Between 1993 and 1999, Franco was active in public service. He started in May 1993 as Deputy Secretary of Economic Policy at the Finance Ministry up to October 1993 when he moved to the
Central Bank of Brazil in the position of Deputy Governor responsible for International Affairs, position he occupied until 1997, and only interrupted by a brief tenure as governor of the
Central Bank of Brazil between December 1994 and January 1995. On August 20, 1997 he was confirmed governor of the
Central Bank of Brazil, until leaving on January 9, 1999, and briefly returning in March 1999 to transfer his functions to his successor
Arminio Fraga.
Economic Policy Secretary Franco served as Deputy Economic Policy Secretary at the Finance Ministry from May to October 1993 by invitation from the newly appointed Minister,
Fernando Henrique Cardoso, the fourth Finance Minister of president
Itamar Franco, who had become president in December 1992 after the resignation of
Fernando Collor de Mello. The other economists in the group were Winston Fristch, as Secretary of Economic Policy and Edmar Bacha as special adviser. In his memoir, Cardoso recollects that “with a small team facing a gigantic challenge, as a
Brancaleone's Army, ... we started to work, under a very discouraging political atmosphere”. This team faced a paradoxical pressure:
not to repeat economic shocks
and to produce some solution to inflation, then approaching 30% per month. The team's first major announcement was described by Franco, as a “non-package” or rather “an ambitious collection of medium term fundamentalists agendas”, curiously named as PAI (acronym for
Plano de Ação Imediata, Plan of Immediate Action), released on June 13, 1993. In sharp contrast with previous stabilization attempts, this document seemed to point that the Real Plan would start by the end offering “some sort of strategic planning of actions in issues associated with the so-called fiscal and monetary fundamentals to stabilization”.
Deputy Governor for International Affairs at the Central Bank Franco was appointed Deputy Governor for International Affairs at the Central Bank on September 8, 1993, when
Pedro Malan was appointed Governor. Simultaneously,
Pérsio Arida was designated president of
BNDES, and André Lara Rezende replaced Malan was chief negotiator of then pending Brazilian
external debt. With this enlarged composition, the economic team around minister Cardoso started preparations towards the Real Plan. In parallel, Franco had executive responsibilities in International Affairs at the
Central Bank related to operational aspects of external debt restructuring under the Brady Plan, then at decisive moments, the administrative structures in charge of exchange controls, bound to be transformed by an ambitious deregulation process, the
FOREX trading desk and international reserves management.
External debt, Brady Plan and new bond issues At the moment Franco and Malan started working together at the Central Bank, the debt negotiation process was around the precise form of exchange of Brazilian currency denominated deposits owned by creditors (under the MYDFAs, Multi Year Deposit Facility Agreement) for newly issued bonds according to the
Brady plan's menu. In the final sequence of this process, Franco was in charge of the composition of the collateral guaranties for the new bonds under the
Brady scheme. These guaranties would take the form of
US Treasury Zero Coupon bonds with certain features, with a face value of approximately US$18 billion (and market value of US$2,8 billion) to be acquired with funds provided by the
IMF under a stand-by agreement. However,
IMF representatives did not feel comfortable with the drafts of the Real Plan shown during the negotiations of the stand-by agreement and refused to go on with the loan, forcing the Brazilian authorities to develop some alternative strategy to acquire the
US Treasury bonds in the secondary market using Brazil's international reserves. The deal was described in detail in Guilherme Fiuza's book in the chapter titled
Sorry, Mr. Fagenbaum. Right next to completing Brazil's
Brady Plan version, simultaneously with the
Real Plan, Franco dealt with
Paris Club debt and the Dart family, who did not wish to adhere to the Brady exchange. With these issues sorted out the challenge for the Republic was to return to international markets with new bonds and proceed with the building of a
yield curve. The new program coordinated and executed by Franco comprised 16 new issues in 10 different currencies, between 1995 and 1998, totaling US$8,2 billion, including the issuance of the so called "BR-27" (the first 30-year bond voluntarily issued in decades, falling due in 2027) in exchange for cash and for
Brady bonds, thus recovering the previously offered collateral in
US Treasury bonds.
Forex deregulation and phasing out exchange controls Exchange controls deregulation was one of the greatest challenges of the International Affairs section of the
Brazilian Central Bank, a modernization imperative and an essential condition for the prevalence of supply and demand as determinants of the exchange rate. The architecture of liberalization was based on the creation of new and segregated market for US Dollars in which rates were determined by supply and demand in parallel to the official market and to compete upfront with the “black market”. Initially fed only by Dollars sold by tourists, the scope of transactions was gradually extended, while, liberalization in the official market, along with a better
balance of payments stance, resulted in gradually eliminating the spread between official and free markets. From 1988 to 2006, when all legal markets were unified, deregulation consisted in expanding the nature of transactions that could take place in the free market, including gold related arbitrages, and remittances from non-resident local currency accounts, though always preserving full identification of players. After 1995, under Franco's direction, the
Central Bank introduced several new rules for
leads and lags in foreign trade, portfolio investment and turned “registry” of foreign capital inflows into a statistical event, and no longer dependent on authorization. Interestingly, however, one key innovation introduced along with liberalization of
outflows was the selective restriction applied on certain types of
inflows, mostly of a short-term nature. Capital surges had been producing restrictive measures in many countries, most visibly (for Brazilians) Chile, where restrictions took the form of a “quarantine”, or a minimum stay for foreign capital. In Brazil, instead, restrictions were implemented mostly as a tax of foreign exchange inflows, and without any “quarantine”. The formula was used many times over in later moments of foreign exchange abundance in order to reduce appreciation and/or extend maturities of foreign liabilities. ==Plano Real==