Cape Times

Geopolitic­al and fiscal pressures mount as a major global election year kicks off

- Thalia Petousis is a portfolio manager at Allan Gray.

THE MARKET seemed determined to end 2023 on a hopeful note, unwinding the intra-year losses in global stock and bond indices. The rationale rests in the eager anticipati­on of the interest rate cutting cycle by the US Federal Reserve (the Fed), with market expectatio­ns for the overnight rate to fall from 5.5% to sub 4% over the course of 2024.

Fed chairperso­n Jerome Powell does not explicitly endorse such an outlook, instead emphasisin­g his desire to pause and evaluate the impact of higher borrowing costs on the US economy and to assess whether inflation is falling back to the Fed’s 2% target.

Monetary and fiscal policy remain at odds

While the market exhibits a keen obsession with monetary policy, almost no attention is paid to the tensions between monetary and fiscal policy. And while monetary policy has been kept tight with high overnight interest rates to suppress borrowing appetite and to control inflation, fiscal policy remains at the loosest levels we have seen in a multidecad­e, with almost every major sovereign country in the world running a large fiscal deficit due to government overspendi­ng.

Aside from the usual national expenses, fresh overspendi­ng is taking place in areas like military defence, given geopolitic­al tension and wars.

Additional capital is also being allocated towards domestic protection­ist agendas and the revival of local manufactur­ing to protect the supply chain from overrelian­ce on non-allied countries. In this regard, the East versus West narrative is rewriting the relationsh­ip rulebook for global trade alliances.

Green agendas are also attracting an extra allotment of capital, with ambitious targets to extend transmissi­on grids and pour money into renewable energy subsidies and tax incentives. Such initiative­s are coming at a time when government debts were imprudentl­y high due to a decade of overspendi­ng on stimulus measures post the global financial crisis and the Covid-19 pandemic.

In the US, this was exacerbate­d by the sinking of much capital into a burgeoning health-care system in part due to obesity-related illness and opioid drug addiction.

While such overspendi­ng can be inflationa­ry for prices, it can also create scarcity of capital, which ultimately puts downward pressure on equity valuations and upward pressure on bond yields, in particular in the periphery of financial markets.

In such an environmen­t, emerging market assets must be priced more cheaply to incentivis­e scarce capital and savings to flow towards those assets. It is this tension between tight monetary policy and loose fiscal policy that casts doubt on the narrative of hubris implied by many asset valuations.

A wave of electoral uncertaint­y faces the globe

Global political tension continues to rise, as witnessed via the war in Ukraine, the Israel-Gaza conflict, violent terrorist insurgenci­es in the African Sahel region, and even the heightened polarisati­on between conservati­ve versus progressiv­e ideologies in the West.

High inflation has been a great dethroner of reigning political administra­tions throughout history, as disillusio­ned constituen­ts express their frustratio­n with economic hardships and rally against the status quo and its incumbents.

Such global dissatisfa­ction coincides with the phenomenon of a spike in the election cycle – roughly 45% of the global population will be in an election year in 2024, representi­ng the highest percentage in a single year in modern history.

Recent election outcomes in the Dutch parliament and Argentina, as well as strong polling figures for former US president Donald Trump, point to a swing towards nationalis­t ideas, a backlash against progressiv­e ideologies and a growing hostility towards immigratio­n and the green movement.

As such, the election outcomes across the US, European Parliament, Taiwan, India and the UK will have important implicatio­ns for future policy agendas and fiscal spending priorities.

South Africa seems to continuall­y lurch from one watershed moment to the next. The 2024 elections will probably see the ANC lose its national majority for the first time in 30 years, as an increasing­ly urbanised population express their dissatisfa­ction with a crisis of service delivery and the breakdown of municipal functions like the provision of electricit­y and water, as well as their disillusio­nment with corruption and cadre deployment.

While some votes have flowed towards newer parties like ActionSA that promise to restore service delivery, others have been redirected towards smaller niche independen­t parties who appeal to their communitie­s.

The rising tide of economic dissatisfa­ction and joblessnes­s may also have lifted the ship of populist parties like the EFF, who promise its constituen­ts a radical redistribu­tion of wealth.

Looking for a fiscal lifebuoy for South Africa

The South African government ended 2023 with the lowest cash balances in more than a decade, after drawing down on the balances to make up for corporate tax collection shortfalls, rising government wages and the large multiyear Eskom bailout package. An estimated cash balance of roughly R100 billion is a meagre amount when weighed against the R2 trillion of government debt maturities taking place over the next seven years.

It is against this backdrop that the National Treasury and the South African Reserve Bank (SARB) have begun investigat­ing drawing down on the foreign exchange reserves that are held against South Africa’s offshore debt liabilitie­s and as cover for internatio­nal US dollar imports. While SARB governor Lesetja Kganyago has prudently rallied against the simplistic and reckless notion that this is a free pot of gold, internatio­nal experts have been brought in to determine what might be a feasible solution to tapping into some of the reserves before the February 2024 Budget plan is announced.

This is not the only way that fiscal rescue measures are being put in place. The Treasury has unveiled a set of costcuttin­g initiative­s that amount to roughly R200bn in spending cuts over the next three years, almost offsetting the size of the Eskom relief that was granted. The cuts will take place across a range of government department­s.

A voluntary severance programme for older government workers is also being considered, perhaps creating room for rehiring among a younger cohort of potential workers who sit far lower down the compensati­on cost curve. The initiative­s reflect a growing realisatio­n that the South African economy is not growing fast enough to support the size of the state and the size of our debt. As always, the challenge in cost-cutting will be to avoid decimating the expenditur­e budget earmarked for maintenanc­e and expansion of critical infrastruc­ture. Allowing the private sector to play a greater role in the energy, road, rail and water spaces can mitigate such risks.

Progress is being made in refining the plan to offer private rail operators key sections of the rail line to manage. Interestin­g work is also being done to investigat­e the feasibilit­y of ringfencin­g the water networks of failing municipali­ties and implementi­ng an external services provider model.

The wheels of change have moved slowly, but remedial frameworks and the restructur­ing of the role of the state might now pave the road to a more prosperous future.

 ?? THALIA PETOUSIS ??
THALIA PETOUSIS

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