USA Today cover story. G-7 nations grapple with economic crisis
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09/15/98- Updated 07:40 AM ET The Nation's Homepage
A USA TODAY Analysis
Time may be running out for the world economy.
That was the scary subtext of a surprise statement issued Monday by economic policymakers from the USA and the world's other major industrialized nations.
After months of collective silence, the Group of Seven nations (G-7) took the unusual step of publicly expressing their determination to deal with what they called "exceptional pressures in financial markets and deteriorating prospects for growth" in the world economy.
The statement came on the heels of a major policy speech on global economic conditions by an embattled President Clinton and was designed to reassure skittish investors that top financial leaders are on the job and able to pilot the world economy through the mushrooming crisis.
But in some ways the statement and its timing underscore how risky the situation is, experts say.
Finance ministers and central bank chiefs from the G-7 - Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the USA - are scheduled to meet in Washington, D.C., on Oct. 3 for a regular review of the world economy. But the policymakers, including U.S. Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin and Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, apparently felt they couldn't wait that long to issue reassurances that they're not asleep at the switch.
"They understand that there are huge risks to the U.S. and the world economy, and that the markets will not wait for Oct. 3," says Allen Sinai, chief global economist at Primark Decision Economics, a Boston-based consulting firm.
But it's not clear how much they can do to resolve a crisis that began almost 15 months ago in Thailand and has spread like wildfire throughout the world economy.
The stakes involved are large. The spread of the crisis to the USA's back yard in Latin America - Ecuador on Monday became the latest developing country to devalue its currency - has rocked Wall Street and raised questions about how long the USA can be what Greenspan called an "oasis of prosperity" in a turbulent world economy.
The continued failure of Japan to get a handle on its long-festering economic and financial problems heightens the chances of a deflationary spiral in the world's second-largest economy and raises the risk of a major bank failure that would shake the world monetary system.
Stakes are high
But there's more at stake than just the USA's - or even the world's - immediate economic well-being. The crisis has thrown a roadblock into what had seemed to be an inexorable march to more open markets and societies since the end of the Cold War.
In Russia, the new prime minister, Yevgeny Primakov, has named a communist and former head of central planning in the Soviet Union as his top economic lieutenant. In Malaysia, Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad has tried to wall his country's economy off from the rest of the world by introducing stiff controls on capital. And even in Hong Kong, the bastion of free and open markets, the government has felt compelled to use its own money to buy up shares and fight off speculators in the stock market.
"This is the biggest financial challenge facing the world in a half century," Clinton told the Council on Foreign relations think tank in New York on Monday.
In recognition of the growing risks, the G-7 nations pledged to work together to promote growth in their own economies and even hinted at the possibility of coordinated interest rate cuts to help bring that about. Experts say the statement increases the odds that Fed policymakers will reduce rates at their next scheduled session Sept. 29. But Greenspan probably still faces an uphill battle in convincing the central bank's anti-inflation hawks to go along.
"Greenspan doesn't have very much time to twist the arms of skeptics at the Fed," says Todd Bucholz, who acts as an adviser to big hedge fund investors.
General Motors Chief Executive Jack Smith added his voice Monday to business leaders calling on the Fed to cut rates.
"While the world seems to be crumbling around us, the U.S. remains strong.... We believe the Federal Reserve could - and should - ease the burden abroad by cutting interest rates and adopting a more expansive monetary policy," the head of the USA's No. 1 car company said in a speech in Detroit.
"The question is whether the Fed will wait until the recession is imported and then act, or act now. GM believes it should act now," he added.
But even if the Fed heeds that call and eases credit, some experts question whether a small cut in short-term interest rates in the USA would make much difference on its own in resolving the spreading financial crisis.
"How much will a cut in U.S. rates really ease the problems in Russia, Latin America and the Far East?" Wall Street veteran Henry Kaufman asks. "Not all that much."
Part of the problem is that much of the solution to the crisis lies outside of the G-7's control. It depends on countries such as Russia taking tough steps to stabilize their economies. "We need to be honest with Russia and everyone else," Clinton said. "No nation, rich or poor, democratic or authoritarian, can escape the fundamental economic imperatives of the global market."
It also depends on global investors not panicking and yanking their money indiscriminately out of all emerging market economies, as seemed to be the case at one point last week when stock markets throughout Latin America plunged. In their statement, G-7 finance ministers and central bankers "expressed concern about the extent of the general withdrawal of funds from emerging markets."
Experts such as Kaufman say there's no silver bullet to resolve a global crisis and that a broad array of measures is needed to bring the turmoil to an end. But those steps, including radical measures to help debt-ridden developing nations, might require the sort of global leadership that has so been sorely lacking. Clinton has been preoccupied by a sex scandal that is threatening to force him out of office. German Chancellor Helmut Kohl has been fighting for his political life in elections later this month. And Japanese Prime Minister Keizo Obuchi has been hobbled by a divided parliament that is balking at passing critical banking legislation.
Reassuring global markets
Experts say that the G-7 statement - and Clinton's speech - were partly designed to reassure investors that the world economy is not rudderless. "This was a pretty well-orchestrated effort to fill the leadership vacuum that Clinton and his indiscretions have created," says David Gilmore, partner at Foreign Exchange Analytics, a consulting firm in Essex, Conn.
"As scarred and wounded and embarrassed as Clinton is, the G-7 don't have much more," Bucholz says. "He's still the tallest and biggest and the most important of the G-7 dwarfs."
For the moment, the G-7 effort to reassure the markets seems to be working. Wall Street stocks climbed sharply Monday, partly on hopes that the worst may be over for Clinton and that he soon may be in a position to exercise more leadership on the international front.
But economists say that the crisis is far from over and warn that the markets' relief may prove short-lived.
"There's real damage control emerging from the G-7 collectively," Gilmore says. "But I'm not sure the statement alone will take care of all that's wrong with the world economy."
By Rich Miller, with Mimi Hall, Micheline Maynard and Beth Belton contributing, USA TODAY
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