The 15th ASEAN+3 Finance Ministers’ Meeting
was held on 3–4 May in Manila and resulted in at least two important outcomes
that marked a new phase of ASEAN+3 financial cooperation: the involvement of
central bank governors at the meeting and the inception of a crisis-prevention
facility.
After
one and a half decades of cooperation, the ASEAN+3 finance ministers finally
welcomed the direct participation of ASEAN+3 central bank governors in the
Finance Ministers’ Meeting. Only deputy governors had been invited to attend in
previous years. The new arrangement is expected to facilitate better coordination between
financial and monetary authorities, as they usually have overlapping and
interconnected policies. It also responds to the criticism that monetary
authorities take a back seat in ASEAN+3 financial cooperation, given the
central bank governors do not have an equal role in the process.
But the
close relationship between the finance ministries and the central banks in the
regional arrangement must not be allowed to hinder the independence of the
central banks, particularly in their work to stabilise their respective
economies. Also, it is important to ensure the future contribution of central
bank governors so that their involvement is not merely seen as a symbolic
gesture, but strengthening ASEAN+3 financial cooperation.
Another
development in the ASEAN+3 financial cooperation framework is the commencement
of the regional crisis-prevention facility, the Chiang Mai Initiative Multilateralisation
Precautionary Line (CMIM-PL). This arrangement will complement
the CMIM’s existing functions as a regional crisis-resolution
mechanism. It is likely that the CMIM-PL’s operating procedure will adopt
aspects of the IMF’s Precautionary Credit Line (PCL), since ASEAN+3 finance
ministers have agreed to engage with the IMF’s financial safety net
arrangement. There are two similarities between the schemes. First, there is
the possibility of applying ex-post conditionality for accessing the CMIM-PL,
which is also applied to the PCL scheme. Second, the CMIM-PL’s qualification
criteria imitate those of the IMF. In addition, the CMIM-PL’s decision-making
process will be based on country-specific economic reports and analysis
produced by the ASEAN+3 Macroeconomic Research Office, the Asian Development
Bank and the IMF.
For the
ASEAN+3 member countries, adopting the IMF’s credit line model may ease their
efforts to meet the CMIM-PL’s qualification criteria, as many member countries
may find it relatively easier to follow the IMF’s scheme, given that it is
internationally recognised. The creation of different or new requirements for
accessing the regional prevention facility may result in another burden for
member countries, especially during times of crisis.
In this
new phase of financial cooperation, the ASEAN+3 states are still finding it
difficult to forge a new path toward a self-determining regional financial
arrangement. On the one hand, they have tried to strengthen the regional
decision-making process by introducing central bank governors into the
policy-making process. The ASEAN+3 states have also tried to reduce the role of
international financial institutions in the regional self-help mechanism
by reducing the IMF-linked portionof the CMIM from 80 per cent
to 70 per cent. On the other hand, ASEAN+3 financial cooperation has shown its
dependence on other institutions by drawing on the IMF’s safety net model and
utilising other institutions’ analysis as the basis for its decisions, and has
not been confident enough to maximise its own capacity to determine regional
arrangements. Hence the future of ASEAN+3 financial cooperation may largely
still be influenced and directed by the dynamic of international organisations
such as the IMF.
Eko
Saputro
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