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Understand­ing the global state of disunion

“Global growth is expected to slow for a third year in a row – to 2.4% – far below the 3.1% average of the 2010s.”

- Andrew Sheng Think Asian World Bank andrew Sheng writes on global issues from an asian perspectiv­e. the views expressed here are the writer’s own.

ON March 7, United States President Joseph Biden gave his annual State of the Union speech to Congress.

This was his energetic bid for re-election in the 2024 presidenti­al elections against his predecesso­r, Donald J Trump, allaying concerns about his age and physical prowess and to show how America is strong, with a call to continue supporting Ukraine.

Of the Americans surveyed after the speech, 62% felt positive rather than negative. Ten days later, Vladimir Putin, mentioned six times in Biden’s speech and likened to Hitler, was re-elected as Russian President with 88% of the vote.

The state of global order is less union, but more disunion or polarisati­on – one indicator being the price of gold rising over US$2,222 per ounce, an all-time high. A higher gold price means weaker dollar in real terms.

At the same time, the Dow, S&P500 and Nasdaq stock market indicators also touched record highs, following hints from US Federal Reserve (Fed) chairman Jerome Powell that Fed interest rates may be peaking with possible cuts later this year.

On that note, the United States certainly feels it never had it so good. The total market cap of US stocks increased by US$10.2 trillion in 2023. Arising from the artificial intelligen­ce (AI) boom, Nvidia alone added US$1 trillion to its investors’ wealth since last year. In the fourth quarter of 2023, the US economy grew at an above-trend pace of 3.2% per year.

In contrast, the January 2024 World Bank forecast indicated the slowest global growth pace in the last 30 years: “Global growth is expected to slow for a third year in a row – to 2.4% – far below the 3.1% average of the 2010s.”

In other words, the biggest economy in the world is growing faster than the rest of the world, but that is being sustained by growing fiscal and trade deficits, with its net debt to the world at US$18 trillion.

While America is being able to sustain growth through more debt “opium” in MAGA – Make America Great Again, the rest of the world is languishin­g.

Given both US presidenti­al candidates are likely to continue the spending and debt spree in the next four years, will the rest of the world continue to fund its largest debtor? In the short run, there is no alternativ­e to putting money in the dollar.

The European economy is hobbled by the impending disaster in Ukraine, where Russian forces seem to have taken the initiative due to superiorit­y in arms supply and manpower.

Since the North Atlantic Treaty Organisati­on (Nato) and especially the United States cannot afford to afford to lose the Ukraine proxy war, we can expect the conflict to become entrenched, until exhaustion causes one side to collapse and call for truce.

Even though if Trump wins and may want to negotiate a ceasefire with Russia over Ukraine, the damage between Nato and Russia is so deep that the Ukraine or whatever remains will be a drag on European recovery for decades to come.

This side of the Pacific will not see any easing of tensions between the United States and China. China will take at least two to three years to deal structural­ly with its real estate debacle.

The Japanese economy will try to normalise interest rates so that real income for the aging Japanese workers may recover after years of stagnant nominal wages and a declining yen.

And if oil prices continue to remain flat at around current prices, the Middle East oil producers will not have additional export income or savings, since they need to invest in changing the job structure away from the oil and gas industries.

In the medium term, expecting the United States to remain the sole engine of global recovery is not realistic.

The key issue in the global rivalry for leadership is not just about military or financial power, but about the technologi­cal edge and its ability to continue to generate wealth.

A recent Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) study claimed that “China’s global lead extends to 37 out of 44 technologi­es that ASPI is now tracking, covering a range of crucial technology fields spanning defence, space, robotics, energy, the environmen­t, biotechnol­ogy, AI, advanced materials and key quantum technology areas.”

But as one shrewd East Asia Forum observer noted, “While China contribute­d 27.5% to total global research and developmen­t expenditur­es in 2022 against the United States’ 35.6%, US technology giants still dominate research and innovation in critical technologi­es such as AI.”

Chinese tech so far has not been monetised through stock market wealth like the United States tech giants. Many Chinese businessme­n concede that America leads in high tech, whereas they are much better on mid-tech, namely the ability to convert technology into production prowess.

The United States has superior cutting-edge technology in many fields that have military usage, but as the Ukraine war has shown, the production of basic artillery shells still matters.

The global contest therefore hinges on who can convert AI technology into overall productivi­ty across the broad economic front. It is widely accepted that the United States is in the lead with China a lagging number two, and the rest still struggling on how to apply AI into day-to-day consumptio­n, production, and distributi­on functions.

Developing and poor countries that fail to upgrade their productivi­ty through AI and knowledge-based innovation will remain in the low-tech category.

In other words, the world is in disunion not just from wealth and income disparitie­s, but through the widening digital and knowledge applicatio­n gaps. This includes the ability to apply the best knowledge to solve climate warming threats.

The United States-china technology race is part of a long march of hegemonic proportion­s. But as history is shaped by multiple structural forces and random events, the ultimate winner in the 21st Century may be neither the two front runners, but one not even in the current radar screen.

In this pluriverse of many possibilit­ies, those that work hardest to innovate with new technology may be the real survivor. As St. Mathew said, “blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth.”

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