China’s Growth: At Home, Abroad?

Justin Yifu Lin:  China looks like the US, Europe and Japan after the Second Wolld War, when the growth rate exploded.  In the 35 years China has been evolving into a market economy the growth rate exploed.  Now it is slowing and evening out at about %7.75.

China has the potential to maintain robust growth by relying on domestic demand – and not only household consumption. The country suffers no lack of investment opportunities, with significant scope for industrial upgrading and plenty of potential for improvement in urban infrastructure, public housing, and environmental management.

Moreover, China’s investment resources are abundant. Combined central- and local-government debt amounts to less than 50% of GDP – low by international standards. Meanwhile, private savings in China amount to nearly 50% of GDP, and the country’s foreign-exchange reserves have reached $4 trillion. Even under comparatively unfavorable external conditions, China can rely on investment to create jobs in the short term; as the number of jobs grows, so will consumption.

The external scenario, however, is gloomier. Though developed countries’ authorities intervened strongly in the aftermath of the global financial crisis in 2008, launching significant fiscal- and monetary-stimulus measures, many of their structural shortcomings remain unresolved. “Abenomics” in Japan has yet to yield results, and the European Central Bank is following in the footsteps of America and Japan, pursuing quantitative easing in an effort to shore up demand.

Employment in the US is growing, but the rate of workforce participation remains subdued and the economy has yet to attain the 6-7% growth rates usually recorded in a post-recession rebound. The US, Europe, and Japan are likely to experience continued sluggish performance, inhibiting China’s export growth.

Cihina's Growth

 

Can Individual EU Nations Act Alone to Do What QE Cannot?

Martin Feldstein writes:  Although the European Central Bank has launched a larger-than-expected program of quantitative easing (QE), even its advocates fear that it may not be enough to boost real incomes, reduce unemployment, and lower governments’ debt-to-GDP ratios. They are right to be afraid.

The success of QE in the United States reflected initial conditions that were very different from what we now see in Europe. Indeed, eurozone countries should not relax their reform efforts on the assumption that ECB bond purchases will solve their problems. But even if these countries cannot overcome the political barriers to implementing structural changes to labor and product markets that could improve productivity and competitiveness, they can enact policies that can increase aggregate demand.The sharp fall in long-term rates induced investors to buy equities, driving up share prices. Low mortgage interest rates also spurred a recovery in house prices. In 2013, the broad Standard and Poor’s index of equity prices rose by 30%. The combination of higher equity and house prices raised households’ net worth in 2013 by $10 trillion, equivalent to about 60% of that year’s GDP.

That, in turn, led to a rise in consumer spending, prompting businesses to increase production and hiring, which meant more incomes and therefore even more consumer spending.  QE’s success in the US reflected the Fed’s ability to drive down long-term interest rates. In contrast, long-term interest rates in the eurozone are already extremely low, with ten-year bond rates at about 50 basis points in Germany and France and only 150 basis points in Italy and Spain.

So the key mechanism that worked in the US will not work in the eurozone.

But, fortunately, QE is not the only tool at policymakers’ disposal. Any eurozone country can modify its tax rules to stimulate business investment, home building, and consumer spending without increasing its fiscal deficit, and without requiring permission from the European Commission. Consider the goal of stimulating business investment. Tax credits or accelerated depreciation lower firms’ cost of investing and therefore raise the after-tax return on investment.

Demand for new homes could be increased by allowing homeowners to deduct mortgage interest payments (as they do in the US), or by giving a tax credit for mortgage interest payments. A temporary tax credit for home purchases would accelerate home building, encouraging more in the near term and less in the future. Here, the revenue loss could be offset by an increase in the personal tax rate.

A commitment to raise the rate of value-added tax by two percentage points annually for the next five years would encourage earlier buying to get ahead of future price increases. The reduction in real incomes caused by the VAT increase could be offset by a combination of reduced personal income taxes, reduced payroll taxes, and increased transfers.

Though eurozone members cannot adjust their interest rates or their exchange rates, they can alter their tax rules to stimulate spending and demand, with the appropriate policy possibly differing from country to country. It is now up to national political leaders to recognize that QE is not enough – and to start thinking about what else should be done to stimulate spending and demand.

EU Economies

Africa Ripe for Investment?

Africa is desperately short of investment. Infrastructure alone needs $90 billion a year.  Many of the normal routes by which capital gets into economies are blocked in Africa.

Only private equity has a direct route.  Private equity raised $4 billion for Africa last year, building toothpaste factories and providing modbile phone service.  Handing cash to pioneers in Africa is often seen as less risky than putting money in underdeveloped pubic markets.

Private equity has been warmly welcomed in Africa.  But Africa needs more than these funds can provide. Often they want to sell the firms they buy in five years. Long term investment is needed.  Uganda’s privatized electric grid gets a state-guaranteed return of 20% a yaer on all dollars invested in the grid.  African economies have grown 5% or more over the past decade.  The continent’s mddle class is projected to triple (one billion people)  by 2060.

Capital restrictions are in place in the rich world which prohibit long-term illiquid investments, such as ports, railways and roads.  African governments are also to blame.  Investors have not forgotten the natioanalizations across the continent in the 1960s and 1970s.

Rich counties need to change their regulations to get capital flowing freely.  African governments need to set up large regional stock exchanges to provide liquidity, security and ease of access.  The conitnent is ripe for investment if the right climate prevails.

Investing in Africa

 

Why Women Make the WEF Better

David Rothkopf writes:   Voices representing the disenfranchised may be hard to find but they are essential to addressing many of the issues being discussed at the World Economic Forum.   But most egregious in my view is the continuing failure to fairly involve the majority population of the planet in these discussions. Davos is a man’s world.

This year the WEF attendees are 17 percent women. While this is the same percentage of women as you will find in the world’s legislatures and slightly more than the percentage you will find on corporate boards, it is not just appallingly low — it is inexcusable.

It is impossible to argue that the problem is that the event is for CEOs and top government officials and because only a small percentage of big-company CEOs and political leaders are women.  According to the organizers, only 30 percent of the attendees are CEOs, and only 2 percent are top government officials. Further, look at the agenda: economics, politics, health, education, development, climate, combating extremism, stabilizing societies — you can’t have a serious discussion or effectively influence outcomes without including the perspectives of women.

But you have to start somewhere, and it seems reasonable to me to start with addressing the grossest of history’s social wrongs, the systematic repression of women by virtually all cultures.

How high-profile global gatherings like the World Economic Forum choose to act matters a lot. Bringing greater gender balance here would not only improve the discussion and the outcomes it produces, but it would send a powerful message. But it is clear that change will not happen without a concomitant effort to produce it from the event’s sponsors, its paying customers, and its keynote speakers. Companies that recognize a need for fair hiring practices and equal opportunity should send their female leaders here. Sponsors promoting great values should walk the talk. Explain that the failure to fix this issue, the failure to show real progress over the past few years, and the failure to make real balance the goal is inconsistent with who they are and sends a terrible message, and that they simply can’t be associated with this event unless change takes place. Speakers should say they won’t be on panels unless there is balance. Otherwise all are complicit — and with the attention the issue has gotten, they have to be viewed as not only being complicit, but intentionally so.

Like other elements of this strange, wonderful, perverse, and heartening event, the payoff is not in what happens here, but in how it translates into action worldwide.  It is called the World Economic Forum, and it’s time its participants looked more like the world they are supposed to be improving.

Davos Quotas

Davos Woman?

Amanda Foreman writes:  Since its staid beginnings in 1971 as an annual management symposium at a Swiss ski resort, the World Economic Forum in Davos has grown into the premier talking shop for the global financial elite. Unsurprisingly, given the opportunities it offers for smug pronouncements and ostentatious parties, Davos (as it is known) has attracted—and earned—some trenchant criticism. The late Harvard political scientist Samuel P. Huntington coined the term “Davos Man” to pin and puncture a kind of obnoxious alpha male who flits from one international meeting to the next in self-serving pursuit of wealth and power.

But Huntington’s Davos Man highlights another issue about the forum: It was (and is) overwhelmingly male. This year, some 19% of the 2,500 delegates were women, according to the forum—a number that has barely changed since a (widely ignored) quota system meant to involve more women was imposed by the event’s corporate sponsors in 2011. (Saadia Zahidi, who heads the forum’s gender-parity initiative, said that the gender ratio in Davos reflects “global leadership as a whole” and that the forum is working to increase women’s participation.)

Behind some of the most famous public gatherings in history lie arguments and controversies about whether to include women. One particularly egregious example was the first World Anti-Slavery Convention, which met in London in 1840. Women on both sides of the Atlantic had been campaigning to abolish slavery since the 18th century. Nevertheless, the 350 male delegates were divided over whether to allow seven American women to participate. One faction, led by William Lloyd Garrison ’s supporters, favored their inclusion; friends and colleagues of the New York abolitionist Lewis Tappan vehemently opposed it. The latter won, and the women were forced to watch from the gallery.

Half a century later, women faced similar discrimination when the first modern Olympic Games were held in Athens in April 1896. Pierre de Coubertin, the founder of the International Olympic Committee, refused to include women. It would be “impractical, uninteresting, unaesthetic and incorrect,” he claimed. Four years later, when the summer games were held in Paris, the Olympic committee ignored his objections, and 22 women were allowed to compete alongside the 997 male athletes (although only in five sports: sailing, equestrian, tennis, croquet and golf). At the 2012 London games, some 44% of the athletes were women.

One notable irony relates to the U.S. civil rights movement. The only woman listed as an official speaker on the program for the famous 1963 March on Washington was Myrlie Evers, widow of the murdered Medgar Evers ; she got stuck in traffic. Leading female activists—including Rosa Parks —were not allowed to accompany the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. down Constitution Avenue but were sidelined to walk alongside the wives of male activists. After the women protested, organizers added a short tribute to their work. No women were among the delegation that met with President John F. Kennedy.

But in the long run, these slights only deepened women’s determination. Furious over their exclusion from the 1840 conference against slavery, the activists Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott went on to hold the Women’s Rights Convention at Seneca Falls, N.Y., in 1848, marking the start of a 72-year fight for women’s suffrage in the U.S. Similarly, frustration among women’s rights activists in the early 1960s led to the rise of second-wave feminism, from the founding of the National Organization of Women in 1966 to the passage of Title IX and Title X in the 1970s to guarantee educational and employment equality.

Davos Man still rules today, but history is against him. One day, he will be joined by Davos Woman—and she will, we hope, be as unlike him as possible.

Davos Woman?

Can Xi Continue to Whiz?

Kerry Brown writes:  In the late 1990s, former President Jiang Zemin liked to talk of China entering a two-decade era of “strategic opportunity” — a period when China could become a middle income country while continuing the Deng-ist strategy of building up its capacity and strengthening its economy during the era of American hegemony. During this period, China would be low profile, largely free of global leadership responsibilities, and able to plead its status as a poor, developing power focused on solving its own problems as a reason to sidestep heavy diplomatic duties beyond its borders.

Three-quarters of the way into this era of “strategic opportunity,” and we might argue that this period has already come to an end. Economically and geopolitically, the China of Xi Jinping increasingly talks and acts like an emerging super power. Xi, with his grand narratives of a “new model of great power relations” for the U.S. and China, and a “New Silk Road” for most of the rest of the planet, seems to have the look, and tone, of someone willing to stand more on the global stage and get attention.

It seems like the “era of strategic opportunity,” where the onus was on internal issues and keeping a low profile, has been replaced by a China where inward and outward context are intimately linked. For China, the pressure is now on finding “holistic” solutions where it often proactively takes the lead on the global stage and wants to be listened to.

Even so, it still makes sense to think along the lines of smaller strategic opportunities. For all his talk of “pivots” and rebalancing, President Obama has been a good president for China. He has been read as weak and overstretched and was treated with staggering disdain during his first visit to Beijing in 2009. Under Obama’s watch, we witnessed the rise of an assertive, pushy China that has been increasingly able to call the shots, at least in its neighborhood. What will happen in the US elections of 2016 is not knonw.

The same year will all bring a presidential elections in Taiwan. Like Obama, but for very different reasons, incumbent Ma Ying-jeou of the Kuomintang (KMT) has been a good ally for Beijing. He promoted economic closeness and political carefulness, significantly reducing the cross-strait tensions that existed in the eight years under Chen Shui-bian before Ma’s election in 2008.

In the space of a few months in 2016, therefore, Beijing will see the leadership of two of its key partners change, with the real possibility that this will bring about a more confrontational environment.

Xi's Plans

Is Asean Ready for Union?

WIlliam Boot writes: The Asean goal of creating a single business market among the regional grouping’s 10 member countries is unlikely to happen for some years and certainly not by the target start date of the end of this year.

Burma is one of several countries in the bloc that lacks sufficient infrastructure to benefit from the planned beginning of the Asean Economic Community (AEC), they say.

And the dream of a single, joined-up market with unrestricted movement of labor—similar to the European Union—will be dogged by national self-interest for years to come, it is predicted.

Burma, Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam will be slower to achieve their targets for trade liberalization than the other more affluent members, said the Wharton business school at the University of Pennsylvania in an assessment on the AEC this month.

The other six Asean members are Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand.

Meanwhile, the AEC countries are already facing their first and unexpected economic hurdle, Wharton said: sharply falling crude oil prices.

Most Asean countries will be unable to comply with AEC objectives for more relaxed rules on foreign ownership and freer movement of workers by the end of this year due to domestic political constraints, international law firm Allen & Overy said in its latest quarterly report on business.

One of Burma’s leading businessmen, Serge Pun, spoke on the AEC at the annual World Economic Forum in Davos.  Protectionist impulses were strong in government and business, but there now seemed to be a determined effort to make the AEC work, he said.

The disparity in development between the 10 member states could be an advantage to an emerging economy such as Burma, which “would welcome the unskilled jobs that more developed Asean members are shedding,” Serge Pun said.

Thailand’s deputy prime minister, Pridiyathorn Devakula, defied the general opinion at Davos: “Some in the audience may not believe it, but believe me, we will have a single market by the end of the year,” he said.

Murray Hiebert, the deputy director of the Sumitro chair for Southeast Asia studies at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) in Washington, told the Wharton study that the liberalization of financial services and freer movement of capital and labor would be slow to develop.

“Some Asean countries are anxious about opening up financial services and capital markets out of fear of financial contagion and exchange rate volatility, even though integration would provide opportunities for risk-sharing,” Hiebert said.

A more unified market will eventually lead to a more organized industrial division of labor, some analysts believe. Not all member countries could afford to develop or sustain a car-building industry, for example.

At present Thailand is “Asean’s Detroit.” But Indonesia is fast catching up in production volume, which leaves little room for emerging players such as Burma to attract major investment in vehicle construction.

Commercial nationalism looks likely to impede full open markets for some time.

Burma poses two potential problems for the AEC.  Uncertainty following parliamentary elections later this year, and the prospect of more violence between majority Buddhists and the country’s minority Muslim Rohingya population.

In the longer term, the AEC is likely to bring greater cohesion between the member states, but this is likely to be a long and arduous process.

What Asean needs more than anything is a powerful supranational body, something akin to the Commission in the European Union, which could compel its disparate and self-interested members to comply with their promises.

An Asean EU?

Beware Greeks Bearing Gifts?

Charalampos Economou writes:  The structural adjustment program in Grrece has failed to deliver the expected results. Indicative of this is the fact that government deficit in 2013 reached 12.2% of gross domestic product (GDP); debt went up to 174.9% of GDP; unemployment reached 27.5%; more than a third of the population (35.7%) is at risk of poverty or social exclusion; and the inequlaity of income distribution increased. Public health expenditure decreased by €4.2 billion between 2009-12, and more than 2.5 million people lost their health insurance.

In this context, Syzria’s election win came as no surprise. Based on an alternative policy proposal of a national reconstruction plan, the party put forward an optimistic vision that was desperately needed.

The plan focuses on four major pillars to reverse the social and economic disintegration, to reconstruct the economy and exit from the crisis. The four pillars are: confront the humanitarian crisis; restart the economy and promote tax justice; regain employment; and transform the political system to deepen democracy.

The plan includes free electricity to households under the poverty line and meal subsidies to families without income.  Syriza has also promised to provide free medical and pharmaceutical care for unemployed people without health insurance — a big problem in Greece that impacts on access to care.

Housing guarantees, rent subsidies, transport discounts for long-term unemployed and those under the poverty line aim to tackle issues related to poverty along with the restitution of the €12,000 annual income tax threshold and restoring the minimum wage to €751.

The health sector will be one of Syriza’s priorities, with an emphasis on securing access for the uninsured to health services, staffing the national health service with the recruitment of the necessary number of medical and nursing personnel and increasing the budget for health.

Deliverying health care will be done through an increase in public spending to be covered  by decisively combating tax evasion and smuggling, and by establishing a public development bank as well as of special-purpose banks financed from the so-called “comfort pillow” of the Hellenic Financial Stability Fund and other specialized European instruments.

The most difficult task the party has will be to convince the EU and troika that a new European deal for Greece is needed in order to secure a socially viable solution to Greece’s debt problem.

Anti-Austerity

Is Growth Necessary in US?

James Pierson writes: The Bureau  of Labor Statistic’s Consumer Expenditure Survey, a detailed study of the spending patterns of 35,000 randomly selected households, paints a grim portrait of middle class families trying to maintain their standard of living in the face of stagnant or falling incomes and rising costs for necessities like rent, transportation, and health insurance. Middle class families – defined as those falling in the middle quintile of the income distribution with incomes between roughly $35,000 and $60,000 in 2013 – reported incomes that were essentially flat between 2009 and 2013 and expenditures that increased by slightly less than 3 percent. Households in the income quintiles just below and above the middle reported similar patterns of flat incomes and slightly increased expenditures. During these years of “economic recovery” – 2009 to 2013 – consumer inflation increased by nearly 9 percent, leaving real incomes for the middle class that were much lower at the end of the period than at the beginning.

Americans have never favored radical schemes to redistribute income because of their faith in social mobility and the belief that they can get ahead on their own. A stagnant America, lacking growth and broad opportunities for advancement and achievement, would represent something new and dangerous for a nation whose ideals and institutions have been built upon a foundation of abundance.

The United States, in short, needs a new focus on economic growth and especially a new “growth agenda” out of Washington to replace the emphasis upon redistribution, regulation, and gender and race controversies that have defined the Obama years. The party or candidate that can deliver such an agenda will win the support of grateful middle class voters – and along the way they may just succeed in saving their country from tearing itself apart in fruitless battles over dwindling shares of a stagnating economy.  Is Growth Necessary

 The Growth Cornucopia

 

In India, Rajan Slashes Bank Rates

William Pesek writes:  Raghuram Rajan’s recent surprise rate cut in India was what central bankers call an “insurance move.” In a highly uncertain and deflationary world, the Reserve Bank of India governor decided he’d rather risk higher inflation in hopes of boosting growth. More quietly, Rajan is hoarding dollars.

On Friday, the day before Barack Obama flew to New Delhi,  the RBI announced that India’s foreign-exchange reserves had risen to a record $322 billion. While the news couldn’t compete with the Modi-Obama hug at the airport, a nuclear deal and talk of cooperation on climate change, that swelling stash greatly increases the odds that Modi’s reform program will succeed.

By slashing the benchmark rate to 7.75 percent from 8 percent, the RBI governor made clear the central bank was ready to guard India’s economy against a fast-mounting number of risks around globe. Equally important was the “vote of confidence” the decision signaled about Modi’s government.

Now Rajan’s stockpiling of currencies should help catalyze change in New Delhi. As recently as September 2013, when Rajan started at the RBI, India was spiraling toward crisis. An economy once celebrated as one of the superpowers of the future — Brazil, Russia, India and China, or the BRICs — was being grouped among the world’s most “fragile” nations. Hedge funds bet India would be the first of the BRICs to be downgraded to junk.

Rajan moved fast to halt a run on the rupee, shore up the banking system and cap inflation. Rajan has stockpiled about $59 billion of reserves since taking charge at the RBI, or an average of $4 billion per month. While India’s reserves are still a fraction of China’s $3.8 trillion, they’re substantial enough now to “create a stronger firewall against external account shocks and build greater international confidence,” says Rajiv Biswas of IHS Global Insight.

India represents something of an outlier in the region. While Asian peers devalue to boost exports, Rajan has clearly decided that a stable, strong rupee is the key to cementing trust in India’s economy, which still suffers from a sizable current-account deficit and relies on short-term capital flows. A firm currency should attract overseas capital to support equities, upgrade infrastructure and pay down government debt.

In July, the prime minister’s first budget avoided “big bang” reforms like allowing foreigners to hold majority stakes in key sectors like insurance and defense. His government sidetracked a World Trade Organization deal to cut tariffs. And while he harnessed the plunge in oil prices to trim subsidies, Modi has been slow to dismantle budget-busting support programs.

Modi enters the budget process with a rare economic tailwind. By stabilizing the financial system and shoring ups its defenses, Rajan has given Modi considerably more latitude not only to restructure the economy, but to take risks like selling state assets and welcoming more foreign involvement in the economy. Once India reforms and moves beyond the boom-bust cycles of the past, it should be able to turn around and use its reserves to invest in education and healthcare as well as roads, bridges, ports and the power grid.

All Rajan has done, though, is prepare the ground. The onus still lies on Modi to push forward the politically difficult reforms he’s avoided thus far. He’s now got 322 billion good reasons to do so.

Rajan