Unless
politicians act more boldly, the world economy will keep heading towards a
black hole
IN DARK
days, people naturally seek glimmers of hope. So it was that financial markets,
long battered by the ever-worsening euro crisis, rallied early this week amid
speculation that Europe’s leaders had been bullied by the rest of the world
into at last putting together a “big plan” to save the single currency.
Investors ventured out from safe-haven bonds into riskier assets. Stock prices
jumped: those of embattled French banks soared by almost 20% in just two days.
But those
hopes are likely to fade, for three reasons. First, for all the breathless
headlines from the IMF/World Bank meetings in Washington, DC, Europe’s leaders
are a long way from a deal on how to save the euro. The best that can be said
is that they now have a plan to have a plan, probably by early November.
Second, even if a catastrophe in Europe is
avoided, the prospects for the world economy are darkening, as the rich world’s
fiscal austerity intensifies and slowing emerging economies provide less of a
cushion for global growth. Third, America ’s politicians are, once
again, threatening to wreck the recovery with irresponsible fiscal
brinkmanship. Together, these developments point to a perilous period ahead.
Slipping
and grasping
Most of the
blame for this should be heaped on the leaders of the euro zone, still the
biggest immediate danger. The doom-laden lectures from the Americans and others
in Washington last week did achieve something:
Europe ’s policymakers now recognise that more
must be done. They are, at last, focusing on the right priorities: building a
firewall around illiquid but solvent countries like Italy ;
bolstering Europe’s banks; and dealing far more decisively with Greece . The
idea is to have a plan in place by the Cannes
summit of the G20 in early November.
That,
however, is a long time to wait—and the Europeans still disagree vehemently
about how to do any of this (see article). Germany ,
for instance, thinks the main problem is fiscal profligacy and so is reluctant
to boost Europe ’s rescue fund; yet a far bigger
fund is needed if a rescue is to be credible. The most urgent solutions, such
as restructuring Greece’s debt or building a protective barrier around Italy,
require the most political courage—something that Angela Merkel, Nicolas
Sarkozy et al have yet to exhibit. The chances of a bold enough plan will
shrink if markets stabilise. The less scared they are, the more likely Europe ’s spineless policymakers are to jump yet again for
a plan that does just enough to stave off catastrophe temporarily, but lets the
underlying problem get worse.
Much of the
world is now paying for their timidity: witness the increasingly dark economic
backdrop. A slew of recent indicators suggests the euro area is slipping into
recession, as Germany’s exports slow, the fiscal screws tighten, confidence
slumps and the banks’ travails imply tighter credit. Even if the euro-zone
crisis were to be solved tomorrow, the region’s GDP would probably shrink over
the coming months.
What about
the cushion the emerging markets provide? That, too, is getting thinner. Their
growth is slowing (as it needed to, since many economies were overheating).
Recent falls in emerging-world currencies and stock prices show that financial
panic can afflict the periphery too (see article). Some emerging economies,
including China ,
have less room to repeat their 2008-09 stimulus because of the debts that
splurge left behind. Monetary policy can be loosened: several central banks
have cut rates. But, overall, the emerging world will be less of a buoy to
global growth than it has been hitherto.
Some of
these constraints are unavoidable. Many governments have less room to support
weak economies than they did in 2008. Some caution, too, is understandable from
central bankers who have waded ever deeper into unconventional monetary policy.
But governments are not just failing to act: they are exacerbating the mess.
Lacking
conviction and courage
In the
aftermath of the Lehman crisis, policymakers broadly did the right thing. The
result was not a rapid return to prosperity in the West, but after such a big
balance-sheet recession that was never going to happen. Now, more often than
not, policymakers seem to be getting it wrong. Their mistakes vary, but two
sorts stand out. One is an overwhelming emphasis on short-term fiscal austerity
over growth. Fixing that means different things in different places: Germany could loosen fiscal policy, while in Britain the
reins should merely be tightened more slowly. But the collective obsession with
short-term austerity across the rich world is hurting.
The second
failure is one of honesty. Too many rich-world politicians have failed to tell
voters the scale of the problem. In Germany , where the jobless rate is
lower than in 2008, people tend to think the crisis is about lazy Greeks and
Italians. Mrs Merkel needs to explain clearly that it also includes Germany ’s own banks—and that Germany faces a
choice between a costly solution and a ruinous one. In America the
Republicans are guilty of outrageous obstructionism and misleading
simplification, while Mr Obama has favoured class warfare over fiscal
leadership. At a time of enormous problems, the politicians seem Lilliputian.
That’s the real reason to be afraid.
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