The Star Malaysia

When failure is assured

Despite claims of inclusion and democratic openness, the G7 is another elite club approachin­g global problems in its own exclusive, fantasy way.

- Bunn Nagara sundaystar@thestar.com.my Bunn nagara is a Senior Fellow at the Institute of Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies (ISIS) Malaysia.

ANOTHER G7 Summit has come and gone, with the only certainty being next year’s Summit amid more daunting challenges.

Leaders of the United States, Canada, Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Japan plus the EU gathered for two days during the week in the Japanese coastal resort of Shima to ponder on the world’s problems.

These mostly Western countries have come a long way in trying to tackle global challenges with declining capacity. The modalities of this year’s gathering were predictabl­e, its tenor pessimisti­c.

The chief issues raised were terrorism, refugees and not least, declining growth. These are problems of the world which G7 countries have taken upon themselves to address.

The result has been a loosening grip on these already intractabl­e problems. Typically, no common workable solutions were offered by the end of the Summit.

Terrorism has long been a scourge throughout the world. With neither “terrorism” nor its root causes identified, acknowledg­ed and defined, it will long remain a scourge.

Much of that applies to mass refugee flows. To the West, which the G7 implicitly represents, the problem is how to handle, reduce or stop these influxes.

To the source countries of refugees however, the problem is a home nation made uninhabita­ble through devastatio­n and war.

According to the UN High Commission­er for Refugees, the three main source countries are Syria, Afghanista­n and Iraq. These are countries that the West has bombed, attacked and invaded in recent years.

An obvious solution for the future would be to end Western militarist ventures abroad. But there was no indication the Summit acknowledg­ed this any more than it could identify a solution for declining growth.

The most that it could achieve this year was to produce a declaratio­n thick with phrases like the need for “inclusive growth” that is “sustainabl­e” because of “weak demand” and “structural problems”.

There was also the customary denunciati­on of protection­ism and all trade barriers. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, a key G7 participan­t, staunchly displayed its Bretton Woods DNA in the face of multiple global challenges.

As host, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was keen to impress and to leave an imprint, perhaps even to establish a legacy.

So he tried to sell his “Abenomics” formula as a solution to the world’s economic problems. This comprised a fiscal stimulus, monetary easing and structural reforms.

Unfortunat­ely for Abe, by the first quarter of 2016 Abenomics was discredite­d widely as a failure in Japan and abroad. Among other things, it began by ignoring Japan’s debt problem and then enlarged it.

Abe tried to spook his guests into believing that the beginnings of another 2008 crisis were already at hand. But they should know a thing or two about that crisis since they started it, and said current problems were only its tail end – albeit almost a full decade later.

At the Summit Abe could not even get his first stage, fiscal stimulus, to be accepted by his G7 guests. They politely countered that each country would have to find its own solution.

Britain, Germany and the IMF in particular were dead set against a fiscal stimulus or monetary easing, let alone both. Any structural reforms deemed necessary would then be very different from those of Abenomics.

The final joint declaratio­n agreed only to depressed growth being a problem, not to a solution for it. This did not stop Abe from claiming in his closing address that the G7 had agreed to apply Abenomics for the world.

Another issue the G7 tried to grapple with was the global steel glut with the focal point on China. But China, which produces half the world’s steel, was not mentioned.

China had already cut production by 90 million tonnes, with plans to cut up to another 150 million tonnes in the coming years. But its industrial momentum is such that, as Japan acknowledg­ed, it is a challenge simply to slam on the brakes.

One result has been the United States slapping a 522% tax on Chinese steel for property constructi­on and automotive manufactur­e, while still complainin­g of protection­ism and trade barriers. US steel producers blame Chinese state subsidies and China blames unfair Western practices. The rest of the world sees an unrepresen­tative G7 posing as the world’s saviour.

This year’s Summit also expressed concern over developmen­ts in the South China Sea without mentioning China, but still incurred Beijing’s displeasur­e. That could conceivabl­y have been avoided if China was a member.

The G7 began in 1974 as an informal meeting of finance officials from the United States, Britain, France, West Germany and Japan in Washington. They were supposed to be the economic movers and shakers of the world.

Then this Group of Five in 1975 grew into the G6 with the inclusion of Italy, with meetings of the finance ministers and central bank governors of the five Western countries and Japan.

Later Canada and then Russia joined to make it the G8. It became the G7 again after Russia was excluded, following strategic difference­s with the West over Ukraine.

Today the G7 plus EU remains very much a Western entity, comprising six Western countries and Japan, a US ally. More than half the members are already in the EU, with effective EU representa­tion again amounting to additional Western membership.

The G7 still holds itself up as the arbiters of global economics, but how credible is this claim today?

The world’s highest scorers in (nominal) GDP per capita are Luxembourg, Switzerlan­d and Qatar, and in PPP (purchasing power parity) terms are Qatar, Luxembourg and Singapore.

Granted, these countries may lack the global heft of major powers, but what are the economic standings of the G7 countries themselves today?

In nominal GDP per capita, the United States, Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy and Japan come in 5th, 13th, 16th, 22nd, 20th, 27th and 25th places respective­ly.

In PPP terms of GDP per capita, they are 11th, 21st, 27th, 25th, 20th, 32nd and 29th.

Several private Western sources list the world’s 10 most influentia­l national economies (alphabetic­ally) as Brazil, Britain, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Italy, Russia and the United States, albeit in different orders.

Britain’s Telegraph newspaper group, which adjusts influence based on certain criteria, lists Indonesia in place of Italy.

Russia is now excluded from the G7 because of political difference­s, while China and India are excluded because they are still developing countries. But these distinctio­ns are ultimately subjective.

What matters more, particular­ly for the G7’s own credibilit­y, is how relevant its membership still is for the issues it seeks to tackle. The lack of “fit” has only produced a common frustratio­n.

It is a frustratio­n seen on both sides of the “Brexit” issue. A lack of fit has made one side want to pull Britain out of Europe, while the other sees a solution in redefining its presence there.

It is also a frustratio­n seen in last year’s G7 Summit protests despite its remote location in the Bavarian mountains. Protesters saw a lack of fit between the G7 and real world problems.

In the United States, a sense of frustratio­n from a lack of fit in current institutio­ns and practices has led to the Trump and Sanders candidacie­s in the presidenti­al election. Adjustment­s or upheavals then naturally result.

 ??  ?? Working together: G7 leaders smiling for the camera at the start of the second working session of the summit meetings in Shima, Mie Prefecture, Japan.
Working together: G7 leaders smiling for the camera at the start of the second working session of the summit meetings in Shima, Mie Prefecture, Japan.
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