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The Present: On the Brink of Disaster

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12/30/10 Singapore, Singapore – The global economy is in crisis. Government intervention on a multi-trillion dollar scale is the only thing preventing a worldwide collapse into a new great depression.

This crisis is structural, not cyclical. At its core is the fact that global production, swollen by limitless credit denominated in fiat money, greatly exceeds the consumption that can be financed by the income of the individuals who comprise the world’s population. Governments around the world are borrowing, printing and spending on an unprecedented scale to absorb the global excess capacity (and to prevent asset prices from deflating), but these measures cannot continue indefinitely. The structure of the global economy is unstable and unsustainable. A catastrophic economic breakdown may be unavoidable.

Globalization has put intense downward pressure on wage rates in industrialized countries at a time when the abandonment of sound money unleashed an explosion of credit that allowed industrial production around the world to soar. Tens of millions of new manufacturing jobs have been created in developing economies, but adverse demographic trends have prevented wages from rising. The prevailing wage rate in the manufacturing sector is roughly $5 per day across much of the developing world. To put this wage structure into perspective consider that two billion out of the world’s seven billion people live on less than $2 per day. This crisis then must be understood in terms of excess production relative to purchasing power.

Between 1970 and 2008, the ratio of total credit to GDP rose from 170% to 370% in the United States as American consumers became caught up in the culture of credit. Rapid credit expansion fuelled asset price bubbles in stocks and property that allowed Americans to continue spending more each year even though average wage rates had stagnated. The credit boom allowed the American social contract, premised on steadily rising prosperity, to remain intact despite the downward pressure globalization exerted on wages. Credit-financed consumption pulled imports into the US. The rest of the world responded by expanding industrial production to sell into the US market.

In 2008, when the US private sector became incapable of supporting its debt load, the driver of global growth, US consumption, went into reverse, global trade crashed and the global economy spiraled toward disaster. Governments stepped in and caught the collapsing global economy in a safety net woven with the equivalent of trillions of dollars in deficit spending and trillions more in newly fabricated money. Global demand was maintained by government spending and transfer payments; bankrupt banks were made whole by access to free money from central banks; and asset prices were supported by ample liquidity. And that’s where we are today, on government life support.

There are just two problems. First, the government intervention is unsustainable. Second, nothing whatsoever is being done to address the causes of the crisis: the flaws in the global monetary and trade superstructure, and insufficient aggregate demand. Governments will only be able to conduct deficit spending on the current scale for a few more years before the public sector becomes as bankrupt as the private sector; and if the Fed and other central banks around the world carry on with the current pace of Quantitative Easing (i.e. money printing), their currencies will lose all value within a decade.

This crisis will not end until the structural defects responsible for causing it have been corrected. This will require the creation of a new international monetary system designed to prevent large and persistent trade imbalances between nations. The Dollar Standard, the current international monetary system, is inherently flawed because it lacks any mechanism to ensure balanced trade. That flaw is responsible for the growth of the global imbalances at the root of this crisis.

Next, the gap between the capacity of the world to produce and the level of income available to fund consumption must be filled by increasing income. The alternative, significantly decreased production, is the very definition of a depression. At present, no steps are being taken in this direction. Wages in the developing world are stuck at $5 per day; and depressed wages there are putting downward pressure on wages everywhere else.

The United States is the world’s largest economy, comprising more than 20% of global GDP. Unemployment there is nearly 10%. The US economy is no longer viable because wage rates in the US manufacturing sector are 40 times higher than wage rates in the developing world. There is no sign that either political party has a strategy that could reverse the country’s rapid economic decline. A protectionist backlash against free trade appears increasingly inevitable.

US trade tariffs would be bad for America, terrible for the world and catastrophic for China and all the other countries dependent on export-led growth. It is important to understand that as grave as are the challenges confronting the United States, those faced by China are even worse. The US can’t produce as much as it consumes, but China – and most other export-led economies – can’t consume as much as they produce. If international trade breaks down, production in China would collapse, unemployment would soar and political unrest would explode.

And, there’s more. The crisis in the global financial system is far from resolved. The global banking industry may prove to be so exposed to toxic assets of its own creation that it simply can’t be saved. The industry has conjured into existence derivative worth approximately $700 trillion, an amount equivalent to the value of everything produced on earth during the last 20 years. It is a matter of public record that these financial instruments have been employed to illegally manipulate the accounts of numerous large corporations. It may be only a matter of time before losses (and fraud) related to “structured finance” are exposed on a scale that will make Bernie Madoff look like a small town rascal in comparison.

Run away credit growth, mismanaged trade, financial sector deregulation and numerous other policy mistakes have brought the world to the brink of disaster. If a breakdown of the global economy is to be averted, policymakers must confront the structural nature of this crisis and quickly implement an aggressive strategy to restructure and rebalance the global economy. This can be done, but only a five to 10 year window of opportunity exists. Beyond that timeframe, the financial resources now available to governments to fund that transition will have been exhausted and a global economic calamity with untold geopolitical consequences will have become unavoidable.

Regards,

Richard Duncan
for The Daily Reckoning

P.S. For more perspective from Richard Duncan you can visit his blog on economics in the age of paper money at www.richardduncaneconomics.com.

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Richard Duncan

Richard Duncan is author of The Dollar Crisis: Causes, Consequences, Cures, an international bestseller, and The Corruption of Capitalism: A strategy to rebalance the global economy and restore sustainable growth. He began as an equities analyst in Hong Kong, and has since served as global head of investment strategy for ABN AMRO Asset Management, financial sector specialist for the World Bank, and head of equity research for James Capel Securities and Salomon Brothers. He also consulted the IMF in Thailand during the Asia Crisis, and is now chief economist at Blackhorse Asset Management in Singapore.

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12 Responses

  1. John Dangereaux said

    Sounded good at the start. You say China can’t consume what it produces? Ever check the population of that country? Um like it’s like a BILLION PEOPLE. And you are going to sit here and say they need to sell to a country of 300 million to survive, but can’t survive w/ ONE BILLION consumers?
    Um like I am a history major not a math whiz but it seems to me that a BILLION is 3 TIMES more than 300 million. Correct me if I am wrong, please.
    Yeah I can tell from your Vitae that you are a schill. IMF and World Bank? How about you take a hike! So if the Us can’t produce waht it consumes how are we going to pay for it? Oh wait you’re a Central Banker,,,I know we’ll PRINT IT! AND sell those producers a bunch of worthless bonds.
    I’m sorry did you call to end the one Monster that enables this situation to develop? NO!! You are one of them!
    Go back into your fiat hole-central banker!! END THE FED!!!!!
    Funny, you didn’t even mention Gold and Silver.
    All we need to import to the US is Coffee Tea and Bananas….we CAN produce what we need AND we don’t need hot-shot money men like you!!!

    on December 30, 2010.
  2. Daniel said

    I also didn’t understand the repeated suggestions of an inability for consumption to keep up with production. Has Mr. Duncan managed to refute Say’s Law somehow?

    on December 30, 2010.
  3. Bill Soko said

    From another history buff — Duncan’s article has a lot to say…. and yes China may appear to be in a better position — they can redirect their export goods and trash to their local economy in theory but…. that will take time and the domestic wages will have to go higher to offset the price they receive from exports. You can bet that the price the US and other countries pay for Chinease imnports is higher than what they can be sold for on the domestic market in the medium term. If local wages go up, the rulers have to share the wealth a bit. The chinease rulers might actually like their people on the breadline and in factories 10hr/day rather than organising on the streets. a lot of foreign policy is a way of controling the folks back home in fact some people think most. China and the US elite have made a mutual interest pact .. one can only guess the details but its a very fine balance to keep themselves in power at home while doing deals with other countries. and in the end thats what counts.

    on December 30, 2010.
  4. kamran said

    less wages vs more credits reminds me of a story that our society is becoming more and more debt slaves to the bankers.

    on December 30, 2010.
  5. DRUNK AND DISORDERLY said

    A good article, interesting with some argumentative points as comments above have noted. I would think a time-line of 5-10 years is too long–a collapse of the credit markets would vortex very quickly and without warning. Anytime…

    on December 30, 2010.
  6. Akhil Khanna said

    Great article.

    Amazingly simple explanation to the state of the world economy.

    http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article24581.html

    on December 31, 2010.
  7. Steve K said

    Well, to his credit, the author is underscoring that we are not simply in a bust following a cyclical boom of routine proportions. Rather, we are experiencing the Mother of All Busts as the structure which provided the prosperity that generated a comfortable middle class in America nearly a lifetime ago has been gutted by the unholy corporate/state alliance to the point where a house of cards is all that remains. One hiccup and look out… Better have your tangibles and intangibles in order…

    on December 31, 2010.
  8. Kenneth said

    The problem and profit will be food.
    As me Ol’Daddy said – watch the weather !
    Chinese are savers not buyers – except food.
    Basic living requirements will be the key,
    forget about building expansion in China,
    that will end.Export revenue is falling -
    which countries have the REAL money to buy ?
    No matter the amount of pump $ is applied
    we are in for some tough years folks !
    Whatever country, bet on your farmers
    as they are most important for survival.
    They will not be rolling in the dough as
    margin squeeze is on them.
    Been there done that.

    on December 31, 2010.
  9. pop cycle said

    Glad to see more articles elaborating on this critical situation. The concept of balancing trade via some regulatory means in a new international exchange solution is just more B*S* from bankers and their economists. The same group who foisted fractional reserve banking,”inflation is good”, and their $700 Trillion of B*S* derivatives.
    It is also B*S* that the current conditions are sustainable for 5-10 years more.
    Black Swans are as thick as vultures. 5-15 months is more realistic.
    Also the author compares a $25/hr. worker in the developed world to a $5/day worker- not apples to apples. But a more realistic 8X ratio suggests the devaluation we are facing in the US will be more severe that many expect.

    on January 1, 2011.
  10. Tyler said

    I think the so-called ‘history students’ missed the part about wages in the developing world stuck at $5/day. It doesn’t matter if a nation’s population is a billion or a trillion- products and services cost money and $5 doesn’t go far in any currency. China is fully dependant on America and can’t simply find new buyer to make up the slack because culturally, Americans are by nature, the most egotistical, gluttonous & financially irresponsible people on Earth. It treats shopping as a form of therapy to combat the slightest sadness and as long as people can meet minimum credit card payments, there’s no collective incentive for Americans to budget- like a videogame, just push the ‘restart button (bankruptcy) and start fresh. As a comparison, in Spain, the debts stay with you for the rest of your life… There’s no ‘do-overs’

    on January 1, 2011.
  11. savagegoose said

    the plan is to even out living conditions around the world. wages etc, and you can bet the plan aint to get africa and asia living like the west, nope its to get us westerners living like china men and africans. they maybe double their incomes, even tripple, we go down 2000%
    all one big happy world.

    on January 2, 2011.
  12. bw said

    And yet the stock market continues to soar.
    The Nasdaq 100 ( NDX ) is now ( 1/3/11 )at highs not seen since 2001.
    Via La Enron Economy !

    on January 3, 2011.

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