Global: Deflationary Perils of a Dysfunctional World
Stephen Roach (New York) Morgan Stanley May 07, 2003
War, uncertainty, and disease are a tough combination for any economy. But for a stalling and vulnerable global economy, this confluence of shocks hurts even more. The result could well be a weak recovery or the world’s second synchronous recession in three years. This could be a critical tipping point for a low-inflation world that is already on the brink of outright deflation. Is there a way out?
To a large extent, today’s deflationary perils reflect the inherent tensions of an increasingly dysfunctional global economy. Two powerful forces are colliding to produce this outcome -- the first being the lopsided, US-centric nature of the global economy. Since 1995, growth in US domestic demand has averaged 4%, double the 2% gains elsewhere in the world. Courtesy of bubble-induced wealth effects, Americans have spent to excess. At the same time, reflecting ever-deepening structural constraints, domestic demand has remained decidedly subpar in Japan, Europe, and most everywhere else in the world. As a result, America accounted for literally 64% of the cumulative increase in world GDP over the 1994-2001 interval -- double its share in the global economy.
This dichotomy is neither costless nor sustainable. A saving-short US economy has had to import surplus saving from abroad, mainly from Asia but also from Europe, in order to support economic growth. And the US has had to run a massive balance-of-payments deficit in order to attract that capital. As America’s federal budget now goes deeper into deficit, the country’s net national saving rate -- for consumers, businesses, and the government sector combined -- could easily plunge from a record low of 1.3% in late 2002 toward “zero.” In that case, the US current-account deficit could approach 7% of GDP, requiring about $3 billion of foreign financing every business day. The world has never before faced an external financing burden of that magnitude.
America’s post-bubble hangover is a second key force shaping the world. Most of the excesses that built up in the United States in the late 1990s endure. Whether it’s the current-account deficit, anemic national saving, or the overhang of private sector indebtedness, all of these measures remain at historic extremes. The result is the functional equivalent of stiff economic headwinds that act to constrain the speed of the world’s only growth engine. Just as the US economy expanded at nearly a 4% average annual rate in the late 1990s -- one full percentage point above its productivity-led trend -- the persistence of structural headwinds implies a below-trend outcome of around 2% per annum in the first half of this decade.
The confluence of these two forces -- a US-centric world and a post-bubble US economy -- sets the stage for the world’s deflationary perils. It paints a picture of lingering subpar growth in the global economy that should continue to open up ever-wider margins of slack between the bubble-induced excesses of aggregate supply and the post-bubble compression of aggregate demand. The jury is out on whether the world will either tip into its second contraction in three years or merely experience a synchronous slowdown. For a low-inflation world, however, either outcome generates more slack, thereby upping the ante on deflationary risks.
But there’s far more to the deflationary saga than the vicissitudes of the global business cycle. Also at work is a residue of excess supply -- an enduring legacy of the bubble that was spawned by the capital spending and hiring binges of the late 1990s. In that key respect, the American disease bears an eerie resemblance to the Japanese strain. In both nations, the bubble in equity markets went on for long enough, and rose high enough, to convince corporate managers that scale and technology acquisition were a surefire recipe to garner bubble-like multiples in the stock market. Once the equity bubble popped, there was an urgent need to trim the overhang of excess capacity -- a development that gave rise to America’s first post-bubble recession since the 1930s.
The capital-spending-led recession of 2001 stands in sharp contrast with past US downturns, which mainly reflected declines in consumer durables and homebuilding activity brought about by the anti-inflationary resolve of the Federal Reserve. Supply-induced recessions of the post-bubble era are strikingly reminiscent of the boom-bust cycles of the late 19th century and the early 20th century -- downturns spawned by speculative excesses in asset prices and concomitant overhangs of excess capacity. The history of those earlier cycles suggests that post-bubble adjustments are typically long and arduous -- meaning that recessions tend to be lengthier and recoveries are usually more subdued and fragile as a result. Japan’s multi-dip syndrome of the past 13 years is a case in point. So far, America’s post-bubble experience seems to be cut from similar cloth.
Globalization is a third leg to the deflation stool. In its early stages, globalization is mainly about new increments to global supply. Courtesy of trade liberalization, rapid dissemination of new technologies, and market-driven structural reforms, low-cost, high-quality production platforms are expanding rapidly in nations like China. As trade barriers come down, worldwide prices of tradable goods converge on the lowest common denominator -- an inherently deflationary transition.
The big surprise is that a similar phenomenon is now playing out in “non-tradable” services. Deregulation of once sheltered services industries is now global in scope, transforming administered pricing into market-driven pricing for this vast segment of economic activity. Moreover, courtesy of a surge of cross-border M&A activity, huge multinational service providers now span the globe; as a result, service enterprises are operating more and more with global rather than local supply curves. Finally, there’s the impact of the Internet. With the click of a mouse, increasingly high-value-added services can be extracted from white-collar outsourcing platforms in India, China, and even Ireland. Once shielded from global forces, service sector pricing is now feeling competitive pressures quite comparable to those shaping the tradable goods sector.
The case for global deflation is not just theoretical conjecture. A large portion of Asia is already in deflation, and inflation rates in the United States and Germany are currently running at around 1%, as measured by broad GDP deflators. America’s so-called “core rate” of inflation is receding sharply. Excluding food and energy, the Consumer Price Index was unchanged in March 2003 and was up at only a 0.8% annual rate in 1Q03.
That’s well below its previous cycle peak of 2.8% in late 2001 and sufficient to bring the year-over-year comparison in March down to 1.7% -- nearly a 40-year low. In short, the industrial world is now in the midst of its most worrisome flirtation with outright deflation in nearly half a century. It wouldn’t take much to cross the line. As a dysfunctional global economy now flirts with a double dip in early 2003, deflationary perils can only mount.
It is not too late to avoid such a dire outcome. What is needed, first and foremost, is a “global rebalancing” -- a world that breaks its US-centric growth mold. This is unlikely to happen spontaneously. The world has been reluctant to embrace the structural reforms that are necessary to unlock the inherent efficiencies that would boost domestic demand. A more powerful incentive is needed. One possibility would be through a realignment of the world’s most important relative price -- the dollar. The problem with this option is that most nations think that they deserve the weaker currency. Japan wants a weaker yen and Europe feels it could benefit from a weaker euro. But the economics is pretty clear on how currency adjustments ultimately work. The nation with the current-account deficit -- in this case, the United States -- is at the front of the queue. A persistence of the so-called strong-dollar regime of the past eight years is the last thing a dysfunctional world needs. It would continue to shelter the non-US world, thereby inhibiting the heavy lifting of structural reform.
A weaker dollar could save the world from deflation. For the United States, a shift in the “currency translation” effect would transform imported deflation into imported inflation. For Japan and Europe, stronger currencies would initially be painful. The appreciation of the yen and the euro would undermine external demand, the only source of sustainable growth in these economies in recent years. That would leave Japan and Europe with no choice other than finally to bite the bullet on reforms in order to stimulate domestic demand. The gain would be worth the pain. It would eventually result in a more balanced mix of global growth -- less domestic consumption from a saving-short US economy and more domestic demand from the saving-surplus economies of Japan and Europe.
There is always a chance such a currency realignment might backfire. If the non-US world chooses to deflect the pain of a weaker dollar, the risk of competitive currency devaluations might intensify. That would take the world down a very slippery slope of trade frictions and protectionism. The recent outbreak of China bashing in Japan is particularly worrisome in that regard. The Chinas and Indias of the world are not a threat. To the contrary, they enable high-cost producers and service-providers in the developed world to realize efficiencies through outsourcing. They also enable rich nations to expand their purchasing power by buying cheaper, high quality goods and services. There will also come a day when the supply-led impetus of countries like China and India hits a critical mass in boosting income generation and domestic demand -- completing the virtuous circle of global rebalancing.
A dysfunctional global economy is at a critical juncture. An intensification of deflationary risks is a real threat if an imbalanced world stays its present course. As globalization continues to expand the supply side of the world economy, a deficiency of aggregate demand becomes the real enemy. If concrete actions are taken to boost the demand side of the global economy, the deflationary time bomb will be defused. The heavy lifting of structural reforms and global rebalancing is the only way out. Note: This essay was published as an editorial feature in the Nihon Keizai Shimbun in Japan on May 1, 2003.
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