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Stock markets rise but global growth forecasts revised down
By Nick Beams
23 November 2001
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There is a growing divergence between financial markets and
the increasingly gloomy forecasts about the state of the world
economy. In the past two months, the Dow Jones index has risen
by 20 percent, wiping out the losses sustained on Wall Street
in the aftermath of September 11. But this rise is not being matched
by a rebound in the real economy, with forecasts for both US and
global growth being revised down, amid warnings that the indebtedness
of the Japanese banking system is approaching a disaster.
Last week the International Monetary Fund issued its revised
forecast for the world economy, predicting growth of just 2.4
percent for both this year and next, half the growth rate of 4.7
percent in 2000. These estimates were lower than the 2.6 percent
growth for this year and 3.5 percent expansion it forecast in
its annual report issued in October but compiled too late to take
account of the impact of the September 11 attacks.
The figures could be revised down again. IMF managing director
Horst Koehler said there was an extraordinary degree of
uncertainty in the aftermath of the September 11 events
which made forecasting based on previous experience something
like trying to read the tea leaves.
According to the IMF, the US economy will grow by just 1.1
percent this year and 0.7 percent next year, down from the October
predictions of 1.3 percent and 2.2 percent respectively. Growth
in the European Union was forecast at 1.7 percent for 2001 and
1.4 percent for 2002 compared with the earlier forecast of 1.8
percent and 2.2 percent respectively. The IMF predicts that Japan
will be in an outright recession both this year and next with
contractions of 0.9 percent in 2001 and 1.3 percent in 2002.
The latest predictions form a stark contrast with those of
a year ago. Then the IMF pointed to the continued strength
of the US economy, a robust expansion in Europe and a nascentalbeit
fragilerecovery in Japan. Growth for this year was
predicted to be 4.2 percent.
The downward revision saw Koehler warn financial markets that
they may not be taking account of all the risks. Equity
markets, he said, appear to be pricing in a relatively
rapid recovery. However, it remains unclear whether [they] have
fully priced in the deterioration in corporate credit quality
and earnings prospects that has occurred thus far.
The downward revision by the IMF has been followed by the Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development. In its latest forecast,
covering the worlds 30 largest economies issued this week,
the OECD warned that global growth would reach only 1 percent
in 2002. The US was already in recession and was expected
to expand by only 0.7 percent next year. But as one comment in
the Australian Financial Review noted, even that might
be too optimistic. Growth of 0.7 percent for the US and 1 percent
for the OECD area as a whole would mean that the US would have
to resume growth in the first half of next yearsignifying
a relatively mild recession.
Like the IMF, the OECD forecast that the Japanese economy
appears set to remain in recession through 2002, at least.
Over-optimism on US growth
The rebound on US share markets seems to be the result of the
belief that the combination of interest rate cuts and fiscal stimulus
will see the American economy rapidly increase its growth ratethe
so-called V-shaped recovery. But some observers are casting doubt
on this optimistic scenario.
Morgan Stanley has again revised down its forecast for global
growth predicting a rate of just 1.7 percent for both this year
and next. According to its chief economist Stephen Roach: If
this forecast comes to pass, it would mark the weakest consecutive
two years of global growth in recorded post-World World II history.
Another to cast doubt on a rapid recovery is this years
Nobel Prize winner for economics, Joseph Stiglitz. Writing in
the Washington Post on November 11, he warned that the
Republican-backed stimulus packagebased largely on massive
tax handouts to corporations and the wealthywill do little
to boost the economy and may even make matters worse.
Even more worrying than the situation in the US, he wrote,
is the threat to the world economy. Already we see inklings
of the downward spiral that was part of the Great Depression of
1929: Recession in Japan and parts of East Asia and bare growth
in Europe are contributing to and aggravating the US downturn.
A report issued last month by the Levy Economics Institute
points out that the recession in the US is different from others
in the recent past because of large structural imbalances
in the American economy.
According to the reports authors, economists Wynne Godley
and Alex Izurieta: The United States should now be prepared
for one of the deepest and most intractable recessions of the
post-World War II period, with no natural process of recovery
in sight unless a large and complex orientation of policy occurs
both here and in the rest of the world. The grounds for reaching
this sombre conclusion are that very large structural imbalances,
with unique characteristics, have been allowed to develop. These
imbalances were always bound to unravel, and it now looks as though
the unraveling is well under way.
Among those imbalances was the fall in the private sector financial
balance (total disposable income less expenditure), which reached
the previously unheard of level of minus 6 percent
last year. They noted that this excess of expenditure over income,
requiring growing injections of credit, was inherently unsustainable
and made the private sector increasingly vulnerable to negative
shocks such as a downturn in income, employment, asset prices,
profits, or investment.
While concerns mount over the state of the US and world economy,
the financial position in Japan is going from bad to worse with
the emergence of deflation threatening to further undermine the
position of banks and other financial institutions.
An article by the Financial Times global economics commentator
Martin Wolf entitled Japan on the brink published
on November 14 described the experiences since the collapse of
the Japanese bubble economy a decade ago as an awful
warning and one that the US Federal Reserve has had in mind
during the 10 interest rate cuts so far this year.
The most significant fact about Japan, Wolf wrote,
is that prices are falling. The figures are less startling
than those for the Great Depression in the US, when consumer prices
fell by a quarter. Nevertheless, the broadest measure of the price
level, the deflator for gross domestic product, has fallen by
6 percent since its peak in 1993. The rate of decline is also
accelerating: in the year to the second quarter of 2001, the deflator
declined by 2.2 percent. In the second quarter it declined at
an annualised rate of 7.4 percent.
The most significant effect of falling prices is that it raises
the real level of interest and increases the debt burden on both
the private and public sector to the point where, if continued,
it becomes unsustainable. Over the past 10 years, the ratio of
gross public debt to GDP in Japan has increased from 61 percent
to 131 percent, the highest level for any OECD country. If debt
levels keep rising at this rate, at a certain point, not too far
into the future, confidence will collapse leading to soaring interest
rates, high inflation and outright default.
In an editorial comment on November 15, the Financial Times
noted that over the past decade the outside worlds
attitude to the Japanese economy has moved from awe to puzzlement
and then to indifference. Now it should move to anxiety. At a
time of gathering global distress, the plight of the worlds
second largest economy and creditor is set to become worse.
It warned that if prices continue to fall, real interest rates
would become devastatingly high. In an economy already
burdened with vast post-bubble debt and a heavy burden of non-performing
loans, the result would be an ever-widening spiral of mass bankruptcy,
financial contraction and deepening recession. The editorial
insisted that the key task facing the Bank of Japan was to halt
the fall in prices and that its failure to do was simply
a calamity.
Under conditions where Japanese sources have financed a large
portion of the US international debt, an implosion on the Tokyo
financial markets, leading to the calling in of funds from the
rest of the world, would have major consequences for the world
economy. Insofar as the rapid rise in US financial markets is
based on an assessment that the situation will soon return to
normal, it could be somewhat premature.
See Also:
Concerns that US may be going down the
Japan road
[7 November 2001]
Sharp fall in global trade
growth
[27 October 2001]
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