Economists Call for TPP Deal to Allow Capital Controls
More than 100 Economists Call for Trans-Pacific Trade Deal to Allow Capital Controls to Prevent Crises
Click here for the full statement and list of
endorsers.
In advance of Trans-Pacific trade
talks, over 100 economists are sending a letter today urging
negotiators to promote global financial stability by
allowing the use of capital controls.
Signatories include prominent scholars from six of the nine countries currently involved in the Trans-Pacific talks: Australia, Chile, Malaysia, Peru, New Zealand, and the United States. The other participating countries are Brunei, Singapore, and Vietnam. Trade officials will meet March 1-9 in Melbourne, Australia for the 11th round of negotiations.
The economist statement reflects growing consensus that capital controls are legitimate policy tools. It notes, however, that nearly all U.S. trade agreements “strictly limit the ability of trading partners to deploy capital controls – with no safeguards for times of crisis.”
They recommend that the Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement “permit governments to deploy capital controls without being subject to investor lawsuits, as part of a broader menu of policy options to prevent and mitigate financial crises.”
Among the endorsers:
• Several economists who are generally supportive of
free trade but are critical of the provisions that restrict
capital controls (e.g., Jagdish Bhagwati of
Columbia University)
• Former IMF officials (e.g.,
Olivier Jeanne of Johns Hopkins University
and Arvind Subramanian of the Peterson
Institute for International Economics)
• Guillermo Le Fort Varela, executive
director to the IMF for Southern Cone Latin American
Countries
• Ricardo Ffrench-Davis,
former Director of Research at Chile’s Central Bank, and
• Michael Mah-Hui Lim of the Penang
Institute in Malaysia, who worked for major international
banks for more than 20 years.
Kevin
Gallagher, Boston University professor and research
associate at the Global Development and Environment
Institute at Tufts University (GDAE), and Sarah
Anderson, director of the Global Economy Project at
the Institute for Policy Studies, initiated the statement.
In 2009, Gallagher and Anderson examined this issue as
members of the Investment Subcommittee of the State
Department's Advisory Committee on International Economy
Policy.
“This will be the first major trade agreement to be negotiated since the 2008 financial crisis,” notes Anderson. “It would be a shame if leaders in the Trans-Pacific region did not use this opportunity to ensure that governments have a full menu of policy options for preventing such catastrophes in the future.”
“The Trans-Pacific region has been
susceptible to volatile capital flows. And in fact, many of
the governments involved in these talks have proven that
regulating such flows can contribute to stability and
growth,” says Gallagher. “We want to
send a message that no government should have to give up a
proven tool for combating the financial volatility which has
caused so much suffering around the
world.”
Click here for the full statement and list of
endorsers.