Financial Times FT.com

The Fund should help Brazil to tackle inflows

By Arvind Subramanian and John Williamson

Published: October 25 2009 19:23 | Last updated: October 25 2009 19:23

The Brazilian action in imposing a tax on certain kinds of foreign inflows to moderate the rise in its currency is of great importance, substantive and symbolic. The symbolic value lies in signalling an end to an era in which emerging markets were enamoured with foreign finance, and in expressing willingness to take action to moderate inflows of foreign finance. Substantively, it is important in increasing the arsenal of weapons that countries can deploy to moderate over- heating of their economies. It is a good illustration of the type of measure policymakers can use to arrest incipient asset price overheating.

The International Monetary Fund’s response to the Brazilian measure was lukewarm or even mildly negative. A senior official said: “These kinds of taxes provide some room for manoeuvre, but it is not very much, so governments should not be tempted to postpone other more fundamental adjustments. Second, it is very complex to implement those kinds of taxes, because they have to be applied to every possible financial instrument,” adding that such taxes have proven to be “porous” over time in a number of countries.

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