Harry Stotle’s Weblog

How’s the world today?

Not over yet

Posted by Harry Stotle on April 10, 2009

A new consensus is seeing the end of World Depression II sometime in 2010. As a matter of fact, the list of positive elements is not negligible:

  • - The very existence and the conclusions of the G20 show the existence of a fast global public response to the events, certainly going in the right direction
  • - The US stimulus plan has had an initial favorable impact, paving the way for the other plans
  • - Europeans plans are not as small as they look, considering the fact that social protection mechanisms mechanically increase public spending each time unemployment levels rise
  • - The banking system has now ceased to crumble down, and the main pieces are back in place
  • - Protectionism is being discarded as a solution
  • - Destocking is reaching its material limits
  • - Most commodities are back to reasonable prices
  • - Confidence is being restored
  • - Key currencies are stable: the ‘Chinamerican’ system protects the dollar, while the Euro structure prevents members to freely print money for their own selfish benefit
  • - A reinforced IMF can be of assistance gain in the most disastrous areas
  • - Last but not least, the US administration, having ceased to be an arsonist force, is now a factor of global appeasement .

Now, on the other side of the balance sheet, still lies a list of liabilities of such importance that the 2010 target remains a product of wishful thinking:

  • - The financial system is by no means limited to the banking system, and it will take a long time (years) to monitor, fix, regulate and control the non-banking part which had become the largest part. This requires a better understanding and monitoring of securitization, another revision of corporate accounting, multilateral as well as bilateral negotiations for the creation of appropriate regulation entities, and adjustment of tax laws
  • - Stimulus plans, limited by a dominant ideology against public deficits, are being set at an order of magnitude below actual needs: the financial wealth recently destroyed (stock markets, real estate, commodities, leveraged securities, for a total of perhaps $ 200 trillion) had been fueling growth, and must be substituted by public injections (today in the range of $ 3 trillion). In the meantime, business will lack funding and growth will stall.
  • - Toxic assets are not yet entirely eliminated (CDS, and weak real estate based securities) and not even entirely identified
  • - The global real estate crisis has not by any means reached its climax, and in many places (such as Spain or Dubai) drops in prices are still expected to reach 80% from currently already discounted levels
  • - The West should continue to keep for several decades the largest consumer markets, and is also the place where unemployment shall keep rising: the gradient in technology capabilities which had separated East and West for the last two hundred years, creating the global system of economic specialization which in turn did sustain the extraordinary economic growth rate observed along the same period of time, is now reduced to very little. Countries like South Korea can produce basically anything the West can produce (except in the fields of airspace, nuclear energy, and armament), and can produce what the West cannot efficiently produce (e.g. consumers electronics). When China –which is a subcontractor of the West in about every sector) inevitably reaches the same situation than Korea, then Western and Eastern salaries will have to adjust. If they don’t, unemployment in the West will reach unprecedented levels, triggering an attrition of Western consumers markets, in turn preventing the East to generate resources for their own new consumers markets. If they do, social unrest in the West will contribute to the depression. In any case, the substantial cause of the economic crisis (not the occasional cause which was the financial crisis) is still in place for a while
  • - When such stubborn facts appear in public view, further stimulus plans shall come. This time, however, they will have to be funded by deficits that only inflation can cure. For a short while stock market’s rallies should multiply. One could even use the opportunity to invest in the most protected sectors (let’s talk about them some other day). Yet, better miss a rally that hit the next crash sooner or later.

This is how the world goes. Please stay tuned.

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