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Bankers speech points to global problems
By Nick Beams
1 April 2004
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A speech last month by Malcolm Knight, general manager of the
Bank for International Settlements (BIS), has pointed to some
potential problems for the world economy arising from the growth
of government debt and the present low interest rate regime.
Addressing the annual congress of the Swiss Society for Economics
and Statistics in Basel, Knight began by pointing to the generally
brighter economic picture of the past six months. A global recovery
was underway, China had become a second engine of economic growth
alongside the United States, there was evidence of buoyancy in
Asia and, while consumer spending still lagged in Europe, there
were signs that confidence had strengthened. Moreover, the international
system had recovered from a series of shocks, including the financial
crisis in Argentina, the collapse of the IT bubble and the demise
of corporations such as Enron and Parmalat.
But Knight then turned his attention to certain concerns within
this apparently benign environment. He began by pointing
out that global economic growth is being driven by three powerful
forces: very expansionary fiscal policies in some countries, accommodative
monetary policies almost around the world and an investment boom
in China that is literally without precedent.
In Knights view, the problem facing the world economy
is that none of these drivers of growth can continue to operate
indefinitely. Fiscal policies in several countries had provided
a massive stimulus to aggregate demand during the
recent years of weak economic growth. In the US, the fiscal balance
has moved from a surplus of 1 percent of gross domestic product
(GDP) in 2000 to a deficit of 5 percent of GDP this year, fiscal
deficits in Europe have also widened, while the deficit in Japan
has been running at over 5 percent of GDP since 1998.
Interest rates set by the major central banks are also at historically
low levels, with a particularly dramatic fall in the
US from 6.5 percent at the end of 2000 to only 1 percent at present.
While the investment boom in China was one manifestation
of what is little short of a new industrial revolution with
millions of new workers being brought into the international
economy, there were signs of overheating in
the Chinese economy and risks of overinvestment in some areas.
The production capacities built up in some sectors may never
be profitable, and an overhang of capacity could blight investment
prospects in the future.
Knight warned that abrupt revisions of expectations
by investors could translate into gyrations in financial
markets. At some point interest rates would have to return
to more normal levels and, with inflation in the US
around 2 percent, a neutral rate is considered to be around 5
percent. The challenge was how to shift the current accommodative
monetary policy without creating excessive volatility in the bond
market.
But interest rates could not be kept at very low levels indefinitely,
because such a policy creates its own problems. There was evidence
of high leverage as money market operators took on longer-term
risk, financed by very low interest rate short-term liabilities.
And with long-term interest rates on risk-free government
bonds so low, many investors, whether leveraged or not, have been
increasingly tempted to search for yield. This has
resulted in a large net flow of funds into risky credits.
While it appears that key international financial institutions
are well placed to cope with higher interest rates and the financial
system has shown a greater capacity to absorb shocks than in the
past, this reassuring picture does not mean that the
present situation is without risks, Knight warned.
It is not difficult to paint a much less encouraging
scenario. For instance, any sudden unwinding of positions by leveraged
investors would itself accentuate volatility, and perhaps trigger
further adjustments by the wider investor community. Higher interest
rates would well undermine present asset valuations. Debt service
burdens of households and corporations could rise and lead to
a deterioration in loan quality across the financial system.
Concerns about the risks associated with the US Federal Reserve
Boards continued low-interest rate regime have been voiced
in other quarters as well.
In a recent editorial, the Economist magazine
commented that a rise in rates could help to avoid another
dangerous bubble by warning investors and homebuyers that asset
prices cannot rise for ever. The New York Times has
also called for the Fed to get started in a shift
to higher interest rates.
In February, Newsweek magazine published an open
letter from Morgan Stanley chief economist Stephen Roach
to Fed chairman Alan Greenspan, calling on him to lift the Feds
base rate from 1 to 3 percent and restore some semblance
of normalcy to financial markets. Only four years after
the bursting of the first bubble, Roach wrote, the risks
of new bubbles abound.
In a comment published on March 5, Roach voiced his fear that
Americas post-bubble recovery is in serious danger
of spawning a new round of asset bubbles that could well pose
the most deflationary risks of all with the risk intensifying
as the Fed clings to its stance of extraordinary accommodation.
Roachs concern is that unless the Fed lifts rates some
time soon it will have no room to manoeuvre in the event of a
financial crisis, unlike the situation four years ago when the
Fed rate was 6.5 percent and successive interest rate cuts helped
soothe financial markets.
The January minutes of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC),
the body that decides on interest rates, indicate that Fed governors
share some of these concerns as well.
The minutes noted that while members acknowledged there
were risks in maintaining what might eventually prove to be an
overly accommodative policy stance they judged that for
now it was desirable to take risks on the side of
assuring the rapid elimination of economic slack. But the
minutes also disclosed that a number of members had
commented that continued commitment to low interest rates appeared
to have contributed to valuations in financial markets that left
little room for downside risks.
The argument of Roach and others is that the Fed should revert
to more normal policies or run the risk of creating
greater problems in the future. But, as calculations by Morgan
Stanley show, these are far from normal times. As Roach noted
in a comment published on March 8, with the US now 27 months into
a so-called recovery, private nonfarm payrolls are running
about 8.2 million workers below the path that would have occurred
in a more normal upturn. This means that the income of wage
and salary earners is $400 billion below where it should be. This
has led to a situation where increased consumption spending is
not being financed from additional income but by tax cuts and
the cash made available through rising house valuations.
Under these conditions an interest rate rise, even to the level
of 3 percent proposed by Roach, let alone the 5 percent level
considered normal by the BIS, would push the US economy, and ultimately
the rest of the world, into recession. As these considerations
make clear, the dilemmas confronting policy makers flow from the
fact that far from operating normally, the world economy
is afflicted by deep-seated problems.
See Also:
US trade gap highlights rising
debt burden
[15 March 2004]
G7 papers over growing problems
[9 February 2004]
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