San Antonio Express-News

Debt expected to shackle the world’s economy

- By Rich Miller

The world economy will be exiting the pandemic weighed down by much bigger debts and increased inequality that could hobble growth in the longer term.

That was one of the memes making the rounds at the annual meeting of the American Economic Associatio­n that wound up Tuesday.

While global growth widely is expected to strengthen as more people are vaccinated, top economists at the virtual three-day conference focused on the glaring inequities that the pandemic had exposed and the fallout from the efforts to cope with and combat COVID-19.

“We have met every crisis in the recent past with yet more aggressive central bank accommodat­ion and yet more leverage, both public as well as private,” former Reserve Bank of India Governor Raghuram Rajan said. “The real question is: Is this a doom loop? Does it keep going until it is forced to stop?”

Global debt rose by more than $15 trillion last year to a record $277 trillion, equivalent to 365 percent of world output, the Institute of Internatio­nal Finance reported.

Debt from all sectors — ranging from household to government to corporate bonds — surged, based on data from the Washington­based IIF, which is comprised of the world’s leading financial institutio­ns.

Inequality also has increased — both within and across countries — as the pandemic has hit the poor particular­ly hard.

In the U.S., Blacks and Hispanics have suffered proportion­ately more fatalities than Anglos, while low-wage workers in such industries as leisure and hospitalit­y have borne the brunt of the layoffs as those better off continue to work from home.

“The pandemic has exposed the depth of inequality and in many ways has exacerbate­d those inequaliti­es,” said Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel Prize-winning economist.

While rich countries like the U.S. have cushioned the blow to their citizens with massive amounts of government aid, poorer nations have been unable to do that.

Stiglitz, a Columbia University professor, said the world’s 46 least developed nations accounted for just 0.002 percent of the $12.7 trillion in public stimulus spending laid out in the fight against the virus.

“In many ways we could see after this pandemic an unwinding of decades of progress toward reducing global inequality,” certainly for the poorest nations, Harvard University professor and former Internatio­nal Monetary Fund chief economist Kenneth Rogoff said.

Not everything coming out of the pandemic will be bad news, of course.

The speed at which vaccines were developed and the rapid growth of telemedici­ne are developmen­ts worth celebratin­g.

Economist Nicholas Bloom of Stanford University also has pointed to the potential productivi­ty gains that can be reaped from more time spent working at home — a trend he expects to persist post pandemic.

Rajan, now a professor at the University of Chicago, said lagging rural America could also benefit as the well-off decamp from cramped cities for bigger homes elsewhere.

Even before the pandemic, the U.S., China and many other countries were experienci­ng rising inequality and increasing debt.

As the coronaviru­s crisis eases, those two tendencies could combine to present problems for the global economy.

COVID-19 has “exacerbate­d inequality markedly which also raises the issue of financial fragility,” said World Bank chief economist Carmen Reinhart.

Many lower-income U.S. households, for example, hold a lot of debt and could find themselves squeezed as temporary moratorium­s on mortgage and rent payments end, she said.

Rajan said small businesses also could suffer after many were kept afloat in the U.S. by the Paycheck Protection Program and other government measures.

“There is a large wave of potential bankruptci­es,” he said.

The problem is even more acute for some emerging market economies and poorer nations. Indeed, Stiglitz sees the “risk of a debt crisis with global consequenc­es.”

“Many countries were over-indebted before the pandemic and the marked declines in their incomes mean they’re going to have difficulti­es servicing the debt,” he said.

The U.S. and other wealthier nations, though, won’t not be immune to having to take action to rein in surging government debt once the coronaviru­s crisis has passed, according to former White House chief economist Christina Romer.

“The pandemic has exposed the depth of inequality and in many ways has exacerbate­d those inequaliti­es.”

Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel Prize-winning economist

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