The Guardian (USA)

Big economies and markets fare well despite Covid but 2022 brings new risks

- Nouriel Roubini

Despite dips and disruption­s from new variants of Covid-19, 2021 turned out to be a relatively positive year for economies and markets in most parts of the world. Growth rose above its potential after the severe recession of 2020, and financial markets recovered robustly. This was especially the case in the US, where stock markets reached new highs, owing partly to the US Federal Reserve’s ultra-loose monetary policy (though central banks in other advanced economies pursued radically accommodat­ive policies of their own).

But 2022 may be more difficult. The pandemic is not over. Omicron may not be as virulent as previous variants – particular­ly in highly vaccinated advanced economies – but it is much more contagious, which means that hospitalis­ations and deaths will remain high. The resulting uncertaint­y and risk aversion will suppress demand and exacerbate supply-chain bottleneck­s.

Together with excess savings, pentup demand, and loose monetary and fiscal policies, those bottleneck­s fuelled inflation in 2021. Many of the central bankers who insisted that the inflationa­ry surge was transitory have now conceded that it will persist. With varying degrees of urgency, they are planning to phase out unconventi­onal monetary policies such as quantitati­ve easing, so that they can start to normalise interest rates.

Central banks’ resolve will be tested if policy-rate hikes lead to shocks in the bond, credit, and stock markets. With such a massive buildup of private and public debt, markets may not be able to digest higher borrowing costs. If there is a tantrum, central banks would find themselves in a debt trap and probably would reverse course. That would make an upward shift in inflation expectatio­ns likely, with inflation becoming endemic.

The next year also brings mounting geopolitic­al and systemic risks. On the geopolitic­al front, there are three major threats to watch.

First, Russia is preparing to invade Ukraine, and it remains to be seen whether negotiatio­ns on a new regional security regime can prevent escalation of the threat. Although the US president, Joe Biden, has promised more military aid for Ukraine and threatened harsher sanctions against Russia, he also has made clear that the US will not intervene directly to defend Ukraine against an attack. But the Russian economy has become more resilient to sanctions than it was in the past, so such threats may not the Russian president, Vladimir Putin. After all, some western sanctions – such as a move to block the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline – could even exacerbate Europe’s own energy shortages.

Second, the Sino-American cold war is getting colder. China increasing its military pressure on Taiwan and in the South China Sea (where many territoria­l disputes are brewing), and the broader decoupling between the Chinese and US economies, is accelerati­ng. This developmen­t will have stagflatio­nary consequenc­es over time.

Third, Iran is now a threshold nuclear state. It has been rapidly enriching uranium to near-weapons grade, and the negotiatio­ns over a new or refurbishe­d nuclear agreement have gone nowhere. As a result, Israel is openly considerin­g strikes against Iranian nuclear facilities. Were that to happen, the stagflatio­nary consequenc­es would probably be worse than the oil-related geopolitic­al shocks of 1973 and 1979.

The new year also brings several systemic concerns. In 2021, heatwaves, fires, droughts, hurricanes, floods, typhoons and other disasters laid bare the real-world implicatio­ns of climate change. The Cop26 climate summit in Glasgow offered mostly cheap talk,

leaving the world on track to suffer a devastatin­g 3C of warming this century. Droughts are already driving a dangerous spike in food prices, and the effects of climate change will continue to worsen.

Making matters worse, the aggressive push to decarbonis­e the economy is leading to underinves­tment in fossilfuel capacity before there is a sufficient supply of renewable energy. This dynamic will generate much higher energy prices over time. Moreover, climate refugee flows toward the US, Europe and other advanced economies will surge just as those countries are shutting their borders.

Against this background, political dysfunctio­n is increasing in both advanced economies and emerging markets. The US midterm elections may offer a preview of the full-blown constituti­onal crisis – if not outright political violence – that could follow the presidenti­al vote in 2024. The US is experienci­ng near-unpreceden­ted levels of partisan polarisati­on, gridlock, and radicalisa­tion, all of which poses a serious systemic risk.

Populist parties (of both the far right and the far left) are growing stronger around the world, even in regions such as Latin America, where populism has a disastrous history. Peru and Chile both elected radical leftist leaders in 2021, Brazil and Colombia may follow suit in 2022, and Argentina and Venezuela will remain on a path to financial ruin. Interest-rate normalisat­ion by the Fed and other major central banks could cause financial shocks in these and other fragile emerging markets such as Turkey and Lebanon, not to mention the many developing countries with debt ratios that are already unsustaina­ble.

As 2021 draws to a close, financial markets remain frothy, if not outright bubbly. Public and private equity are both expensive (with above-average price-to-earnings ratios); real estate prices (both housing and rent) are high in the US and many other economies; and there is still a craze around meme stocks, crypto assets, and Spacs (special purpose acquisitio­n companies). Government bond yields remain ultralow, and credit spreads – both highyield and high-grade – have been compressed, owing partly to direct and indirect support from central banks.

As long as central banks were in unconventi­onal policy mode, the party could keep going. But the asset and credit bubbles may deflate in 2022 when policy normalisat­ion starts. Moreover, inflation, slower growth and geopolitic­al and systemic risks could create the conditions for a market correction in 2022. Come what may, investors are likely to remain on the edge of their seats for most of the year.

• Nouriel Roubini, professor emeritus of economics at New York University’s Stern School of Business, has worked for the IMF, the US Federal Reserve and the World Bank. © Project Syndicate

Central banks’ resolve will be tested if policy-rate hikes lead to shocks in the bond, credit, and stock markets

 ?? ?? As 2021 draws to a close, financial markets remain frothy. Photograph: Andrew Kelly/Reuters
As 2021 draws to a close, financial markets remain frothy. Photograph: Andrew Kelly/Reuters

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