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HKMA Fifth
Distinguished Lecture:
"The Asian Crisis: Lessons for the Future"
21 May 2002
Opening Remarks
by
Mr Joseph Yam
Chief Executive
Hong Kong Monetary Authority
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I am delighted to welcome
all of you to this fifth HKMA Distinguished Lecture, and to
introduce our speaker, Dr Stanley Fischer, and our discussant,
Dr Stephen Grenville.
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The title of Stanley
Fischer's lecture is "The Asian Crisis: Lessons for the
Future." In a few weeks' time we shall be marking the fifth
anniversary of the outbreak of the Asian financial crisis - a
day or so, incidentally, after we celebrate an entirely
unconnected event, the fifth anniversary of the establishment of
the Hong Kong SAR. Asia and the world have gone through many
other ordeals since 1997, so that the crisis perhaps seems much
further in the past than it really is. But its effects - both
physical and psychological - are still with us. It is
important that we continue to study the causes and effects and
to see what lessons there are for the present. I have spoken at
length on many previous occasions on the Asian financial crisis,
and I intend today to sit back and listen. Let me, however, make
three very brief observations.
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The first is that,
five years on, very limited progress has been made in resolving
one of the fundamental problems that helped make the crisis so
devastating for so many economies: a deficient global financial
architecture, which has been outgrown by the markets that use
it. There have indeed been some reforms both internationally and
in individual economies, and there is a much greater alertness
to the threats to stability posed by volatile, high-velocity
international capital flows. But much still remains to be done,
and as capital flows get bigger, the risk of further crisis
remains. Paradoxically, the risks are increased by a false sense
of security brought on by two or three years' absence of the
kind of contagion that shook so many parts of the world in the
nineties.
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The second
observation is that, in the absence of international solutions,
a number of economies in the region have adopted local
approaches to the problem. Some have chosen to go slow or even
step back from financial liberalisation through introducing or
tightening restrictions and controls. While understandable -
and in some cases effective as short-term measures - such an
approach is regrettable because it shuts off many of the
benefits, as well as the dangers, of globalisation. In Hong
Kong, where controls of this kind are not practical because of
the realisation that global links supply our lifeblood, we have
taken a different approach. We have chosen to enhance policy
credibility through greater transparency and through
strengthening and tightening up our rule-based monetary system.
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My third observation
is that those who said that the Asian crisis was the death knell
of Asia as an economic force - and there were many of them -
seem to have been wrong. There has been remarkable resilience,
even in the worst-hit economies, and a will to reform and
restructure that has helped put a number of economies back on
their feet even during a time of global economic downturn.
Progress has not been evenly spread throughout the region, and
there are still causes for anxiety. But, as the world economy
shows signs of recovery, the prospects for the region, if not
dazzling, look somewhat brighter.
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It is now my great pleasure
to introduce our speaker and discussant. From the late eighties
until very recently, Stan Fischer has been very much at the
centre of world economic and financial crisis - and its
solutions - first at the World Bank and then as First Deputy
Managing Director and subsequently Senior Adviser at the IMF. He
has played a practical role - often a crucial one - in
addressing, preventing and resolving crises, and he has written
extensively on the subject. Asia, no less than other regions of
the world, has benefited from his expertise, and we are very
honoured to have him here to talk about the lessons that can be
learned from the recent crisis.
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Steve Grenville served for
20 years with the Reserve Bank of Australia, and was Deputy
Governor of that Bank from 1996 to 2001. Before joining the
Reserve Bank, he served in the OECD in Paris, and before that he
spent time with the IMF in Indonesia. He played a pivotal role
during the Asian crisis, and was instrumental in Australia's
involvement in three of the larger support packages in the
region. It is a great honour to have him here as discussant
today.
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Stan and Steve are old
friends of mine. I therefore think it is right for me to comment
on the positions in which they now find themselves after careers
totalling around 40 years in central banking, and to try to see
if this sheds any light on the eternal question: "What happens
to central bankers when they cease to be central bankers?" I
speak from a position of intense personal interest because the
recent resignation of Don Brash of the Governorship of the
Reserve Bank of New Zealand leaves me - so I am told - with
the doubtful distinction of being the longest-serving central
bank chief in the region. Don Brash, who has a reputation for
making original career choices, has reportedly gone into
politics - a precedent which, let me stress, I have no
intention of following.
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Stan and Steve have followed
what the IMF would no doubt refer to as a "two-corner
solution". Since leaving the IMF earlier this year, Stan has
firmly anchored himself to one of the world's largest banking
and finance groups as its Vice-Chairman. I will not name the
bank here, because the HKMA is currently a tenant in a building
that bears its name. To avoid giving the impression that the
HKMA is a subsidiary of that bank, we have always tried to
pretend that the building is called something else, by
refraining from mentioning the name on our stationery, or to
deliverymen or taxi-drivers, or to anyone else. It is sufficient
to say that the bank in question is this year celebrating its
100th anniversary in Hong Kong.
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Steve has gone to the
opposite end of the two-corner solution by entering the floating
world of academics and consultants. Since leaving the Reserve
Bank of Australia six months ago, he has taken up an appointment
as Adjunct Professor at the National Centre for Development
Studies at the Australian National University. He also works as
an economic consultant, mainly, I understand, on Asia-related
topics.
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Whatever corner Stan and
Steve have chosen, the important thing is that they will
continue to give their expertise to the region through
organisations which, though very different, have an important
presence in Asia. They are also here to share that expertise
with us today. So without further delay, let me welcome them
both and call first upon our speaker, Dr Stanley Fischer, to
deliver the Fifth HKMA Distinguished Lecture. Dr Fischer,
please.
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