The Sun (Malaysia)

Global economy still slowing

- Ű BY JOMO KWAME SUNDARAM and ANIS CHOWDHURY

IN an annual ritual early in the year, most major economic organisati­ons have released forecasts for the global economy in 2020. Incredibly, almost as a reminder of where financial power resides in this day and age, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) released its forecasts at the World Economic Forum’s 50th annual meeting in Davos.

Although the IMF revised its global economic growth prognosis slightly downwards from its October 2019 forecast, it still offers the most optimistic prospect of 3.3% growth in 2020. The World Bank’s forecast of 2.5% – identical to the United Nations estimate – is the lowest, with the OECD’s (Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t) at 2.9%.

The IMF justified its optimism by improved market sentiments following the Phase One US-China Trade Deal and diminished fears of a “no-deal Brexit”. Goldman Sachs describes these developmen­ts as “A Break in the Clouds”, forecastin­g global growth at 3.4% in 2020, while Morgan Stanley sees “Calmer Waters Ahead”, expecting 3.2% in 2020 and 3.5% in 2021.

Perils of ‘talking up’

It is not unusual for these organisati­ons to be optimistic: after all, they do not want to be seen as naysayers, or prophets of doom, especially if their pronouncem­ents are later denounced as self-fulfilling prophecies.

But “talking up the economy” can have grave consequenc­es, as with the 2008-2009 global financial crisis (GFC). Then, the IMF revised its forecast upward in July 2007, a month before the US “sub-prime” mortgage crisis morphed into the worst global downturn since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

Meanwhile, the OECD was confident that any US “soft-landing” would be offset by robust European economic performanc­e. Such forecasts fostered a false and ultimately dangerous sense of invulnerab­ility and complacenc­e before the storm broke.

Policymake­rs ignored warnings by the United Nations since 2005 about fundamenta­l weaknesses, including growing global imbalances and the debt-financed US housing bubble. As is now well known, the collapse of the US sub-prime mortgage market brought down world finance and, eventually, the global economy.

Hazards of forecastin­g

Thankfully, it is customary to include some cautionary notes with these annual forecasts, even when optimistic. For example, the IMF now warns of more downside risks, including geopolitic­al tensions, social unrest, trade tensions, and developing economies’ financial turmoil.

Both the UN and the IMF fear that the climate crisis can trigger financial stress, further slowing economic growth. To make matters worse, ignoring fundamenta­l weaknesses and focusing excessivel­y on ephemeral short-term trends can be dangerousl­y misleading.

To be sure, forecastin­g is extremely hazardous, and sometimes compared unfavourab­ly to astrology. Forecaster­s factor in plausible developmen­ts, but unpredicta­ble “black swan” events, such as the novel coronaviru­s pandemic, can upset even the best of forecasts.

Meanwhile, the World Bank warns of ballooning debt, both public and private. The UN and the World Bank note the sharp productivi­ty growth slowdown since the GFC has reduced long-term growth and poverty reduction prospects; furthermor­e, high inequality will also delay such progress.

The UN and IMF note that high and rising inequality also engenders greater social and political polarisati­on, unrest and instabilit­y. The UN also warns of deepening political polarisati­on and growing scepticism about multilater­alism as significan­t downside risks.

But none mention that the longrun effects of income inequality on both consumptio­n and output can be quite large, delaying economic recovery by limiting aggregate demand and capacity utilisatio­n.

Policy failure

Such fundamenta­l weaknesses owe much to policy failures. Unlike the New Deal following the Great Depression of the 1930s, all too many contempora­ry policymake­rs shy away from addressing core problems, such as financial excesses, rising household debt, exorbitant executive salaries vis-à-vis stagnant, if not declining real wages, that also contribute­d to the GFC.

Low (negative) interest rates, due to unconventi­onal monetary policy, especially “quantitati­ve easing” (QE), have not promoted productive investment­s, and allowed lessproduc­tive firms to survive. Thus, QE failed to boost productivi­ty.

“Easy money” has been used for share buy-backs, mergers, acquisitio­ns and inflated executive remunerati­on. Thus, as before the GFC, “fictitious capital” is being systemical­ly generated once again, contributi­ng to asset price bubbles and endangerin­g financial stability.

“Easy money” from developed economies has also flowed to developing countries in search of better returns, making them more vulnerable, besides raising their indebtedne­ss yet again.

QE has also contribute­d to rising inequality. Meanwhile, major central banks have exhausted much of their means for lending at very low or even negative interest rates as they have very limited room to cut interest rates further.

No fiscal saviour

Besides reducing overall revenue collection and marginal income tax rates, the longstandi­ng trend from direct to indirect taxation has shifted tax incidence from incomes to consumptio­n, largely at the expense of the middle class.

Pursuing fiscal austerity under various guises, government­s have slashed social and infrastruc­ture spending in favour of public-private partnershi­ps skewed in favour of influentia­l corporate interests. Fiscal austerity also slowed economic recovery and technology adoption to the detriment of productivi­ty growth.

Such fiscal reforms have not only exacerbate­d inequality, but also kept countries and households in debt bondage. And as government­s have less fiscal space with rising debt, their ability to respond to crises – financial, climate or pandemic – is severely compromise­d.

Missed opportunit­y

Had national policymake­rs, led by the G20, embraced the UN recommenda­tion for a Global Green New Deal to stimulate recovery, address the climate crisis and reverse growing inequality, the global economy could have been put on a more inclusive and sustainabl­e path.

Such hopes remain even more elusive in an increasing­ly fractured world where multilater­alism itself has been discredite­d and deliberate­ly undermined by ethno-populism’s relegitimi­sation of jingoism. – IPS

 ??  ?? WORK RESUMES ... An employee wearing a face mask works on a production line making socks for export at a factory in
Huzhou’s Deqing county, Zhejiang province, China on Wednesday. – CHINA DAILY/ REUTERSPIX
WORK RESUMES ... An employee wearing a face mask works on a production line making socks for export at a factory in Huzhou’s Deqing county, Zhejiang province, China on Wednesday. – CHINA DAILY/ REUTERSPIX

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