Saturday, January 4, 2014

Soros Casts Worries About Global Economy Because Of China's Direction

WELL DUH!
 The biggest risk that the world economy now faces isn’t the stability of the euro zone or the logjam of US politics, according to famed investor and philanthropist George Soros. Rather, China is the reason to doubt optimism about the global economy, he says.
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Soros’s concern, expressed in a column for Project Syndicate, is that the Communist Party’s renewed focus on economic growth is at odds with its commitment to structural reform. He also likens China’s financial condition to those in the US before the financial crisis.
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“[T]here is an unresolved self-contradiction in China’s current policies: restarting the furnaces also reignites exponential debt growth, which cannot be sustained for much longer than a couple of years,” writes Soros. “How and when this contradiction will be resolved will have profound consequences for China and the world.”
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Of course, he isn’t the only China bear. Among others, Patrick Chovanec of Silvercrest Asset Management, an expert on China’s economy, also argues that optimists are missing something big.
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“Western investors largely ignored the cash crunch [in Dec. 2013] and failed to grasp its potential significance,” Chovanec wrote in Bloomberg. “These repeated crises are a sign that the foundations of China’s investment-driven growth model are crumbling—with unsettling implications for the rest of the global economy.”
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Why are people tuning out the warning bells? Both Soros and Chovanec point to misinterpretations of the Chinese president Xi Jinping’s pledge for sweeping reforms in the country’s agenda-setting Third Plenum in November. For one, the fact that the Party committed to these reforms doesn’t give a clear picture of whether it can pull them off. So far, it’s fumbled; every time the government tries to wind down lending to push companies and local governments to slash their debts, it sets off cash shortages like the ones that occurred last June and December.
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The potential global consequences of China’s debt dilemma include the impact on commodity prices, automobile exports, and even foreign banks, writes Chovanec. The impact could expand well beyond the economy per se: Soros says a failure to reform will result in “military confrontation abroad.”
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And yet, despite similar doomsaying on China over the last half-decade, the country has never seen anything close to a hard landing; it has produced stellar GDP figures and soaring trade deficits even as the global economy withered.
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That track record says very little about China’s ability to adapt to change, though. Since 2003, the government has promised massive growth while offering scant reform. Meanwhile, it has allayed fears about the economy with gushes of credit.
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China bulls may be assuming that reform will come as easily as the government’s promises of growth. But this time may actually be different: We’re beginning to see signs that, when it comes to reform, the government can’t or won’t deliver.

9

The World Economy’s Shifting Challenges

CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphNEW YORK – As 2013 comes to a close, efforts to revive growth in the world’s most influential economies – with the exception of the eurozone – are having a beneficial effect worldwide. All of the looming problems for the global economy are political in character.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphAfter 25 years of stagnation, Japan is attempting to reinvigorate its economy by engaging in quantitative easing on an unprecedented scale. It is a risky experiment: faster growth could drive up interest rates, making debt-servicing costs unsustainable. But Prime Minister Shinzo Abe would rather take that risk than condemn Japan to a slow death. And, judging from the public’s enthusiastic support, so would ordinary Japanese.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphBy contrast, the European Union is heading toward the type of long-lasting stagnation from which Japan is desperate to escape. The stakes are high: Nation-states can survive a lost decade or more; but the EU, an incomplete association of nation-states, could easily be destroyed by it.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphThe euro’s design – which was modeled on the Deutsche Mark – has a fatal flaw. Creating a common central bank without a common treasury means that government debts are denominated in a currency that no single member country controls, making them subject to the risk of default. As a consequence of the crash of 2008, several member countries became over indebted, and risk premia made the eurozone’s division into creditor and debtor countries permanent.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphThis defect could have been corrected by replacing individual countries’ bonds with Eurobonds. Unfortunately, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, reflecting the radical change that Germans’ attitudes toward European integration have undergone, ruled that out. Prior to reunification, Germany was the main motor of integration; now, weighed down by reunification’s costs, German taxpayers are determined to avoid becoming European debtors’ deep pocket.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphAfter the crash of 2008, Merkel insisted that each country should look after its own financial institutions and government debts should be paid in full. Without realizing it, Germany is repeating the tragic error of the French after World War I. Prime Minister Aristide Briand’s insistence on reparations led to the rise of Hitler; Angela Merkel’s policies are giving rise to extremist movements in the rest of Europe.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphThe current arrangements governing the euro are here to stay, because Germany will always do the bare minimum to preserve the common currency – and because the markets and the European authorities would punish any other country that challenged these arrangements. Nonetheless, the acute phase of the financial crisis is now over. The European financial authorities have tacitly recognized that austerity is counterproductive and have stopped imposing additional fiscal constraints. This has given the debtor countries some breathing room, and, even in the absence of any growth prospects, financial markets have stabilized.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphFuture crises will be political in origin. Indeed, this is already apparent, because the EU has become so inward-looking that it cannot adequately respond to external threats, be they in Syria or Ukraine. But the outlook is far from hopeless; the revival of a threat from Russia may reverse the prevailing trend toward European disintegration.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphAs a result, the crisis has transformed the EU from the “fantastic object” that inspired enthusiasm into something radically different. What was meant to be a voluntary association of equal states that sacrificed part of their sovereignty for the common good – the embodiment of the principles of an open society – has now been transformed by the euro crisis into a relationship between creditor and debtor countries that is neither voluntary nor equal. Indeed, the euro could destroy the EU altogether.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphIn contrast to Europe, the United States is emerging as the developed world’s strongest economy. Shale energy has given the US an important competitive advantage in manufacturing in general and in petrochemicals in particular. The banking and household sectors have made some progress in deleveraging. Quantitative easing has boosted asset values. And the housing market has improved, with construction lowering unemployment. The fiscal drag exerted by sequestration is also about to expire.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphMore surprising, the polarization of American politics shows signs of reversing. The two-party system worked reasonably well for two centuries, because both parties had to compete for the middle ground in general elections. Then the Republican Party was captured by a coalition of religious and market fundamentalists, later reinforced by neo-conservatives, that moved it to a far-right extreme. The Democrats tried to catch up in order to capture the middle ground, and both parties colluded in gerrymandering Congressional districts. As a consequence, activist-dominated party primaries took precedence over general elections.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphThat completed the polarization of American politics. Eventually, the Republican Party’s Tea Party wing overplayed its hand. After the recent debacle of the government shutdown, what remains of the Republican establishment has begun fighting back, and this should lead to a revival of the two-party system.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphThe major uncertainty facing the world today is not the euro but the future direction of China. The growth model responsible for its rapid rise has run out of steam.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphThat model depended on financial repression of the household sector, in order to drive the growth of exports and investments. As a result, the household sector has now shrunk to 35% of GDP, and its forced savings are no longer sufficient to finance the current growth model. This has led to an exponential rise in the use of various forms of debt financing.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphThere are some eerie resemblances with the financial conditions that prevailed in the US in the years preceding the crash of 2008. But there is a significant difference, too. In the US, financial markets tend to dominate politics; in China, the state owns the banks and the bulk of the economy, and the Communist Party controls the state-owned enterprises.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphAware of the dangers, the People’s Bank of China took steps starting in 2012 to curb the growth of debt; but when the slowdown started to cause real distress in the economy, the Party asserted its supremacy. In July 2013, the leadership ordered the steel industry to restart the furnaces and the PBOC to ease credit. The economy turned around on a dime. In November, the Third Plenum of the 18th Central Committee announced far-reaching reforms. These developments are largely responsible for the recent improvement in the global outlook.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphThe Chinese leadership was right to give precedence to economic growth over structural reforms, because structural reforms, when combined with fiscal austerity, push economies into a deflationary tailspin. But there is an unresolved self-contradiction in China’s current policies: restarting the furnaces also reignites exponential debt growth, which cannot be sustained for much longer than a couple of years.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphHow and when this contradiction will be resolved will have profound consequences for China and the world. A successful transition in China will most likely entail political as well as economic reforms, while failure would undermine still-widespread trust in the country’s political leadership, resulting in repression at home and military confrontation abroad.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphThe other great unresolved problem is the absence of proper global governance. The lack of agreement among the United Nations Security Council’s five permanent members is exacerbating humanitarian catastrophes in countries like Syria – not to mention allowing global warming to proceed largely unhindered. But, in contrast to the Chinese conundrum, which will come to a head in the next few years, the absence of global governance may continue indefinitely.

Read more at http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/george-soros-maps-the-terrain-of-a-global-economy-that-is-increasingly-shaped-by-china#LKz7SvB25pHaeLoD.99

Read George Soros On Why China Is The World's Biggest Story Right Now

George sorosGeorge Soros
Everything seems to be going fine in the world economy, and people are scratching their heads wondering how it could turn south again.
In a new piece up at Project Syndicate, George Soros says to watch China:
There are some eerie resemblances with the financial conditions that prevailed in the US in the years preceding the crash of 2008. But there is a significant difference, too. In the US, financial markets tend to dominate politics; in China, the state owns the banks and the bulk of the economy, and the Communist Party controls the state-owned enterprises.
Aware of the dangers, the People’s Bank of China took steps starting in 2012 to curb the growth of debt; but when the slowdown started to cause real distress in the economy, the Party asserted its supremacy. In July 2013, the leadership ordered the steel industry to restart the furnaces and the PBOC to ease credit. The economy turned around on a dime. In November, the Third Plenum of the 18th Central Committee announced far-reaching reforms. These developments are largely responsible for the recent improvement in the global outlook.
So China could have a meltdown like the US in 2008 or it could drive the entire global economy to new heights.
The ultimate conclusion to China’s tension — whether it can successfully rebalance its economy away from debt — will have “profound” consequences for the whole world he says.

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