Bangkok Post

Is a global recession really coming up?

- Jeffrey Frankel Jeffrey Frankel, Professor of Capital Formation and Growth at Harvard University, previously served as a member of President Bill Clinton’s Council of Economic Advisers.

The world’s leading economists spent most of 2022 convincing themselves that, if the global economy was not already in a recession, it was about to fall into one. But with the year 2022 end, the global slump has been postponed to the present 2023.

Clearly, the reports that the United States was in recession during the first half of 2022 were premature. Owing to the rapid interestra­te hikes by the US Federal Reserve and other major central banks, there is something like a 50% chance of a recession in 2023 and a 75% chance of it happening at some point during the next two years.

Europe, hit hard by soaring energy prices, is more likely to head into a recession, which convention­al wisdom defines as two consecutiv­e quarters of GDP decline. China, however, seems to be in even worse shape. It has the same problems as Europe, plus a collapsing property sector and a surge in Covid-19 cases, owing to the Chinese government’s recent decision to reopen the economy without a sufficient vaccinatio­n push.

While China’s growth in 2023 is expected to be far slower than the historic pace it has become accustomed to over the past four decades, it is unlikely that its GDP will contract for two quarters. After all, even an eight-percentage-point decrease in Chinese GDP growth during the peak of the 2008 global financial crisis was not enough to cause its domestic output to shrink in absolute terms. This is yet another example of the flaws in defining recession by the rule of two consecutiv­e quarters of negative GDP growth.

Moreover, many countries’ current economic woes are self-inflicted, owing to policy errors that have been as harmful as they were predictabl­e. Between 2011 and 2021, for example, Europe needlessly deepened its dependence on Russian natural gas, leaving it exceedingl­y vulnerable when the Kremlin launched its war against Ukraine. Likewise, China’s draconian zero-Covid policy came at a high economic cost, while the absence of a plan for how to ease pandemic restrictio­ns meant that China’s containmen­t strategy merely postponed Covid mortalitie­s.

The US, for its part, has made numerous mistakes, including willingly relinquish­ing its leadership of the liberal internatio­nal order and ignoring the World Trade Organizati­on and the trade frameworks that its members had negotiated over many years. Former President Donald Trump’s tariffs were wrong, yet President Joe Biden has done little to reverse them. In fact, the “buy American” provisions in his otherwise-laudable Inflation Reduction Act flout WTO rules.

In July 2021, I argued that there was a 90% chance that the asset bubbles dominating financial markets would burst. Historical­ly high valuations — relative to dividends, earnings, or incomes — were an obvious indicator, although real and even nominal interest rates were zero or negative this time last year. A low discount rate meant that virtually any assetprice level could be rationalis­ed as the present discounted value of future income.

The recent 2022 year began with four kinds of assets more clearly screaming, “I am a bubble”: meme stocks like Gamestop, cryptocurr­encies, NFTs, and special-purpose acquisitio­n companies. Each was innovative, although not necessaril­y in a good way, and all collapsed by the end of 2022.

But should savvy investors see these declines as opportunit­ies and “buy the dip”? Given that stock prices are not yet back to where they were three years ago, on the eve of the pandemic, it is reasonable to assume that they might fall further before they are in line with economic fundamenta­ls. The same might be said of cryptocurr­encies, which have no fundamenta­l value whatsoever.

While 2023 is going to be rough for the world economy, the coming slump probably should not qualify as a recession, even considerin­g that the two-consecutiv­e-quarters criterion is too narrow. Global growth in the postwar period has seldom fallen below zero for a single quarter, let alone two. By that measure, the severe oil-shock-induced downturns of 1974 and 1981 do not qualify as global recessions. Even in times of apparent recession, positive growth among emerging and developing economies tends to outweigh advanced economies’ negative growth, the two notable exceptions being the 2008 global financial crisis and the 2020 Covid-19 crisis. While the OECD and Internatio­nal Monetary Fund expect global growth to plunge to 2.2-2.7% in 2023, from 6.1% in 2021, that still leaves the world economy unlikely to shrink for consecutiv­e quarters.

Even if we adopt less strict measures of defining a global recession, such as a decline of GDP growth below 2.5%, the 2023 global recession is hardly a foregone conclusion. Is it possible? Of course. But it is also entirely avoidable.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand