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Chain reaction crisis feared in Latin America
Financial markets plunge as Brazil devalues currency
By Martin McLaughlin
14 January 1999
Stock markets plunged in Europe and the Americas Wednesday
in the wake of the Brazilian government's decision to allow the
country's currency, the real, to be devalued by 7.5 percent.
The action was followed by the resignation of the president of
Brazil's Central Bank, Gustavo Franco, a leading advocate of the
harsh austerity policies which Brazil has pursued over the past
four years.
The devaluation was triggered by a political crisis within
Brazil, arising from domestic opposition to the austerity measures
demanded by the International Monetary Fund as the price of the
$42 billion loan package agreed on two months ago to provide a
financial cushion for the Brazilian currency and financial markets.
President Fernando Henrique Cardoso, who won reelection October
4 campaigning as the candidate of fiscal prudence and stability--he
declared he had been "elected to defend the real "--failed
to win a majority of congressional seats for his party in legislative
elections later in the month. Opposition politicians also won
the governorships in several key states.
In early December the national legislature defeated a bill
to cut state pensions by $2.2 billion, part of the $25 billion
program of budget cuts that Cardoso had agreed to in return for
the IMF loan.
In Minas Gerais, the third largest state, which includes the
city of Belo Horizonte, former President Itamar Franco won the
governorship as an avowed opponent of the austerity policies of
Cardoso, who had served as finance minister in Franco's cabinet.
Only days after Franco took office on January 1 he announced that
Minas Gerais would default on debt payments owed to the national
government, with the first payment on $15 billion in debts to
be missed on January 20.
This announcement triggered a plunge in the Brazilian stock
exchange, which has fallen 5 percent or more in each day's trading
over the past week. Speculative capital began to flee the country
at the rate of $200 million a day, amid fears that other states
would follow the lead of Minas Gerais.
Cardoso attacked the default by the state government as illegal,
declaring, "Breaking the law won't be tolerated. Everyone
must obey, no matter the cost. That's democracy." But on
Tuesday, January 12, Rio Grande do Sul, the southernmost state
bordering on Uruguay, announced that it would also be unable to
make payments on its nearly $1 billion in debts to the national
government.
With a second state government defaulting, the outflow of capital
turned into a flood, with $1 billion leaving the country in a
single day. The devaluation became unavoidable, as Brazil's foreign
currency reserves have now declined by more than half since the
summer, to less than $34 billion, only a fraction of the country's
foreign debts.
International repercussions
Brazil's decision set off shock waves internationally. In Europe
all major markets fell sharply, with the Madrid stock exchange
down 6 percent, the Paris Bourse down 4.1 percent and the German
exchange in Frankfurt down 4.3 percent. Two of the biggest German
banks, with huge outstanding loans to Brazil, saw their stock
values plummet--Deutsche Bank fell 6.5 percent and Dresdner Bank
4.43 percent.
The New York Stock Exchange plunged more than 260 points in
the first few hours of trading, followed by a partial recovery
and then a second drop which left Wall Street down 125 for the
day. Bank stocks were particularly affected, since Brazil is the
largest single foreign borrower from US banks, owing $30 billion.
Adding to the turmoil, especially in the financial sector,
was the impact of a major bank collapse in China. The Beijing
government announced earlier this week that it would not bail
out the Guangdong International Trading and Investment Company
(GITIC), the biggest private banking firm in southern China, which
now stands to default on $4.2 billion in debts.
President Clinton told reporters at the White House that the
US government was closely following the events in Brazil. "We
are monitoring the developments closely, especially what is going
on in Brazil,'' he said. "We have been in contact with key
Brazilian government officials, the G7 and other important countries.
We've been in contact with the IMF.''
Debacle for the IMF
The Brazilian devaluation marks the collapse of the latest
effort by the International Monetary Fund to contain the deepening
world crisis of capitalism. Less than two months ago, under strong
pressure from the United States, the IMF announced a $42 billion
loan package for Brazil. The deal was unprecedented, since Brazil's
currency was not then under stress, following the reelection of
President Fernando Henrique Cardoso on October 4, and his pledge
to continue the cuts in public spending and other anti-inflationary
measures which had stabilized the real.
US officials praised the decision as a big step forward in
IMF policy-making because it provided for international intervention
before a crisis, thus supposedly avoiding the pitfalls of recent
IMF interventions in Asia, when bailouts of Thailand, Indonesia
and South Korea resulted in an exacerbation of the spreading financial
contagion, followed by the collapse of governments.
The effect now, however, is that the crisis has come anyway,
while the IMF has already shot its bolt and can do little further
to restabilize the markets. The immediate fear was of a plunge
in currency and stock values throughout Latin America--Brazil
is by far the largest economy in the region, and investors fearing
a spreading collapse were expected to pull out of Argentina, Chile,
Mexico and other Latin American markets. The panic could also
spill over into the few remaining "emerging markets"--South
Africa and Turkey, for example--which have not yet been overwhelmed
by the financial convulsions that have swept through Asia and
Russia.
The biggest impact, however, is likely to be on corporate America,
which has more capital invested in Brazil than in either Japan
or France. With $36 billion in direct US investment, and operations
by more than 400 of the Fortune 500, Brazil dwarfs any other "emerging
market" in its importance to American capitalism.
Even before the events of Tuesday and Wednesday, the financial
press has singled out Brazil as a possible trigger for wider global
convulsions. A yearend commentary in the British daily Financial
Times, for instance, warned, "Just as Asia appears to
be bottoming out, Latin America faces a severe regional recession."
The newspaper warned: "Emerging markets face another difficult
year, and investors' appetite for risk remains particularly fragile.
A sharp acceleration in the pressures on Brazil is just one of
a number of factors that could ignite the tinderbox."
See Also:
US and IMF
rescue banks in Brazil
[2 December 1998]
Brazilian
president prepares to implement IMF austerity package
[10 October 1998]
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