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From the Executive Director
Free Market Reforms in Latin America:
Let’s Pause for a Second
Latin American living standards
were supposed to be catching up with the developed world’s
by now. That, at least, was the promise behind the ambitious
economic reforms many countries in the region introduced
over the last two decades—more or less consistently
with the so-called Washington consensus.[1]
The failure to fulfill that promise
has triggered a wave of dissatisfaction with market
reforms, beginning with Venezuela in 1999 and continuing
with Argentina in 2001–02. Since then several
countries in the region have elected governments—or
are reportedly about to—that have vowed to undo
the Washington-consensus “neoliberal policies”
of the last 20 years. The neoliberal label often used
in Latin America to deride free market reforms seems
to mistakenly identify them with granting monopoly rights
to vested interests, when the intention is precisely
the opposite. Free markets are supposed to liberate
societies not only from government monopolies but also
from their private-sector counterparts.
Whatever its underlying motivations,
the reaction against free market reforms cannot be easily
dismissed as idiosyncratic to Latin America. India’s
voters have just rejected the BJP (Bharatiya Janata
Party)—which had implemented ambitious market
reforms—and restored to power the Congress Party,
whose anti-liberalization electoral campaign slogans
captivated the four-fifths of the populace still living
in what some analysts call the “bullock cart economy.”
The geographical breadth of a
backlash that encompasses Argentina, Venezuela, India,
and places in between suggests that something has gone
wrong with market reforms. And that is where economists
could step in with some analytics if they only paused
for a second—a “second theorem,” that
is. Indeed, economists have produced two important theorems
that suggest logical motives behind what perhaps are
also ideologically driven criticisms of market reforms:
the Theorem of the Second Best and the Second Welfare
Theorem.
The Theorem of the Second Best
states that reforms must be comprehensive or an economy
could wind up worse than before. Well-meaning policymakers
have, for example, implemented free trade reforms without
corresponding labor market reforms. If rigid labor legislation
impedes the reallocation of workers from the inefficient
industries swept away by free trade to those it bolsters,
more jobs could be destroyed than created.
The Second Welfare Theorem says
that free market reforms improve everyone’s standard
of living provided the losers are compensated with
lump-sum transfers from the winners. The unpopularity
of free market reforms in many countries suggests that
even when society is better off overall, large fractions
of the population have been hurt by or left out of the
benefits.
There is no doubt that the backlash
against market reforms and globalization results in
part from serious misunderstandings exploited by the
eternally discontented. But it may also be an indication
that the important caveats of the second theorems have
been neglected in the drive to implement those reforms.
Empirically speaking, much remains
to be discovered about which liberalizations are crucial.
Even in industrial nations it is not clear which labor
regulations and rigidities are destructively binding
and which are not really deal breakers for an economy.
If policymakers have to pick their fights, they had
better learn which ones to pick.
But making such judgments will
not be easy in the current state of the economics profession,
whose reform recommendations have come largely from
models that assume the paradigmatic “representative
household”—that all households and economic
agents are the same. This analytical shortcut has proved
valuable to much research, but is inadequate for identifying
the potential losers and winners of alternative liberalization
programs. That kind of identification requires a new
generation of quantitatively implementable models that
can account for differences among economic individuals—a
technical problem several orders of magnitude beyond
what we have solved so far.[2]
The increased power of computers
now lets us address some of the computational difficulties
posed by heterogeneous agent models, but we still must
bring those models to the data. For example, identifying
the winners and losers of a particular trade liberalization
would require tracking displaced workers to determine
whether they are absorbed into the dynamic sectors and
under what conditions. This chore requires data at a
level of detail that is not easy to come by even in
countries with the best statistics.
Once these hurdles are jumped,
the job of implementing the Second Welfare Theorem’s
transfers from winners to losers remains—and the
revenues required must come from nondistortionary lump-sum
or poll taxes. Unfortunately, poll taxes are politically
problematic. (Recall the unrest triggered by UK Prime
Minister Margaret Thatcher’s attempt to implement
a poll tax in the 1980s.) Only distortionary fiscal
instruments are typically available, and basing transfers
on them might well undo the benefits of the reforms.
In any case, Latin American countries have nothing like
the U.S. programs that pay for workers displaced by
international competition to learn new skills.
The challenges ahead have been
eloquently summarized by Manmohan Singh, recently designated
prime minister of India by the victorious until-not-long-ago
opposition Congress Party: “Nobody today is against
reform. The question is, how do you package reform so
it is not seen as merely an elitist exercise?”
The second theorems may hold the
answer to that question—if the profession pauses
long enough to think about what they mean for the success
or failure of free market reforms. To understand what
has gone wrong with previous market reforms and what
can go wrong with future ones—and to design corrective
and preemptive measures—it may take decades of
protracted and frustrating effort at the very frontier
of research.
Encouragingly, conference papers
and journal articles are paying more attention to these
issues—with their important consequences for the
well-being of people across the globe.[3] We hope that
the Center for Latin American Economics—with its
focus on long-term policy-linked research and on promoting
dialogue between scholars and policymakers—will
prove to be a significant part of that effort.
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Carlos E.
J. M. Zarazaga
Executive Director
Center for Latin American Economics |
| Notes
- This expression was first coined by
John Williamson in his account of a conference
on the topic of market reforms organized
by the Institute for International Economics
in Washington, D.C., in 1990.
- Nobel Laureate Robert Lucas Jr. emphasized
the importance of heterogeneous agents
models for the study of business cycles
as well in his 2004 Presidential address
to the American Economic Association.
- Evidence of these recent efforts can
be found in the 2002 IMF conference on
Macroeconomic Policies and Poverty Reduction.
For example, the paper “Evaluation
of financial liberalization: a general
equilibrium model with constrained occupation
choice,” by Xavier Giné and
Robert M. Townsend, presented there explicitly
identified winners and losers of the financial
liberalization program implemented in
Thailand in the period 1976–96.
(This and related papers in that conference
have been published in the August 2004
issue of the Journal of Development
Economics.)
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