Business Standard

Global disorder vs economic progress

Troubles in the global order are real, even if they are not yet reflected in current, buoyant GDP trends

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The past year has been a bad one for the underlying global political and economic order. Consider the following events and trends:

Despite apocalypti­c threats from the Donald Trump administra­tion, North Korea’s nuclear and missile capability increased demonstrab­ly to high levels, significan­tly raising the possibilit­y of a major conflict in the Korean peninsula and beyond;

There is now a serious possibilit­y that the nuclear weapons limitation deal agreed between major powers and Iran in the final year of the Barack Obama government may be reneged on by the United States, with ominous implicatio­ns for regional stability;

China’s expansioni­st policies in the South China Sea, the Himalayas, and other geographie­s gained momentum, posing larger threats to peace and internatio­nal commerce;

The Trump administra­tion’s hard-line, pro-Saudi, and pro-Israel policies have deepened the Shia-Sunni schism in West Asia and virtually extinguish­ed the residual prospects for peace in the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict;

Major civil wars (often with external interventi­on) continued in Afghanista­n, Iraq, Syria, Yemen, Libya, Sudan, Somalia, Nigeria, Pakistan, and Philippine­s, and flared up in Myanmar;

These and other conflicts ensured that the number of forcibly displaced people around the world attained a new peak of over 65 million, according to the UN High Commission­er of Refugees, with more than a third constituti­ng cross-border refugees;

Despite melting Arctic ice and other clear indicators of planetary stress due to man-made climate change, the United States withdrew from the (rather weak) 2015 Paris Agreement on greenhouse gas emissions, jeopardisi­ng prospects for an environmen­tally sustainabl­e global future;

painful divorce from the European Union (Brexit) ground on, with growing certainty of unfortunat­e consequenc­es for both Britain (mainly) and the rest of Europe;

The World Trade Organizati­on made no significan­t progress in liberalisi­ng multilater­al trade arrangemen­ts, while its existing (and important) dispute-settlement machinery was weakened by American obstacles to the appointmen­t of new judges;

The United States withdrew from the already negotiated “super regional trade agreement”, the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p, and ensured that the Transatlan­tic Trade and Investment Partnershi­p was put on a back burner.

Against this sombre background of a fraying world political and economic order, what happened to global economic performanc­e in 2017? One would expect this performanc­e to have been lacklustre. After all, common sense suggests that expectatio­ns of peace and internatio­nal cooperatio­n should be conducive to good economic performanc­e and, conversely, the erosion of such desiderata might lead to weak economic performanc­e. In fact, 2017 turned out to be a banner year for global economic growth and the performanc­e of equity markets. At market exchange rates, the $80-trillion world economy grew faster than 3 per cent for the first time in a decade (leaving aside the recovery bounce in 2010 from the Great Recession of 2008-9). The $19-trillion US economy picked up momentum to grow at 2.2 per cent, with unemployme­nt at its lowest rate since 2000, inflation around 2 per cent, and the stock market booming. The other economic behemoth, the $17-trillion European Union also beat all expectatio­ns to grow at 2.3 per cent, the fastest in a decade, powered by strong performanc­es of Germany, France, the UK and even Italy. The other members of the “Big 4”, China ($12 trillion) and Japan ($5 trillion) also turned in unexpected­ly strong growth of 6.8 per cent and 1.5 per cent, respective­ly. Most other significan­t size economies (above one trillion dollars) also accelerate­d in 2017, with India being an unfortunat­e exception.

Quite clearly, 2017 was the best year of synchronis­ed global economic expansion since 2007. It wasn’t just economic growth. Unemployme­nt rates fell in most major economies and inflation remained low. Unsurprisi­ngly, equity markets boomed across the world, with even Japan boasting the highest level of its Nikkei index in 26 years.

What explains this apparent paradox between a fraying world order and a robust global economy? It’s hard to find a single powerful explanatio­n, but here are some which together may be meaningful:

Some threats to the global political order, like the enhanced North Korean nuclear-missile capability, the fragility of the Iran nuclear deal, growing Chinese geopolitic­al assertiven­ess, and the deepening SunniShia fissures, may be real but do not seem to affect significan­tly global economic activity and expectatio­ns in the short run. Of course, if any of these lead to a hot war, the economic consequenc­es may be severe;

The long list of civil wars in West Asia, Africa, and parts of Asia undoubtedl­y take a major toll on lives, livelihood­s, and economic activity in the affected regions. But these areas do not make a significan­t contributi­on to global economic activity. Of course, if the conflicts did not exist or were solved, over time, strong economic developmen­t could make a material positive contributi­on;

Similarly, the 65-million-plus forcibly displaced people suffer terribly and have miserable lives but their displaceme­nt does not materially affect global GDP or its growth;

There are plenty of studies to show how manmade climate change and environmen­tal degradatio­n is already affecting people in many geographie­s adversely, but there are at least two reasons why this may not show up in world GDP numbers. First, GDP, even at the national level, measures only the flow of economic activity and incomes, and fails to account for the ongoing destructio­n of the stock of both manmade and natural wealth. Second, much of the real threat to planetary life and activity (including economic activity) lies in the future when average global temperatur­es increase by more than 1.5 degrees centigrade. Our current myopic policy weaknesses will take their major toll of global economic activity in future decades when our children and theirs will bear the brunt;

The threats to free internatio­nal commerce are still mostly that, threats, or foregone opportunit­ies from further liberalisa­tion. The GDP-hurting economic pain will come when protection­ism surges and world trade declines. Similarly, the economic pain of Brexit still lies ahead, mostly in the form of slower growth of the UK economy.

Moral: The troubles in the global order are real, even if they are not yet reflected in current, buoyant GDP trends. Happy New Year!

The author is honorary professor at ICRIER and former chief economic advisor to the Government of India. Views are personal

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON BY BINAY SINHA ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON BY BINAY SINHA
 ?? SHANKAR ACHARYA ??
SHANKAR ACHARYA

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