Global: In Limbo
Stephen Roach (New York) Morgan Stanley Apr 28, 2003
A sluggish global economy is essentially spinning its wheels as it fends off one shock after another. No sooner was the war over, when SARS reared its ugly head. Without a cushion of resilience, these shocks can do much greater damage to underlying economic activity. At a minimum, they inhibit the pace of cyclical recovery. They also have the clear potential to trigger a more serious recessionary relapse. For financial markets now banking on the likelihood of cyclical revival, I continue to believe that the risks remain skewed decidedly to the downside.
The best I can say about the state of the industrial world is that the current state of economic conditions is not quite as bad as we had expected. That’s especially the case in Europe. The tone of the latest euro-zone business surveys has remained weak at the start of the spring quarter. At least, that was the message from the first tallies of April, especially from Italy and Belgium; the all-important German Ifo survey (due out April 28) will provide an important reality check on this trend. However, the incoming 1Q03 flow data of actual Euroland activity contained modest upside surprises in both Germany (manufacturers’ orders and production in February) and France (consumption of manufactured goods in March). This hints at a Euroland economy that is now tracking slightly above our current forecast of a fractional decline in 2Q03 GDP.
A similar pattern has been evident in Japan. Incoming data on private consumption and business capital spending point to fractional increases in 1Q03; that suggests the Japanese economy is running slightly above our forecast of a -0.2% (QoQ) decline in real GDP. Nevertheless, our Japan team continues to raise considerable doubt about the staying power of such resilience. That’s especially true for the Japanese consumer, where spending propensities continue to rise -- up 5.2 percentage points in the year ending March 2003 -- and saving propensities continue to fall.
Meanwhile, with the jobless rate back on the rise and the ratio of job offers to applicants having declined in March, all signs point to a renewed erosion of income support for the Japanese consumer. Nor is the US economy exactly springing back to life. Statistical bounce-backs in retail sales and manufacturers’ orders are mildly encouraging, as was an expected postwar rebound in consumer confidence. But the US labor market remains weak, as underscored by persistently elevated trends in the jobless claims data through mid-April. Moreover, while the 1Q03 GDP report is considered “old news” by now, it underscored the lingering fragility of the US economy. A relapse on the capital spending front following a fractional increase in 4Q02 was especially disconcerting, as was ongoing sluggishness in consumer demand. Domestic final demand increased at just a 1.2% annual rate, the most anemic increase since the final period of the last recession (3Q01). Looking through the noise, our US team still sees GDP growth tracking no faster than 1% in the current period -- an outcome which would mark the third consecutive quarter of sub-2% growth.
All in all, the conclusion on the industrial world is hardly uplifting. While the state of activity is a little “less worse” than we had been expecting, the major economies of the world are, at best, holding to a 1% growth trajectory. That’s consistent with what I have long referred to as the “stall speed” -- a sluggish growth rate that has downside risk written all over it. Lacking a cushion that would shield it from ever-present exogenous shocks, the recent outbreak of such shocks is all the more disturbing -- first, the war in Iraq and its attendant geopolitical uncertainties and now SARS. Of these various shocks, SARS seems to be the most disruptive insofar as its impact on the global economy is concerned. In part, that’s because the war in Iraq didn’t really turn out to be the full-blown shock we feared. In retrospect, we saw it coming last summer, when the American troop build-up in the Middle East commenced. While there was always reason to hope that hostilities could be avoided at the last minute, the likelihood of war had become factored in to consumer and business expectations and had also been discounted in world oil markets. The real shocks would have been the long-war or the no-war alternatives.
SARS is a different matter altogether -- an unexpected shock that has the real potential to disrupt both Asia as well as the broader global economy. True to the strict definition of a shock, it is impossible at this point in time to assess the full implications of the rapidly unfolding SARS outbreak. We have already made one cut to our Asian growth estimates for 2003 -- taking our pan-regional forecast of Asia ex Japan down to 4.6% from 5.0%; this reduction also prompted us to lower our estimate of world GDP growth in 2003 to 2.4%, which technically takes the global economy into recession territory (see my April 4 essay, “The Global Double Dip”). As SARS now spreads, the risk is that we will have to make additional cuts -- not just to Asia but also to the rest of the world. The first-round impacts on Asia could be enough, in and of themselves, to make a real difference for an already sluggish global economy. They eliminate the one source of global resilience that we and others have been counting on to keep the world economy afloat. With the industrial world in the stall-speed zone, the impacts of Asian growth shortfalls loom all the more significant for the broader global economy. SARS-related growth shortfalls could well be the tipping point that takes the world into its second recession in three years.
As the most trade-intensive region in the world, shortfalls in Asian growth have the clear potential to exact collateral damage on the region’s major trading partners, especially Europe and the United States. For example, China plus the newly industrialized Asian economies of Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, and Hong Kong currently account for about 14% of America’s total goods exports, or about 1% of total US GDP. Inasmuch as this share has been rising sharply in recent years, the potential impact of a slowing of Asian demand on the US economy can’t be taken lightly. The longer SARS-related disruptions persist, the greater the chance that these global multipliers will kick in.
All this raises a big question mark in my mind as to what will lift the global economy in the second half of 2003. Given the absence of demand growth outside the US, I continue to believe that it all boils down to the US growth prognosis. And here the issues are pretty much the same as those we have been debating for some time -- namely policy traction, the state of pent-up demand for American consumers and businesses, the job market, and oil prices.
The bulls on the economy will tell you that an unleashing of postwar animal spirits, in conjunction with sharply lower oil prices, will finally enable the policy lags to kick in. By contrast, I continue to maintain that America’s post-bubble headwinds -- especially record private sector indebtedness, a massive and ever-widening current-account deficit, and a national saving rate that has plunged into uncharted territory -- will continue to mute policy traction and thereby inhibit growth in the US economy. Increasingly treacherous global conditions could well reinforce the downside in the US. Our baseline forecast already has the world economy in double-dip range for 2003. I would currently place about a 40% chance on a similar such outcome in the US before the end of this year.
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