国际储备、汇率与货币政策:从三难困境到四难困境

J. Aizenman
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引用次数: 11

摘要

国际储备、汇率和货币政策之间的联系可以通过“不可能的三位一体”(又名“三难困境”)的现代化身来理解,这是基于蒙代尔和弗莱明的假设,即一个国家可以同时选择以下三个政策目标中的任意两个,但不是全部:货币独立、汇率稳定和金融一体化。最初的经济三难困境是在20世纪60年代布雷顿森林体系(Bretton Woods)时期提出的,即从可能的三个政策目标中选择两个。然而,在20世纪90年代和21世纪初,新兴市场和发展中国家发现,随着金融一体化程度的加深,金融不稳定的风险越来越大,资本流入“突然停止”和资本外逃危机的风险也越来越大。这些危机的特点是汇率不稳定,这是由各国的资产负债表对外部硬通货债务的敞口引发的,这种敞口扩大了银行业的不稳定和危机。此类事件经常演变为严重的内部和外部债务危机,最终以对系统性银行和强大的宏观参与者的纾困告终。由此产生的国内债务积压导致财政主导和货币政策范围的缩小。这些危机带来了不同的滞后效应,引发了经济和政治变革,其中越来越多的新兴市场和发展中国家转向了三难困境中的“中间”制度,即有管理的汇率灵活性、有控制的金融一体化和有限但可行的货币自主权。新兴研究证实了现代版的三难选择:即各国面临持续的三难选择权衡,其中较高的三难选择政策目标与其他两个三难选择政策目标的加权平均值下降“交换”。通过管理公共缓冲(国际储备、主权财富基金)的不同配置,以及越来越多地应用宏观审慎措施,解决了与金融不稳定风险敞口相关的担忧,这些措施旨在诱导系统性参与者将其资产负债表风险敞口对国家金融稳定的影响内部化。因此,最初的三难困境已经演变成四难困境,其中金融稳定已被添加到三难困境的原始政策目标中。规模确实很重要,较小的国家没有办法使自己完全免受全球周期和冲击的影响。然而,成功驾驭开放经济的困境有助于减少外部冲击对国内经济的传导,以及国内冲击的成本。这些观察结果解释了新兴市场的相对弹性,特别是在那些拥有更成熟机构的国家,因为它们得到了更深入的储备预防性管理和更大的财政和货币空间的缓冲。我们在结束讨论时指出,全球金融危机以及随后的欧元区危机表明,没有一个国家能够免受金融不稳定和现代困境的影响。然而,那些制度成熟、财政能力更强、财政空间更大的国家,可以用央行间协调的双边互换额度来取代对代价高昂的预防性缓冲的依赖。尽管这种安排的好处是显而易见的,但它们可能取决于财政支持机制的存在和可信度,以及遏制由此产生的道德风险。时间将检验这种可信度,以及风险分担安排能够扩大到何种程度,以覆盖新兴市场和发展中国家日益增长的份额。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
International Reserves, Exchange Rates, and Monetary Policy: From the Trilemma to the Quadrilemma
The links of international reserves, exchange rates, and monetary policy can be understood through the lens of a modern incarnation of the “impossible trinity” (aka the “trilemma”), based on Mundell and Fleming’s hypothesis that a country may simultaneously choose any two, but not all, of the following three policy goals: monetary independence, exchange rate stability, and financial integration. The original economic trilemma was framed in the 1960s, during the Bretton Woods regime, as a binary choice of two out of the possible three policy goals. However, in the 1990s and 2000s, emerging markets and developing countries found that deeper financial integration comes with growing exposure to financial instability and the increased risk of “sudden stop” of capital inflows and capital flight crises. These crises have been characterized by exchange rate instability triggered by countries’ balance sheet exposure to external hard currency debt—exposures that have propagated banking instabilities and crises. Such events have frequently morphed into deep internal and external debt crises, ending with bailouts of systemic banks and powerful macro players. The resultant domestic debt overhang led to fiscal dominance and a reduction of the scope of monetary policy. With varying lags, these crises induced economic and political changes, in which a growing share of emerging markets and developing countries converged to “in-between” regimes in the trilemma middle range—that is, managed exchange rate flexibility, controlled financial integration, and limited but viable monetary autonomy. Emerging research has validated a modern version of the trilemma: that is, countries face a continuous trilemma trade-off in which a higher trilemma policy goal is “traded off” with a drop in the weighted average of the other two trilemma policy goals. The concerns associated with exposure to financial instability have been addressed by varying configurations of managing public buffers (international reserves, sovereign wealth funds), as well as growing application of macro-prudential measures aimed at inducing systemic players to internalize the impact of their balance sheet exposure on a country’s financial stability. Consequently, the original trilemma has morphed into a quadrilemma, wherein financial stability has been added to the trilemma’s original policy goals. Size does matter, and there is no way for smaller countries to insulate themselves fully from exposure to global cycles and shocks. Yet successful navigation of the open-economy quadrilemma helps in reducing the transmission of external shock to the domestic economy, as well as the costs of domestic shocks. These observations explain the relative resilience of emerging markets—especially in countries with more mature institutions—as they have been buffered by deeper precautionary management of reserves, and greater fiscal and monetary space. We close the discussion noting that the global financial crisis, and the subsequent Eurozone crisis, have shown that no country is immune from exposure to financial instability and from the modern quadrilemma. However, countries with mature institutions, deeper fiscal capabilities, and more fiscal space may substitute the reliance on costly precautionary buffers with bilateral swap lines coordinated among their central banks. While the benefits of such arrangements are clear, they may hinge on the presence and credibility of their fiscal backstop mechanisms, and on curbing the resultant moral hazard. Time will test this credibility, and the degree to which risk-pooling arrangements can be extended to cover the growing share of emerging markets and developing countries.
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