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Economy
Concerns grow behind G-7 official optimism
By Nick Beams
19 February 2001
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The meeting of finance ministers from the major capitalist
nations, held in Palermo Sicily on Saturday, concluded with an
optimistic assessment of the state of the world economy, despite
the downturn in the US and the continued stagnation of Japan.
The basic factors that have supported sustained growth
in many of the major industrial economies remain in place,
the Group of Seven (G-7) statement issued at the conclusion of
the meeting declared.
On the US, the statement said that economic fundamentals
remain strong, while for Japan the G-7 predicted a modest
recovery but warned that downside risks remain.
The G-7 assessment of the state of the world economy came in
the face of reductions in growth assessments by the International
Monetary Fund and further signs of a slowdown in the US.
The IMF has cut its forecast for growth in the US economy for
2001 from 3.2 percentthe prediction it made last Septemberto
just 1.7 percent, while reducing the forecast for world economic
growth from 4.2 percent to 3.4 percent.
Figures on the US economy released last Friday show that industrial
production fell again in January, the fourth consecutive monthly
decline and the longest series of monthly declines since the recession
of 1990-91. The rate of capacity use in the manufacturing industry
has now dropped to its lowest level since August 1992. At the
same time a preliminary report from the University of Michigan
showed that its consumer confidence index had fallen for the third
month in a row and was now about the same level it was at the
start of the last recession in July 1990.
Across the Pacific, the Japanese government downgraded its
assessment of the state of the economy on Friday, saying that
it expected growth to be more moderate as a result
of a loss of exports to the US. Revised figures have shown that
the Japanese economy contracted by 0.6 percent in the September
quarter. If a further decline is recorded for the December quarter
then Japan will have officially entered a recession.
While the problems being encountered in the US and Japan were
more or less passed over in the official G-7 statement, they are
giving rise to concerns. As one unnamed British official told
the Financial Times: If you look back to last autumn,
we were looking at quite a benign outlook for the world economy.
Since then we have had the US figures for the fourth quarter and
a downward revision to Japanese growth. These are real changes.
And changes have not only taken place on the economic front.
The coming to power of the Bush administration has created
a degree of uncertainty in the ranks of the G-7 nations, and more
broadly, over the likely response of the US to a major world financial
crisis, along the lines of that in September-October 1998, or
a world slump.
These concerns were heightened by an interview with incoming
US Treasury Secretary, Paul O'Neill, published in the Financial
Times last Wednesday. O'Neill's remarks indicated that the
new administration favour a more hands-off stance in relation
to global financial turbulence.
O'Neill took issue with the view that crises were an inevitable
feature of global capitalism, requiring the intervention of financial
authorities. Rather than being caused by the market, crises occurred
when market mechanisms did not operate freely. It doesn't
have anything to do with the failure of capitalism. It's to do
with the absence of capitalism.
According to O'Neill, the market should be able to forestall
crises before they happened, and the IMF and the World Bank should
never have to intervene. In an ideal world the fire company
never leaves the firehouse ... hopefully they learn how to play
chess really well.
As if this were not enough to arouse concerns among his G-7
partners about the future role of the US in financial crisis management,
O'Neill cast doubt on the value of the organisation itself.
Travelling around the world to tell each other about
what's going on in the economy doesn't seem to me to be a primary
reason for meeting, he told the Financial Times.
I can go into my office and look at my machine and find
out what's going on right now in London. I don't need to go to
Palermo to find out.
In an editorial published on Saturday, under the title First
world fundamentalism, the Financial Times drew attention
to some of the concerns that are obviously felt in European capitals.
Over the past eight years no one has had serious cause
to question the US commitment to international economic co-operation
in the Group of Seven developed countries' forum, it noted.
But the comments by O'Neill in the lead up to the G-7 talks threw
the cat among the Sicilian pigeons.
The editorial also noted that Wall Street was worried about
the make up of the new regime. While investors remain convinced
that Mr Greenspan will come to the rescue in a market panic, Mr
O'Neill is hinting that the next hedge fund or bank collapse will
be viewed with a less sympathetic eye in the Treasury than at
the Fed.
It went on to point out that even if recent disturbances in
the markets proved to be nothing more than transitional upsets
associated with the shift from a Democratic to a Republican administration,
it was clear that O'Neill's remarks certainly point in a
more unilateralist direction than under the Clinton administration.
Arguing for continued intervention in financial markets, the
editorial claimed that events will in due course force this
new US administration into economic co-operation but until
then the world would have to wait to see how the balance was struck
between fundamentalist capitalism and business pragmatism.
And that wait may not be a long one if, in the lead up to the
next meeting of the G7, the situation in the world economy changes
as fast as it has since last September.
See Also:
Japanese economy continues to stagnate
[16 February 2001]
Is the US economy on the Japanese road?
[8 February 2001]
Recession clouds gather over
Davos summit
[30 January 2001]
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