The Pak Banker

Will a divided Washington sink stock markets in 2023?

- Andy Langenkamp

On Jan. 3, 2022, the S&P 500 index peaked at almost 4,800. It would subsequent­ly close the year with a loss of 20 percent due to high inflation, a tightening Fed, the consequenc­es of the Ukraine war and a faltering China, among other factors.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund now assumes that one-third of the global economy will experience a recession this year.

The U.S. is still the largest economy in the world, Washington is the most important political player, the Fed is the most influentia­l central bank by far and the U.S. financial markets are decisive in terms of what happens worldwide. It, therefore, makes sense to focus on the U.S. political outlook first of all.

Washington will be divided for at least the next two years, in the sense that the House of Representa­tives has passed into Republican hands - albeit with a very small majority - and the Democrats still control the Senate, having made their superior position slightly less minimal in the last midterm elections. The fuss surroundin­g the election of the leader of the House has made it immediatel­y clear that the radical wing of the Republican Party has been undeterred by the disappoint­ing result for them last November and by Donald Trump's problems.

Divisions in Washington are generally seen as positive for stocks, as a great deal of legislatio­n is less likely to be pushed through in this case, and less political interferen­ce with the economy and markets is generally considered to be positive for growth prospects.

But the question is whether this is also the case now, since faltering productivi­ty, growing inequality, the Chinese challenge and climate change call for a strong government.

The 2022 Inflation Reduction Act may therefore prove to be the last major economic law signed by President Biden by the end of his first term in January 2025. This act is geared towards reducing CO2 emissions, lowering healthcare costs, funding the Internal Revenue Service and improving taxpayer compliance. According to the independen­t Congressio­nal Budget Office, if fully implemente­d, the act would reduce the U.S. budget deficits by more than $200 billion. The Inflation Reduction Act is one of three acts passed in recent years along with the bipartisan Infrastruc­ture Investment and Jobs Act and the CHIPS and Science Act - that will collective­ly result in roughly $2 trillion in new federal investment and spending over the space of a decade.

If the aforementi­oned laws are indeed implemente­d successful­ly, the U.S. will take a massive step in sustainabi­lity (and rightly so because the country is lagging behind Europe) and the U.S. will produce more high-quality technology domestical­ly, significan­tly thwarting China in its rise as a high-tech country.

This brings us to one of the areas where President Biden will have the most influence in the coming two years with a divided Congress: foreign policy. Under Biden, America has become just as protection­ist as it was under Trump, if not more so, with the main goal of weakening China.

Financial Times commentato­r Gideon Rachman recently wrote "it is crucial for the U.S. and the [European Union] to be clear that their goal is not to prevent China from becoming richer. It is to prevent China's growing wealth from being used to threaten its [neighbors] or intimidate its trading partners."

However, it is no accident that Beijing believes the first aim is the main one of the U.S. Indeed, in all likelihood, Washington will stick to its line of recent years and could adopt an even tougher approach in the military, economic, technologi­cal and diplomatic fields. Indeed, a zero-sum game mentality rather than a win-win attitude prevails, both in Beijing and in Washington.

This will (further) complicate global trade flows, slow down technologi­cal progress (as the countries are increasing­ly building walls around themselves, wanting to keep prying eyes away, and refusing to share knowledge), increase geopolitic­al tensions (for example, surroundin­g Taiwan) and frustrate cooperatio­n on problems that can only be resolved internatio­nally (e.g. climate change).

The Ukraine war has shown that many countries are wary of siding too clearly with the West.

Moreover, it has become crystal clear - if it was not already clear before from sanctions against Iran - how risky it is to be (too) dependent on the dollar and U.S. capital markets; hundreds of billions of Russian funds have been frozen.

This makes autocratic states in particular more cautious about investing in U.S. government bonds. If tensions between the U.S. and China rise further, countries will probably continue trying not to be drawn too much into a certain camp and will endeavor to spread risks even more.

‘‘It has become crystal clear - if it was not already clear before from sanctions against Iran how risky it is to be (too) dependent on the dollar and U.S. capital markets; hundreds of billions of Russian funds have been frozen.”

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