What exactly do the leaders of the world
want for the global economy? The official communiqué released by
the G20 Seoul Summit suggests that they have very little idea. The sense
that document conveys is of complete confusion, not just in terms of contradictions
across the positions held by governments of different countries, but contradictions
within positions, in terms of stated goals and the means to achieve them.
There has been a lot of talk about the apparently ''irreconcilable differences''
between surplus and deficit countries, for example, or between countries
that are trying to engineer lower values of their currencies through monetary
policies and other measures, and other countries who are trying to prevent
appreciation created by the inflows of hot money. There is no doubt that
these issues have emerged as significant areas of friction between some
major economies. There are growing fears of currency wars and trade wars,
and these fears can at best be only partly alleviated by the platitudes
coming out of summit documents.
But the obsession with imbalances obscures the lack of coherence on what
should be the more significant question: what are to be the major drivers
of growth for the world economy? It is remarkable that the countries that
ought to be the most concerned about this within the developed world seem
to be the most confused, particularly from a developing country perspective.
The United States government, for example, mooted the extraordinary idea
of capping the external deficits or surpluses (as proportion of GDP) of
major countries - as if such a thing could be done realistically, or indeed
as if the global economy has ever really required such a false notion
of balance. The idea clearly got no traction at the summit, but in any
case simply trying to enforce balance is hardly likely to resolve the
problem of revival of growth and employment. If anything, it will exacerbate
them.
The German position is even more remarkable and self-contradictory. On
the one hand, the Germans want the US to reduce their external imbalance,
which they have decided is a cause of many problems. Yet when the US Federal
Reserve announces a policy of buying long-term bonds in order to provide
more liquidity in the market, they rail against this strategy of bringing
down the external value of the dollar. But surely such depreciation is
one of the routes to greater ''competitiveness'' and achieving the trade
balance that the Germans supposedly value.
Similarly, the Germans want the US to get into fiscal consolidation quickly,
on the (wrong) presumption that this will not affect growth prospects.
But if the private sector has to continue to wind down its excessive debt,
which it is already doing, then the slack has got be taken up by the government
or exports. If this does not happen, then the US economy will not grow,
and this will also affect demand for German exports. The same wrongheaded
argument is also being applied by Germany on the peripheral European economies,
without adequate consideration of the obvious negative implications for
the German growth model.
It seems bizarre that global leaders have to be reminded that all countries
cannot use net export growth as the route to expansion. But clearly this
message has not yet struck home. How else can one explain the almost complete
absence of any meaningful measures to enable sustained expansion of demand
from low income countries, which is really the only sustainable and equitable
way out of this global dilemma?
Consider what has come out of this summit for most developing countries.
The much-delayed reform of the IMF is to proceed very gently along, and
at most will enable a minor shift in voting power at that institution
in the next 3 years. Since there was no clear mandate against imposing
procyclical conditions on countries in distress, the IMF will continue
to impose austerity upon economies that are already experiencing downswing,
rising unemployment and falling wage incomes.
Meanwhile, the ''Seoul Development Consensus for Shared Growth'' is so
general as to be mostly meaningless. It continues to valorise the role
of the private sector despite all the unfortunate experience of the past
three years, and continues to place importance on the need to ''stimulate
the flows of private capital for development'' and ''improving the investment
climate''. The fact that most developing economies have been trying to
do this for two decades without much benefit in terms of improved living
standards for the bulk of their people is simply not noticed.
The list of important omissions in the Seoul G20 documents is long, but
one of the more significant ones for developing countries relates to financial
regulation. The focus is all on monitoring and regulating the problem
of ''SIFIs'' or systemically important financial institutions that are
too big to fail. This is doubtless important, but in the developing world
the bigger problem today is that of financial activity in the futures
markets for primary commodities, which is once again driving up prices
of goods like oil and wheat. Here the discussion was anodyne at best,
asking for more study of the problem rather than financial regulation
to control speculative activity that has damaging effects on food security
in the developing world.
Clearly, this latest G20 Summit displayed lack of cohesion among its members
as well as lack of imagination. But what is more startling is the extent
of which it displayed the paucity of ordinary economic sense among those
who currently control the world's destiny.
* A related article by the author 'Spotlight G-20:
Where's the Growth Supposed To Come From?' is available at, http://triplecrisis.com/spotlight-g-20-wheres-the-growth-supposed-to-come-from/#more-1687
November
24, 2010.
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