1) Japan's massive government spending and debt accumulation following its economic crisis in the 1990s failed to revive sustained growth.
2) The US consumer drove global growth but is pulling back, and it is unclear what will replace this engine of growth as policy stimuli are withdrawn.
3) China cannot drive global growth through exports alone and its domestic consumer market is still limited, calling into question its ability to decouple from slower growth in the West.
1) Japan's massive government spending and debt accumulation following its economic crisis in the 1990s failed to revive sustained growth.
2) The US consumer drove global growth but is pulling back, and it is unclear what will replace this engine of growth as policy stimuli are withdrawn.
3) China cannot drive global growth through exports alone and its domestic consumer market is still limited, calling into question its ability to decouple from slower growth in the West.
1) Japan's massive government spending and debt accumulation following its economic crisis in the 1990s failed to revive sustained growth.
2) The US consumer drove global growth but is pulling back, and it is unclear what will replace this engine of growth as policy stimuli are withdrawn.
3) China cannot drive global growth through exports alone and its domestic consumer market is still limited, calling into question its ability to decouple from slower growth in the West.
1) Japan's massive government spending and debt accumulation following its economic crisis in the 1990s failed to revive sustained growth.
2) The US consumer drove global growth but is pulling back, and it is unclear what will replace this engine of growth as policy stimuli are withdrawn.
3) China cannot drive global growth through exports alone and its domestic consumer market is still limited, calling into question its ability to decouple from slower growth in the West.
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GLOBAL 4 AUGUST 2011
A persistent theme of recent and
current events in the global economy and here at home in Zimbabwe too is the idea of the New Normal. This is the belief that the global and local economies have undergone, and continue to undergo, radical change which means that the past is a poor guide to the future. Japan is a good place to start. Remember it was one of the star performers in the global economy from 1960 to 1989. Until the early 1990s it was fashionable to see Japan as the economy that would overtake the US and whose business model was far more efficient than those of the West. In the 1960s Japan grew 10% annually, slowing to 5% in the 1970s and 4% in the 1980s. But today all that is a distant memory. Japan is in serious trouble. Why? Over the last ten years, the level of debt-to-GDP has risen from 99% to over 170%. This was because the government ran massive deficits to reverse the Lost Decade of the 1990s, following the crash of their real estate and stock markets, starting in 1989. Japan invested massively in infrastructure, building bridges and roads to nowhere. All sorts of spending programmes were launched and the Central Bank went in for quantitative easing printing money. Does any of that sound familiar? It did not work and 20 years later Real Estate prices are down 50% to 80% depending on location, while the share market is 75% lower than it was in 1989! Because pension funds and personal savings were as high as 16% of GDP the govt used to be able to borrow at very low interest rates 1% to 1.5% Demographics are changing that situation The New Normal situation is that Japan now has 1.2 non-productive persons (under the age of 15 or over the age of 64) for every working age person. By 2020 the ratio will be two-to-one and by 2050, six-to-one! As populations age, so savings rates fall because the elderly have to live off their savings. The Japanese savings rate has collapsed from 18% of GDP in 1990 to less than 2% in 2008. Even though interest rates are still very low because the govt has borrowed so much, servicing the national debt will absorb 18% of the Japanese budget. Govt debt is growing by 7-8% a year while interest rates cannot go lower. Savings are falling rapidly and will not be able to cover the need for new debt issuance. Within a few years, because of the aging of the population, savings will go negative, while social security payments are rising. GDP is shrinking, and export trade is off about 30-40%, depending on the industry. Machine tool exports are down 80%. There is a rule in economics: "If something can't continue, then it won't." Japan can't continue down this path. Japans problem is a microcosm of that facing the world as a whole. It is estimated by a US investment house that globally govt borrowing in 2009 exceeded $5.3 trillion of which $2 trillion was by the US. That excludes private sector and household borrowing (for house mortgages, etc). That is about 9% of global GDP at a time when savings rates were falling in industrialized countries though they are now rebounding. The net effect is that savings will average around 23% of global GDP, meaning that govts will take (say) 10% Leaving a maximum of 13% for the private sector and households. The net result is almost certain to be a sharp fall in investment in the period 2009-2011 which will mean slower global growth. Most analysts think that the US economy will continue to deleverage over the next two years Households, banks and corporates will seek to rebuild their balance sheets, which means: Saving more Spending less, and Repaying debt Some analysts the stock market bulls expect higher savings to translate into more stock market investment But most disagree and expect the higher savings rates to be used to repay loans and debts Economists increasingly believe that consumption will fall by 7% from its 72% share of US GDP in 2007 to around 65% over the next three years. Moreover, they believe it will remain at a significantly lower level. In 2007, US consumer spending accounted for more than 18% of Global GDP (14.8% in 1980 and 16.8% in 1990). In other words US consumers have played a key role in fuelling global economic growth, especially in Asia and Latin America where a high proportion of US consumer imports are sourced. Indeed over half Asias total exports end up in the US. There is an important technical point here. For there to be high levels of discretionary spending by consumers, per capita incomes need to exceed $5000 a year as is the case in Botswana, South Africa, etc. In China only about 8% of the population fit into that category, meaning that the Chinese consumer market, although numerically huge, is largely confined to people spending on necessities rather than discretionary items. The point is that if more likely when US consumer spending dips and remains at lower levels than before, Chinese exports will be hurt. Chinese industry will be hit because so much of its production overproduction really is for export. Thereis another side to this namely that China buys only 22% of Asian exports, so that even if China were to manage to grow very rapidly the impact on the rest of the Asian region and even further afield to Africa would not be that great. Bottom line? There is simply not enough available capital under current conditions to do it all. Something has to give. More household savings? More foreign investment (flight to safety, as the rest of the world looks even worse)? Reduced corporate borrowing and thus less GDP growth? Higher rates to attract more foreign and US investment? The combinations are infinite, but none of them bode well. Increased household savings means less consumer spending. To attract more foreign investment (in the amounts that will be needed) will mean higher rates in 2011 and beyond. One trillion dollars is 7% of US GDP. And the US will be running trillion-dollar deficits for a very long time. Three conclusions stand out from this part of the discussion: 1. That China is unlikely to be able to continue to grow on the basis of exports, especially exports to the US and Europe. 2. That China will also not be able to drive the global economy, because it will not drive Asian growth, unless it changes its growth model. 3. Chinas growth will increasingly be driven by home consumption, but, as just pointed out, there is a problem per capita incomes are low insofar as discretionary consumption growth is concerned. Theconclusion is that the US economy is going to grow more slowly because firms and households are saving more, deleveraging and spending less. The US debt-GDP ratio in 2008 was 70%, but within a few years (say 2012) it could be 110%. To put this into context, the EU has a debt ceiling target for members of the Euro of 60% of GDP. This would be almost twice that. Two trajectories that between them determine the debt-GDP ratio are critical: The growth rate of debt, and The growth rate of GDP If the debt ratio continues to rise then it usually accelerates because of the rising cost of interest that adds to the budget deficit and the total debt. But if the Debt-GDP ratio stagnates, it tends to be associated with very low real growth, political paralysis, and a degree of social disenchantment. However, if the ratio falls, it is usually because of a combination of two developments: Higher real growth and Tough, vigorous fiscal discipline The lesson is obvious the US must keep a tight rein on government spending and reduce the budget deficit, while accelerating growth. Because of the fall in consumption spending from 72% to 65% of GDP, pessimists warn that without a recovery of household spending to previous levels, the economy will suffer for a long time. That need not necessarily happen If investment spending (both in the corporate sector and in government infrastructure spending) rises sufficiently to offset the fall in consumer spending, then there will not be a problem. This is because an invested dollar will generate more growth than increased social spending. Another worry is the calculation that credit destruction in the US economy caused by bank deleverage and losses is some $14 trillion. But the total amount of new credit created by the government and Federal Reserve is only $2 trillion. This suggests that deflation not inflation is more likely to be the problem in future. Letme recap on what I have been arguing so far: (a) Reflationary policies of the kind the world is now trying quantitative easing, propping up banks and auto manufacturers, cutting interest rates, lowering taxes and increasing govt spending, did not work in Japan. (b) US consumption spending drove global growth in the 1990s and up until 2007. China made the products and the US bought them, using money invested in the US economy by oil producers and China. The US consumer has pulled back and it is not obvious where the rebound in growth will now come from once the current policy stimuli are withdrawn As they will have to be later this year The stimuli are: Low interest rates Lower Taxes Higher govt spending, and Quantitative easing printing money (c) Because China buys relatively little from the rest of Asia, it is not obvious that Asia can decouple from the West. Again where does the growth come from? (d) The US needs to save and invest more and spend less. That is likely to happen but will it be enough? The US debt-GDP ratio is going to rise steeply and to grow faster to prevent the debt ratio from reaching Zimbabwe style proportions (190% of GDP), the US must not only: Invest more but Ensure it grows faster. (e) The US economy has been hit by the steep deleverage of banks, which is 7 times the spending stimulus put in place by the government. As of today (August 2011) there is no shortage of optimists and analysts who say that the picture I have been painting is way too gloomy. Certainly, the US economy is now rebounding much more strongly than seemed possible a Few months ago, AND China shows no sign whatsoever of slowing down. 1. The lack of progress in fiscal consolidation in major advanced economies 2. The continued weakness of the U.S. real estate market 3. Rapidly rising commodity prices, especially of fuel and food, 4. Overheating and the potential for boom-bust cycles in emerging markets, mostly in Asia, and 5. The concern that the Eurozone sovereign debt crisis will re-ignite in one of the so-called PIGS Greece, Ireland, Portugal , or spread to the fourth Pig (Spain) and worse to an even bigger economy, Italy. In addition to these specific concerns there is the ongoing worry that while economies are recovering job growth is not. There seems to be a serious disconnect between output growth and employment growth. Normally the two go together, but in the New Normal that does not seem to be the case. With US govts Federal and State cutting jobs, the private sector needs to create 120 000 to 150 000 jobs a month. 8.75 million jobs were lost in the US in 2008-09, In 2010 private-sector employment expanded by a little more than 1 million. Unemployment fell from around 10% to 9% But this fall in the unemployment rate mainly reflects a decline in the participation rate. In the US data, if a person does not look for a job in the four weeks before the data are collected, then he/she is not considered to be unemployed but to be not participating. The number to count is not the unemployed, but the employed. In the US the employed peaked at 146 million at the start of 2008 and then fell to 138 million at the end of 2009 before recovering to 139 million at present still down 7 million. This focus is important because in the US the central bank has a dual focus Price stability, and Foster employment Most other central banks in industrial countries have a single focus price stability through inflation targeting. This highlights the Feds dilemma. The data suggest that inflation is rising, but the Fed insists that because there is a large output gap ie: substantial spare capacity. Printing money cannot be inflationary. Yet the reality is that prices ARE rising despite the output gap It is what is known as stagflation. The two mandates price stability and fostering employment are apparently in conflict. Recall what was said in BE There are four dimensions to inflation: 1. Short-term caused by exogenous effects like devaluation, rising oil prices, drought or floods etc, And 2. Long term inflation caused by excessive monetary expansion, usually driven by large budget deficits. 3. Cost push which is often outside the control of the authorities, and 4. Demand pull which they can influence, though not control, through higher interest rates, monetary curbs and tightening fiscal policy. Globally there is very little that govts can do to control food and fuel inflation. If they curb demand, that might help curb fuel consumption, but it6 takes at least a year for monetary policy to work. The concern is that the current rise in inflation is not due to what is called QE2 the second phase of printing money by the Fed But over the long haul 2 to 3 years QE will impact on inflation. So in several rich countries there is a growing call for higher interest rates and tighter monetary policy But this is being opposed by those who say that will stop the recovery in its tracks and tip the world back into a double dip recession. Meanwhile, some emerging markets, especially China, are tightening monetary policy because they do not have the same output gap (spare capacity), and Inflation is approaching 6% in China . The IMFs most recent global economic update (June 2011) says activity is slowing down temporarily, and downside risks have increased. The global expansion remains unbalanced as growth in many advanced economies remains weak, while the mild slowdown in the second quarter of 2011 is not reassuring. The IMF said that greater-than- anticipated weakness in the US and financial volatility caused by the Eurozone debt crisis posed greater downside risks. Simultaneously, signs of overheating have become increasingly apparent in many EMs. In its assessment the Bank for International Settlements takes a different view, warning that the worlds output gap has disappeared. By this is meant the gap between potential and actual production or capacity utilization. When actual production catches up with capacity, prices start to rise and inflation accelerates. The BIS warns that this is what will happen over the next year and wants countries to tighten fiscal and monetary policies to slow demand expansion. Economic growth in the US is the weakest of any recovery in the past nine decades. But the picture is very different for asset prices. Commodities, until recently, had enjoyed their strongest ever performance in a recovery. Until July, the S&P 500 share market index had enjoyed its fifth strongest rally in 34 recoveries. Why have asset prices done so well when the US economy hasnt? Part of the story is monetary policy. QE2 pumping $600 billion into the markets by buying Govt bonds stimulated demand for shares and bonds, because by keeping interest rates low the Fed encouraged investors to buy shares. But since QE2 ended in June, three things have happened: 1. Share prices have tumbled partly because of debt concerns but also the slowdown in the economy; 2. The debt deal means govt spending will be cut thereby reducing demand. 3.This has caused analysts to downgrade their growth forecasts while unemployment has worsened. As a result the share price bubble appears to be deflating, though markets remain very volatile and it is impossible to make firm forecasts. The recent stalling of the US recovery raises scary questions. After a recession, this economy usually gets people back to work quickly but not this time. Optimists say there is no reason to panic as a number of special factors account for the midyear slowdown. They blame short-term headwinds for the slowdown: Bad weather The phasing out of fiscal and monetary support The Japanese earthquake The Eurozone debt crisis The surge in oil and food prices Whether this optimism that as these believed-to-be short-run influences fade, the US and global economies will recover more strongly remains to be seen. It is simply too early to say But what is clear is the policy dilemma the policy divide. The reflationists Stiglitz, Blanchflower, Krugman, the UK Labour party etc warn that the global economy is heading for a double-dip recession. They want: More QE Increased govt spending No increase in interest rates Some tax cuts This they say will revive stalling economies. The austerity group wants: Firm action to cut govt budget deficits and cut the debt burden; This meant spending cuts and higher taxes as in the UK, Spain., Italy, Greece, Ireland, Portugal etc The austerity view is that interest rates should be raised, not cut, and that monetary policy should be tightened as advocated by the BIS and for many, especially EMs by the IMF That is where the debate rests today (Aug 2011). Both schools believe they are right and that time will vindicate their view. But there is more to it than that as the debt crises have shown. Itis that the more govts borrow today by running budget deficits the worse the debt burden will become. Rogoff and Reinhart in a much- admired book have estimated that once a countrys debt-to-GDP ratio exceeds 90%, GDP growth slows by one percentage point a year. The reflationists accept this, but say that with growth very slow and unemployment very high, the focus today should be on growth. Grow now cut later is their motto. This is what the Obama Democrats are saying in the and left-wing political parties in Europe. So the divide is both about economics who is right? and politics, left (borrow and spend) and the right (cut and raise interest rates).