Monday, June 29, 2009

More devaluation talk

Blogger Edward Hugh has yet again returned to the subject of devaluing the lat, something he notes has also been urged by former IMF chief economist and Harvard professor Kenneth Rogoff. Prof. Rogoff spoke at a traditional Swedish political shindig on the island of Gotland, known as Almedalsveckan. This has been a traditional forum for political and economic debate since the late 1960s and gets considerable attention in the Swedish and Nordic press. The Harvard economist said that Latvia should devalue as soon as possible, but probably wouldn't.
At this point, my view is that devaluation, while perhaps inevitable, would trigger a worst of two worlds scenario. Key elements of the public sector have already been gut-shot with both barrels by massive budget and salary cuts. More cuts are coming and, as I wrote in an earlier post, Latvia is unintentionally bumbling its way toward being not only a failed state, but a failed minarchy (a place where rag-tag remnants of a police and court system, a scattering of skeleton-staffed schools, and a largely black market health care system are all that remain of former state functions). Good minarchy, of course, is possible through a long-term, planned transition, but that is another story.
There is much speculation about where the lat would go if it were cut loose. Some say that a devaluation could be as bad as 50 % or more. The conservative variant is that the lat is allowed to float in a plus/minus 15 % corridor. Both scenarios would boost inflation , reduce imports and cripple the ability of enterprises to retool. Swedish banks would write off huge losses, turn distressed assets over to management companies that have already been formed, and declare (0r effectively continue) an indefinite lending moratorium. Many Latvian salaries would, effectively, fall to Third World levels (at 50 % devaluation, plus likely 2010 budget cuts, we could see teachers making under $150 a month). While the prospect of labor at devalued rates might attract some foreign investors, it will also be a great incentive for Latvians to emigrate to take any minimum wage job in any other "Old European" country. I met an American who has a small business teaching English. A few years ago, most of his students were taking English to deal with foreign customers and correspondence, or to study abroad for a year. Now more than half are taking English as preparation for emigration. In other words, the cheap skilled labor will be gone. As soon as the recovery starts elsewhere, thousands or tens of thousands will leave, making not only a choice of economic advantage, but also a choice of better governance (as I have written earlier)

4 comments:

Mr.Key said...

Hope those bright people at least know differences between Lats and Rublis. Is the author sure those experts even know in which color and what is the least nominal banknote of Lat?

Mr.Key said...

BTW what's that - "cheap skilled labor" who learns English for emmigration? Don't they know it already? What are their skills?

investmentgardener said...

I fear you are correct in your analysis. Choices have been made (or not made) while there were multiple alternatives available. As it stands Latvia will just have to run the course. The major collapse is still ahead and will come when the initial bailout money has been spent. There won't be support for further cuts and all other countries will be too busy fighting their own crises to even notice Latvia's default until it has happened.

Subashish said...

I agree with the thoughts reflected here, particularly the later part.

Latvia already had a problem in hand with skilled people turning to emigration. Now once the other part (western europe, mainly) recovers, the problem can be more acute. Most of younger generation has lost hope in the country anyway.

Taking a long view, I cannot help but shudder. With teacher's salary not fit to pay for basic needs, one can imagine what level of education the state will be left with. The quality the teachers and basic education will take a long hit. Demographic situation was improving with all incentives for having children, but that too is now lost.