The Star Early Edition

Times tough, but hope not lost for growth cycle

- Hamish McRae

IT WAS THE weekend of a Group of Twenty (G20) meeting – the finance ministers and central bank governors of what are, more or less, the 20 largest economies in the world gathering in Ankara, Turkey, to debate what they might do about the world economy.

Had they been meeting a few weeks ago they might be preening themselves over how well they were doing: decent growth in the US and UK, signs of a recovery in most of Europe, and solid growth in the two largest Bric (Brazil, Russia, India and China) economies, China and India.

There would have been shadows of course in parts of Europe, and in Russia and Brazil, but the outlook would have been pretty upbeat.

Not any more. You don’t have to be a close follower of financial affairs to appreciate the chill wind sweeping across the markets, but this is not just a market thing. Underlying these wobbles is the widespread awareness that the world economy seems to be slowing.

That change is most dramatic in China, where official data suggesting growth at 7 percent does not square with unofficial estimates of roughly 4 percent. That is sending ripples through South-east Asia.

Downgraded

The European Central Bank has just downgraded its forecasts, and while the outlook for the US and UK remains positive there have been the slight sniffs of concern, which were absent earlier this year. Whether these are enough to stop the Federal Reserve raising interest rates this month is an open question.

US unemployme­nt is down to 5.1 percent, in the range that is considered by the Fed as full employment. Under normal conditions that would trigger a rise, but with all this other stuff going on the Fed may hold off a bit longer.

The timing of that increase has become a huge issue and, as and when it comes, it will affect the rest of the world too. It will, for example, underpin the relatively strong dollar and it will clear the path for the UK rate rise in the next few months.

But elevating one decision to totemic height is to misunderst­and the relationsh­ip between the economy and policy. It is a two-way thing. The economy shapes policy as much as policy shapes the economy, often more so.

For all the official cars and the faffing about the wording of the communiqué, the G20 ministers and central bankers are not in charge; they respond to what happens.

Are we catching a glimpse of the end of this cyclical global expansion, or is it a classic mid-cycle pause? My instinct is overwhelmi­ngly the latter – a pause – but let’s look at the arguments.

The expansion is undoubtedl­y mature. In the US, there are signs that the labour market is tightening and it would have tightened in the UK a lot more had it not been for massive immigratio­n. You can debate as to whether the so-called output gap in the US and here has been closed but it is certainly closing.

In Europe, the picture is different, and the debate is about the extent to which the wounds are self-inflicted by poor policy and the extent to which they are endemic. What is clear is that Europe will not grow rapidly enough to be of material help to the world economy in the foreseeabl­e future.

Regional growth

Outside the developed world, China will continue to grow but more slowly, while India is too small an economy to be an engine of more than regional growth. Elsewhere, there are problems too, because Africa and much of Latin America depend on commodity exports and Russia on energy.

Overhangin­g all this is a troubling fact: at this stage of the cycle, even after six or seven years of growth, the UK is is still dependent on near-zero interest rates.

They are lower than they have ever been in recorded history. Common sense says that cannot continue, and they have already had damaging effects on inequality by boosting the assets of the wealthy. Take away this artificial support and maybe the recovery is over.

Put like this, the outlook is rather glum. Expansions do not stop suddenly, but you could make a decent argument that this one will start to peter out in the next year or so, and when that happens there will be nothing much that the policymake­rs can do about it.

But there is a more positive way of looking at the same picture. This starts by noting that even the faster-growing economies are not running at an unsustaina­ble level. For example, the US and UK should be able to continue growing at 2 to 3 percent without running into capacity constraint­s.

Europe is nowhere near full output. China will still grow, and as a 4 to 5 percent rate would put less pressure on energy and commodity prices than the headlong growth of the past, that reduces the resources constraint on growth globally.

Finally, the world may be better able to stand higher interest rates than sceptics believe because they are so widely expected.

Tighter fiscal policy did not derail the expansion, so why should tighter monetary policy? – The Independen­t on Sunday

Underlying these wobbles is the widespread awareness that the world economy seems to be slowing.

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