Friday, October 29, 2010

The World Economy: Goodbye Golden Age, Hello Tough and Turbulent Times

Many people are waiting for a promised economic recovery that will never come. They remind me of Samuel Beckett’s famous play Waiting for Godot, where unfortunately Godot never arrives and there is never any explanation provided for why he fails to show up. Theatre audiences around the world have been eagerly expecting Godot for half a century, but regrettably Godot will never arrive.

So it is with fabled “Economic Recovery” so long promised by government leaders around the world. It will never come, at least not in the form expected, or within any reasonable time-line. I will try to provide you a coherent explanation for this, since I lack Beckett’s literary impulse to keep you in suspense.

My thesis is that the year 2000 marked not only the end of a century, but also the end of the Golden Age that started soon after World War Two. Before that, there had been a Catastrophic Era which spanned two world wars and a grim depression.

For the past decade, we have come back to more normal historical patterns. However, this new era seems tough and turbulent compared to the recent Golden Age.

I was born in 1946, shortly after World War Two. I did not realize that my birth timing was nearly perfect. For although we faced significant challenges in the second half of the 20th Century, in retrospect this was unmistakably the most prosperous time period recorded in human history:

• World trade increased more than 10 fold

• Technology and productivity exploded beyond our wildest imagination

• The worldwide standard of living improved immensely: to a level our grandparents could never have imagined

During most of my career, optimism was rewarded. If you bought a house, it could go up as much as 5 - 10 times in value. If you bought and held stock investments, they would equally turn to gold. If you got a good education and worked hard, success seemed highly likely. We all seemed brilliant.

But no more. These golden, easy times have shifted to a far more challenging outlook. Finding or keeping jobs is now difficult in most places around the world. Investments go up and down precipitously without any clear trend.

As best I can calculate, this sea change in the global economy occurred about the year 2000. It wasn’t the Y2K phenomena so many had feared. However in March 2000, the technology bubble burst with a disastrous crash of NASDAQ stocks that has never been reversed. A year and a half later was 9/11, the beginning of the war on terror. This lead to the war in Iraq and later to the war in Afghanistan.

By any reasonable measure, the last 10 years has been a flat decade. Personal income adjusted for tax and inflation has not grown in most countries. Stock markets in the industrialized world are mostly still in the same trading range as they were a decade ago, which is the first decade without substantial gains during my lifetime.

While emerging economies in China, India, and Brazil are faring somewhat better, they do not alter the global picture of stagnation for the past decade, nor can they provide sufficient impetus for worldwide growth ahead.

My view is by no means unique. I read recently that the legendary bond guru Bill Gross believes that investors should face up to a “new normal,” a world of feeble economic growth where returns on stocks and bonds are stubbornly low.

There are also some dire forecasts of imminent global catastrophe, whether due to financial crisis, military conflict, or environmental disaster. While such predictions can never be disproved until retrospectively, I do not share these dark fears. Rather, I see the world bumbling forward along the current general path for an extended period.

So where does this leave us? Life on easy street is gone. There are still many opportunities left however: for careers, for investments, for companies and for governments.

But those opportunities require a new calculus. Budgets and plans based on an approaching global recovery are doomed to failure.

Governments will need to reduce their spending, especially in the United States and in other formerly prosperous nations. Companies will need to avoid debt and speculative endeavours. Individuals will need to return to the frugal habits of their grandparents.

Human history has recorded previous periods of huge growth and also times of widespread war and economic catastrophe. Nevertheless, the times in between have seemed tough and turbulent to the people experiencing them.

Our ancestors adapted to new environments, whether willingly or reluctantly. We face the same necessity. If we embrace this new era optimistically, we will thrive.

Wednesday, June 23, 2010


World Economy: Stuck in Low Gear?

In March while driving on the south coast of Italy, I encountered some of the most demanding road conditions I have ever seen.  I have previously driven in the Swiss Alps and on other tricky mountain roads, but none compare to the danger and thrill of driving on the Amalfi Coast, particularly when you throw in the impatient local drivers.  One driver passed me on a single lane road and within five minutes he caused a head-on collision. But with the luck of the Italians, his damage was moderate and no one plunged off the steep cliff. 

My little Mercedes rental car had seven gears, so I was able to drive in a low gear. This prevented my car from running away when traveling around blind corners and while going up and down the steep inclines with inadequate guard rails. (Please see my photos in my previous post.)

But low gear is not always fun. It became quite obvious in traveling through southern Europe, that the economy there is also stuck in low gear.  The volume of tourists is considerably reduced from a few years ago.  Shopkeepers are struggling to get enough business.  Everyone complained of jobs lost due to Chinese imported goods.

Regrettably, the situation in Europe economically is not much different from the rest of the world.  We are all stuck in a low gear.  And trying to drive our economy faster is frustrating governments everywhere.

Because of the large swings in world stock markets, the underlying economy seems hard to track. During good months for the stock market, people get their hopes up for a full recovery. When markets plunge, as they did in May, fears revive about a second recession.

The best indicator to watch worldwide is the growth of jobs in the private sector. In the USA, jobs appear to have improved recently, but that is due mainly to temporary government workers hired for doing the next census. When these temporary workers are released in a few months, the situation will reverse.

Unfortunately, not nearly enough jobs are being created for a recovery. Some economists call this a jobless recovery. But without job creation, the term “recovery” is meaningless.

The situation is marginally better in the developing world of China, India, and Brazil.  But not good enough to revive the whole world economy. Those who think a recovery in China can restart the global economy are dreaming. The transfer of too many manufacturing jobs to China is one of the global imbalances that must be rectified.

So what is the outlook?  Another big financial collapse? A recovery next year? I suspect that next year we will still be stuck in low gear. There is a danger of going back into reverse like what happened two years ago, but I don’t expect that.

Another possibility is more stimulus to try to get the economy moving faster, which President Obama wants. But he is nearly alone in believing that deficit spending would help. I support the majority of world leaders who believe that deficits must be cut to avoid a bigger collapse in a few years.

So why can’t someone fix the economy?  Why can’t we create lots of new jobs?  The answers to these questions are complex.

The time period most of us remember best is the last 50 years, when the economy grew at unusual speed up until 2008. That was due to broad improvements in technology, relative global peace, and constantly growing world trade. Those conditions will not be repeated soon.

The best thing is for individuals, families, companies and governments to realize that we will likely be stuck in low gear for the foreseeable future, likely for another 5 – 10 years. We are far better off than people were in previous centuries, but we shouldn’t expect more from the economy—rather we need learn how to make do with less.

Individuals will still be able to find careers. Some companies will grow and succeed. However, for most people and for their governments, this will be a very challenging time.





Thursday, February 11, 2010

American and World Financial Crisis Continues

During the past three years years of writing this blog, I have been a prophet of doom about the American (and World) financial situation. (See my post "A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall" in March 2007 and many subsequent posts). I keep hoping that my observations are based on poor digestion and I will be proven wrong by a huge economic recovery; alas, that is not happening.

Although stock markets and commodity prices have recovered considerably from their lows in 2008 and 2009, the fundamental ills of the economy have not been solved. Personal income and employment have not recovered at all. Trade deficits remain immense. Unprecedented government spending has lessened the feeling of impending doom, but I wonder how much has actually been improved by the trillions spent.

See this week's article by Niall Ferguson A Greek Crisis is Coming to America. My wife and I will traveling to Greece and several other Mediterranean countries in March. Already there are widespread strikes due to severe government spending cutbacks. I knew this situation when I planned our trip. However, to avoid all economic crisis zones, we would need to stay at home.

I wish I had some brilliant insights to offer of how to avoid this continuing storm. On a mass scale, the die is already cast. Governments will reap the consequences of deficit spending in the near future.

For individuals, we can protect ourselves to some extent by embracing the values of our ancestors who nearly always lived in precarious times. We need to spend less than we earn and to become even more frugal. We need to focus on our jobs, however humble, and scramble to earn enough to live. We need to look after our neighbors and the least fortunate people in our communities. We must abandon hope that governments can rescue us; they seem unable to even look after themselves.

I don't think this crisis will last indefinitely, but it will stay longer than most of us have patience to endure. My hope is that we will relearn what our grandparents knew.

For Christmas I gave my wife the book From Dawn to Decadence by Jacques Barzun. His title could well be the epitaph of our Western Civilization, unless we reinvigorate our approach to life, money and work.

However, at heart I remain a stubborn optimist. I believe humanity has the metal to survive even worse storms as we demonstrated during the great wars in the first half of the 20th Century. We will need to change our ways.