Michael
Mussa
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People's
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Germany
and the IMF
France
and the IMF
United
Kingdom and the IMF
People's
Republic of China -- Hong Kong Special Administrative Region and
the IMF
Italy
and the IMF
Japan
and the IMF
Russian
Federation and the IMF
Thailand
and the IMF
United
States and the IMF
Speeches for 2002 2001
2000
1999
1998
1997
1996
1995
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Factors Driving Global Economic
Integration by Michael Mussa Economic Counselor and
Director of Research IMF Presented in Jackson Hole,
Wyoming at a symposium sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank
of Kansas City on “Global Opportunities and
Challenges,” August 25, 2000
The views expressed in this paper are those of the
author and do not reflect those of the IMF. Contents
Charts
- United
States Immigration: Total
- United
States Immigration as a Percent of Resident Population
- United
States: Exports of Non-Factor Services
- Japan
Premium
- Financing
Conditions for Emerging Markets
- Net
Flow of Investment to Developing Countries
- The
Internet Slashes the Cost of Transactions
- Contraction
of World Trade, 1929-33
Tables
- Regional
GDP per Capita
- Emerging
Market Economies: Net Capital Flows
Introduction
Global economic integration is not a new phenomenon. Some
communication and trade took place between distant civilizations
even in ancient times. Since the travels of Marco Polo seven
centuries ago, global economic integration—through trade, factor
movements, and communication of economically useful knowledge and
technology—has been on a generally rising trend. This process of
globalization in the economic domain has not always proceeded
smoothly. Nor has it always benefited all whom it has affected. But,
despite occasional interruptions, such as following the collapse of
the Roman Empire or during the interwar period in this century, the
degree of economic integration among different societies around the
world has generally been rising. Indeed, during the past half
century, the pace of economic globalization (including the reversal
of the interwar decline) has been particularly rapid. And, with the
exception of human migration, global economic integration today is
greater than it ever has been and is likely to deepen going forward.
1
Three fundamental factors have affected the process of economic
globalization and are likely to continue driving it in the future.
First, improvements in the technology of transportation and
communication have reduced the costs of transporting goods,
services, and factors of production and of communicating
economically useful knowledge and technology. Second, the tastes of
individuals and societies have generally, but not universally,
favored taking advantage of the opportunities provided by declining
costs of transportation and communication through increasing
economic integration. Third, public policies have significantly
influenced the character and pace of economic integration, although
not always in the direction of increasing economic integration.
These three fundamental factors have influenced the pattern and
pace of economic integration in all of its important dimensions. In
particular, this paper discusses three important dimensions of
economic integration: (1) through human migration; (2) through trade
in goods and services; and (3) through movements of capital and
integration of financial markets. After examining how fundamental
forces have influenced economic integration in these dimensions, the
paper concludes with reflections on three issues of general
importance to the future course of global economic integration: the
importance of communication as an influence on integration; the
possibility that we may see a sharp reversal in the general trend of
increasing integration, as occurred in the interwar period; and the
apparent end of imperialism as a mechanism of integration. Before
turning to this agenda, however, it is important to emphasize a key
theme that will recur in subsequent discussion: the main factors
that drive the process of economic integration exert not only
independent influences but also interact in important and complex
ways.
Interactions Among the Fundamental
Factors Driving Economic Integration
Although technology, tastes, and public policy each have
important independent influences on the pattern and pace of economic
integration in its various dimensions, they clearly interact in
important ways. Improvements in the technology of transportation and
communication do not occur spontaneously in an economic vacuum. The
desire of people to take advantage of what they see as the benefits
of closer economic integration—that is, the taste for the benefits
of integration—is a key reason why it is profitable to make the
innovations and investments that bring improvements in the
technology of transportation and communication. And, public policy
has often played a significant role in fostering innovation and
investment in transportation and communication both to pursue the
benefits of closer economic integration (within as well as across
political boundaries) and for other reasons, such as national
defense.
The tastes that people have and develop for the potential
benefits of closer economic integration are themselves partly
dependent on experience that is made possible by cheaper means of
transportation and communication. 2
For example, centuries ago, wealthy people in Europe first learned
about the tea and spices of the East as the consequence of limited
and very expensive trade. The broadening desire for these products
resulting from limited experience hastened the search for easier and
cheaper means of securing them. As a by-product of these efforts,
America was discovered, and new frontiers of integration were opened
up in the economic and other domains. More recently, if less
dramatically, it is clear that tastes for products and services
produced in far away locations (including tastes exercised through
travel and tourism), as well as for investment in foreign assets,
depend to an important degree on experience. As this experience
grows, partly because it becomes cheaper, the tastes for the
benefits of economic integration typically tend to rise. For
example, it appears that as global investors have gained more
experience with equities issued by firms in emerging market
countries, they have become more interested in diversifying their
portfolios to include some of these assets.
Public policy toward economic integration is also, to an
important extent, responsive to the tastes that people have
regarding various aspects of such integration, as well as to the
technologies that make integration possible. On the latter score, it
is relevant to note the current issues concerning public policy with
respect to commerce conducted over the internet. Before recent
advances in computing and communications technology, there was no
internet over which commerce could be conducted; and, accordingly,
these issues of public policy simply did not arise. Regarding the
influence of tastes on public policy, the situation is complicated.
Reflecting the general desire to secure the perceived benefits of
integration, public policies usually, if not invariably, tend to
support closer economic integration within political jurisdictions.
The disposition of public policy toward economic integration between
different jurisdictions is typically more ambivalent. Better harbors
built with public support (and better internal means of
transportation as well) tend to facilitate international trade—both
imports and exports. Import tariffs and quotas, however, are clearly
intended to discourage people from exercising their individual
tastes for imported products and encourage production of domestic
substitutes. Sadly, the mercantilist fallacy that seems to provide
common-sense support for these policies often finds political
resonance. Even very smart politicians, such as Abraham Lincoln (who
favored a protective tariff, as well as public support for
investments to enhance domestic economic integration) often fail to
understand the fundamental truth of Lerner’s (1936) symmetry
theorem—a tax on imports is fundamentally the same thing as a tax on
exports.
It should be emphasized that the interactions between public
policy and both tastes and technology in their effects on economic
integration can be quite complex and sometimes surprising. Two
examples help to illustrate this point. First, for several
centuries, there has been active trade between Britain and the
Bordeaux region of France, with Britain importing large quantities
of Bordeaux wine. This trade, however, was seriously interrupted (if
not completely suppressed) during various periods of hostility
between the two countries when one side or the other wished to
suppress trade with the enemy. Partly as a result of being cut off
from Bordeaux wines, and partly as a means of strengthening its
alliance with Portugal, Britain sought to develop imports of
Portuguese wines. The existing Portuguese wines, however, did not
meet British requirements. A solution was found in creating a new
product—Portuguese red wine from the Duoro region, fortified with
grape brandy that gave the wine an extra alcoholic kick, retained
some of the fruit sugar that would otherwise have been absorbed in
fermentation, and helped protect the wine during shipment in hot
weather. 3
The result of this technological innovation was a new product—modern
Port—that developed and retained a considerable market, especially
in Britain, even after barriers to the acquisition of French wines
were reduced.
The second example concerns U.S. public policy toward
international trade in sugar which, in a bizarre way, is partly the
consequence of policies pursued by Napoleon Bonaparte and Admiral
Lord Nelson. For many years, the United States has maintained tight
import quotas on sugar to keep the domestic price typically at
roughly three times the world market level. The domestic political
interests that support this policy include some sugar refiners, some
producers of cane sugar in the deep south and Hawaii, and a few
thousand sugar beet farmers primarily in the upper midwest.
Production of sugar from beets is a “new” technology, dating back to
the Napoleonic period. Before that time, sugar was produced from
cane grown primarily in the West Indies. Admiral Lord Nelson’s
establishment of naval supremacy over the French enabled Britain to
cut off Napoleon’s empire from imports of West Indian sugar. In
response, Napoleon established a prize for finding a substitute for
cane-based sugar which could be produced within his empire. The
sugar beet was discovered, and has been with us ever since.
This story becomes even more complicated when we consider
reactions to the U.S. governments’ sugar policy. Responding to the
high domestic price of sugar, users have searched for alternatives.
High fructose corn syrup is a cheaper and attractive alternative,
especially for producers of soft drinks who are major users of
sweeteners. A key by-product of high fructose corn syrup is corn
gluten meal which can be used as animal feed and which the U.S. both
uses domestically and exports, notably to the European Union. Thus,
through this round-about channel of public policies and product
innovations, what was started by Napoleon and Nelson has come back
to European shores.
Human Migration
Evidence from DNA has established that all modern humans are
descended from common pre-human ancestors living in Africa roughly
one million years ago. From that time until a few centuries ago, the
most important mechanism for interaction among and integration of
the activities of different human societies was undoubtedly people
moving from one place to another, predominantly by foot. In the
great span of pre-history up to roughly fifty thousand years ago,
humans walked out of Africa and settled across the Eurasian land
mass. Settlement of the Americas came later; my mother’s native
American ancestors probably walked across the land bridge between
Asia and North America now submerged under the Bering Strait roughly
ten thousand years ago.
Throughout most of historical time, extending back roughly five
thousand years, human migration has remained the predominant
mechanism of interaction and integration of different societies. Use
of the horse and other beasts of burden changed somewhat the
technology of human movement (and had a larger effect on methods of
warfare), and boats were used to cross water barriers. However, most
people most of the time continued to travel by foot. Although
migration was slow (by the standards of present speeds of human
transport) and often posed considerable risks, it proceeded on a
vast scale. Indeed, even for many societies that pursued agriculture
(as well as hunting and gathering) migration was a very common
phenomenon up until quite recent times—as is testified to by the
waves of migration out of Asia and across Europe extending up to
roughly 1000 AD. 4
What fundamental factors were driving these waves of human
migration? Relevant technologies (e.g., use of horses) presumably
had some effect, and changing tastes may also have mattered
somewhat. But, the key factor was surely public policy. In some
cases a society would see that it was exhausting the productive
opportunities in a particular location and decide to move on. Also,
if one society thought it had the military might to improve its
welfare by taking over the territory and other property of one of
its neighbors and perhaps also enslave its citizens, it would launch
an attack. Seeing discretion as the better part of valor, the
society under attack might decide to move on—and perhaps attack
somebody else.
For the victor who succeeded in subjugating or driving out a
rival society, the result would probably be an improvement in
economic welfare. The loser, of course, would lose. The overall
result presumably was negative sum. Indeed, in the first work in the
entire field now known as social science, Thucydides opens his
History on the Peloponnesian War with the following observation:
“...it is evident that the country now called Hellas had in
ancient times [i.e., well before 400 BC] no settled population; on
the contrary, migrations were of frequent occurrence, the several
tribes readily abandoning their homes under pressure of superior
numbers. Without commerce, without freedom of communication either
by land or sea, cultivating no more of their territory than the
necessities of life required, destitute of capital, never planting
their land (for they could not tell when an invader might not come
and take it all away, and when he did come they had no walls to
stop him), thinking that the necessities of daily sustenance could
be supplied at one place as well as another, they cared little
about shifting their habitation, and consequently neither built
large cities nor attained to any other form of greatness. Their
richest soils were always subject to this change of masters... The
goodness of the land favored the enrichment of particular
individuals, and thus created faction which proved a fertile
source of ruin. It also invited invasion.”
This ancient observation remains highly relevant today. It
reminds us that good governance at the national and international
level—especially maintenance of reasonable security for peoples’
lives and property—is essential for economic progress. It also
reminds us that not all forms of economic interaction among
different societies are necessarily beneficial. Globalization by
means of the sword, the gun boat, or the slave ship is very
different from globalization through voluntary movements of people,
goods, services, and physical and financial assets.
Turning to human migration in more recent times, it is useful to
distinguish between mass migrations which have continued to occur in
response to wars and political and social turmoil, and migrations of
individuals and families undertaken primarily for economic reasons.
Of course, the two categories are not completely distinct;
individual and family decisions about migration are often affected
by both economic and non-economic factors. Nevertheless, events such
as the mass migrations in Europe that occurred during and
immediately after World War II clearly reflect different fundamental
factors than those that were primarily at work in influencing
migration to the United States during the past two centuries.
As the noted historian Oscar Handlin observed, America is a
nation of immigrants. The greatest surge of immigrants came during
the period from the end of the Civil War up to the start of World
War I, especially during the first decade of this century; see Charts
1 and 2. Economic considerations, including the cost of
transportation mainly explain why immigration was particularly high
during this period, with fluctuations in annual immigration flows
reflecting (with a short lag) business cycle conditions in the
United States.
Even in the early part of the 19th century, the United
States was, relatively, a rich country. Average per capita income
was roughly comparable to that in England, but the average American
worker and his family probably lived better than the average English
working family. The gap between America and much of the rest of
Europe was substantial. However, travel from Europe to America was
neither cheap nor fast nor without risks. A sailing ship could
easily take a month to make the voyage. During colonial times, if a
poor man wanted to immigrate, he could secure passage by agreeing to
become an indentured servant, usually for five to seven years.
By the middle of the 19th century, the cost, speed,
and safety of human transport across the Atlantic had all
progressively improved, especially with the replacement of wooden
sailing vessels by iron-made steam ships. These improvements in
passenger transportation continued through the 19th and
into the 20th century. By 1907 when my father’s family
migrated from Paris to New York, the cost of passage was down to a
couple of months’ wages. Indeed, my grandmother Marie Noel earned
sufficiently good wages as a skilled seamstress for high fashion
houses in New York (where speaking French was an important
advantage), and was sufficiently suspicious of American doctors,
that she sailed back to France in 1908 to give birth to her fourth
son, before returning to live out the rest of her life—generally
quite happily—in America. Some of my father’s Italian relatives and
friends also made trips back and forth between Europe and both the
United States and Argentina. A couple of them, after experience in
the new world, returned permanently to Italy. Beyond these
anecdotes, there is evidence of significant back and forth movement
of people between Europe and the Americas in the period shortly
before World War I.
This phenomenon of back-and-forth movement is significant. It
suggests that by no later than the early part of this century, the
costs and risks of transportation had fallen to the point that (in
contrast to earlier times) they were no longer a substantial factor
in economic decisions about migration. Also, this reduction in
transportation costs probably interacted with tastes in a way that
enhanced the likelihood of migration. Even if, as is often the case,
one knows family or friends who have migrated to a new country and
culture, there must be uncertainty and concern about adapting to a
new environment. If the decision to migrate is seen as practically
irreversible, deterrence to migration is relatively high. If the
cost of reversal are comparatively low, it is possible to experiment
and see whether one’s tastes are compatible with or adaptable to the
new environment.
Undoubtedly, the transportation costs of migration have continued
to decline since World War I. Why has the pace of immigration into
the United States slowed? For migration from Europe, the answer is
partly that income differentials have narrowed and so too have the
economic and non-economic incentives for migration. However,
economic incentives for migration to the United States (and most
other industrial countries) from developing countries remain very
large. Here, it is clear that public policies restricting
migration—even though not fully effective—are the key reason why
migration has declined from the high rates prevailing before World
War I. Indeed, for the United States, there was no restriction on
inward migration until the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 (adopted
because of domestic political opposition, especially in California
and other western states, to further immigration of Chinese laborers
for railroad construction and other work). General restrictions on
immigration from other countries did not come until the National
Origins Act of 1924. Interestingly, as will be discussed further
below, enactment of this highly restrictive measure was part of the
general retreat of the United States into isolationism during the
interwar period. This retreat, which was not limited only to the
United States, reflected a general shift in tastes toward opposition
to many forms of involvement and interaction with foreign
countries.
Trade in Goods and Services
Traditionally, economists tend to focus on trade in goods and, to
a lesser extent, services as the key mechanism for integrating
economic activities across countries and as a critical channel (but
not the only important one) for transmitting disturbances between
national economies. Indeed, in the economic theory of international
trade (specifically the Hecksher-Ohlin-Samuelson theory described in
most textbooks), trade in goods is seen as a substitute for mobility
of factors of production. Under certain restricted conditions, which
do not apply completely in practice, the theory says trade in the
outputs of production processes may be an essentially perfect
substitute for mobility of factors, with the result that factor
returns are equalized internationally—i.e., factor price
equalization is achieved—without the necessity for factors to move
internationally to achieve this equalization. 5
If the conditions for factor price equalization did apply, there
would be no economic benefit from international mobility of factors
of production. Full economic efficiency could be achieved
exclusively through trading outputs. 6
A key reason why the conditions for factor price equalization do not
fully apply is because of barriers to trade in outputs that
effectively prevent the equalization of relative output prices at
different locations. These barriers take two forms: natural barriers
to trade in the form of transportation costs and also costs of
information about product prices and availabilities at different
locations; and artificial barriers to trade arising from tariffs,
quotas, and other public policy interventions. Indeed, even if the
broader conditions for factor price equalization (e.g., identical
technologies with constant returns to scale) and, consequently trade
in goods alone (without factor mobility) is not sufficient to
achieve full international economic integration, a focus on natural
and artificial barriers to trade is still important in assessing the
extent to which international economic integration through trade
achieves as much as is possible through this channel. Specifically,
if there were literally no natural or artificial barriers to trade
in goods or services, then the relative prices of all goods and
services would be equalized everywhere, and integration through the
channel of trade would be perfect and complete. In practice, of
course, there are important natural and artificial barriers to trade
which preclude such perfection. 7
In general, the higher are the barriers to trade, the lower will be
the degree of international integration through trade, and
conversely. Thus, it is relevant to consider what has been happening
to barriers to trade as a means of assessing what has been happening
to international economic integration through this important
channel.
The development of ocean-going sailing vessels beginning in the
late 15th century expanded the horizons for trade to a
truly global scale. However, despite gradual and cumulatively
substantial improvements in transportation technology, during the
era of sail high sea transportation costs (including risks from
piracy or misadventure) generally remained an important barrier to
trade over substantial distances. For most goods, shipping by land
for more than a few score miles was prohibitively expensive. 8
Shipping by water across the Atlantic or, even more so, between
Europe and Asia was mainly restricted to goods with high ratios of
value to weight and substantial disparities in relative prices
between distant trading locations. Unlike recent times when there is
a good deal of two-way intra-industry trade in very similar
products, trade over long distances consisted primarily of products
which were not produced domestically or of payment flows of gold and
silver. Gradually, as sailing vessels became larger and piracy and
other hazards to ocean-borne commerce were reduced., ocean-borne
shipping costs did decline significantly and longer-distance trade
expanded as a result. Nevertheless, well into the 1800s,
transportation costs remained an important natural barrier to global
trade.
The invention and development of steam-powered iron ships
during the second half of the 19th century further
reduced the costs of ocean shipping. By the end of the century, the
cost of shipping a ton of cargo across the Atlantic was probably
less than one-fifth of what it had been at the start of the
century.9
This reduction in shipping costs contributed importantly to the
expansion of world trade and to the range of products participating
in that trade.
Artificial barriers to trade in the form of import tariffs and
other public policy interventions have a very long history. No
doubt, there has always been some interest in such measures as means
of providing protection to domestic producers (often including
monopolists and cartels) from foreign competition. Owners of
warehouses in ancient Rome, for example, supposedly objected to the
construction of the new harbor at Ostia which would improve the
city’s ability to deal with food shortages by increasing imports
from around the Mediterranean. However, raising revenue for the
state probably remained the most important reason for the imposition
of tariffs until the 19th century. In the United States,
in particular, tariffs were generally the most important source of
revenue for the federal government up to World War I.
Despite the continuing importance of revenue as a reason for
imposing tariffs, it appears that interest in these measures as a
means of providing protection to domestic producers increased as
natural barriers to trade from transportation costs declined and as
the revolution in manufacturing technology created important new
competitive threats to more traditional and higher cost producers.
Interestingly, the tariff proposed by Treasury Secretary Alexander
Hamilton in President Washington’s first administration was intended
both to raise much needed revenue for the new federal government and
to provide protection to domestic manufactures. Manufactured
products typically had quite high ratios of value to weight, and
even the quite high transatlantic shipping costs of the 1790s
offered comparatively little natural protection for American
producers of such products.
By the end of the 19th century, ocean shipping costs
for high valued products like most manufactures had generally
declined to the point that they were no longer a substantial natural
barrier to trade among the industrialized countries bordering the
Atlantic. 10
Import tariffs imposed by most of these countries—except for Great
Britain which retained a policy of free trade—were, by this stage,
generally far more important barriers than transportation costs.
The interwar period witnessed a collapse in the volume of world
trade. This collapse reflected both the worldwide depression of
economic activity in the 1930s and the widespread and massive
increase in tariffs and other trade restrictions during this period.
The retreat into protectionism included, and to an important degree
was probably stimulated by, two massive increases in tariffs imposed
by the United States. The first was imposed just after the end of
World War I and was intended as both a revenue measure (to absorb
the elimination of the wartime income tax and to help pay-off debts
accumulated during the war). The second was the infamous
Smoot-Hawley tariff of 1930 which must be seen largely as an effort
of protectionism.
Since World War II, the world economy has enjoyed a remarkable
era of prosperity that has spread quite broadly, but not
universally, across the globe. Over the past five decades, real
world GDP has risen at somewhat more than a 4 percent annual rate,
with real GDP in developing countries (as a group) growing in per
capita terms at about the same pace as the industrial countries. The
result has been that real living standards, as measured by real per
capita GDP, have improved on average about three-fold in just half a
century; see Table
1. During this era of remarkable economic growth, world trade in
goods and services has expanded at nearly double the pace of world
real GDP. As a result the volume of world trade in goods and
services (the sum of both exports and imports) rose from barely
one-tenth of world GDP in 1950 to about one-third of world GDP in
2000. By this measure—and by others as well—there has indeed been an
increase in the degree of global economic integration through trade
in goods and services during the past half century.
The two fundamental factors that appear to have driven this
increasing global economic integration are continuing improvements
in the technology of transportation and communication and a very
substantial, progressive reduction in artificial barriers to
international commerce resulting from public policy interventions.
For transportation, the most dramatic improvements have been for
air cargo, which except for airmail, did not exist as a commercially
important phenomenon fifty years ago. Now, for a wide array of
products from fresh flowers to electronic components to airplane
parts, air cargo is the speedy and cost effective means of
international transport. For some of these products, international
trade would not be feasible without comparatively cheap air cargo.
Also, it is clear that many modern production management practices
(including just-in-time inventory techniques utilized by different
divisions of multinational corporations) are heavily reliant on the
use of air cargo.
Ocean shipping costs have fallen substantially in the past half
century, perhaps by as much as a factor of four or five. Oil tankers
of roughly 10,000 tons displacement have been replaced by
supertankers of up to 500,000 tons, with no increase in crew size.
Merchant steamers of 5,000 to 8,000 tons have been replaced by
containerized cargo carriers displacing 100,000 to 150,000 tons.
Loading and off-loading by large crews of longshoremen has been
virtually eliminated. Integration with the domestic transportation
networks of road and rail is speedy, efficient, and less prone to
disruption.
Land transportation costs are directly important for a good deal
of international trade between contiguous countries and indirectly
important for connecting international trade with domestic
production and consumption. Land transportation costs (trucking and
rail) have clearly declined during the past half century, although
proportionately much less than for air cargo.
Communications costs—for voice, text, and data—have dropped
enormously in the postwar era, and are continuing to fall
precipitously under the influence of rapid improvements in
information and communications technology. Although not often given
much attention in traditional trade theory, this has had broad
implications for international trade, as such trade generally
necessitates a good deal of communication between actual and
potential buyers and sellers and a variety of middlemen and
facilitators. Probably the most important effect of improvements in
communications has been felt on trade in services. For a variety of
services, modern communications technology makes it possible and
cost efficient to separate production and use in ways that were not
previously feasible. Design of new computer chips can be done in
Silicon Valley and implemented in production facilities in East
Asia. Software can be written under contract in India or Ireland and
e-mailed back to the United States. Doctors can diagnose patients
using transmitted MRI images and other data. Methods are even being
created whereby operations can be performed robotically by a
specialist surgeon thousands of miles away from his patient.
Financial services (to be discussed below) are a particularly
important area where modern communications technology is helping to
transform the arena for international trade in services. More
broadly, the decline in communications costs is surely one of the
important reasons why for the United States exports of non-factor
services in recent years has been growing more rapidly than either
GDP or merchandise exports; see Chart
3.
For government imposed artificial barriers to international
trade, the postwar era has undoubtedly seen a dramatic reduction.
The extent of the reduction is hard to measure with great precision.
The disruption of the war and of postwar reconstruction and the
widespread use of exchange restrictions and other non-transparent
policies during and for some time after the war are one special set
of problems. Resort to import quotas, voluntary export restraints,
and other non-tariff interventions in more recent years is another
difficulty. Also, trade flows undoubtedly respond with lags, perhaps
quite significant lags, to changes in the level of barriers to
trade. Nevertheless, assuming that there was a significant overhang
effect from the war and war time measures that tended to restrict
trade shortly after the war, and taking account of the decline in
tariff rates for the main industrial countries since the war to very
low levels today, it is possible that levels of protection for
domestic manufacturing industries in industrial countries have
declined by as much as 90 percent since World War II. This includes
the fact that tariffs have been eliminated within the European Union
and within Nafta and that inflation has eroded the ad valoren
equivalent of many specific tariffs. While significant import
protection remains for industrial countries, it is concentrated on a
few key sectors, most notably agriculture, and also textiles and a
few manufactured goods. For developing countries, the situation is
more mixed and levels of protection generally remain higher than
those in the industrial countries. However, during the past twenty
years there has been a significant move by most economically
important developing countries to liberalize their trade regimes.
Taking account of the fact that, measured at market prices and
market exchange rates, developing countries account for only about
one-fifth of world output and world trade, it is probably not much
of an exaggeration to say that artificial barriers to international
trade from government policy interventions have fallen by between 80
and 90 percent since World War II.11
This is obviously an enormous accomplishment in the direction of
public policies that seek to secure the benefits of a more
efficiently integrated world economy. How much the of rise in the
volume of world trade relative to world GDP might plausibly be
explained by this accomplishment? A back of the envelope calculation
sheds some light on this question. Suppose that the combination of
the reduction in artificial barriers to trade from government
policies (the main factor) and reduction in natural barriers to
trade (a much more modest factor in the postwar era) have reduced
the total barriers to trade from an effective average of 35 percent
to an effective average of only 5 percent. Suppose that these
figures apply to the United States. Standard estimates of trade
elasticities (see Goldstein and Khan (1984)) suggest that the volume
of imports would rise by roughly 2 percent of U.S. GDP. This is much
smaller than the actual increase in the share of imports in U.S. GDP
from under 5 percent in 1950 to nearly 15 percent in 2000. For more
open economies with high initial ratios of trade to GDP, the
estimated increases in the trade to GDP ratio would be larger than
for the United States, but the actual trade share gains are also
generally larger.
Part of the resolution of this conundrum comes from recognizing
that when trade barriers are reduced all around the world economy,
there is a mutually reinforcing effect not captured by considering
each country individually. U.S. trade expands not only because U.S.
trade barriers are reduced, but also because other countries’
barriers are reduced as well. Taking account of this interaction
effect and relying on standard estimates of relevant elasticities,
the assumed reduction in artificial and natural trade barriers might
plausibly explain as much as a doubling in the volume of world trade
relative to world GDP; that is, an increase in the share of imports
from 6 percent to 12 percent of world GDP or an increase in the
combined share of imports and exports from 12 percent to 24 percent
of GDP. The actual increases in these world trade shares, however,
amount to a tripling—which is beyond the range of reasonable results
using standard estimates of relevant elasticities.
Three things might plausibly explain the substantial remaining
gap. It is possible that because of the disruptions of the war and
its aftermath and the policies pursued before, during, and shortly
after the war, that the effective barriers influencing volumes of
trade in 1950 were much higher than has been assumed and that,
correspondingly, the reduction in these barriers should be
substantially greater than the assumed average effective reduction
from 35 to 5 percent. Alternatively, it is possible that, even
though the empirical estimates are quite robust, the relevant
elasticities are actually a fair bit larger than the consensus
suggested by the bulk of empirical studies. The general tendency for
estimates of price elasticities to be low (Stigler’s Law) adds some
comfort to this possibility. Then, there is the possibility that the
standard theory linking trade volumes to relative prices and income
(or expenditure) levels leaves out something important, especially
in a longer-term context. The fact that the so-called “gravity”
model performs relatively well in explaining bilateral trading
volumes cross-sectionally may reinforce this explanation.
Specifically, if trade between two countries tends to rise
proportionately with respect to each of their economic sizes and
diminish with the distance between them, then the suggestion is that
doubling the size of both economies should raise their bilateral
trade by a factor of four rather than by a factor of two.
Regardless of which, if any, of these explanations is correct,
the conclusion remains that the massive reduction in artificial
barriers to trade and the substantial, although quantitatively less
significant, reduction in natural barriers to trade in the postwar
era contributed very importantly to increasing global economic
integration.
Surprisingly, however, the extent of global economic integration
through international trade today is, by some key measures, not much
greater than it was a century ago. Specifically, the rising shares
of trade relative to GDP in the postwar era have only just recently
restored these shares to about where they were just before World War
I. This seems surprising because artificial barriers to trade would
appear, on balance, to be lower than they were at that time, and
natural barriers to trade are surely much lower than they were then.
However, as discussed by Bordo, Eichengreen, and Irwin (1999) and
summarized in Crafts (2000), the result is less surprising when
account is taken the massive change in the structure of national
outputs during the past century. Around 1900, roughly two-thirds of
GDP was in the goods producing sector of the typical industrial
country. Now that situation is reversed, and roughly two-thirds of
GDP is in the service sector of the typical industrial country (with
a somewhat higher services share in the United States). 12
If trade shares are measured as ratios of international trade
(exports plus imports) of goods to the output—or even more so, the
value added—of goods production, then those shares are soon to have
increased significantly from a century ago. This supports the view
that international integration of markets for goods is significantly
greater today than a century ago.
Looking forward, how might the fundamental factors of
technological developments affecting natural barriers to trade and
of public policies affecting artificial barriers to trade be
expected to evolve and thereby to influence the extent of global
economic integration through international trade in goods and
services. Almost surely, technological improvements will continue to
reduce the costs of transportation and communication, both
domestically and internationally. For transportation, because costs
cannot go negative, further absolute cost reductions cannot
generally be as large as what has been achieved in the past century.
Even in proportional terms, it seems likely that the pace of advance
will slow from the pace of the past century. In fact, during the
past quarter century, while there have been continuing efficiency
gains in transportation, the main technologies of land, sea, and air
transport have not changed. Nevertheless, as the natural barriers to
international trade for most goods arising from transportation costs
are already quite low, technological limits on the likely pace of
future cost reductions will probably not be very important, at least
for the industrial countries. For developing countries, where the
infrastructure of modern transportation is generally less well
developed, opportunities for reductions in transportation costs that
would enhance economic integration (both within the domestic economy
and internationally) are clearly greater.
For communications (as discussed further below), the situation is
very different. A technological revolution is underway and appears
likely to continue for some time. Costs of communication, domestic
and international, have fallen rapidly; and these declines also seem
likely to continue. International trade surely benefits from
improvements in communications. As previously discussed, the areas
likely to benefit the most are those that rely particularly heavily
on communications, with financial services being an important
example.
Concerning the future of public policies toward trade, the
successful postwar effort to reduce trade barriers has virtually
eliminated most significant restrictions on trade in most goods
among industrial countries, with notable exceptions for a number of
agricultural products and a few manufactured products. To make
further meaningful progress, the industrial countries need to
address the few remaining hard cases (especially agriculture) in
goods trade and deal with a complex of restrictions that
artificially suppress opportunities for trade in services—trade that
is increasingly being made feasible by advances in communications
and other technologies. For developing countries, the agenda
includes both reducing import restrictions that remain relatively
high for products where industrial country barriers are already
quite low and securing from the industrial countries reductions in
barriers against exports of products for which developing countries
have an important comparative advantage.
International Capital Movements and Trade in
Financial Services
For the Jackson Hole Conference of 1993, Morris Goldstein and I
were asked to write a paper on, “The Integration of World Capital
Markets.” While much has happened during the past seven years,
particularly in global financial markets, events have been
remarkably kind to that earlier paper, and its main conclusions are
worth repeating.
... we have surveyed the available empirical evidence on the
integration across national capital markets. We have found that
these international links have been increasing over the past
decade — especially for high-grade, financial instruments traded
actively in the wholesale markets of major financial centers.
Capital markets in developing countries too are becoming more
closely integrated with markets in the rest of the world, although
they have progressed less far in that direction than the
industrial countries.
It is still way too early to speak of a single, global capital
market where most of world saving and wealth are auctioned to the
highest bidder and where a wide range of assets carry the same
risk-adjusted expected return. Some important components of wealth
(like human capital) are scarcely traded at all, and currency
risk, the threat of government intermediation (especially during
periods of turbulence), and the strong preference for consuming
home goods and investing in more familiar home and regional
markets, still serve to restrict the range and size of asset
substitutability. But the forces making for stronger arbitrage of
expected returns are already powerful enough to have made a large
dent in the autonomy that authorities have in the conduct of
macroeconomic and regulatory policies. When private markets, led
by the increasing financial muscle of institutional investors,
reach the concerted view (rightly or wrongly) that the risk/return
outlook for a particular security or currency has changed, those
forces will be difficult to resist....
We see little in the factors underlying the evolution of
international capital markets to suggest that this increased clout
of private markets will reverse itself in the future. Quite the
contrary: international diversification is still in its
adolescence; the costs of gathering, processing, and transmitting
information and of executing financial transactions will probably
decline further with advances in technology; the pace of financial
liberalization (including cross-border ownership) and innovation
continues unabated in most industrial countries; the pool of
savings managed by professionals is growing (as private pension
schemes supplement public ones, and as saving shifts from the
banking sector into mutual funds); and the same reforms that
reduce systemic risk (such as improvements in the payments and
settlement system) often also enhance the private sector’s
capacity to redenominate the currency composition of its assets
and liabilities at short notice.
We would not go so far as to suggest that the growth and
agility of private capital markets now makes it unrealistic to
operate a fixed exchange rate arrangement durably and
successfully. But we do believe that these factors have made the
conditions for doing so more demanding....
With the benefit of perfect hindsight, it is not hard to
identify instances over the past decade or so when international
capital flows (like domestic ones) did not pay enough attention to
fundamentals. ... Nevertheless, we see no basis for concluding
that private capital markets usually “get it wrong” in deciding
which securities and currencies to support and which ones not to.
... We therefore see merit in trying to improve the “discipline”
of markets so that it is more consistent and effective rather than
in trying to weaken or supplant the clout of markets.
Toward this end, two conditions (in addition to open capital
markets themselves) are worth emphasizing. First, markets must be
aware of the full magnitude of the debtor’s obligations if they
are to make an accurate assessment of his debt-servicing
obligations and capacity. The lower is the range and quality of
that information, the more likely is it that “contagion effects”
will be present, since lenders will find it difficult to separate
better credit risks from weaker ones. More comprehensive reporting
of off-balance sheet borrowing (by private firms and sovereigns
alike), greater transparency in the obligations of related
entities (in conglomerates and the like), greater international
harmonization of accounting standards more generally, and more
prompt disclosure of losses, would all be helpful. Second, market
discipline cannot be effective if market participants believe that
the borrower will be bailed out (one way or another) in the case
of an actual or impending default. When there is such a perception
of a bailout, the interest rate paid will reflect the
creditworthiness of the guarantor — not that of the borrower — and
there will be little incentive either for the borrower to rein in
his errant behavior or for lenders to monitor and appraise the
borrower’s behavior in making loans....
None of this implies that authorities should be indifferent to
the potential prudential and systemic risks that may be associated
with the trend toward global capital market liberalization and
innovation. ... The message however should not be to try and halt
financial liberalization and the international integration of
capital markets but rather to accompany that liberalization and
integration with a strengthening of the supervisory framework that
permits the attendant risks to be properly priced and that
encourages risk management programs to be upgraded.
As the debt crisis of the 1980s so powerfully illustrated,
these issues of the proper pricing and management of risk in
international capital markets are of deep concern to developing
countries, as well as to industrial countries. ... the changing
character of much of the capital flow to developing countries —
away from bank loans and toward bonds, equities, and direct
foreign investment — suggests enhanced flexibility and resiliency
of the international financial system in dealing with any future
problems.
What should be added to these conclusions from Mussa and
Goldstein (1993)? I would stress four points relatively briefly and
develop one key issue at somewhat greater length—namely, the
integration of the world economy through the globalization of the
financial services industry.
First, as suggested in Mussa and Goldstein, during the past seven
years, financial markets, especially wholesale markets for high
grade instruments, have tended to become more tightly linked
internationally, especially among the industrial countries and also
including many important emerging market economies. Most notably and
as a clear example of the influence of public policy on economic
integration, the advent of EMU (and the anticipation of this event)
has eliminated exchange rate fluctuations among the eleven
participating countries and has led to a dramatic reduction in
interest rate spreads and in the volatility of these spreads. A
unified market for bank liquidity emerged very rapidly once EMU
started, with the larger banks in each country bidding aggressive
for liquidity auctioned by the European Central Bank (ECB) and
acting as wholesalers of liquidity to second-tier institutions;
these developments are discussed in the IMF’s reports on
International Capital Markets for 1999 and 2000. For the
industrial countries, the only significant suggestion of any
weakening in international capital markets linkages relates to
Japan. When concerns about the financial condition of many large
Japanese banks arose during 1997–98, the “Japan premium” paid by
large Japanese banks to borrow on international banking markets
spiked up; see Chart
4. Government measures to help re-capitalize and restructure
Japanese banks was subsequently instrumental in reducing the Japan
premium. Nevertheless, many Japanese banks have substantially scaled
back their involvement in international financial markets. Also (as
described in the IMF’s report on International Capital
Markets for 2000) there are some indications of a degree of
detachment of some Japanese financial markets, such as the market
for yen-based OTC derivatives, from global financial conditions.
For emerging market economies, dramatic evidence of their linkage
to global financial markets was provided during the tequila crisis
of 1995 and especially during the Asian/Russian/LTCM/Brazilian
crises of 1997–99. It is noteworthy that the Asian crisis, which
effectively began with the attack on the Hong Kong dollar and stock
market in mid October 1997, was preceded by a massive surge in gross
private capital flows to emerging market countries and a deep
compression of spreads for emerging market borrowers; 13
see Chart
5. These developments signal a shift in tastes of global
investors either toward lower assessments of the risks of investing
in emerging markets or toward greater acceptance of such risks. With
the onset of the Asian crisis, there was an apparent sudden shift of
tastes of global investors away from emerging market risks,
especially for Asian emerging market economies; and, as gross
private capital flows dropped precipitously (especially for Asian
emerging markets), spreads for emerging market borrowers spiked
upwards. In this episode and in later episodes of the series of
crises during 1997–99, many emerging market countries lost effective
access to global financial markets. In many cases, the loss of
access proved relatively brief—in contrast to the experience of many
Latin American countries during the debt crisis of the 1980s—but in
a few cases access has not yet been restored. Consistent with Mussa
and Goldstein, while some progress has been made, the linkage of
developing countries to global financial markets remains weaker and
more tenuous than for industrial countries.
Second, although not original to Mussa and Goldstein, the
observation that for a country highly open to private international
capital flows, the policy requirements for successful operation of a
pegged exchange rate regime are quite demanding has certainly proved
prophetic. For Mexico in the tequila crisis, for Thailand, Malaysia,
Indonesia, and Korea in the Asian crisis, for Russia in 1998, and
for Brazil in 1999, the combination of a pegged exchange rate regime
with a relatively high degree of openness to private international
capital flows proved unsustainable and contributed to substantial
financial crises. Countries that supported their pegged exchange
rate policies with firm commitments to consistent monetary policies
and maintained well-capitalized and well-regulated banking
systems—notably Argentina and Hong Kong—were able to weather recent
crises without collapses in their policy regimes. However, emerging
market countries that maintained more flexible exchange rate
regimes—such as Singapore, Taiwan Province of China, South Africa,
and Mexico (after 1995)—were generally better sheltered from the
effect of recent financial crises.
The general lesson here (and also earlier from the ERM crises of
1992–93) appears to be that the public policies that support the
highest degree of international capital market integration—rigidly
pegged exchange rates and free capital mobility—are feasible, but
only if other key macroeconomic policies, most importantly national
monetary policies, are subordinated to this goal of financial
integration. Where the requisite degree of subordination is not
feasible or not desirable, a choice of public policy orientations
must be made. For some countries—notably those that have
comparatively weak financial systems and have in place systems of
controls on private capital flows—maintenance of some restrictions
on private capital flows (at least for some period of time) may be a
desirable option that allows greater stability of the exchange rate.
14
For the major currency countries and regions (the United States, the
euro area, and Japan) where unrestricted capital mobility is the
established norm, and where pursuit of a common monetary policy
appears unlikely to be consistent with key goals of macroeconomic
stability, floating exchange rates will, and should, continue to
prevail.
Third, in light of the experience of the past seven years, the
favorable assessment of the growing role of and prospect for direct
investment flows to emerging market economies appears justified; but
the relatively sanguine assessment of changes in the composition of
portfolio flows and of the “enhanced resiliency of the international
financial system in dealing with any future problems” seems somewhat
premature. While it is true that flows of foreign direct investment
to developing countries have expanded considerably during the 1990s
and have come to dominate net flows of private capital to these
countries (see Chart
6); and flows of FDI have also proved to be quite stable during
recent financial crises. Nevertheless, the international financial
system was certainly not free of important problems during the past
seven years.
On the positive side, as previously noted, many of the emerging
market countries that lost access to global capital markets in
recent crises did rapidly regain it—a sign of enhanced resiliency.
Also, developments since recent crises (examined in detail in
Chapter 3 of the IMF’s report on International Capital Markets
for 2000) are reassuring. Bank lending as a source of finance
for emerging markets—which proved quite volatile in recent
crises—has continued to decline, while FDI has strengthened further
and net portfolio equity flows have recovered. In a number of
emerging market countries, domestic debt markets have developed
considerably and have become an important source of finance for
sovereigns and corporates. Although the global investor base for
emerging market bonds remains somewhat fickle, emerging market
equities seem to be gaining more of an independent foothold.
Fourth, the emphasis in Mussa and Goldstein on efforts to improve
market discipline through better provision of information,
heightened transparency, harmonization of accounting standards,
etc., and through avoiding generous bailouts of errant borrowers
(and their creditors) appears to have successfully forecast much of
the agenda for the recent debate on improving the international
financial architecture. Already at this stage important progress has
been made in these reform efforts; but much remains to be done on
the implementation of reforms. It is still to be seen how much these
reforms will improve the performance of the international financial
system.
In my view, the main omission from the discussion of global
capital market integration in Mussa and Goldstein is the relative
lack of emphasis on the globalization of the activities of providing
financial services—a phenomenon which is part of the broader
revolution in this sector brought on primarily by rapid advances in
information and communications technology. The rapid reductions in
the costs of storing, accessing, analyzing, and communicating
information are both dramatically reducing the costs of producing
virtually all existing forms of financial services and creating new
products and services (such as many OTC derivatives) which would
have been prohibitively expensive with older technologies. At the
national level, the structure of the financial services sector is
changing as the distinctions that used to exist between commercial
banks, investment banks, securities dealers, insurance companies,
and other financial service providers become increasingly blurred.
At the international level, the same basic forces are driving where
financial services are increasingly being provided across national
boundaries, and public policies are tending to accommodate and/or
facilitate this mechanism of global economic integration.
There is no doubt that advances in information and communications
technology are the most important technological advance of the past
quarter century. In the United States, technological advances in
these areas account for much of the rise in total factor
productivity in recent years. As a result of these technological
advances, the costs of processing and communicating all forms of
information have been all declining very rapidly; i.e., by a factor
of two or more within a two year period. By nature, much of the
activity in the financial services industry has to do with the
processing and communication of information. It stands to reason,
therefore, that the financial services industry would be
particularly strongly affected by rapid advances in information and
communications technology—and, it has been. This is readily apparent
in a number of phenomena. 15
For example, the costs of making stock exchange transactions for
both retail and wholesale traders has dropped enormously (and the
gap between them has narrowed significantly) during the past twenty
years, with the predictable result that there has been an explosion
of the volume of transactions and (perhaps somewhat more
surprisingly) a large increase in the number of retail investors.
The cost of bank transactions at the wholesale and interbank level
has also dropped precipitously; and this, among other things, is
reflected in the continuing rise in the volume of bank transactions
relative to nominal GDP. Some indication of how advances in
technology are affecting (and likely to continue to affect) retail
banking transactions is suggested by Chart
7.
As information and communications technology has advanced and the
costs of doing virtually all forms of financial business have
declined, the meaningfulness of the differences associated with
different locations or with different sectors of the financial
services industry appear to have eroded. This reflects the fact it
is much cheaper now than a few years ago to do financial business
over a wider geographic range and over a wider scope of activities.
As a consequence, there has been a tendency toward restructuring of
institutions in the financial sector in the direction of broader
geographic and functional scope. This tendency is apparent in recent
efforts to integrate and/or consolidate trading activities on
different stock and commodity exchanges. It is also apparent the
restructuring of banking systems and the integration of banks with
other types of financial institutions.
Public policy in most countries has been accommodating or
facilitating these developments. In the United States, the last
restrictions on nation wide banking have been removed; and, with the
passage of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act last year, most remaining
restrictions on bank holding company participation in the full range
of financial services have been removed. In the European Union,
under the auspices of directives from the European Commission, the
banking sector is becoming more competitive; and the advent of the
EMU at the start of 1999 is providing important additional impetus
to restructuring in the financial sector. In Japan, partly as a
consequence of difficulties of recent years, public policy is also
pushing, reform and restructuring in the financial sector; see IMF
(2000).
Not surprisingly, the same types of changes that have been taking
place within the financial service sectors of individual countries
have also been occurring internationally—and in response to the same
principal driving force. The advances in information and
communication technology which make it efficient to do financial
business across a wider geographic and functional scope
domestically, also operate across national boundaries. And, the
effects are seen, for example, in the efforts to integrate the
activities of stock and commodity markets internationally and in the
international diversification of a number of leading firms providing
financial services. As in the domestic arena, public policies are,
by and large, facilitating these developments or at least
accommodating them. In particular, seeing the advantages of allowing
(sophisticated) foreign financial institutions to provide services
in domestic markets, a number of emerging market countries have
liberalized or are liberalizing to permit such participation; see
IMF (2000).
Going forward, it is clear that advances in information and
communications technology that have already been achieved and those
that are in the pipeline will continue to drive the evolution of the
financial services industry. People will want to take advantage of
the opportunities rapid advances in technology allow—in financial
services, as well as elsewhere. Public policy can influence, to some
degree, the pace and pattern of developments. It can spur or retard
them; but it is unlikely to stop them.
At the international level, this implies that we have strong
reason to expect an increasing degree of capital market integration
in the future. Information and communications costs are a natural
barrier to integration of capital markets and financial
services—just as transportation costs are for trade in physical
goods. As these costs come down, integration should increase.
There is, however, one important worry. Many empirical studies
have confirmed the common-sense appraisal of the postwar experience
with trade liberalization: open policies toward international trade
are an important factor contributing to stronger economic growth.
16
Similarly persuasive evidence is not available for liberal policies
toward international capital flows, particularly for portfolio flows
rather than direct investment flows. Indeed, the experience in
recent financial crises could cause reasonable people to question
whether liberal policies toward international capital flows are wise
for all countries in all circumstances. 17
The answer, I believe, is probably not. High openness to
international capital flows, especially short-term credit flows, can
be dangerous for countries that weak or inconsistent macro-economic
policies or inadequately capitalized and regulated financial
systems. For such countries, public policy has important challenges
to meet in preparing for a world economy that is being driven toward
higher degrees of capital market integration.
The Particular Importance of
Communications
In many discussions of international economic integration, the
focus is on integration through trade and factor movements, both
labor and capital. There is, however, clearly another important
mechanism through which economic activities in different parts of
the world affect each other; namely, through the communication of
economically relevant information and technology. It may, or may
not, be true that Marco Polo carried back from China to Italy the
concept of noodles—and thus multiple forms of Italian pasta were
born. The lesson nevertheless is clear. It is not necessary to
transport large quantities of noodles (by expensive and slow camel
caravans) from China to Italy to produce a culinary revolution. It
is necessary only to transport the concept of a noodle and an
understanding of how noodles are made to have this effect. And
clearly, noodles are but one example. International trade and
movements of people and capital are undoubtedly important for the
spread around the world of the fundamental technological innovations
that underlie the broad advance of human productivity—from the use
of the wheel through the modern personal computer. Societies that
cut themselves off from commerce with the rest of humanity do tend
to stagnate. However, the volume of international commerce is
probably not the critical determinant of the spread of useful
innovations—provided that channels of communication remain
reasonably well open.
Abraham Lincoln—the only American President to be granted a
patent—had a special appreciation of the importance of communication
in facilitating innovation:
[I]n the world’s history, certain inventions and discoveries
occurred, of peculiar value, on account of their great efficiency
in facilitating all other inventions and discoveries.... The date
of the first [writing] is unknown; ...the second—printing—came in
1436. ...When writing was invented, any important observation ,
likely to lead to a discovery, had at least a chance of being
written down, and consequently, a better chance of never being
forgotten; and of being seen and reflected upon, by a much greater
number of persons; and thereby the chances of a valuable hint
being caught, proportionably augmented. By this means, the
observation of a single individual might lead to an important
invention, years, even centuries later after he was dead. In one
word, by means of writing the seeds of invention were more
permanently preserved, and more widely sown. And yet, for the
three thousand years during which printing remained undiscovered
after writing was in use, it was only a small portion of the
people who could write, or read writing; and consequently the
field of invention, though much extended, still continued to be
very limited. At length, printing came. It gave ten thousand
copies of any written matter, quite as cheaply as ten were given
before; and consequently, a thousand minds were brought into the
field where there was but one before. This was the great
gain; and history shows a great change corresponding
to it, in point of time. I will venture to consider it, the
true termination of that period called “the dark ages.”
Discoveries, inventions, and improvements followed rapidly, and
have been increasing their rapidity ever since.
If Lincoln was right about this issue (as he was about slavery,
but not about tariffs), then the recent and continuing advances in
communications promise to have profound effects on innovation across
a very broad spectrum and on a global scale. We are seeing the
beginnings of this now, in the financial services. It promises to be
a profound force driving global economic integration in the
future.
A Reversal in the Trend of Increasing
Global Economic Integration?
During the interwar period between World Wars I and II, there was
a sharp reversal in the generally rising trend of global economic
integration. The volume of world trade contracted sharply. As
illustrated in Chart
8, this contraction of world trade was particularly pronounced
during the early 1930s, and was partly attributable to, the general
decline of economic activity in the great depression. The decline in
world trade, however, was much greater than the decline in economic
activity (or in goods production). The rise of protectionism,
particularly the Smoot-Hawley tariff imposed by the United States in
1930 and the retaliatory responses to it, clearly contributed
importantly to the collapse of world trade. At around the same time,
capital market linkages among countries weakened substantially, as
the international gold standard collapsed and as several countries,
led by Nazi Germany, began to impose highly restrictive controls on
capital movements.
A complex of factors undoubtedly contributed to the general sharp
reversal of global economic integration in the interwar period,
including especially the economic effects of the great depression.
Several studies have suggested economic and political economy
explanations for this reversal, especially as relates to
developments in the United States; see, for example, Eichengreen
(1989) and Irwin and Kroszner (1996). However, I believe that it is
not possible to explain an important part of this worldwide
phenomenon without recognizing that there was an important change of
tastes in the body politic of several key countries away from
sympathy to involvement in an economically integrated global economy
and toward nationalism and isolationism. In Europe, the tragedy of
the Great War and its aftermath explains much of the change. Russia
after the devastation of the war and Bolshevik revolution was
invaded by some of its former allies. Mutual suspicion and hostility
between communist Russia and most of the rest of the world was
reflected in Russia’s economic isolation. In Germany, a bitter
defeat and a bitter peace fed a new spirit of nationalism. In the
United States, the symptoms of the shift toward isolationism took
many forms. The Senate refused to ratify the League of Nations
Treaty in 1920. The government took repressive action toward
imported political ideologies in the red scare. The Ku Klux Klan was
reborn and gained prominence outside of the south, expressing
antipathy not only to blacks but also to most things foreign.
Prohibition was passed, partly based on campaigns that attributed
alcoholism to foreign influences. The National Origins Act sharply
restricted foreign immigration. All of this transpired during the
roaring twenties, before the great depression; the Smoot-Hawley
tariff was also passed before the depression took hold. From all of
these developments, it seems clear that after World War I and partly
in reaction to it, many Americans decided that they wanted
substantially less involvement with most things foreign.
What are the chances that something similar might happen again?
The protesters in Seattle demonstrated that globalization has its
detractors; and we have hardly seen or heard the last of them.
However, while we need to remain cognizant of the risk that such
protests may gain political momentum, I do not believe that the
conditions are ripe for a return to isolationism. The plain fact is
that the U.S. economy, and the world economy more generally, have
prospered enormously under, and partly because of, favorable
policies toward international economic integration—policies that
have been championed by the United States in the post World War II
era. Despite occasional difficulties such as the recent emerging
market financial crises, nations around the world are not seeking to
withdraw from the increasingly integrated global economic system.
Rather, those that are not yet full participants are generally
seeking to become so.
The End of Empire
In the public park above the great Rheingau vineyard near
Rudesheim, there stands a large, rather ugly statue commemorating
Prussia’s victory in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870–71. Notably,
this was the last important European war in which the victor ended
up better off because of the conflict. The defeat of the French,
after earlier victories over the Danes and the Austrians, solidified
the basis for a unified Germany under Prussia’s leadership.
Subsequently, in both World War I and World War II, none of the
combatants, victor or vanquished, gained as a result of the
conflict. The United States and the Soviet Union did emerge as the
two global super powers after World War II. But, the Soviet Union
suffered horribly during the war, and the postwar prosperity enjoyed
by the United States was not the consequence of its military
victory. Indeed, the defeated Axis powers recovered relatively
rapidly from wartime devastation and prospered impressively
thereafter. Exploiting its wartime victory, for forty-five years,
the Soviet Union maintained effective control over most of central
and eastern Europe and may have gained economically as a result.
But, under the stress of economic stagnation and political
dissatisfaction, this empire collapsed in 1990; and by 1992, the
Soviet state itself split apart into politically independent
republics. Earlier than this, efforts by each of the super powers to
impose their military wills on much smaller countries—the United
States in Vietnam and the Soviet Union in Afghanistan—ended in
failure.
Before the 20th century, these things often turned out
quite differently. For those who were good at it, military
aggression and imperialism often paid off economically. The Vikings,
for example, pillaged with enthusiasm and success along the coasts
and rivers of Europe in the 9th and 10th
centuries. Spain grew rich on the new world plunder gathered up by a
few hundred conquistadors early in the 16th century.
Britain prospered during the 17th, 18th, and
19th centuries from its far flung empire. The other
European imperialists who came relatively early to the game—the
Portuguese, the Dutch, the French, and (to some extent) the
Belgians—also profited, although the late comers—the Germans and the
Italians—did not. Austria’s central European empire generally
prospered and expanded from the 16th through the
19th century. Over six centuries, the Czars built the
huge Russian Empire. For 1600 years Constantinople (now Istanbul)
retained its importance as an imperial capital, under the Romans,
Byzantines, and Ottoman Turks. Indeed, by the end of the
19th century, the political map of the world was, to an
impressive extent, a patch quilt of different empires. And, this
political reality clearly influenced patterns of global economic
integration, which tended to be stronger within rather than across
imperial domains.
By the end of the 20th century, all of this had
changed. Except for a few bits and pieces, the empires that had
existed a century before (and many for long before that) were gone.
Efforts to create new empires during the 20th century—by
the Germans, Italians, Japanese, and Soviets—all failed. As a
consequence of this substantial change in the political organization
of the world, there were important changes in its economic
organization as well. 18
Flows of trade, capital, and people that a century ago were
channeled within empires now generally take place on a more
diversified basis. This is true, for example, of Great Britain where
trade with colonies and commonwealth partners has declined
substantially relative to trade with former rival imperial powers in
Europe. It is also dramatically true for the transition countries of
Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union where, since
1990 trade among them has declined enormously, while trade with the
rest of the world has picked up substantially.
Not that we should regret it, but it is relevant to ask why the
20th century was so unkind to imperialism? Obviously,
imperialism is a matter of public policy; so the short answer is
that public policy changed. But, why this policy change on a global
scale? Tastes are probably part of the answer. Just as moral
revulsion against slavery was critical to its suppression in the
19th century, revulsion at the great carnage of war and
the brutality of oppression have helped turn the tide against
imperialism. Mass communications that graphically portray carnage
and brutality have contributed to the change in public attitudes.
Perhaps more important, however, is the shift in technology that has
made imperialism an inefficient, if not counter productive, means of
improving economic welfare.
Although he apparently did not fully appreciate his own wisdom,
Napoleon once observed, “A bayonet is good for just about anything,
except to sit on.” The 20th century has been a very
uncomfortable time for imperialists to seek to impose their will on
other peoples, either for economic gain or for other reasons.
Unwelcome efforts to exert control over an alien people, especially
in the face of armed opposition, tends to be very expensive in blood
and treasure. In contrast, devoting resources to domestic economic
development through efficient investments in physical and human
capital and development and exploitation of new technologies is an
attractive and reliable path to improved national economic
well-being. This is the experience and the lesson of the past
century.
As this lesson becomes broadly understood and appreciated, the
prospect is that the process of global economic integration—which is
being driven by essentially irresistible forces of technological
advance—will take place through voluntary means. People around the
world will decide to participate—through trade, through movements of
people and capital, and through accessing information and taking
advantage of new technologies—because they see the benefit to them
of such participation. Unlike too many unfortunate episodes in the
past, participation in the global economy will not occur at the
point of a sword or facing the muzzle of a gun. This, perhaps more
than anything else, provides the reasonable assurance that the
fundamental forces that are driving global economic integration are,
in fact, driving the world toward a better economic future.
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1 An excellent survey of the progress of
international economic integration and its effects during the past
century is provided by Crafts (2000).
2 In the standard textbook of international
trade, other things equal, differences in tastes between countries
are seen as a reason for trade. In contrast in models by Krugman
(1980) consumers in different countries have the same tastes, but
for a wide variety of different products. With products produced
under increasing returns of the scale, this taste for diversity
creates a reason for international trade. Ohlin (1935) provides an
interesting discussion of the interaction between tastes and
international trade.
3 For a lucid description of the events
surrounding the creation and development of port wine see Johnson
(1988).
4 A number of the important human
migrations dating back to prehistoric times are described, along
with commentary about their causes, in Times Atlas of World
History (1978).
5 An excellent description of the standard
model of international trade theory and of the more specific
Hecksher-Ohlin-Samuelson version of this model is provided in
Salvatore (1998). A survey of the empirical literature relating to
this model is provided by Leamer (1995).
6 When there are barriers to trade in
goods, the Hecksher-Ohlin-Samuelson theory works in reverse;
mobility of factors of production tends to operate as a substitute
for trade in outputs. In fact, as shown by Mundell (1957), under the
same restrictive conditions for which factor price equalization
would hold perfectly, mobility of one (out of two) factors of
production is sufficient to achieve full international economic
efficiency and to completely eliminate the need for trade in
outputs. Even when the strict conditions required for full factor
price equalization are not met, factor mobility and trade and
outputs may well tend to be substitute forms for achieving more
efficient international economic integration. For example, it is
virtually impossible for many services, such as housecleaning, or
restaurant service, to be traded internationally. But workers in low
wage countries who have the skills to perform these services can and
do move to high wage countries. If the mountain cannot come to
Mohammed, Mohammed can go to the mountain.
7 Rodrick (1999) emphasizes that the
barriers to perfect international economic integration (through both
trade and factor movements) remain very substantial. These barriers
include a variety of cultural, linguistic, and legal differences
between countries (even countries as close in these dimensions as
Canada and the United States) that keep cross-country trade volumes
well below within country, interregional trade volumes. Mussa and
Goldstein (1993), among others, emphasize that such natural barriers
also appear to affect the integration of global capital markets.
8 Fogel (1964), for example, estimates that
in 19th century America, shipping of grain by wagon
ceased to be economical for journeys of more than about 60 miles.
One of the responses to this problem, particularly before the
development of canals and railroads, was to convert grain into a
product with a higher value to weight ratio; namely, whiskey.
Efforts to impose an excise tax on whiskey production in President
Washington’s administration provoked the whiskey rebellion.
9 I have not found precise data on shipping
costs to support this conclusion. However, balance of payments data
indicate that the ratio of shipping costs (exports and imports
combined) to the value of merchandise trade (exports and imports
combined) were about 30 percent around 1800, had fallen to about 10
percent by around 1850, and declined further to about 3 percent
around 1900. As a note of caution, this ratio spikes up after 1915
and runs generally between 5 and 10 percent thereafter.
10 The most important innovation in
transportation during the 19th century was for land, not
water, transport-namely, the railroads. Fogel (1964) estimates that
the “social savings” from railroads in the United States, relative
to the next best alternative, amounted to about 2 percent of US GDP
in 1890. These “social savings” represent the estimated excess
return from investment in the railroads over the normal rate of
return on capital investment. While seemingly small relative to GDP,
these savings are quite large relative to land transportation costs.
The transportation cost reductions wrought by the railroads
facilitated international trade as well as domestic trade by
reducing internal distribution costs.
11 Since 1990 there has been a very large
reduction in the effective barriers for trade between the transition
countries (in Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet
Union) and the rest of the world economy. The initial effect of the
collapse of the communist bloc was a sharp reduction in trade
between these countries, reflecting both the sharp initial output
declines in the transition countries and the fact that much
previously existing trade among these countries did not reflect
comparative advantages in the context of the broader global economy.
Subsequently, trade between the transition countries and the rest of
the world has expanded considerably, especially trade with the more
successful transition countries in Central and Eastern Europe.
12 As previously noted, the share of
(non-factor) services in international trade has recently been
rising. However, natural barriers to international trade in most
services remain high and, primarily for this reason, relatively
little of the output of the service sector of most economies
potentially enters into international trade.
13 The onset of the Asian crisis is often
associated with the devaluation of the Thai baht on July 2, 1997.
This event was clearly important for Thailand and had spillover
effects to a few other countries in the region. However, the
financial attack on Hong Kong currency and stock market in mid
October was a far more important event as measured by the magnitude
and scope of the reaction in global financial markets.
14 The sudden imposition of capital
controls by a country in or on the verge of a financial crisis is
very different from the maintenance of controls by a country that
already has them. Controls that are maintained in place probably
have some effect on discouraging capital inflows. This may be
particularly true for inflows of the types of capital that may want
to run out suddenly in the face of the crisis because investors with
these concerns will naturally tend to avoid putting capital into
countries that already have controls. Sudden imposition of controls
by a country that has not have them may catch some investors flat
footed. But, partly for this reason the sudden imposition of
controls is likely to be regarded and remembered as an unfair change
in the rules of the game. Moreover, if investors suspect that
controls may suddenly be imposed, those with an inclination to run
will rush to do so.
15 An excellent analysis of the impact of
advancing technology on financial services and a discussion of some
of its key public policy implications is provided in Claessens,
Glaessner, and Klingebiel (2000).
16 For a recent survey of the evidence on
this subject, see Edwards (1998). Crafts (2000) summarizes evidence
which shows that using broader measures of human welfare than real
per capita GDP (including life span and education) the improvement
in human welfare in poorer countries is significantly larger than
that indicated by real per capita income alone. These broader
improvements in human welfare undoubtedly owe much to the
globalization of advances in medicine, public health, and
hygiene.
17 This important issue is discussed in
detail in Eichengreen and Mussa (1998).
18 Baldwin and Martin (1999) emphasize the
change in the political structure of the world as a particularly
important change in the qualitative character of international
economic integration during the past century.
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