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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Sunday, May 14, 2000 |
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Japan flexes muscles with currency plan
By F. J. Khergamvala
TOKYO, MAY 13. Last week's decision by 10 Asian Finance Ministers
on establishing a currency swap agreement symbolises Japan's
realisation that its old ways of diplomatically outflanking the
U. S. paid better dividends than a headlong confrontation.
Japan's Finance Ministry, still smarting from the slight of two
and a half years ago when the U.S. and China ganged up to abort a
Japanese initiative for an Asian Monetary Fund (AMF), obtained
some compensation by leading 12 other Asian nations into a
coordinated network of currency swaps. Ten Finance Ministers from
the Association of South-East Asian Nations and Japan, China and
South Korea agreed in Chiang Mai, Thailand to give Japan its due
leadership provided it does not embroil the 10 in a larger
controversy. China is said to be ``positively neutral.''
Last November, the summit of the ASEAN plus the three heard from
Japan the idea of expanding the swap concept. The idea was
fleshed out at the Finance Ministers' meeting in Brunei in March.
In Chiang Mai, the Ministers agreed to Japan's proposal to expand
Japan's bilateral swap commitments and an existing $ 200 million
currency swap arrangement among the ASEAN's five members. The
mechanism is for members to pool a part of their foreign reserves
to help partners ward off speculatory attacks on their
currencies. The multilateral currency swap arrangement is no
where near the blockbuster $ 100 billion AMF idea, whose sheer
size led the U.S. to believe that Japan was trying to exploit the
weaknesses of regional economies to establish a regional
hegemony. It is premature to believe that the swap agreement
could be the thin end of the wedge. The AMF idea was pushed in
Hong Kong during the annual IMF/World Bank meeting in September
1997, two months after the collapse of the Thai Baht followed
later by a region wide crisis.
On Sunday, the U.S. acknowledged partial retreat by giving
qualified welcome to the swap. The U.S. Assistant Treasury
Secretary attending the Chiang Mai meeting said the swap
agreement should not lull the Asian nations into exemption from
structural reform. In fact, one of the reasons for the U.S.
opposing the earlier AMF idea was the suspicion that by creating
a huge fund, Japan could impose its own guided capitalism at a
time when the ailing economies needed a tough, IMF-led assistance
package pre-conditioned on reform. Obviously, the U.S., the major
power in the IMF also did not want its clout in Asia diminished.
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