Shanghai Daily

Tricky 2020 ahead as climate, tech giants influence global economy 2.9%

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US political clouds coupled with wider climate and digital transforma­tions point to a tricky 2020 for the world economy, although experts say a lurch back to crisis is improbable.

The Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t said last month that activity had been hobbled by weaker trade and investment in the past two years, as US President Donald Trump pursued a trade war with China.

The OECD expects global growth to dip in the coming year to 2.9 percent, its lowest level since the world recession of 2009.

Trump appears to have struck a truce with China for now, under a “phase one” pact announced this month, but pre-existing tariffs remain in place and it will take time to demobilize their effects.

More broadly, the OECD contrasted proactive actions taken by central banks with the policy foot-dragging by government­s in the face of climate change and the march of technology.

Industrial­ists and investors are having to correct their climate strategies even as Trump sits firm in his policy of denial. Oil giant Saudi Aramco recently had to trim back the volume of its gigantic share offering.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund was a little more optimistic in its latest World Economic Outlook, forecastin­g 2020 growth of 3.4 percent but warning neverthele­ss of a “synchroniz­ed slowdown and uncertain recovery.”

At a time of populism and protests around the world, politics will remain an economic wild card next year.

Trump heads into the November presidenti­al election under an impeachmen­t cloud, and Britain’s Brexit divorce from the European Union will likely be sealed next month, following Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s election triumph.

The rise of technologi­cal giants sitting on mountains of data is meanwhile challengin­g the distributi­on of wealth between government­s and big business, and has the potential to reshape the world of work as artificial intelligen­ce exploits that data.

The online arena has emerged as another front for Trump’s trade wars, after he threatened tariffs on France over its digital tax imposed on the likes of Amazon, Facebook and Google. Europe is threatenin­g a collective response.

Ludovic Subran, chief economist of German insurance giant Allianz, sees a global “purgatory of growth” coming up.

Any systemic shock next year “will probably not be born in finance, but will be exogenous, for example a big regulatory shock on personal data, or in relation to the climate,” he said.

Trump and his potential challenger­s on the Democratic left are united in their hostility to the free-trade and liberaliza­tion agendas that, they argue, hollowed out industrial America over the past decades.

The mistrust is felt well beyond the United States.

“We’re not worried about how to overcome a cyclical crisis, we know what to do,” said Ingo Kuebler, the staff representa­tive at Mahle, a German automotive supplier that has already been forced to downsize as car buyers turn away from diesel engines.

“The big issue is transforma­tion, digitaliza­tion, electric mobility,” he said, fretting that an influx of cheap car batteries means “we are dreading the loss of many jobs.”

Since the financial crisis a decade ago, central bank policies have led to negative interest rates spreading in some countries, squeezing bank profitabil­ity and inflating private debt. With growth faltering, the debate about wealth distributi­on will likely become still more acute.

In 2018, according to Oxfam, 26 billionair­es had as much money as the poorest half of the world.

“Even when people seem to enjoy basic material comfort, they may still experience the same level of misery and unhappines­s as the poorest,” French academic Esther Duflo said in October after she won the Nobel Prize in economics.

US investor Steve Eisman of “The Big Short” fame thinks that another global crisis is unlikely, but the best that can be hoped for is a slow strangulat­ion of growth.

“What will happen next time, whenever it does happen, will be your normal garden variety of recession where the economy slows and goes negative and people lose money. That’ll be painful enough,” Eisman said.

(AFP)

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