Trade Deficits and the Health of the Economy - Part V
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Trade Deficits and the Health of the Economy - Part V
Dialog with Nikola Gruevski, former Minister of Finance of the
Republic of Macedonia
By Sam Vaknin
Author of "Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited"
NG: Within the scope of the roles of increasing investments and
changing the economic structure there is the implementation of an
efficient court system, which will create an environment in which
the commercial banks of RM, by a speedier settlement of their own
claims, will make long-term and cheaper credits available. This,
indirectly, will influence the process of structural economic change
and start to create an export-oriented efficient economy. At this
moment, financial resources available in RM, from the banks' point
of view, are really "a cat in a bag". The bank can never be certain
that its financial resources will be recovered. First, the court
mechanism is very slow and inefficient. This means that even if the
bank were able to recover its financial resources within a year, or
more - the principal plus regular and penalty interest rates would
amount to more than the mortgage value and the bank will not be able
to recover the full amount of the debt. Second, the realization of a
mortgage is a real BINGO in RM. There are a thousand ways to cheat
the bank and the creditors with the aim of not returning the credit.
The system, instead of protecting the banks, protects the debtors.
Thus, in the long run, the basics of the financial system are
damaged and it boomerangs. The desperate banks lose the courage to
place financial resources because of the uncertain environment,
which doesn't guarantee the recovery of their financial resources,
or the danger that an eventual devaluation will erode a part of the
property's value, especially of the banks of foreign origin, which
directly invested in foreign currency after increasing their
capital. Slow justice is injustice. Because of that, the banks
choose to impose high active interest rates, as they will cover the
risk of investing in the economy with a judicial system with the
appearance of "Swiss cheese". On the other hand, high interest rates
increase the costs of production, which realistically diminishes the
export competitiveness of firms' products, casts in doubt new
investment projects, and at worst, casts in doubt the very survival
of the company and its ability to return the invested money to the
bank. This never-ending spiral is vicious if not nipped in the bud.
RM is in the situation "invest and export or die". To start with,
what should be done is what is written in one of Hitler's
biographies: "the negative appearances should be destroyed in the
very beginning, not to be analyzed later".
SV: Needless to say that I fully share your views. I just want to
remind all of us that an efficient court system is only one of a
long series of measures that should be adopted prior to the
establishment of a healthy and functioning banking system. Assets
need to be registered reliably using advanced computer systems.
There should be centralized, real time registers of liens and
mortgages. Bad debtors should be blacklisted and the lists should be
made public. Bankruptcy proceedings have to be streamlined and
implemented. Personal bankruptcy should be introduced with severe
restrictions imposed upon such individuals. Legal procedures of
seizing assets and materializing them should be made much simpler. A
lot of the functions of collection and appropriation of collateral
by creditors should be transferred to the private sector. This is a
very partial list. There is nothing I can say about the courts that
hasn't been said before. They are slow, inefficient, clogged and
subject to political meddling. Special commercial courts need to be
established to cater to the needs of special groups such as
exporters and foreign investors. Judges urgently need to be
retrained. But the banks themselves have a lot to do. Their image
will be transformed only through actions. It is easy not to repay a
loan to an "enemy of the people" (as banks are perceived to be).
Banks should become more personal, attuned to the needs of small
businesses, young couples, students, industry, exporters. The level
of professional education of bank employees must improve. They must
be exposed to financial products and instruments in the West. They
must innovate and be active partners in the economy and not just
money conduits. They must charge interest discriminately: good
borrowers should pay MUCH LESS than bad ones. They must share their
profits with their employees and with the public. They must be
forthcoming to the client: ATM machines, simpler procedures, smaller
queues, home banking, information services, capital markets
services. They must get rid of political decision making, cronyism
and corruption - all rampant nowadays.
NG: Also, RM should impose a policy for the export of finished
products, and discourage the export of semi-finished goods and raw
materials, of course, after it has already secured the conditions
for it. Credits, from the bank for export development and support
and from international institutions, should be directed exactly at
stimulating the production and the export of as many finished
products as possible and towards investments in the construction and
tooling of highly profitable factories, in which the bigger part of
the production will be export oriented, or import substitution.
As a result of the bad structure of the Macedonian economy (created
as part of the old Yugoslav Federation and as result of the extreme
liberalization of imports lately), the import coverage ratio in RM
drastically decreased. In 1992 the coverage of imports with exports
was 99.3%, in 1993 90.6%, in 1994 it drastically plummeted to 73.2%,
in 1995 the trend continued to 70.0%, in 1996 it was 70.5% and in
1997 it broke the limit of 70% coverage down to 69%. Such long-term
dynamics cannot be withheld even in stronger economies than
Macedonia's, and this leads to the total collapse of the economy and
the state in the longer term.
SV: Hear, hear. Perhaps it is important to explain to the laymen
why. The only reason why a country exports is in order to receive
payments in foreign exchange. Why is this needed? After all,
internally, all the transactions are concluded using the Macedonian
denar. The foreign exchange is needed in order to finance imports.
In other words: we export ONLY so that we will be able to use the
proceeds to import goods and services. Imports are a good thing.
Different countries have advantages in the production of different
goods and services. It is better to import a product from a country,
which has an advantage in producing it - then to produce it
ourselves. Our resources can be better employed where WE have a
relative advantage over others.
This is why a consistent, multi-annual trade deficit is dangerous.
Ultimately, the country will run out of foreign exchange. It will
not be able to import. Its resources will be employed in producing
goods and services in which it has no relative advantage (and which
it used to import) - in other words: its resources will be wasted.
Its wealth will decrease. As its wealth decreases, the value of its
commitments will diminish - because people will not be sure how
risky the country is. This is why currencies depreciate and debt
payments frozen when a balance of payments crisis erupts. Currencies
and debt instruments (bonds) are commitments made by countries. They
are supposed to store value. But if the value of the country itself
is reduced (because its wealth is squandered through the inefficient
allocation of economic resources) - the currency must be de-valued.
As trade deficits mount and accumulate (=as the country's foreign
exchange reserves dwindle), the country either loses its
independence and becomes the surrogate of its donors - or a crisis
sweeps across it. Its currency collapses, it freezes its obligations
and is doomed to a prolonged recession and to a shortage of goods
and services that it can no longer import.
NG: Besides the low quantity of exports, RM has a huge problem with
the structure of its exports. The bigger part of the exports of
Macedonian products is comprised of cheap raw materials with low-
level processing (zinc, tobacco), classical semi-finished products
(a hot-cast composite of iron and nickel), pre-paid production
(lower level working force and low profitability) or (fresh)
agricultural produce. In support of this thesis, here is the list of
products, which generated the most foreign exchange income for RM
(data from the Bureau of statistics of RM) between 1/1/97 and
1/12/97. At the top of the list appears zinc (raw material) with a
value of 54,268,000 USD. Second place is occupied by male shirts
(pre-paid production) with 53,706,000 USD, followed by cigarettes
and tobacco 50,102,000 USD, other hot-cast iron products (raw
material, semi-finished) 49,222,000 USD, tobacco (raw material)
47,508,000 USD, Feronickel (raw material, semi-finished) 33,607,000
USD, Ferosilicium (raw material, semi-finished) 32,252,000 USD,
female shirts and blouses (pre-paid production) 31,361,000 USD,
mineral water 28,963,000 USD and wine made of fresh grapes (mostly
not bottled) 28,944,000 USD.
The bad structure of the exports can be demonstrated by an analysis
according to economical uses. The total exports of materials for re-
processing in 1995 stood at an extremely high 54.2%, in 1996 it was
49.5% and in 1997 - 52.3%. The export of machine tools in 1995 was
4.2% of the exports, in 1996 - 3.3% and in 1997 -2.9%. Goods for
general consumption amounted in 1995 to 37% of the total exports, in
1996 to 47.1% and in 1997 to 44.7%. From these data it is clear that
more than half of the Macedonian exports is comprised of the export
of materials for re-processing. This is very worrying, especially
considering the fact, that the resources, raw materials and mines
have a limited life-span, which is about to end soon, and that the
price of raw materials might keep falling in the world markets.
These are the facts. Naked facts. Every idea has to start developing
from facts. The economy, like life, is a drawing where it is not
possible to use an eraser.
(continued)
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AUTHOR BIO (must be included with the article)
Sam Vaknin ( samvak.tripod.com ) is the author of Malignant
Self Love - Narcissism Revisited and After the Rain - How the West
Lost the East. He served as a columnist for Global Politician,
Central Europe Review, PopMatters, Bellaonline, and eBookWeb, a
United Press International (UPI) Senior Business Correspondent, and
the editor of mental health and Central East Europe categories in
The Open Directory and Suite101.
Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government
of Macedonia.
Visit Sam's Web site at samvak.tripod.com
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