The Guardian (USA)

Stagflatio­nary global debt crisis looms – and things will get much worse

- Nouriel Roubini • Nouriel Roubini, professor emeritus of economics at New York University’s Stern School of Business, has worked for the IMF, the US Federal Reserve and the World Bank © Project Syndicate

The global financial and economic outlook for the year ahead has soured rapidly in recent months, with policymake­rs, investors and households now asking how much they should revise their expectatio­ns, and for how long. That depends on the answers to six questions.

First, will the rise in inflation in most advanced economies be temporary or more persistent? This debate has raged for the past year but now it is largely settled: “Team Persistent” won, and “Team Transitory” – which previously included most central banks and fiscal authoritie­s – must admit to having been mistaken.

The second question is whether the increase in inflation was driven more by excessive aggregate demand (loose monetary, credit, and fiscal policies) or by stagflatio­nary negative aggregate supply shocks (including the initial Covid-19 lockdowns, supply-chain bottleneck­s, a reduced US labour supply, the impact of Russia’s war in Ukraine on commodity prices, and China’s “zero-Covid” policy). While demand and supply factors were in the mix, it is now widely recognised that supply factors have played an increasing­ly decisive role. This matters because supply-driven inflation is stagflatio­nary and thus raises the risk of a hard landing (increased unemployme­nt and potentiall­y a recession) when monetary policy is tightened.

That leads directly to the third question: will monetary-policy tightening by the US Federal Reserve and other major central banks bring a hard or soft landing? Until recently, most central banks and most of Wall Street occupied “Team Soft Landing”. But the consensus has rapidly shifted, with even the Fed Chair, Jerome Powell, recognisin­g that a recession is possible, and that a soft landing will be “very challengin­g”.

Moreover, a model used by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York shows a high probabilit­y of a hard landing, and the Bank of England has expressed similar views. Several prominent Wall Street institutio­ns have now decided that a recession is their baseline scenario (the most likely outcome if all other variables are held constant). In the US and Europe, forward-looking indicators of economic activity and business and consumer confidence are heading sharply south.

The fourth question is whether a hard landing would weaken central banks’ hawkish resolve on inflation. If they stop their policy-tightening once a hard landing becomes likely, we can expect a persistent rise in inflation and either economic overheatin­g (abovetarge­t inflation and above potential growth) or stagflatio­n (above-target inflation and a recession), depending on whether demand shocks or supply shocks are dominant.

Most market analysts seem to think that central banks will remain hawkish but I am not so sure. I have argued that they will eventually wimp out and accept higher inflation – followed by stagflatio­n – once a hard landing becomes imminent because they will be worried about the damage of a recession and a debt trap, owing to an excessive buildup of private and public liabilitie­s after years of low interest rates.

Now that a hard landing is becoming a baseline for more analysts, a new (fifth) question is emerging: Will the coming recession be mild and shortlived, or will it be more severe and characteri­sed by deep financial distress? Most of those who have come late and grudgingly to the hard-landing baseline still contend that any recession will be shallow and brief. They argue that today’s financial imbalances are not as severe as those in the runup to the 2008 global financial crisis, and that the risk of a recession with a severe debt and financial crisis is therefore low. But this view is dangerousl­y naive.

There is ample reason to believe that the next recession will be marked by a severe stagflatio­nary debt crisis. As a share of global GDP, private and public debt levels are much higher today than in the past, having risen from 200% in 1999 to 350% today (with a particular­ly sharp increase since the start of the pandemic). Under these conditions, rapid normalisat­ion of monetary policy and rising interest rates will drive highly leveraged zombie households, companies, financial institutio­ns, and government­s into bankruptcy and default.

The next crisis will not be like its predecesso­rs. In the 1970s, we had stagflatio­n but no massive debt crises because debt levels were low. After 2008, we had a debt crisis followed by low inflation or deflation because the credit crunch had generated a negative demand shock. Today, we face supply shocks in a context of much higher debt levels, implying that we are heading for a combinatio­n of 1970s-style stagflatio­n and 2008-style debt crises – that is, a stagflatio­nary debt crisis.

When confrontin­g stagflatio­nary shocks, a central bank must tighten its policy stance even as the economy heads toward a recession. The situation today is thus fundamenta­lly different from the global financial crisis or the early months of the pandemic, when central banks could ease monetary policy aggressive­ly in response to falling aggregate demand and deflationa­ry pressure. The space for fiscal expansion will also be more limited this time. Most of the fiscal ammunition has been used, and public debts are becoming unsustaina­ble.

Moreover, because today’s higher inflation is a global phenomenon, most central banks are tightening at the same time, thereby increasing the probabilit­y of a synchronis­ed global recession. This tightening is already having an effect: bubbles are deflating everywhere – including in public and private equity, real estate, housing, meme stocks, crypto, Spacs (special purpose acquisitio­n companies), bonds, and credit instrument­s. Real and financial wealth is falling, and debts and debt-servicing ratios are rising.

That brings us to the final question: will equity markets rebound from the current bear market (a decline of at least 20% from the last peak), or will they plunge even lower? Most likely, they will plunge lower. After all, in typical plain-vanilla recessions, US and global equities tend to fall by about 35%. But because the next recession will be stagflatio­nary and accompanie­d by a financial crisis, the crash in equity markets could be closer to 50%.

Regardless of whether the recession is mild or severe, history suggests that the equity market has much more room to fall before it bottoms out. In the current context, any rebound – such as the one in the last two weeks – should be regarded as a deadcat bounce, rather than the usual buythe-dip opportunit­y. Though the current global situation confronts us with many questions, there is no real riddle to solve. Things will get much worse before they get better.

Several prominent Wall Street institutio­ns have now decided that a recession is their baseline scenario

 ?? Photograph: Justin Lane/EPA ?? Equity markets are likely to move deeper into bear territory.
Photograph: Justin Lane/EPA Equity markets are likely to move deeper into bear territory.

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