA) has been considered the solution for B countries, where, after substantial increase of disbursements, there is evidence that aid effectiveness is not increasing. Among the many possible reasons, it depends on institutions and policies. It is a fact that good governance and accountability reduce transaction costs. 

ODA is perceived as a tool for the achievement of Millennium Development Goals and part of it is used for health, education and emerging social issues. Social and economic aid need to get the right balance. Not too much implemented, during last decade, a best practice to improve ODA effectiveness is to leverage ODA with domestic financing. By reducing the credit risk, local project have access to financing and generate much higher impact. 

ODA is mainly a less uncertain source of financing for development. From this perspective, giving access to developing countries to international financial markets makes them vulnerable to their volatility and liquidity crises. This is only partially tackled through a number of innovative debt instruments aiming at reducing this risk, such as external debt in domestic currency.

I guess this was the message in my dissertation without being very aware: Development and prosperity is better achieved following the A road. The WorldBank focuses on debt relief but this has little impact without investment at the firm level. Maybe, probably, perhaps, … focus could shift to mechanisms for speedy resolutions of debt crises and fair burden-sharing among  creditors and debtors, improvement of creditor’s risk assessment and reforming the monetary and financial system.



Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Climate Change in Bangkok

En Marzo, delegaciones de 163 paises se han reunido en Bangkok para preparar el acuerdo de Copenague. La reunión está financiada por el gobierno de Dinamarca, hosteada por el Deputy Primer Ministro de Tailandia y organizada por Naciones Unidas UNFCCC.

En Bali, los parties se comprometieron a empezar a negociar para tener un acuerdo antes de fin de 2009. Esta reunión tiene por objeto llegar a un programa de trabajo y discutir las reglas para controlar las emisiones en los paises desarrollados.

Hay un AWG-LCA para acción cooperativa a largo plazo (Luis Alberto Figueiredo) que está diseñando los pasos para llegar al acuerdo, y un AWG-KP para compromisos en el Anexo 1 de Kyoto que está revisando las herramientas disponibles en los países ricos. Entre estas herramientas, se habla de comercio de emisiones y mecanismos de proyecto. El mecanismo de desarrollo limpio del Protocolo de Kyoto ya incluia la posibilidad de llegar a objectivos de reducción a través de la inversión en proyectos de desarrollo sostenible en países en desarrollo. También se habla de uso de la tierra, cambio de uso y forestales, gases greenhouse, sectores y categorías de fuentes a cubrir, además de objetivos sectoriales (cemento y hierro).

En Bali, también, se diseñó el fondo para la adaptación de los países. Se trata de mitigar independientemente de la ayuda para el desarrollo. Que haya falta de agua y de alimentos no es evitable ni en las más optimistas de las previsiones.

Thursday, January 31, 2008

The role of the UN (II)


Last post was on the technical cooperation role of the UN. There are two others, analysis and policy. Today´s post is on analysis.

Climate change is a big thing today, but we humans still do not know exactly what are the threats, the risky areas and the consequences. A series of reports including the major elements of Climate Change are being produced. For example, one has been issued today on coral reefs.

Worldwide 500 million people depend on healthy coral reefs for sustenance, coastal protection, renewable resources, and tourism, with an estimated 30 million of the world’s poorest people depending entirely on the reefs for food. Two thirds of the world’s coral reefs are under severe threat.

Knowing more on this would result in better policy making , more prevention mechanisms and more efficient disaster management, and the report ends with recommendations for action in these three levels.

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

What is the role of the UN?

I am planning to provide a set of examples of activities (more or less successful) of the United Nations as an answer to the many questions I have been asked. This one is an example of Corporate Social Responsibility by Cadbury and a good example of Private Public Partnership with an african government.

With the objective of supporting cocoa-farming communities in Ghana, India, Indonesia and the Caribbean, the United Nations has signed a partnership with the confectionery conglomerate Cadbury. This will help them boost crop yields, find new sources of income and improve local infrastructure.

Seed funding is $2 million for 2008. Two thirds will be invested in Ghana, which provides the cocoa beans for Cadbury’s chocolate products in the United Kingdom and where current cocoa yields reach only 40 per cent of their potential. They will initiate microcredit programs and other types of business support.

“We hope to show just how effectively sustainable cocoa production can be in generating improved opportunities for local farmers, conserving the environment and building a brighter future for younger generations,” Mr. Touré, UNDP’s Resident Representative in Ghana, said.

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Climate Change: Solidarity in a divided world


The 2007/08 Human Development Report is published. Under the current energy policies, rising
economic prosperity will go hand-in-hand with mounting threats to human development today and the well-being of future generations. But carbon-intensive economic growth is symptomatic of a deeper problem. One of the hardest lessons taught by climate change is that the economic model which drives growth, and the consumption in rich nations that goes with it, is ecologically unsustainable.

The way to go is consensus and policy, including post-2012 Kyoto framework. We need to preserve what Gaugin painted not so long time ago.

Sunday, November 25, 2007

ASEAN for Southeast Asia


In the picture, a bather is opening a cabin with a key. ASEAN is probably the most successful regional organization in Asia and the Pacific in building keys for development. These are comments related to the coming 13th ASEAN Summit, as proposed by United Nations.

In terms of investment and financial flows, the poorest countries need efforts for financing development and crisis prevention. ICT sector could be strong in Southeast Asia as the world ICT market continues to grow steadily, but it needs to integrate, with integrated policies and regulations on the use of ICT, a regional physical infrastructure that includes Internet connectivity, availability of skilled ICT professionals and an integrated labour market.

ICT is fundamental for the competitiveness of other economic sectors. Southeast used to compete in the global economy by relying on low-cost labour, is now pressed to improve the processes, to innovate, and to improve competitiveness through the use of ICT. The more competitive countries are also the ones with higher e-readiness. The Global Competitiveness Report 2006/2007 of the World Economic Forum ranked Singapore, Malaysia and Thailand among the top 35 economies in the world in terms of competitiveness.

In sum, if the free market policies do not help the poorest countries, somebody has to do it, and for this reason ASEAN exists. The way to go is integration. By integrating, all countries benefit from a higher community of skills workers, a larger set of resources and a larger critical market mass.

Report can be downloaded here.