Post-pandemic, world facing gloomy stew of debt, trade wars and poor
productivity
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[August 28, 2023] By
Howard Schneider
JACKSON HOLE, Wyoming (Reuters) - Record levels of government debt,
geopolitical tensions that threaten to split the global trading system,
and the likely persistence of weak productivity gains may saddle the
world with a slow-growth future that stunts development in some
countries even before it starts.
That sobering view of a post-pandemic global economy emerged from
research organized by the Kansas City Federal Reserve and debated here
this past weekend. It explored issues like the outlook for technological
innovation, public debt, and the state of international trade at a time
when the Russian invasion of Ukraine and conflict between the U.S. and
China have eroded a once-broad global agreement, at least in theory, to
boost the free flow of goods and services.
"Countries are now in a more fragile environment. They've used a lot of
their fiscal resources to deal with a pandemic...Then you have
policy-driven forces, geoeconomic fragmentation, trade tensions, the
decoupling between the West and China," International Monetary Fund
chief economist Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas said in an interview on the
sidelines of an annual Fed conference here. "If we get to a point where
part of the world is stuck without catching up and has large amounts of
population, that creates tremendous demographic pressures and migration
pressures."
Gourinchas said it is possible that global growth settles into a trend
of around 3% annually, a figure far below rates above 4% seen when rapid
advances in China's economy drove global output higher and which some
economists consider borderline recessionary in a world where quick gains
should still be achievable in large, less-developed countries.
But in the emerging pandemic economy, "the global growth environment has
become very challenging," said Maurice Obstfeld, a former IMF chief
economist and now a fellow at the Peterson Institute for International
Economics in Washington.
China is now suffering what may be chronic economic problems along with
a shrinking population. Emerging industrial policies in the U.S. and
elsewhere are reordering global production chains in ways that may be
more durable or serve national security ends, but also be less
efficient.
The symposium is among the first major attempts to take stock of
longer-term economic developments after the pandemic and amid renewed
geopolitical tensions after years in which officials were at first
preoccupied with fighting COVID-19 itself, then had to focus on a global
breakout of inflation.
Economists and policymakers here appeared in rough consensus that two
trends from before the pandemic, both with global-growth implications,
had been intensified by the health crisis and other recent events.
After rocketing higher during the Global Financial Crisis 15 years ago,
the ratio of public debt to world economic output has grown to 60% from
40% thanks to pandemic spending and is likely now at a level where
serious debt reduction is not politically feasible, Serkan Arslanalp, an
economist at the International Monetary Fund, and Barry Eichengreen, an
economics professor at the University of California, Berkeley, wrote in
a paper.
The implications of public debt that is "here to stay" varies by
country, they said, with higher-debt but higher-income nations like the
U.S. likely able to muddle through over time, while smaller nations
perhaps face future debt crises or binding fiscal constraints.
Globally the fallout could be severe if public borrowing steers capital
from countries that still have growing populations and less developed
economies, said Cornell University economics professor Eswar Prasad.
[to top of second column] |
Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas, Director and
Economic Counsellor, Research Department IMF, speaks during IMF
roundtable on tackling public debt at the International Monetary
Fund Building in Washington, U.S. April 12, 2023. REUTERS/Ken Cedeno/File
Photo
"This puts us in a bleak setting, thinking about the parts of the
world that are labor rich but capital poor," he said. While the
populations of major European nations, Japan, China and the U.S. are
all aging, some African nations like Nigeria continue to grow fast.
'A MORE NAIVE TIME'
The other pre-pandemic trend that has endured and intensified is a
rising openness to policies that range from the outright
protectionist tariffs imposed under former U.S. President Donald
Trump to Biden administration efforts to steer production of things
like computer chips back to the U.S.
White House Council of Economic Advisers Chair Jared Bernstein said
at the symposium Biden administration industrial policies weren't
necessarily tilted either for or against more international trade,
since many of the intermediate goods needed to make silicon chips,
for example, would be imported.
"In my view the strategies we are pursuing despite a lot of heated
rhetoric implies neither more nor less trade," Bernstein said during
one discussion.
Others noted the Russian invasion of Ukraine, and the fast follow-on
divorce of the European power grid from Russian energy, fractured
one of the key precepts behind the spread of globalization: Trade
would create durable partnerships, if not outright allies.
"I do remember a time, maybe a more naive time...when more trade
would create friends," said Ben Broadbent, deputy governor of the
Bank of England.
But World Trade Organization Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala
said while the pandemic raised reasonable issues around global
supply resilience, particularly for sensitive items like
pharmaceuticals, the move to reorder global production patterns
risked leaving growth opportunities on the table.
"From a political point of view you can understand how attractive it
is to say we see the vulnerabilities so we are going to try to do
business with those who have the same values as we do," she said.
But whatever the strategy - "nearshoring," "friendshoring," "reshoring"
- she argued that "maybe you need to go a little bit further...If
you are going to diversify anyway...spread it to those who have been
at the margins of the global system."
"Friends," she noted, can change, a pointed statement at a time when
Trump, who aimed tariffs at Europe, is running again and recently
raised the idea of an across-the-board tax on imports.
If there was a potential bright spot, it was around the discussion
of advances in artificial intelligence as a possible driver of
higher productivity.
Yet even that was weighed against the possible damage the
technologies may do, and against research findings showing
innovation was getting exponentially harder.
Even beyond that, any benefits may be slow in coming.
"I think of ChatGPT like Peloton," said Nela Richardson, chief
economist for payroll processor ADP, comparing the AI innovator with
the maker of upscale exercise bike systems. "You can put as many as
you want in a home office. If doesn't mean people are going to use
it."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Andrea
Ricci)
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