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Friday, August 12, 2011

Is there a future without growth?

I doubted it. This was palpable, but in reality, not palatable. So, questions are invariably being raised on the issue of reliance on ratings and the rating agencies in regulation and for investment mandates.

And that’s not trifling nevertheless. The inebriated public borrowing practices of the US government that led to this ‘debt trap’ cannot but, invite downgrade and that was apparent. So I’m not surprised.

What I am surprised is at; the policy makers are up to some game planning that is undermining the theory of economic growth. They are fantasizing about a future without growth!

The social conception of unemployment has changed much since the last millennium. Now, the art of thinking about growth needs to be examined from a different perspective, given the regular bouts of business cycle fluctuations. And somehow, that equilibrium needs to be quickly restored.

See, you do all sorts of dim-witted things and expect people to admire you-that’s ridiculous! Actually, the ratings agencies did that exactly before the credit crisis. Well, they never expected those things that they call financial innovation (the mortgage-backed securities traded as wind and air-backed instruments) could take ugly shape, and few of them understood the intricacies, payoffs, risks inherent and details of those securitized designs. That was venture pollution, or rather speculative smog and the SEC is working hard to clean-off the haze. Inevitably, that required huge investments, rather bailout programs costing billions of much wanted greenbacks, thus making it weaker.

And now, they won’t do it again. Well, there is no payoff anyway. Mr. Bernanke is stuck to the great idea of zero-percent fed fund rate policy, just to stave off inflation that is never going to happen in the US, well, for the time being. However, in one way or other, these recent episodes will at least dampen global purchase of US debt. Mr. Bernanke since long time is strictly focusing on reviving the economy from a phenomenon known as Stagflation- a very common trend in Japan. Note that Japan’s debt is around 189% of their GDP, the highest so far. They lead them all (in the matter of debt). The toxic recombination of slow growth and high debt does worry everyone concerned with the economy since; Japan is still not out of it (the stagflation) even after a decade. Once, if the US is deeply ever into it, that’s sure to stunt the economy back into some spiraling no-growth-little-inflation story, at least for the next 10-15 years. That’s a bad bet anyhow.

But how is all that helping the American economy anyway? Is it creating enough jobs, bringing down unemployment levels or stimulating business sentiment or credit growth and uptake? The unemployment rate is stubbornly high at 9.1%.

Is there a future without growth?

A package of austerity becomes more painful during hard-times, we all know. It is not a takeaway piecemeal. What could have been imposed rather- enforcing the private sector to shoulder some of the burden of debt restructuring and their participation would ensure that they understand and respect what a debt crisis really means (People like Madoff). And that’s not just extending bailout funds to rescue those deeply indebted. There is something more than that- responsibility and restraint.

Everything works well during boom times. Things are taken as granted, even if they seem to be murkier. So did the happy business of credit therapy and leverage spas. They mushroomed all over the Wall-Street, in hidden alleys and gloomy corners. They did some brisk business. But those were so fair times!

Time is different now, and more precious than money. And it is running out.

America doesn’t have a labor centric jobs-for-votes electorate system, as like Greece or India. But that seems to be changing now. The recent Reuter/Ipsos poll proves that. As much as 73% of the results say that US is on the wrong track. As Ipsos pollster Julia Clark summed it up with a beautiful moral-“When the economy is bad, people look for a Change”. And so, there’s much to worry about a reelection campaign for the Nobel Prize winner President Obama who will be seeking a second term. The balance of power is tilting slowly against all odds. Now, it seems that the Republicans too aren’t as popular as they used be before the debt deal negotiations. So, what’s the third option?

Learn from Chindia! Cheekooo!!!

Well, there is at least one common principle among the Chinese. They don’t think too much about what has happened!

Things destined to happen has already occurred. No use in churning back those gone-by episodes. You can’t change your past, yet you can make a huge difference in your future, and so, they try to make their present as memorable as possible. They work hard to achieve those. Americans will have to work harder, even more than they used to, to put their house in order.
Expect a new decade of cheaper “Made in Wonderland-(America)” products flooding the world markets. Those would be much cheaper than China I can tell you! And better off course.

As for us Indians, we do not used to think too much as well complicated and hence, we seldom play with risk. However, we do think too much about what went wrong and do spend half of our life lamenting about those episodes. So, we are rather half-way down the line between US and China. Yet, for the Chinese, they have a huge appetite for victuals, but a very small one for their hard-earned money. That’s the reason they invest in risk free productive assets (they invest in labor-intensive industry, having the highest number of SEZ per country in the world) and hence savings rate more (savings rate @54% of GDP). Same goes with us, Indians, the exception being, we do not invest humanly in productivity and yet, saving rate is still one of the highest (savings rate @35.7% of GDP) - due to over-regulated labour market, and off course, economic growth!
As for the Americans, ahoy, they followed an entirely innovative trend- invest all your money in risky assets and just do the job of counting your chicken before they hatch. Hey, that’s funny.

The reason they are working hard to count those ever burgeoning national debt and the clock is still ticking! In terms of savings rate, Japan and Germany are still better off, both at 26% of GDP, compared to USA’s 13%.

That’s a different way of thinking after all! And the reason that is why it is; America-the Wonderland! They took the risk, which did pay off in those good times and the economy is still now by far the largest. A huge, complex economy is sure to have many intricacies, a few hiccoughs can occur, and problems can indeed get too tricky. A few sneezes from the US, and the rest of the world is destined to catch cold.

So now, rather than thinking too far beyond temporal domains, they have much important work on too near at hand to clean up the mess.

Nobody desires a ghost economy!

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