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Explaining the Global Economic "Secular Stagnation"

LeveragedBuyout

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Fascinating article. I suspect this thread will turn into a series of such articles.

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http://ftalphaville.ft.com/2014/09/23/1980442/let-there-be-bubbles/

Let there be bubbles!
Izabella Kaminska

Citi’s Matt King has jumped on the secular stagnation bandwagon with a really nifty collection of charts that ties the whole story of how we got to this point together.

He starts off with the capex issue, noting that despite the cyclical recovery corporates don’t seem to be investing all that much. In fact, according to King, declining capex may be a key aspect of secular decline, which he suggests began in advanced economies and is now spreading to emerging markets as well.

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Namely: Anything but capex, because capex ain’t what you need when the name of the game is artificial scarcity.

But, as King notes, with companies (for some reason) not keen to expand on the capex side — see our beyond scarcity for why that may be the case — that leaves everyone with a growing dependence on credit:

Growth has instead been propped up by an increasing reliance upon credit acceleration effects. Unfortunately this implies that the recent boost from the end of deleveraging in many economies may prove temporary: either we lapse back into releveraging, or else growth risks fading.

Which opens the door to Larry Summers-style thinking that “we need leverage to support the economy and/or faddy bubbles (ideally in non systemic areas like bitcoin) to keep things ticking over”.

In other words, as King notes, you can pump it in, but you can’t control where it goes.

Case in point, you can provide cheap money but you can’t make banks lend if the economic agents don’t think they will be able to pay back the loan, or invest that money productively. That leaves you lending to businesses which can control the flow of money into areas where returns can at the very least be artificially synthesised. This happens either through buybacks — the sort that help to create wealth through the stock appreciation effect — or by means of capital returns, which look a whole lot more appealing if rebased via buybacks at the same time.

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Alternatively, you can also go down the M&A monopolisation route, in a bid to corner whatever demand that’s left:

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(Noteworty: the M&A strategy is not quite as popular as it once was.)

The eventual effect being… that the asset rich end up substituting salaries for dividends, and in the process concentrating demand amongst the asset rich.

If you’re lucky enough to work for one of winners, of course, things can still be rosy. Unfortunately there’s not enough jobs in the top-tier to serve the population:

16eeed2bc1a20a3acdda6388ee55ff7a.png

So what’s to be done?

As King notes:

While central banks are doing their best to stimulate new credit creation, the lack of return prospects in the real economy means there is every likelihood it will continue to be channelled into financial assets instead. Macroprudential policies and regulatory constraints seem unlikely to prevent bubble formation; they may even exacerbate it by impairing shorting and the liquid operation of markets.​

So, you could say, ponzification becomes a legitimate “Keynesian coal-mine thought experiment” coping strategy, especially if you’re not prepared to wipe out the legacy debt that’s really at fault for stifling everyone:

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To wit, traditional economics is dead:

3127fb3488b1ce8b87ea3406e2cbc3d2.png

… and, most importantly, many of the economic values you were brought up with, no longer make sense. The looking glass, in other words, has been penetrated, meaning we’re now in a world where profligacy should be admired and thrifty tendencies frowned upon.

So what are central bankers and authorities to do in the circumstances? After all, we’re not yet at the point where a free for all grab can be justified.

King breaks it down into three possible approaches, the Summers bubble route, the Blanchard “we can debase our way out of this” route and/or the Shirakawa “financial cycles are more important than business cycles” approach:

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And as can be seen above, the bubble approach is in many ways the most effective (providing, we’d hope, that central bankers agree that utter madness in the market should still be shaken out with Jedi mind-tricks every now and then).

Although this does mean that anything resembling an exit from extraordinary policy is going to become increasingly difficult to pull off without systemic implications.

As King concludes:

The compression of risk premia across markets, and unusual behaviour of many asset classes, suggests that central bank exit will be difficult. While they may be able to withdraw, we think they will be very sensitive to the risk of bubbles bursting. In the past few cycles this has occurred at ever lower levels of interest rates.
And if you’re wondering how to play this as an investor? King’s ultimate message is that for as long as the liquidity is forthcoming, a rising tide should float most boats. Though….

For now, the still-rising tide of global liquidity keeps us significantly more bullish on credit and other asset classes than fundamentals alone would justify. But we caution that in the long term, you can’t fix a blocked plughole by pouring in more water.
We think that means eventually there will have to be a paradigm shift.
 
http://ftalphaville.ft.com/2014/09/26/1984182/too-much-competition-overcapacity-arghh/

Too much competition, overcapacity, arghh!
Izabella Kaminska

Earlier this week we highlighted the following chart from Matt King at Citi representing the corporate sector’s seeming resistance to capex:

cfb1fcfde4fddfcf59a1ceaf3863ac5f.png

The message here is that after a certain point more capex stops providing corporations with market edge and instead begins to destroy entire markets. Self-preservation instincts come into play, and corporations look to divert cash either to monopoly creation (M&A) and/or investor cash distribution for the sake of keeping stock prices supported and income forthcoming regardless of earnings potential.

But who cares if you’re the most efficient producer or service provider — or even if you have a monopoly position — if any attempt to charge prices for your goods leads to customer flight.

Hence, in some way, the need to keep investors sweet with dividends. As long as you can continuously attract new blood for bleeding with the promise of returns, investors seem to be happy to look the other way when it comes to depreciation and/or burn-rates.

That is to say, these investors don’t seem to realise they may just benevolently be donating cash to fund the expenses of businesses they think are cool but no-one else feels inclined to pay for. The analogy isn’t charity, as much as self-determined tax. Very nice for all of us users, thank you very much. But do you really understand the level of your own altruism?

It’s a scenario which, as King has also pointed out, leads to secular stagnation’s tendency for ponzification. I.e., the reason investors are inclined to be so benevolent, is because they think they’ll be rewarded with capital appreciation instead.

So, how big a problem are we facing?

When it comes to burn-rates in new faddy sectors with slim to no provable earnings track record, even the koolaid drinkers in Silicon Valley are suddenly becoming worried.

Latest in that array is Netscape hero Marc Andreessen — until now, the loudest defender of the “this is not a bubble” view. But as Pando Daily reported, a new Andreessen Tweetstorm has seen the billionaire tech investor turn his attention to burn-rates. And shock of shocks, he admits to be concerned. Albeit, for the new blood that has never experienced a world in which money isn’t always easy to raise at higher valuations.

As he noted in a Tweet:



(Interestingly, no mention of burn rates in Bitcoin, one market Andreessen is particularly fond of).

But the big mistake is to think this is just a tech specific issue. It’s not.

Overcapacity and competition issues are plaguing everyone. From money printers, banks and supermarkets to airlines, media and postal services… and most of the time the response is (mainly on an unwitting basis) a co-agreement to suspend capacity investment and to cease competition on somewhat oligopolistic terms.

Alternatively, to the introduction of stealth and somewhat mercenary charges elsewhere (let’s monetise everything from queues to reservations!) which penalise the uninformed (i.e. anyone not prepared to read the terms & conditions, or who still takes certain standards for granted).

A good example is how airlines dealt with higher fuel costs and ongoing price competition in the US.

As the following report from the US government accountability office into the impact of fuel price increases on the aviation industry shows (h/t John Kemp):

Specifically, FAA said that, even though fuel prices increased, airlines decreased domestic fares in 2003 and 2004, largely due to increased competition from low cost carriers. In contrast, FAA said that airlines increased fares in several years in which fuel prices increased from 2005 through 2012. In 2008, in addition to increasing fares, airlines began to charge for many services for which separate charges did not previously exist. These services include fees for a checked bag, early boarding, or other amenities. These fees are not included in the fares directly charged for transporting passengers and are commonly known as ancillary fees.

——-

Airlines have taken a number of steps aimed at mitigating the financial impact of the increases in fuel prices that occurred from 2002 through 2013. High fuel prices may contribute to airlines reducing capacity, or restraining growth in capacity, to control costs and help maintain or increase fares by limiting the supply of airline seats relative to the demand. The 2014 NEXTOR II report concluded that available data suggest that airlines restrained growth in their domestic capacity between 2004 and 2007 in response to higher fuel prices. More specifically, the study concluded that the growth in domestic capacity during the time period (1.6 percent, measured in available seat miles) was much smaller than would be expected had fuel prices not increased substantially, given that U.S. gross domestic product and commercial passenger aviation traffic both grew substantially over roughly the same time period.​

Once again, the point is, when extreme competition reduces an entire industry to not being able to cover operational costs — at the base level reflected by the energy cost required to operate the network — the industry as a whole has an incentive to find cheaper energy (i.e. replace expensive human labour with more efficient machines, or locate where energy costs are lower, or encourage more production) or to quietly stop competing with each other while attempting to extract value from those who can afford it.

Airlines were perhaps the most efficient at this game. They became world class experts at personal (desperation) pricing and in getting a few rich people to subsidise the rest of the customer load. They also became expert in capacity management, the overbooking of flights, and the management of swing supply.

But it seems even that model is now drifting. The message being, eventually the rich do cotton on to the fact they’re getting gamed for the sake of the masses and go and get private jets. Thus, look at the new breed of airlines which are emerging and focusing on customer specialisation; higher rates and better standards for all who are prepared to pay up.

Being everything to everyone doesn’t pay anymore. And neither does a model focused on getting a small portion of altruists or rich-paper to subsidise the rest, whether overtly (airlines) or covertly (supermarkets, banks). With segmentation, however, comes specialisation. And very much the transfer of costs back to the customer who identifies with that segment.

We see this most clearly in the supermarket and retail world, with the outbreak of discount retailers and the rise of premium and artisan networks.

Unfortunately, most innovation in the new tech bubble area still seems to be focused on:

– Getting customers to drop standards by accepting low-quality capacity at lower rates or to become the producer themselves (AirBnb);

– Getting a small affluent/altruistic minority to do all of the work for the masses (Wiki, Bitcoin, media, entertainment)

– Getting investors to subsidise the platforms and games we won’t pay for directly on the belief that it will eventually be possible to extract stealth charges elsewhere, or in the worst case scenario transform the users into the product (by means of data collection)

But could it be that big customer data is more useful to real-world industries that like to exploit one of their customer segments against the other, rather than those who like to specialise to such a degree that they not only know their customer base better than anyone, but also the scope and limits of the market’s growth potential as well?
 
http://blogs.ft.com/beyond-brics/2014/10/14/asia-shouldnt-blame-slow-growth-on-faraway-markets/

Asia shouldn’t blame slow growth on faraway markets
Oct 14, 2014 2:11pmby Mian Ridge

Slowing productivity growth is holding back the economies of Asia, making them overly dependent on credit to sustain demand, says HSBC. And, because the root of the problem is structural, not cyclical, the only real panacea is domestic structural reform.

Things should be looking pretty good for Asia just now, said the bank in its quarterly review of the region’s macro economics, Losing Steam. Yet, positive developments – among them an uptick in growth over the summer, hopeful election results in India and Indonesia and mini stimulus measures in China, as well as growth in the US and a drop in the price of raw materials – had not removed a “nagging feeling”.

Why? It was because:

things are not quite as shiny upon closer inspection. In China, the housing sector, a big driver of growth, continues to cool. In Japan, industrial production once again contracted in the third quarter, if at a less rapid pace, raising the risk that the economy slid into a technical recession. India’s Modi bounce appears to be confined to the second quarter, with the PMIs pointing to slowing growth last quarter. Exports in much of the region haven’t so far benefited from a stronger US, absent a little tech bounce. Credit growth has mostly slowed, hinting at stiffer headwinds as the dollar gains strength.

But the real nub:

it is really halting progress on reforms that gives pause to thought: the urgency for speedy implementation is plain for everyone to see. Still, this continues to be slow and uneven.

This chart – showing new orders and new export orders for emerging Asia measured by PMIs – suggests that exports are far from roaring. After a little pick up in the summer orders have slowed again:

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HSBC

Waiting for better times was not going to cut it, said HSBC. Exports were not going to soar because markets had picked up elsewhere. Instead wide ranging, often politically unpopular, structural reforms were required:

pruning subsidies, spending more on quality infrastructure, boosting education, opening further to foreign direct investment, and, perhaps most important of all, introducing greater competition in local markets.

The chart shows how exports to the US are not rising as rapidly as they did during previous recoveries. Shipments to Europe had accelerated this year but after a long contraction, so it was more of a normalisation than outright growth. And they are not expected to grow much in the next couple of years, either, HSBC said.

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HSBC

With exports lacklustre, local demand was essential to growth. But for reasons that varied from country to country, consumption had generally slowed. One persistent drag was a slowing of jobs growth, which could harm consumer confidence. A “wobbly” real estate market – and not just in China – was another.

Easing inflation – even in the face of recent exchange rate changes – was helpful, easing pressures on consumers and helping central banks keep rates low. But a strong dollar could create problems. Exports to the US were much less important to GDP growth in Asia than they were a decade ago – while a big increase in debt heightened Asia’s vulnerability.

This chart shows the bank credit-to-GDP ratio for emerging Asia, which HSBC pointed out was looking similar to “the debt fuelled boom of the early 1990s”:

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HSBC

This chart, meanwhile, showed how lending had slowed in recent months, showing worries about interest rates and the possible impact of a stronger dollar on local funding conditions:

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HSBC

Perhaps this wasn’t too worrying in the near term, said HSBC. Asian currencies had so far held up pretty well against the dollar. Current account balances were also in surplus in many countries, providing an “initial cushion” against a dollar bounce. Japan’s continuation of its quantitative easing programme, meanwhile, which encouraged Japanese investors to take their cash abroad to look for higher returns, had a stabilising effect on the region.

It is important, of course, not to push that argument too far. A spike in US interest rates, or a sharp climb in the dollar, could well trigger volatility in global financial markets.
Capital inflows had broadly held up, too.

But there are two persistent worries regarding Asia’s economic prospects in the coming years. One relates to a sudden reversal of capital flows, triggered perhaps by rising US rates, a stronger dollar, more general risk aversion, or a combination thereof.

Back to the main point, though, HSBC reiterated its view that even if the broader financial picture remained bright, Asia’s fundamentals were not. Productivity growth had slowed for the past eight years, making sustained growth elusive even if interest rates remained low.

HSBC’s conclusion was stern:

Thus, to improve the region’s economic prospects and make Asia more resilient against potential financial shocks, structural reforms need to be urgently implemented. There’s been encouraging talk of late. But action needs to follow. Everywhere.
 
http://ftalphaville.ft.com/2014/10/16/2009422/qe4-nah-time-to-look-elsewhere/

QE4? Nah, time to look elsewhere.
David Keohane Author alerts | Oct 16 11:33

GoT.jpg


Deutsche’s George Saravelos isn’t entirely convinced by the calls for QE4/QEmorerattling through our inbox from those on the receiving end of this correction.

Those looking to the Fed to save the day are looking at the wrong place. First, unlike the September 2013 non-taper, US rates have rallied and American data surprises are close to their highs. Second, this is not about the US but the rest of the world. Bunds and gilts have rallied 9-10% this year compared to a 6% rally in USTs. This is about global, not American fears. It is about how the world transitions away from Fed-driven liquidity (QE winds down this month) to the rest of the world.

So look elsewhere for your redeemers:

1.The ECB needs to start QE

The game is up. Inflation expectations are collapsing, peripheral spreads are widening, equities are selling off, and foreigners are liquidating European assets (charts). The market is pricing policy failure and challenging the ECB. It is Europe’s central bank that now has the biggest role to play in acting as a circuit breaker for markets. A QE move in November should not be taken off the cards, but the bigger the delay and the more timid the action, the more disruptive markets are likely to become.

2. PBoC liquidity
It is not just about Europe. Conditions in China keep tightening and the economy is slowing down. Today’s credit data disappointed, and Bloomberg’s GDP tracker is showing ongoing deceleration (charts). A reserve requirement cut or additional liquidity injections would be a useful complement to ECB action.

3. Japan
The Nikkei is tumbling and recent Japanese data have been weak. Kuroda’s QQE runs out next April, completing the “doubling of the monetary base” that was promised two years ago. The more open Kuroda is around extending (upsizing?) the existing program in the upcoming BoJ meeting and outlook report on October 31st, the more this will help.

In sum, UST yields below 2% make nice headlines, but this is all about what is happening to the rest of the world, not America. The focus should not be on if Yellen turns more dovish (does she need to?) but on how the liquidity baton is passed from the Fed to the other central banks. It is only once this transition has completed that one can feel more comfortable calling a top in volatility and a bottom in risk assets. It is also precisely because more easing will come from the rest of the world, not the Fed, that the long USD trade remains intact.
 
I am posting this here for informational purposes only, in regards to slowing global growth (i.e. the "secular stagnation" that is the topic of this thread). I will not respond to any baiting, trolling, or ultra-nationalist outrage by the usual suspects, as this is not intended to be an anti-China post, but is critical in understanding why all countries must continue to press forward with restructuring and reforms to improve productivity growth. For that reason, allow me to post the final sentence of the article here, to reiterate this point:

Contingency planning should also embrace scenarios in which Chinese growth slows dramatically, presumably bringing with it a range of domestic and international political implications.

Emphasis is the article's.

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http://ftalphaville.ft.com/2014/10/...-something-cannot-go-on-forever-it-will-stop/

Regressing to the mean in China or why if something cannot go on forever, it will stop
David Keohane Author alerts | Oct 20 09:39

With a h/t to Marginal Revolution, here’s Larry Summers and Lant Pritchett on why — for the same reason the USSR didn’t overtake the US, and Shinzo Abe has a tough job on his hands — “excessive extrapolation of performance in the recent past and treating a country’s growth rate as a permanent characteristic rather than a transient condition” is a bad idea. Emphasis is the article's.

Most particularly where China is concerned.

From the paper (our emphasis):

We are trying to reverse the default assumptions often made in forecasting GDP, which is that, in the absence of any reason to think otherwise, the current growth rate persists. In this view what has to be justified with argumentation is why the growth rate would decelerate. However, this mode of forecasting or projection or even formulation of scenarios is counterfactual to the single most robust fact about growth rates, which is strong reversion to the mean. Our argument is that the default prediction/projection/forecast should be that a country’s growth rate will be subject to regression to the mean. What has to be justified with argumentation is why the growth rate would persist at rates higher (or lower) than the world mean growth rate.

So when looking at China, the default position has to be that growth will slow… because, even aside from the related Pettis led rebalancing arguments, that’s what rapid growth does. Of course, those same Pettis led arguments and the nature of its authoritarian system mean China is perhaps even more vulnerable to such regression.

Hello Fourth Plenum based on a Chinese conception of the rule of law, do please meet the need to rebalance an economy stuffed with elite beneficiaries of the rent-seeking status quo.

As Summers and Pritchett somewhat understate, “it is difficult for corruption to remain organized during a transition in political power.” Or, to put it another way, if China is moving to build more social capital and robust institutions in order to transition to another stage of (most probably lower growth) it will not be a painless process.

Anyway, the real point from Summers and Pritchett is that we should pay less attention to the middle income trap as simple regression to the mean is more relevant and is “perhaps the single most robust and empirical relevant fact about cross-national growth rates”.

Which makes continued high Chinese growth rather unlikely and a fall to 3.9 per cent rather more likely:

…knowing the current growth rate only modestly improves the prediction of future growth rates over just guessing it will be the (future realized) world average. The R-squared of decade-ahead predictions of decade growth varies from 0.056 (for the most recent decade) to 0.13. Past growth is just not that informative about future growth and its predictive ability is generally even lower over longer horizons…

There is some consensus that China will not maintain 9 to 10 percent growth rates, but even the view that China’s growth will slow to something like 7 percent assumes substantial persistence. The predicted growth over the next two decades using regressions is 3.9 percent (with a coefficient on past growth of 0.24), and the regression standard error of estimation is 1.6 percent, so a continuation of even 7 percent is two standard deviations in the tail, and a continuation of a growth rate of 9 percent is three standard deviations.

So yeah, it’s possible that China will keep going at elevated growth rates above 7 per cent but it would be a real tail event. The fact is that “China’s experience from 1977 to 2010 already holds the distinction of being the only instance, quite possibly in the history of mankind, but certainly in the data, with a sustained episode of super-rapid (> 6 ppa) growth for more than 32 years”. Hell, the risk of a sudden stop is arguably more likely than that continuing into the future.

Speaking of extremely unlikely scenario’s, here’s as aside on what Summers and Pritchett have to say on China transitioning to democracy:

Among 22 countries in which episodes of large democratic transition coincided with above-average growth, all but one (Korea in 1987 with an acceleration of only 0.22 percent) experienced a growth deceleration. The combination of high initial growth and democratic transition seems to make some deceleration all but inevitable. The magnitude of the decelerations was very large: The median deceleration across the 22 countries was 2.99 percent and the average deceleration was 3.53 percent.

And, perhaps more relevant, here’s what the broader risk of a slowdown means for the rest of us:

If China and India continued at their current rate, they would reach over $66 trillion and hence just mechanically the annual growth rate of world GDP is 3.5 percent and then 4.45 percent in the next two decades (accelerating just because India and China mechanically have a larger share of the total). Conversely, with regression to the mean scenarios for China and India, the global growth rate is 2.48 percent and 2.27 percent.

Of course this mechanical calculation underestimates the role of China and India as growth engines by assuming that other country growth rates are not raised by faster growth in the giants. To the extent there are positive linkages, then this mechanical calculation underestimates (perhaps substantially) the impact on global growth of regression to the mean.

Do read the full paper but here’s a final chunk from the conclusion:

We suggest several implications of these conclusions. First, there will be a strong tendency to assume that, if growth slows substantially in China or India, it will represent an important policy failure. This is not right. Regression to the mean in a decade or so is the rule, not the exception. What would require much more explanation would be continued rapid growth, which would be very much outside the general run of experience. Second, those making global projections should allow a very wide confidence interval with respect to growth for countries whose current growth rates are far from the mean. Given the sensitivity of commodity demands in particular to growth rates in Asia, this suggests substantial uncertainty about the medium-term path of commodity prices. In the same way, forecasts of global energy use and climate change impacts should also recognize the possibility of discontinuities in Asia. Third, much geopolitical analysis has focused on the implications of a rising China, and certainly Chinese international relations theorists have extensively studied past rising powers. Contingency planning should also embrace scenarios in which Chinese growth slows dramatically, presumably bringing with it a range of domestic and international political implications.
(Partial header credit to Herbert Stein and Marg Rev commenter prior_approval. Ta)
 
Mind-blowing if true, and terrifying.

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http://ftalphaville.ft.com/2014/10/20/2014172/secular-stagnation-and-the-paradox-of-worth/

Secular stagnation and the paradox of worth
Izabella Kaminska | Oct 20 20:31

Gauti Eggertsson and Neil Mehrotra’s latest stab at modelling secular stagnation can be found here.

It includes explanations about the role of demographics, technological displacement, the liquidity trap and the paradox thrift, toil and flexibility within the secular stagnation framework — and there’s also a really neat explanation about the effects on capital, and in particular productive capital’s tendency to depreciate more quickly than might otherwise be expected. (You know, there’s more stuff being produced than expected, so the return on investment is never quite achieved in time, due to increasingly lower barriers to entry thanks to technique.)

The flip side of that scenario, however, is that unproductive capital becomes strangely useful for dodging depreciation for as long as there is belief in the asset class; hence the tendency for bubbles to form in asset classes which can’t easily be over-produced. At least not without significant investment.


From the paper (our emphasis):

We have shown that in the model with capital, the presence of productive assets carrying a positive marginal product does not eliminate the possibility of a secular stagnation. The key assumption is that capital has a strictly positive rate of depreciation. In the absence of depreciation, capital can serve as a perfect storage technology which places a zero bound on the real interest rate. It is straightforward to introduce other type of assets, such as land used for production, and maintain a secular stagnation equilibrium. For these extensions, however, it is important to ensure that the asset cannot operate as a perfect storage technology as this may put a zero bound on the real interest rate. One can think of a variety of ways in which this can be done, but we will not pursue these extensions here. Moreover, even with zero depreciation rates, so long as capital or land carries a risk premium, a secular stagnation equilibrium remains a possibility as the natural rate can be negative while the discount rate relevant for risky assets remains positive.

The real interest rate and the possibility of a secular stagnation can also be affected by the presence of bubble assets. The secular stagnation equilibria we consider are typically dynamically inefficient in our setting (as in the celebrated analyses of Samuelson (1958) and Diamond (1965)). As is well known in the OLG literature, this implies that under certain conditions rational bubbles may be supported; inherently worthless objects may have value simply because agents believe that other agents value these objects. We view analyzing the properties of possible asset bubbles in our economy as an interesting extension for future research. Our model suggest that asset bubbles may be efficient, but depending on the stability of the bubble, interesting tradeoffs may emerge between the level and volatility of employment in that setting.

These are precisely the sort of effects we’re talking about when we reference the rise of cult markets.
 
Corruption and declining international orders for Chinese goods get a lot of attention, as does China slowing housing and infrastructure industries, but I think that culture gets lost a bit too often when talking about domestic consumption in China. China is in a point of transition that is by no means through, or even close for that matter, and it's normal for a transitioning economy (going from exports to domestic consumption) to experience weak data in these numbers, but Asia cultures are traditionally reserved spenders. I couldn't find more recent data, my apologies for this, but in 2013 Chinese house hold spending was a dismal 34% of their total income. For comparison the US saw a 69% total for its most recent figure (2012). Do you, or does anyone see China, as capitalistically inclined as it is and is becoming, reversing this traditionally save-first culture and becoming a true domestic driven economy? Or does China's long-term future still rest on its export prowess? Or will a hybrid system comprised of both suffice?

The source for the figures Household final consumption expenditure, etc. (% of GDP) | Data | Table

* And I apologize if I miss interpreted anything, finance and economics aren't my strong suits (those are medicine and military electronics) and would welcome a clarification. I'm always willing to admit I'm wrong and learn what is right.
 
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Corruption and declining international orders for Chinese goods get a lot of attention, as does China slowing housing and infrastructure industries, but I think that culture gets lost a bit too often when talking about domestic consumption in China. China is in a point of transition that is by no means through, or even close for that matter, and it's normal for a transitioning economy (going from exports to domestic consumption) to experience weak data in these numbers, but Asia cultures are traditionally reserved spenders. I couldn't find more recent data, I apologies for this, but in 2013 Chinese house hold spending was a dismally 34% of their total income. For comparison the US saw a 69% total for its most recent figure (2012). Do you, or does anyone see China, as capitalistically inclined as it is and is becoming, reversing this traditionally save-first culture and becoming a true domestic driven economy? Or does China long-term future still rest on its export prowess? Or will a hybrid system comprised of both suffice?

The source for the figures Household final consumption expenditure, etc. (% of GDP) | Data | Table

* And I apologist if I miss interpreted anything, finance and economics aren't my strong suits (those are medicine and military electronics)

You are not wrong about this, and I am certain that the CCP leadership recognizes this as well. That is why they are moving forward with their rebalancing program, even while so many on PDF call for what has worked for so long to be continued. I think that savings rates in China will fall, but not to the low level of savings that are seen in the US. For this to happen, though, as much as it pains me to say it, China must implement a more robust welfare/social security program. Chinese citizens must save because the government does not help them (or at least, not as much as in the West) with retirement or catastrophic medical problems, and so they must save for these contingencies. Once Chinese citizens can be more assured that their future is less precarious, they will probably open their wallets a bit more and consume. That said, due to cultural factors, the savings rate will probably remain higher than it is in the West, generally speaking. @Edison Chen @Chinese-Dragon Your thoughts on this?

The other problem is sheer math. China has been growing at a multiple of world GDP growth rates for decades. Taken to infinity, that means China becomes the market, so obviously there will be a reversion to the mean (as stated in that article I posted earlier today in this thread), as it's not possible for China to comprise 100% of world GDP. Furthermore, since China is growing faster than the rest of the world, and since exports make up a majority of China's GDP growth, that means that there are only two ways for China to grow exports: through world growth, or through taking market share. Both of these factors have played a part in China's export growth in recent decades, but now that China already accounts for over 15% of global GDP, and is either already or will soon be the largest economy in the world (depending on the measure), that's getting harder.

Therefore, if China's output is going to continue to increase at a faster rate than the rest of the world, only China will be able to consume that increasing output. Therefore, the rebalance to domestic consumption is inevitable, at least until another gigantic economy (the US? India?) picks up the consumption slack--but that doesn't appear to be in the cards in the short to medium term.
 
You are not wrong about this, and I am certain that the CCP leadership recognizes this as well. That is why they are moving forward with their rebalancing program, even while so many on PDF call for what has worked for so long to be continued. I think that savings rates in China will fall, but not to the low level of savings that are seen in the US. For this to happen, though, as much as it pains me to say it, China must implement a more robust welfare/social security program. Chinese citizens must save because the government does not help them (or at least, not as much as in the West) with retirement or catastrophic medical problems, and so they must save for these contingencies. Once Chinese citizens can be more assured that their future is less precarious, they will probably open their wallets a bit more and consume. That said, due to cultural factors, the savings rate will probably remain higher than it is in the West, generally speaking. @Edison Chen @Chinese-Dragon Your thoughts on this?

This is true. And most of the savings finally come to pay the mortgages of our apartment, like 2B1B apartment(not even house). The 9 year complusory education is also a major expenditure, cause it's not free, it cost even higher than college tuitions. These two are the major expenditures I think. China is doing very well in hardware facilities like the public transportation, but doing poorly in providing enough software public services like education and medical care, so citizens have to pay this by themselves, high saving rate means insecurity.
 
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Difficult decisions ahead.

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http://online.wsj.com/articles/chinas-slowdown-raises-pressure-on-beijing-to-spur-growth-1413893980

China’s Slowdown Raises Pressure on Beijing to Spur Growth
China’s Economy Expanded Slowest Pace in Five Years in Third Quarter
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A woman walks past a poster showing Beijing's central business district. REUTERS
By
MARK MAGNIER and

BOB DAVIS
Updated Oct. 21, 2014 2:13 p.m. ET

BEIJING—China’s economic slowdown is widely expected to continue into next year, increasing pressure on Beijing leaders to take more-strenuous growth-spurring measures and to continue moving slowly on their plans for fundamental economic reform.

On Tuesday, China reported that gross domestic product expanded at 7.3% in the third quarter from a year earlier, the slowest rate of growth in more than five years, as deepening problems in the housing market, sluggish retail sales and expanding debt weighed on the economy. Many analysts were expecting weaker growth and greeted the results as positive news, but few predicted a pickup in the coming quarters.

UBS economist Tao Wang said she expected growth to continue “decelerating” in the fourth quarter to 7%. She forecasts full-year growth at 7.3%—compared with 7.7% last year—and a decline to 6.8% in 2015. Monetary easing is unlikely to “rejuvenate corporate investment demand” or reverse the property slump, she wrote in an analyst note.

The prospect of GDP expansion in the 7% range comes after a report released Monday from the Conference Board, the New York-based business-research group, which forecast growth slowing to an average of 5.5% from 2015 to 2019, and an average of 3.9% from 2020 to 2025.


China's 7.3% third-quarter GDP is its slowest rate of growth in five years. WSJ’s Ramy Inocencio speaks to Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business professor Gan Jie about the reasons.
Navigating the present slowdown is the biggest challenge China’s leaders face. They must assess how fast and how deeply economic growth will decline and what policies to adopt to make sure the slide doesn’t get out of hand. Doing too little could produce bankruptcies and unemployment. Doing too much and boosting stimulus could pump up real-estate and credit bubbles.

An annual Communist Party conclave is taking place this week in Beijing to discuss legal reforms and the continuing crackdown on corruption. Last year’s session produced a blueprint to give the economy a firmer long-term foundation by letting market forces play a much larger role. But China has been very slow in putting the plan into action, economists say, because of fears it might further undermine short-term growth.

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“They won’t move on reform until the pain of inaction is greater than the pain of action,” said Andrew Polk, an economist at the Conference Board.

Premier Li Keqiang told a delegation attending an Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation finance ministers’ meeting in Beijing on Tuesday that growth during the first three quarters remained within a “reasonable range” according to the official Xinhua news service. “It takes time for China’s reformative measures to be fully effective,” the premier added, according to Xinhua.

The effects of the slowdown are evident throughout China. Factories are churning out steel, concrete and other commodities well beyond local demand and are kept alive by local governments arranging emergency loans. Debt levels are rising at a clip that rivals the U.S., Japan and South Korea before they tumbled into recession. About 20% of apartments are vacant, according to a Goldman Sachs report, and Chinese cities are chockablock with empty apartment towers. Much of Chinese consumer wealth is tied up in housing.

Zhang Shuangyang, who runs a cake shop and two online sock stores, said she has delayed major purchases and is increasingly worried about the future. “We can feel that the economy is getting worse,” the 27-year-old entrepreneur from eastern Zhejiang province said.

The growth outlook for the world’s second-largest economy is one of the biggest question marks hanging over the global economy. China is a major market for commodity producers in Latin America, Asia and Africa and capital-goods makers in the U.S. and Europe, as well as one of the world’s largest recipients for foreign investment. By some estimates, China accounts for more than one-fourth of the world’s economic growth.

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Zheng Qiang, general manager of Jin Dali Shoes Foreign Trade Co. based in eastern Zhejiang province, said his company’s export sales to Europe and the U.S. are improving, but hardly robust. “The government could help us by making it easier for small and medium companies to get loans,” he said.

Housing sales declined by 10.8% in the first nine months of 2014, the National Bureau of Statistics reported, while retail sales decelerated. One bright spot: industrial production picked up in September, year-over-year, from August’s pace.

The leadership has talked up reform all year but has been wary of rolling out specific measures while growth is so weak. Beijing has endorsed the freeing of bank-deposit rates, which are now capped at 3.3%, as a way to put more money in the pockets of consumers and to encourage big banks to funnel more money to private firms. But the government has yet to even release a plan for how it would insure bank deposits—a necessary first step in liberalization—despite having debated such a step for 20 years.

Instead, the leadership has sought ways to bolster short-term growth. Most prominently, China’s central bank has increased low-interest loans to major Chinese commercial banks, and the central government and its local counterparts have picked up spending on railways, subways and information technology, among other sectors, in a strategy known as ministimulus. China economists expect Beijing to continue such measures.

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Cumulatively, the stimulus provided by the People’s Bank of China has equaled a cut of more than one percentage point to the reserves that banks are required to keep at the central bank, estimates Mark Williams, an economist at Capital Economics, a London research firm. That is a substantial boost, but one that has limited duration, he said. For instance, loans totaling 500 billion yuan ($81.65 billion) that the PBOC provided to big banks in September are scheduled to be repaid in December.

Some Chinese ministries are lobbying for more powerful stimulus measures, including a cut in interest rates across the board, Chinese officials say. The PBOC has so far blocked those efforts, worrying that fresh loans would wind up in the hands of developers, steel mills and other sectors marked by overcapacity and worsen China’s longer-term economic problems.

“The downward trend—I don’t think it can be reversed,” said Citibank economist Shuang Ding, who is projecting 7.3% annual growth this year.

The slowing GDP rate means that China may fail to meet its growth target—7.5% this year—for the first time since the 1998 Asian financial crisis. For the first three quarters China grew at a 7.4% clip, the National Bureau of Statistics reported. Formally, China states that its goal is “around” a certain numerical target, but until this year, the adjective had been routinely ignored because China generally exceeded the target by such a large amount.

China may well further downshift its goal for next year; the International Monetary Fund is lobbying Beijing to choose a range of between 6.5% and 7%.

— Kersten Zhang and Lillian Lin contributed to this article.
 
As a capitalist and an adherent of Robert Nozick's economic philosophy, I naturally disagree with the concept of "inclusion," but I still found the article to present an interesting perspective.

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Capitalism in Crisis Amid Slow Growth and Growing Inequality - SPIEGEL ONLINE



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10/23/2014 04:51 PM
The Zombie System
How Capitalism Has Gone Off the Rails
By Michael Sauga

Six years after the Lehman disaster, the industrialized world is suffering from Japan Syndrome. Growth is minimal, another crash may be brewing and the gulf between rich and poor continues to widen. Can the global economy reinvent itself?

A new buzzword is circulating in the world's convention centers and auditoriums. It can be heard at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, and at the annual meeting of the International Monetary Fund. Bankers sprinkle it into the presentations; politicians use it leave an impression on discussion panels.

The buzzword is "inclusion" and it refers to a trait that Western industrialized nations seem to be on the verge of losing: the ability to allow as many layers of society as possible to benefit from economic advancement and participate in political life.

The term is now even being used at meetings of a more exclusive character, as was the case in London in May. Some 250 wealthy and extremely wealthy individuals, from Google Chairman Eric Schmidt to Unilever CEO Paul Polman, gathered in a venerable castle on the Thames River to lament the fact that in today's capitalism, there is too little left over for the lower income classes. Former US President Bill Clinton found fault with the "uneven distribution of opportunity," while IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde was critical of the numerous financial scandals. The hostess of the meeting, investor and bank heir Lynn Forester de Rothschild, said she was concerned about social cohesion, noting that citizens had "lost confidence in their governments."

It isn't necessary, of course, to attend the London conference on "inclusive capitalism" to realize that industrialized countries have a problem. When the Berlin Wall came down 25 years ago, the West's liberal economic and social order seemed on the verge of an unstoppable march of triumph. Communism had failed, politicians worldwide were singing the praises of deregulated markets and US political scientist Francis Fukuyama was invoking the "end of history."

Today, no one talks anymore about the beneficial effects of unimpeded capital movement. Today's issue is "secular stagnation," as former US Treasury Secretary Larry Summers puts it. The American economy isn't growing even half as quickly as did in the 1990s. Japan has become the sick man of Asia. And Europe is sinking into a recession that has begun to slow down the German export machine and threaten prosperity.

Capitalism in the 21st century is a capitalism of uncertainty, as became evident once again last week. All it took were a few disappointing US trade figures and suddenly markets plunged worldwide, from the American bond market to crude oil trading. It seemed only fitting that the turbulence also affected the bonds of the country that has long been seen as an indicator of jitters: Greece. The financial papers called it a "flash crash."

Running Out of Ammunition

Politicians and business leaders everywhere are now calling for new growth initiatives, but the governments' arsenals are empty. The billions spent on economic stimulus packages following the financial crisis have created mountains of debt in most industrialized countries and they now lack funds for new spending programs.

Central banks are also running out of ammunition. They have pushed interest rates close to zero and have spent hundreds of billions to buy government bonds. Yet the vast amounts of money they are pumping into the financial sector isn't making its way into the economy.

Be it in Japan, Europe or the United States, companies are hardly investing in new machinery or factories anymore. Instead, prices are exploding on the global stock, real estate and bond markets, a dangerous boom driven by cheap money, not by sustainable growth. Experts with the Bank for International Settlements have already identified "worrisome signs" of an impending crash in many areas. In addition to creating new risks, the West's crisis policy is also exacerbating conflicts in the industrialized nations themselves. While workers' wages are stagnating and traditional savings accounts are yielding almost nothing, the wealthier classes -- those that derive most of their income by allowing their money to work for them -- are profiting handsomely.

According to the latest Global Wealth Report by the Boston Consulting Group, worldwide private wealth grew by about 15 percent last year, almost twice as fast as in the 12 months previous.

The data expose a dangerous malfunction in capitalism's engine room. Banks, mutual funds and investment firms used to ensure that citizens' savings were transformed into technical advances, growth and new jobs. Today they organize the redistribution of social wealth from the bottom to the top. The middle class has also been negatively affected: For years, many average earners have seen their prosperity shrinking instead of growing.

Harvard economist Larry Katz rails that US society has come to resemble a deformed and unstable apartment building: The penthouse at the top is getting bigger and bigger, the lower levels are overcrowded, the middle levels are full of empty apartments and the elevator has stopped working.

'Wider and Wider'

It's no wonder, then, that people can no longer get much out of the system. According to polls by the Allensbach Institute, only one in five Germans believes economic conditions in Germany are "fair." Almost 90 percent feel that the gap between rich and poor is "getting wider and wider."

In this sense, the crisis of capitalism has turned into a crisis of democracy. Many feel that their countries are no longer being governed by parliaments and legislatures, but by bank lobbyists, which apply the logic of suicide bombers to secure their privileges: Either they are rescued or they drag the entire sector to its death.

It isn't surprising that this situation reinforces the arguments of leftist economists like distribution critic Thomas Piketty. But even market liberals have begun using terms like the "one-percent society" and "plutocracy." The chief commentator of the Financial Times, Martin Wolf, calls the unleashing of the capital markets a "pact with the devil."

They aren't alone. Even the system's insiders are filled with doubt. There is the bank analyst in New York who has become exasperated with banks; the business owner in Switzerland who is calling for higher taxes; the conservative Washington politician who has lost faith in the conservatives; and the private banker in Frankfurt who is at odds with Europe's supreme monetary authority.

They all convey a deep sense of unease, and some even show a touch of rebellion.



If there is a rock star among global bank analysts, it's Mike Mayo. The wiry financial expert loves loud ties and tightly cut suits, he can do 35 pull-ups at a time, and he likes it when people call him the "CEO killer."

The weapons Mayo takes into battle are neatly lined up in his small office on the 15th floor of a New York skyscraper: number-heavy studies about the US banking industry, some as thick as a shoebox and often so revealing that they have enraged industry giants like former Citigroup CEO Sandy Weill, or Stan O'Neal in his days as the head of Merrill Lynch. Words of praise from Mayo are met with cheers on the exchanges, but when he says sell, it can send prices tumbling.

Mayo isn't interested in a particular sector but rather the core of the Western economic system. Karl Marx called banks "the most artificial and most developed product turned out by the capitalist mode of production." For Austrian economist Joseph Schumpeter, they were guarantors of progress, which he described as "creative destruction."

But financial institutions haven't performed this function in a long time. Before the financial crisis, they were the drivers of the untenable expansion of debt that caused the crash. Now, focused as they are on repairing the damage done, they are inhibiting the recovery. The amount of credit ought to be "six times faster than it has been," says Mayo. "Banks now aren't the engines of growth anymore."

Mayo's words reflect the experience of his 25 years in the industry, a career that sometimes sounds like a plot thought up by John Grisham: the young hero faces off against a mafia-like system.

He was in his late 20s when he arrived on Wall Street, a place he saw as symbolic of both the economic and the moral superiority of capitalism. "I always had this impression," says Mayo, "that the head of a bank would be the most ethical person and upstanding citizen possible."



The Blackest of Boxes

But when Mayo, a lending expert, worked for well-known players like UBS and Prudential Securities, he quickly learned that the glittering facades of the American financial industry concealed an abyss of lies and corruption. Mayo met people who recommended buying shares in technology companies in which they themselves held stakes. He saw how top executives diverted funds into their own pockets during mergers. And he met a bank director who only merged his bank with a lender in Florida because he liked boating in the Keys.
What bothered Mayo most of all was that his employers penalized him for doing his job: writing critical analyses of banks. He lost his job at Lehman Brothers because he had downgraded a financial institution with which the Lehman investment department wanted to do business. Credit Suisse fired him because he recommended selling most US bank stocks.

Only when the real estate bubble burst did the industry remember the defiant banking analyst, who already saw the approaching disaster even as then-Deutsche Bank CEO Josef Ackermann issued a yield projection of 25 percent. Fortune called him "one of eight people who saw the crisis coming." The US Congress called on him to testify about the crisis.

Today Mayo writes his analyses for the Asian brokerage group CLSA and they still read like reports from a crisis zone. Central banks have kept lenders alive with low interest rates, and governments have forced them to take up additional capital and comply with thousands of pages of new regulations. Nevertheless, Mayo is convinced that "the incentives that drove the problems … are still in place today."

Top bank executives are once again making as much as they did before the crisis, even though the government had to bail out a large share of banks. The biggest major banks did not shrink, as was intended, but instead have become even larger.

Incalculable Risks

New accounting rules were passed, but financial managers can still hide the value of their receivables and collateral behind nebulous terms like "transaction" or "customer order." Bank balance sheets, British central banker Andrew Haldane said caustically, are still "the blackest of boxes."

Before the crash, investment banks gambled with derivatives known by acronyms like CDO and CDS. Today Wall Street institutions try to get the upper hand with high-frequency trading, with their Dark Pools and millisecond algorithms. Regulators fear that high-frequency trading, also known as flash trading, could create incalculable risks for the global financial system.

When analyst Mayo thinks about the modern banking world, he imagines a character in the Roman Polanski film "Chinatown," California detective Jake Gittes. The man solves one corruption case after another, and yet the crime level in Los Angeles doesn't go down. "Why is that?" he finally asks another character, who merely replies: "Forget it, Jake. It's Chinatown."

It's the same with the banking industry, says the analyst. Individual institutions aren't the problem, he explains. The problem is the system. "The banks are Chinatown," says Mayo, "and it is still the situation today."



The little village of Wimmis lies in an area of Switzerland that still looks quintessentially Swiss, the Bernese Oberland, or Highlands, where Swiss flags flutter in front yards. The local tanning salon is called the "Sunne Stübli" (little sun room) and under "item five" of the latest edition of the town's "Placard Ordinance," posted outside the town administration building, organizations must secure their public notices "with thumbtacks" and "not with staples." Everything has its place in Wimmis, as it does in Markus Wenger's window factory. The business owner, with his thinning hair and crafty eyes, is the embodiment of the old saying, "time is money." He walks briskly through his production building, the size of a football field, passing energy-saving transom windows, energy-saving patio doors and energy-saving skylights, which can be installed between solar panels, also to save energy, a system Wenger developed. "We constantly have to think of new things," he says, "otherwise the Czechs will overtake us."

Wenger could pass for a model businessman from the regional chamber of commerce were it not for his support for a political initiative that's about as un-Swiss as banning cheese production in the Emmental region. Wenger advocates raising the inheritance tax.

For decades, Switzerland was based on a unique form of popular capitalism, which promised small craftsmen as many benefits as those who worked in high finance. Switzerland was the discreet tax haven for the world's rich, while simultaneously laying claim to Europe's highest wage levels -- a Rolex model of the social welfare state.

But the country's established class consensus was shattered by the excesses of the financial crisis -- the $60 billion bailout of its biggest bank, UBS, and the millions in golden parachutes paid out to executives so that they wouldn't go to the competition after being jettisoned by their companies.

Since then, a hint of class struggle pervades Swiss Alpine valleys. A series of popular initiatives have been launched, initiatives the financial newspapers have labeled "anti-business." To begin with, the Swiss voted on and approved a cap on so-called "rip-off salaries." Another referendum sought to impose a ceiling on executive compensation, but it failed. A proposal by Social Democrats, Greens and the socially conservative EVP, to support government pensions with a new tax on large inheritances, will be put to a referendum soon.

'The Wealth of Medieval Princes'

Income isn't the problem in Switzerland, where the gap between rich and poor is no wider than in Germany or France. The problem is assets. No other country has as many major shareholders, financiers and investors, and in no country is as much capital concentrated in so few hands. The assets of the 100 wealthiest Swiss citizens have increased almost fivefold in the last 25 years. In the Canton of Zürich, the 10 richest residents own as much as the poorest 500,000. When a Swiss business owner died recently, his two heirs inherited an estate worth as much as all single-family homes and owner-occupied flats in the Canton of Appenzell Innerrhoden. Wealth has become so concentrated in Switzerland, says the former head of the Zürich statistics office, that it "rivals the wealth of medieval princes."

The government benefits hardly at all from this wealth. The Swiss tax authorities recently collected all of 864 million Swiss francs (€715 million) in inheritance tax, and this revenue source is unlikely to increase anytime soon. To attract wealthy individuals, the cantons have reduced their tax rates to such low levels that even estates worth billions can be left to the next generation without being subject to any taxation at all.

In the past, the Swiss were fond of their quirky high society, whose lives of luxury in places like Lugano were as spectacular as their bankruptcies. But now, a large share of the super-rich comes from the financial industry, and even an upright window manufacturer like Markus Wenger is often unsure what to make of the demands coming from his high-end customers.

A homeowner recently asked Wenger if he could gold-plate his window fittings. And when he was standing in an older couple's 500-square-meter (5,380-square-foot) apartment not long ago, he found himself wondering: How do they heat this?

A Dangerous Path

Wenger is no revolutionary. He likes the market economy and says: "Performance must be rewarded." His support for a higher inheritance tax is not as much the result of his sense of justice, but rather a cost calculation that he explains as soberly as the installation plan for his windows.

This is how Wenger's calculation works: Today he pays about €8,000 a year in social security contributions for a carpenter who makes 65,000 Swiss francs (€54,000). But the Swiss population is aging, so contributions to pension insurance threaten to increase drastically soon. Doesn't it make sense, he asks, to exact an additional, small contribution from those Swiss citizens who hardly pay any taxes at all today on their rapidly growing fortunes?

For Wenger, the answer is obvious. But he also knows that most of his fellow business owners see things differently. They are worried about an "attack by the left" and prefer to support their supposed champion, Christoph Blocher, the billionaire spiritual head of the Swiss People's Party. Only recently, Blocher convinced the Swiss to limit immigration by workers from other European countries. Now Wenger expects Blocher to launch a new campaign under the motto: "Are you trying to drive our business owners out of the country?"

There is more at stake than a few million francs for the national pension fund. The real question is whether wealthy countries like Switzerland should become playthings for their elites. Wenger sees the industrialized countries embarking on a dangerous path, the path of greed and self-indulgence, and he believes Blocher's party is the most visible expression of that. Blocher is pursuing a "policy for high finance," says Wenger. "He is fighting on behalf of money."

The entrepreneur from the Bern Highlands has no illusions over his prospects in the upcoming conflict with the country's great scaremonger. The Swiss are likely to vote on the inheritance tax initiative next year. "In the end," Wenger predicts, "the vote will be 60 to 40 against us."



The Deformation of Capitalism

He was the face of the Reagan revolution, a young man with large, horn-rimmed glasses and thick hair, wearing a suit that was too big for him as he sat next to the hero of conservative America. As former President Ronald Reagan's budget director, David Stockman was the architect of the biggest tax cut in US history and the propagandist of the "trickle-down" theory, the Republican tenet whereby profits earned by the rich eventually benefit the poorer classes.
Thirty years later, Stockman is sitting on a Chesterfield sofa in his enormous mansion in Greenwich, Connecticut, an affluent suburb of New York, where the stars of the hedge fund industry conceal their tasteless mansions behind red brick walls and jeeps owned by private security companies are parked on every street corner.

Stockman is wearing a green baseball cap and a black T-shirt. It's a sunny early fall morning, but the mood in the brightly lit rooms is strangely somber. The rooms are empty, there are boxes stacked in the corners and a servant is wrapping the silverware in the dining room.

Stockman is moving to New York, into an apartment he has already rented in Manhattan. But it isn't entirely clear whether he is only moving to be closer to TV studios and newspaper editors, or if the move signifies a departure from his previous life. It was a life that took him through the executive suites of Washington politics and the US financial industry, a life that has placed Stockman in an almost unparalleled position to recount the aberrations of American capitalism in the last three decades. "We have a financialized, central-bank dominated casino," he says, "that is undermining the fundamentals of a healthy growing capitalist economy," he says.

Ironically, Stockman was the one who wanted to reshape that society, back in the 1980s, when Reagan made him the organizer of his shift to so-called supply-side economics. Like the actor-turned-president from California, Stockman believed in free markets, low taxes and reducing the role of government.

The First Mistake

But Stockman also believed in healthy finances, which placed him at odds with the California contingent on Reagan's team who saw themselves as lobbyists for industry and the military. When Reagan's chief of staff, Donald Regan, declared the phrase "tax increase" to be taboo after the 1984 election, Stockman knew that he had lost. But it was more than a personal defeat. It was a triumph of irrationality, one that led Stockman to permanently disassociate himself from his party's fiscal policies. "The Republican concept of starving the beast is the worst thing in terms of fiscal rectitude that you can imagine," Stockman says today. "It's even worse than the Keynesian models of the Democrats."

The debt policy of the Reagan years was the first mistake of America's conservative revolutionaries, but not the only one. There is another fallacy, one that Stockman also participated in when he went to work for the investment bank Salomon Brothers and later the private equity firm Blackstone after his ouster from the White House.

It was the time when it had become politically fashionable to unfetter the financial industry; a time when then-Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan, Stockman's old acquaintance from the Reagan team, was inventing a new monetary policy: Whenever the economy and the markets showed signs of weakness, he reduced interest rates, and when a large financial institution ran into trouble, it was bailed out with the help of the central bank.

Greenspan's policy of cheap money became a sweet poison for Wall Street, the chief ingredient of the dangerous debt cocktails brewed up by the wizards at London and New York investment banks, with Stockman front and center. The former politician became a virtuoso of the leveraged buyout, a complex financial deal in which in investor buys companies with borrowed money, restructures them or carves them up, and then sells them at a profit.

The deals made Stockman rich, but they also turned him into a junkie. His projects became increasingly risky and the towers of credit he constructed became taller and taller. "I was an addict," he says. "I got caught up in the process."

A Debt Republic

Disaster struck in 2007, when one of his highly leveraged companies went bankrupt. He was indicted on fraud charges, and the bankruptcy cost him millions and damaged his reputation. It became his "road to Damascus experience," as he calls it, when the financial crisis erupted a short time later. He concluded that the same mistakes that had destroyed his company also took the United States to the brink of an abyss: cheap credit, excessively high debt and a false sense of security that everything would ultimately work out for the best.

Stockman again became the rebel he had been at the beginning of his career. He gave up his position in the financial industry, started a blog in which he settled scores with both policymakers in Washington and the financial oligarchy on Wall Street and he wrote an almost 800-page analysis of the "Great Deformation" of US capitalism.

The conservative is furious over his country's transformation into a debt republic of the sort the Western world has never before seen in times of peace. A republic in which going to college is paid for with borrowed funds, as is the next military campaign. A country which hasn't actually dismantled its gigantic pile of debt since the crisis -- $60 trillion -- but has merely redistributed it. While the banks were allowed to pass on a large share of their bad loans to taxpayers, the government is in more debt than ever before.

The mountain of debt appears smaller than it is because the Fed keeps interest rates low. At the same time, though, all this cheap money is driving the United States into a risky race against time, one in which no one knows what will happen first: the hoped-for economic boom or the next crash. Experts, like former Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, believe the current rally in the markets is in fact the precursor to the next crash.

The primary beneficiaries of the market rally seen in recent months are the 10 percent of top earners who own more than 90 percent of financial assets. But for average Americans, the policies instituted in response to the crisis have been poverty inducing. After the crash, millions of US citizens first lost their homes and then their jobs -- and now the social divide in the country is as big as it was in the 1920s. While wealth has grown at the top of the income scale, the median household, or the household that lies statistically at the exact middle of the scale, has become $50,000 poorer since 2007.

In the past, part of the promise of the American dream was that anyone who worked hard enough could eventually improve his or her situation. Today the wealthy enjoy most of the fruits of US capitalism and the most salient feature of the system is the fear of fear. No one knows what might happen if the Fed raises interest rates next year as planned. Will pressure from rising costs cause the government deficit to explode? Will the stock market bubble burst and will financial institutions collapse? Will the economy crash?

Only one thing is certain: In the seventh year of the financial crisis, the US economy is still addicted to debt and cheap money. Worst of all, the withdrawal phase hasn't even begun.

"There is no possibility of a soft landing (with the) markets as completely distorted and disabled as they are today," Stockman says in parting. "There will be some great conflagration. It's just the question of when."



Michael Klaus flips open his mobile phone, which he has been doing a lot of these days. He taps the screen with his finger to display the current yields on 10-year German government bonds. "Germany 10 Year: 0.80," the screen reads, using the abbreviated terminology of the Bloomberg market service. "You see," he says, "yields are down again. They were at 0.84 yesterday."

It's Wednesday of last week. The Frankfurt banker is walking down Friedrichstrasse in Berlin on his way to a meeting with fellow members of the Confederation of German Employers' Associations. The latest labor agreement is on the agenda, but Klaus is still thinking about the number on the screen of his mobile phone, yet another reaction to the most recent plans of Mario Draghi, the president of the European Central Bank (ECB).

Such rates are almost always a reaction to Draghi, at least they have been since the euro crisis got going. According to economics textbooks, security prices are determined by supply and demand. But in the reality of the monetary union, they usually follow the rates set by the top monetary watchdog in Frankfurt. In Klaus's assessment of the situation, "to put it in somewhat exaggerated terms, we live in a central-bank-administration economy."



The ECB's Contribution

For the last quarter of a century, Klaus, a management expert, has been working for Metzler, a traditional, private bank based in Frankfurt. He is now a partner and exudes the self-confident nonchalance of a man who knows that his customers need to show up with at least €3 million to become his clients. His biggest asset is reliability. Unlike the large, powerful banks, his bank would be unable to count on government assistance in a crisis. It is not big enough to be too big to fail.
Partly for that reason, Klaus is particularly bothered by the ECB's development in recent years. He sees it as a kind of hedge fund a kind of ministerial administration. Because Europe's major banks are ailing and national governments are at odds, the ECB has developed into the most powerful bureaucracy on the Continent. It controls interest rates and the money supply, drives prices on the exchanges and financial markets, supervises financial institutions and audits governments. According to Klaus, the European Central Bank has all but "replaced" the European bond market.

It made sense at the time, because it protected the monetary union from breaking apart. But now emergency aid has turned into long-term assistance. The effects of ECB measures are subsiding, and financial experts aren't the only ones to notice that their programs have recently done more harm than good.

That was the case with Draghi's latest package last month. To stimulate lending to small and mid-sized companies, the ECB announced its intention to begin large-scale buying of special debt instruments known as asset-backed securities, or ABS. The only problem is that far too few of these securities exist in Europe.

This leads many experts to worry that lenders will simply fill the gap by transforming bad debt from their portfolios into ABSs and pass them on to the ECB. The investment effect would be next to nothing.

Draghi's plan to provide long-term funds to banks if they can demonstrate that they passed it on in the form of loans to companies or households could also prove harmful. They must only offer proof in 2016, meaning they could first invest the money in government bonds, a surer bet these days than corporate bonds.

Achieving the Opposite

Another recent Draghi measure is particularly dangerous: the "negative deposit interest rate." It means that banks no longer earn anything when they park their money with the ECB. On the contrary, they are required to pay for the privilege.

This too is meant to encourage banks to lend. In reality, however, the measure makes the situation even more difficult for financial institutions like savings banks and cooperative banks, which are dependent on customer deposits. Because of the current low interest rates, these banks already earn almost nothing from the spread between savings and lending rates. If interest rates are pushed down even further, profits will continue to decline. "Ironically, this torpedoes the business model of savings banks and cooperative banks, which have thus far managed to survive the crisis in relatively good shape," says Klaus.

Many experts are worried that with measures like these, the ECB is achieving precisely the opposite of what it wants to achieve. Instead of being strengthened, the credit sector is weakened. Instead of reducing risks, new ones are being created. Instead of liquidating ailing banks, they are kept alive artificially.

The economy has had little experience thus far with the new crisis capitalism, with its miniature growth, miniature inflation and miniature interest rates. But economists learned one thing after large credit bubbles burst in recent years, in Japan and Scandinavia, for example: After a financial and banking crisis, the first order of business is to clean up the banks, and to do it quickly and radically. Institutions that are not viable need to be shut down while the others should be provided with capital.

'Substantial Turbulence'

In Europe, however, this process has dragged on for years, under pressure from the financial lobby. The condition of the industry is now so dismal that experts are using metaphors from the world of horror films to describe it. "Zombie banks" are those that are being kept alive artificially with government bailouts and, like the zombies in Hollywood films, are wreaking havoc throughout Europe. They are too sick to lend money to the real economy but healthy enough to speculate with financial investments. Many banks today, says Bonn economist Martin Hellwig, can only "survive in the market by speculating."

What distinguishes the current situation from the wild years before the financial crisis is that speculators were once driven by greed but have since turned into speculators motivated by need.

Private banker Klaus has seen enough on his market app. He closes the phone with a worried look on his face, and then he utters a sentence in the typically convoluted idiom of the financial industry: "If Europe slips into a recession, it could lead to substantial turbulence in the financial markets."



The man who introduced the concept of "inclusion" into the political debate is sitting in his office in Boston. There are mountains of papers on the round conference table: academic papers, pages of statistics from the International Monetary Fund, and the latest issue of the Anarcho-Syndicalist Review.

Daron Acemoglu is currently considered one of the 10 most influential economists in the world, but the native of Istanbul doesn't think much of titles and formalities. He prefers the relaxed look of the web community: a plaid shirt and jeans, and a Starbucks cup in his hand.

He became famous two years ago when he and colleague James Robinson published a deeply researched study on the rise of Western industrial societies. Their central thesis was that the key to their success was not climate or religion, but the development of social institutions that included as many citizens as possible: a market economy that encourages progress and entrepreneurship, and a parliamentary democracy that serves to balance interests.

The only problem is that such institutions do not arise automatically. They have to be promoted and defended, especially against those social classes and interest groups that use power to seal themselves off from competitors, secure their own benefits and seek to influence lawmakers accordingly.

Extremely well read, Acemoglu can cite dozens of such cases. One is 14th century Venice, where a small patrician caste monopolized maritime trade. Another is Egypt under former President Hosni Mubarak, whose officer friends divided up key economic posts among themselves but were complete failures as businessmen. These are what Acemoglu calls "extractive processes," which lead to economic and social decline.

A Process of Extraction?

The question today is: Are Western industrial societies currently undergoing a similar process of extraction?

Acemoglu leans back in his chair. He isn't one to make snap judgments, and he understands the contradictions of social trends, in the United States, for example. On the one hand, the US is more inclusive today than in the 1960s, because it has abolished racial segregation. On the other hand, says Acemoglu, he has noticed the growing influence of powerful interest groups: the pharmaceutical industry, insurance companies and, most of all, Wall Street. "The problem of money in politics," says Acemoglu, "is particularly acute in the case of the financial industry."

US politicians spend up to 70 percent of their time raising money for their campaigns, and Wall Street is one of their most important sources. Experts have calculated that Bill and Hillary Clinton alone have garnered at least $300 million in donations from the financial industry since the early 1990s.

In addition, money is no longer the only factor shaping the connections between Wall Street and Washington, as Acemoglu demonstrated in a recent study about former US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner. The stock prices of financial firms, with which he maintained close relationships, climbed significantly after his nomination. "The fact that some companies had the ear of the Secretary of the Treasury," Acemoglu concludes, "was, at least by the market view, very valuable."

It has nothing to do with bribery, Acemoglu clarifies. Still, the process highlights the dangerous closeness between the financial industry and the political world, a phenomenon which can be seen elsewhere in the world as well. In Germany, for example, Chancellor Angela Merkel took steps to prevent a Greek insolvency at least partly out of consideration for German banks invested there. The London financial industry, to cite another example, was instrumental in blocking EU plans for the introduction of a financial transaction tax. In Switzerland, billionaire Blocher finances referendum campaigns via his political party. "The rich are extremely powerful," Acemoglu says, "and that is a concern."

Not Enough

Limiting that influence is of the utmost importance, Acemoglu believes, so that today's upper-class, high-finance capitalism can once again revert to being a capitalism of the real economy and the societal center. The necessary economic reforms are not Acemoglu's primary focus, even if the relevant proposals have existed for a long time: a fiscal policy that doesn't just benefit the rich; a monetary policy that knows its limits; a reform of the financial and banking industry that separates the traditional savings and lending business from risky investment banking.

That won't be enough, Acemoglu believes. What is needed, he argues, is a new political alliance that takes a stand against the power of the financial industry and its lobby. He sees the anti-trust movement from the beginning of the last century in the United States as a model. It was a broad coalition from the center of society and finally achieved its great victory after decades of struggle: the breakup of major corporations like Standard Oil.

Will something comparable happen with the big international banks? Acemoglu doesn't know, but he is convinced of one thing: Elitist conferences, at which bankers and fiscal policy experts hold sophisticated conversations about "inclusion," will not bring about change.

The organizers of the World Economic Forum once again sent him an invitation to Davos recently. But Acemoglu declined, as he has done several times in the past. "Solutions to the world's problems are not produced in a meeting between Bill Gates and George Soros," he says. "Renewal has to come from below."

Translated from the German by Christopher Sultan
 
The terrifying idea that the economy might stay stuck forever just got more terrifying - The Washington Post

The terrifying idea that the economy might stay stuck forever just got more terrifying

By Matt O'BrienOctober 23 at 3:34 PM


Great-Depression-Cartoon.jpg

(Alan Light/Flickr)
The U.S. economy has fallen, and it can't get up.

At least that's the way it seems. That's because our slump hasn't really ended, even though the Great Recession officially did more than five years ago. Growth has been low, unemployment is still high, and it'd be even more so if the labor force hadn't shrunk so much. And all this, remember, has happened despite interest rates being zero the whole time. It's the opposite of what we would have expected: big crashes are usually followed by big comebacks. So why has this time been different?

Well, it hasn't — not if you compare it to other recoveries from financial crises. These, as economists Carmen Reinhart and Ken Rogoff have shown, tend to be nasty, brutish, and long: it takes, on average, eight years just to make up lost ground. But even so, this doesn't fully explain the kind of persistent economic weakness we've seen here and most everywhere else. Look at Japan. Its own bubble burst in the 1990s, and since then even zero interest rates haven't been enough to save it from first one, and then two, lost decades. The same is happening to Europe today. Bad recoveries, it seems, have a way of turning into bad economies that never get better.

It's brought back the specter of "secular stagnation." That's the idea, first proposed by Alvin Hansen in 1938, that an economy can get stuck in a never-ending slump if slower population growth means slower investment. Now, the baby boom thankfully proved him wrong, but what if he's right this time? That's the question Larry Summers has been asking for a year now. As he points out, the U.S. economy has needed lower and lower interest rates just to get the investment it needs so that virtually everyone who wants a job can get one — and even then, it's taken bubbles to get us there. But interest rates can't go only lower -- they're effectively at zero. As a result, the not-so-great recovery might be followed by a future that's just as bad.

Hold on. What does it mean that the economy "needs" low rates -- indeed, negative once you account for inflation -- to get to full employment? That shouldn't happen in a world, like our own, where investments have positive returns. Companies should always want to invest, hiring workers in the process.

Well, the answer is one part psychology and another part supply and demand. People, you see, just might be too scared to invest in anything that doesn't look super-safe, unless there's a bubble that looks super-profitable.

But this isn't just a mental problem. Real rates might also be negative, because there's more supply of lendable funds but less demand for investment. Or, in English, there's more money chasing fewer opportunities. It's still a hard story to tell, but economists Gauti Eggertsson and Neil Mehrotra have come up with the first real model of it. And here, according to them, are the three reasons secular stagnation might be more than just a scare story this time:

1. Deleveraging. Imagine a country where households went deeper and deeper into debt, until they couldn't anymore because their biggest piece of collateral — their homes — had collapsed in value. Call it, "America." Well, suddenly they'd have to start paying back what they owe, which would increase savings and push down rates. And, as Eggertsson and Mehrotra argue, this can cast a long shadow, since young people who take on less debt today can save even more when they're older — keeping rates low for quite awhile.

2. Inequality. The rich are different from you and me. They have more money to save. Not only that, but they can afford to save it, too. That's not as true, economists Atif Mian and Amir Sufi point out, for poor households that are much more likely to spend what they have. So if more and more money is going to the people at the top, like it has the past 30 years, then that means there's more and more money being saved, all else equal. And that, of course, pushes interest rates down a little more.

3. Declining population growth. If the workforce doesn't grow as much, then the economy won't either, and we won't need to build as many new houses or offices — which only hurts economic growth even more. It's an accelerator effect. In other words, Alvin Hansen was right that lower population growth can lower investment demand enough for the economy to stay stuck in a permaslump. He was just wrong that it would happen in 1940s America. But it's a real concern now that the Baby Boomers are about to retire. Japan, once again, is the canary in this deflationary coal mine: Its working-age population started declining in 1997, and that, the IMF says, has helped push its inflation rate into negative territory. That's left interest rates at zero, and the economy to languish.

***

Let's put it all together. The best we can say is that something happened, and now the economy needs bubbles or negative real rates to get people to invest enough. It'd be nice if we could be more specific than that, but we can't really. What we can say, though, is this is a problem that might not go away anytime soon. Household deleveraging and low population growth should keep pushing rates down for awhile.

Now let's back up. Why are negative real rates such a bugaboo? Well, because the Federal Reserve might not be able to give them to us. The Fed can't cut rates below zero and it won't let inflation go above 2 percent, so the lowest real rates can go is -2 percent. But if the economy needs lower ones than that — say -7 percent, like it did during the crisis — it will just collapse.

It's a grim picture of a recession stamping on a human face — forever. But it wouldn't be too hard to save ourselves from this dystopian future. All it would take is a higher inflation target that would let real rates go lower, and help households reduce their debt burdens. Immigration reform that boosted the workforce wouldn't hurt either.

Stagnation, in other words, is a choice.
 
While this article is about Italy, it applies to the entire developed world.

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The roots of the Italian stagnation | VOX, CEPR’s Policy Portal

The roots of the Italian stagnation

Paolo Manasse 19 June 2013

It’s currently very trendy in Italy to blame Angela Merkel, Mario Monti, and austerity measures for the current recession. This column argues that while the severity of the downturn is clearly a cyclical phenomenon, the inability of the country to grow out of it is the legacy of more than a decade of a lack of reforms in credit, product and labour markets. This lack of reform has suffocated innovation and productivity growth, resulting in wage dynamics that are completely decoupled from labour productivity and demand conditions.


Italy is currently facing its worst recession in recent history, having lost about 8.5% of GDP between 2007 and 2013. The current situation is, to a large extent, the result of the Eurozone crisis and of the tough fiscal-austerity measures introduced across Europe, and particularly in Italy. Since 2007, the Italian primary balance improved by 3.3 points of potential GDP according to the OECD, almost exclusively through tax increases.

However, in a new CEPR Policy Insight, "The roots of the Italian Stagnation" (2013), I argue that the inability of the Italian economy to pull itself out this recession mainly lies in the legacy of the past ‘lost decade’ of missed reforms in product, labour and credit markets: a large competitiveness gap due to ailing productivity growth and to a dynamics of earnings totally decoupled from productivity and market pressure. The crisis brought to light and made more dramatic the problems Italy has ignored for too long.

Competitiveness …
Competitiveness measures the price of foreign goods relative to that of domestic goods. Different measures of competitiveness (or its reciprocal, the real effective exchange rates, see Chinn 2006 for more) rely on consumer prices or on unit labour costs, and use weights derived from trade shares to compute a ‘foreign goods’ basket. The unit labour costs measure is particularly interesting because it is not affected by firms’ pricing policies which may vary over time and markets.

The unit labour costs-based indexes for Italy (green line) and Germany (blue) are shown in Figure 1. Between the first quarter of 2001 and the last of 2011, unit labour cost in Italy rose by 23 percentage points more than in its trading partners (a real appreciation), while unit labour costs in Germany declined by 9.7 percentage points (a real depreciation). What explains the huge rise in the Italian relative unit labour costs?

Figure 1. Unit labour cost-based real effective exchange rates

manasse%20fig1%2019%20jun.png


Source: Darvas (2012).

… And beyond
I decompose ‘competitiveness’, into its main determinants (see Appendix 1 of Manasse 2013 for a formal definition). A country becomes more competitive if the domestic relative (to foreign) average wage per hour falls, if the domestic relative average labour productivity rises, if the relative social security tax rate paid by domestic employers falls, if the domestic relative sales tax rate rises, and if the (trade weighted) nominal exchange rate depreciates. In this context, a country can improve its competitiveness by a ‘fiscal devaluation’, that is, by raising the VAT tax rate, which exempts domestic exports but hits imported goods, and by cutting social security contributions (which benefits domestic but not foreign producers). Given the focus on Europe, I do not discuss the issues relating to changes in the nominal exchange rates with trading partners, nor the composition of trade and value added, that affect the definition of real effective exchange rates based on unit labour costs.

Hourly labour compensation
Figure 2 shows the evolution of the average cost of one hour of work in Italy and Germany in the last decade. In 2000, the price of one hour of work in Germany was almost double that in Italy (about 19 euro compared to 10.9). In following decade nominal wages per hour converged, although not completely: they rose by 39.5% in Italy against 21.1% in Germany.

Figure 2. Hourly labour compensation

manasse%20fig2%2019%20jun.png


Source: Darvas (2012).

Hourly labour productivity
Labour productivity, however, did not follow wages. Figure 3 shows that labor productivity completely stagnated in Italy (+2.7% in the entire period) while it rose considerably Germany (+16.7%). As a result, net of taxes, unit labour costs in Italy rose about 32.5% more rapidly than in Germany.

Figure 3. Hourly labour productivity

manasse%20fig3%2019%20jun.png


Source: Darvas (2012).

Social-security contributions and consumption taxes
Figure 4 plots the average tax rate on social-security contributions paid by employers. The difference between the levels Germany and Italy contribution rates is striking, although it is quite stable (the Italian rate fell by two points and the German by one point between 2000 and 2012).

Figure 4. Average rate of employer's social-security contributions (%)

manasse%20fig4%2019%20jun.png


Source: OECD, available at OECD.Stat Metadata Viewer.

Consumption taxes show a different dynamics. Figure 5 plots the ratio of VAT revenue to GDP in Italy and Germany. Provided the ratio of consumption expenditures (the tax base) to GDP does not change across countries in a different way, we can infer the relative change in tax rates from the differences in the ratio of tax revenue to GDP (this is because the average tax rate is equal to the VAT revenue over GDP times by GDP over consumption). Starting in 2006, Germany raised its reliance on VAT considerably, thus engineering a ‘fiscal devaluation’ of around one percentage point, while from 2006 to 2009, Italy did the opposite. Over the entire period, however, the changes in tax rates were rather small.

Figure 5. VAT revenue over GDP

manasse%20fig5%2019%20jun.png


Source: OECD, available at OECD.Stat Metadata Viewer.

Explaining Italy’s loss of competitiveness
Table 1 summarises the contribution of these different factors to Italy’s loss of competitiveness. Unit labour costs in 2000-12 rose in Italy by 35.3 percentage points and only by 3.17 points in Germany, resulting in a competitive loss of more than 32%. The largest share of this competitiveness loss is accounted for by the difference in the dynamics of the hourly wage rate, which rose in Italy by 18.4 percentage points more rapidly than in Germany. Since labour was much cheaper in Italy at the beginning of the period, we had partial wage convergence. The problem was that labour productivity did not follow: to the contrary, it grew much slower (by 14 points) in Italy than in Germany. Overall, changes in the structure of taxation had a negligible impact on competitiveness. Finally, if we compare the developments in relative unit labour costs in Italy and Germany, with the dynamics of the real effective exchange rates described in Section 1, we can see that that other factors that affect competitiveness, such as changes of the composition of trade and of the nominal exchange rates (with respect to non-EU trade) did not play a significant role in explaining the Italian competitive gap.

Table 1. A Decomposition of unit labour costs

manasse%20table1%2019%20jun.png


What ‘should have happened’ in Italy as a consequence of productivity-enhancing reforms by its trading partners (largely Germany)? Based on the Dornbusch, Fisher, Samuelson ‘Ricardian’ model (1977), as some industries migrate abroad, the excess labour supply should have reduced the domestic wage rate relative to the foreign wage rate. The fact that the opposite actually occurred exacerbated the effects of the competitiveness gap.

Conclusions
It’s currently very trendy in Italy to blame Angela Merkel, Mario Monti, the euro and austerity measures for the current recession, the worst and most prolonged of the post-War period. While the severity of the downturn is clearly a cyclical phenomenon owing much to the fiscal contraction, its persistence, that is, the inability of the country to grow out of it, is the legacy of more than a decade of a lack of reforms in credit, product and labour markets, which suffocated innovation and productivity growth, and resulted in wage dynamics that were completely decoupled from labour productivity and demand conditions. In a ‘rapidly changing world’, where trade and non-trade barriers were falling and commercial partners were rapidly innovating, the Italian reform inertia has built up a competitive gap that the crisis has brought to the fore with dramatic and, in all likelihood, long-lasting consequences.

Editor's note: This article is based on the author’s presentation at a conference on "Italy’s challenges in the midst of the euro-crisis", a joint workshop of Bruegel and Dipartimento del Tesoro – Ministero dell'Economia e delle Finanze, Rome, 8 May 2013.

References
Chinn, Menzie D (2006), “A Primer on Real Effective Exchange Rates: Determinants, Overvaluation, Trade Flows and Competitive Devaluation”, Open Economies Review 17, 115–143,A Primer on Real Effective Exchange Rates: Determinants, Overvaluation, Trade Flows and Competitive Devaluation - Springer.

Darvas, Zsolt (2012), “Real effective exchange rates for 178 countries: A new database”, Working Paper 2012/06, Bruegel, 15 March.

Keen, Michael, Ruud de Mooij (2012), “Fiscal devaluation as a cure for Eurozone ills – Could it work?”, VoxEU.org, 6 April.

IMF (2011), “Fiscal Devaluation: What is it and does it work?”, Appendix 1, Fiscal Devaluation Monitor, September.

Dornbusch, R, S Fischer, PA Samuelson (1977), “Comparative advantage, trade, and payments in a Ricardian model with a continuum of goods”, The American Economic Review 67(5), December, 823-839.

Phillips, A W (1958), “The Relation Between Unemployment and the Rate of Change of Money Wage Rates in the United Kingdom, 1861–1957” Economica, 25, 283–299.

Manasse, Paolo (2013), working paper, based on presentation at a conference on "Italy’s challenges in the midst of the euro-crisis", a joint workshop of Bruegel and Dipartimento del Tesoro – Ministero dell'Economia e delle Finanze, Rome, 8 May.
 
News In Charts: The Long March to Deflation? | Alpha Now | Thomson Reuters

NEWS IN CHARTS: THE LONG MARCH TO DEFLATION?
October 24th, 2014 by Fathom Consulting

Volatility has returned to financial markets, just as we warned that it might. Consequently, the big picture asset allocation that we set out three months ago has paid off, with bonds outperforming equities more or less across the board. By region, our short-term underweight euro area assets, and short-term overweight US assets has worked well too. Two of the risks that we have been highlighting for some time may now be crystallizing. China’s inability to halt its slowdown, particularly in the property market, has moved it materially closer to a hard landing; while the euro area has continued its slide towards outright deflation and recession. In our view it is the nagging fear that policy makers in these two economies, which together account for almost a third of global GDP, may already have left it too late that is behind the recent reappraisal of risk pricing.



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If this particular cloud has a silver lining it is that we may at last be moving towards the endgame of the great global debt crisis. China’s long economic march – towards what could yet turn out to be a period of global deflation – began in the late 1990′s. After witnessing the turmoil suffered by the likes of Thailand, Indonesia and South Korea during the Asian Crisis, China’s policy makers resolved never to be beholden to the West. Rather than rely on inflows of foreign capital, which is the textbook approach for a developing economy, China instead pursued growth through a combination of investment and net trade. Between 2001, when China joined the WTO, and 2007, China’s trade surplus soared from just over 1% of GDP to more than 10%. As a result, it is now one of the world largest creditors, second only to Japan. Germany lies in third place. The United States, as the world’s largest debtor, was the first to feel the consequences of the great global debt crisis. But time has moved on, and now it is the creditor nations that are suffering. There could yet be a positive outcome for the global economy – but that depends on decisions taken by those countries that have lent too much.

China in the foothills of a hard landing

Before he became China’s Premier, Li Keqiang announced that he had little faith in China’s GDP figures. He preferred instead to look at electricity consumption, at rail freight volumes and at credit growth. We have used these more timely measures of economic activity to construct what we have called a ‘Li Keqiang momentum index’ for China – and it does not look good. Although data released earlier this week showed growth of 7.3% in the four-quarters to 2014 Q3 – 0.1 percentage points ahead of expectations – we do not take them entirely at face value, particularly when our momentum index, based on things that are far easier to measure, is falling so sharply.





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When assessing the situation in China today, it is worth recalling the sequence of events that led up to the global financial crisis of 2008/09. Through the early 2000′s, a period of exceptionally easy money caused US house prices to reach levels that were unsustainable. Prices peaked in 2006 Q1, before starting to fall sharply. Only in 2008 Q1 did the US enter recession, and only at the end of 2008 Q3 did Lehman’s go bust. In China house prices have now fallen for five months in a row. The economy is undoubtedly slowing, and on some measures it is slowing rapidly. China does not have a banking crisis yet – though it may be close. In our latest Global Economic and Markets Outlook, we give 35% weight to a risk scenario where China’s policy makers have already left it too late. China’s mounting non-performing loan problem, which follows years of over-investment, becomes a crisis. Systemically important banks and non-banks fail. Growth slumps, hitting just 2% next year.





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Financial integration between China and the rest of the world is low. If China does suffer a hard landing, it is trade links that will count. Hardest hit will be the commodity exporters, including Australia and much of sub-Saharan Africa, alongside those who export ICT equipment and other capital goods, such as Malaysia and Germany. But potentially more damaging than the direct hit to global GDP will be the consequences for global inflation. We have already seen significant downward pressure on the prices of commodities, including energy and base metals. In our risk scenario, it does not stop there. Measured in US dollars, the price of US imports from China has risen just 4% in ten years. Measured in renminbi, it has fallen more than 20% over the same period. The own-currency price of China’s exports is on a clear downward trend, reflecting that country’s significant over-investment in productive potential. In our hard landing scenario, that trend will accelerate. Combine that with an end to the dollar peg, and a weaker renminbi, and the disinflationary pressures are profound.

The euro area the has most to lose

The euro area recovery ground to a halt in Q2, with output unchanged across the region as a whole. The core countries, by and large, fared worse than the periphery. Indeed, Germany saw an outright contraction, of 0.2% – and monthly activity data hold out little hope of a bounce back in Q3. Core inflation across the single currency bloc has fallen by a percentage point over the past two and a bit year to 0.7% – the lowest on record. The fall in commodity prices means that the drop in the headline rate has been larger still. On this measure, more than one third of euro area countries are already in outright deflation. A hard landing in China would, in our view, push the region into outright deflation, once again raising the spectre of a total break-up of the single currency bloc.



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The rather large elephant standing awkwardly in the middle of the region’s living room is, of course, Italy. We have written at length about that country’s unpleasant debt dynamics. Even if both growth and the primary balance were to return to their long-run averages, Italian debt would be unsustainable at an inflation rate of 0.6% – the rate currently implied by five-year breakevens. A sustained period of outright deflation in our hard-landing scenario would merely bring matters to a head more quickly.

The ECB, together with politicians across the single currency bloc, is fully aware of the brewing Italian debt crisis. Measures announced to date, such as TLTROs, and the ABS and covered bond purchase programmes, will not be enough to generate the inflation that Italy so sorely needs. That is why we continue to expect a programme of sovereign bond purchases, probably in the early part of next year.

Forecast revisions and asset allocation

In our central scenario, to which we attach a 65% weight, not only do European policymakers do the right thing and begin a programme of sovereign bond purchases just in the nick of time, but China’s authorities finally face up to the dangers facing their economy and pull out all the stops to engineer a soft landing. This involves more fiscal largesse, more over-investment in infrastructure, and more imprudent lending. In this environment, China’s re-balancing, when it eventually comes, will be more painful still. But in the near term, a crisis is averted. Growth still dips below 6% next year.

A sharper slowdown in both China and mainland Europe than had seemed likely three months ago means that we have revised down our central projections for growth and inflation more or less across the board. Risks to these central projections are, of course, firmly to the downside.

In this environment, our allocation by broad asset class is little changed – we remain underweight equities and overweight bonds. By region, we are now underweight euro area equities at three-, six- and twelve-month horizons. We retain our overweight position in US equities.







This research note is provided by Fathom Consulting. All of the charts below and many many more, covering a range of topics and countries on both the macroeconomy and financial markets are available in the Chartbook to Datastream users at www.datastream.com. Alternatively you can access Fathom’s Chartbook at www.fathom-consulting.com/TR.
 
http://blogs.ft.com/gavyndavies/2014/10/26/is-economic-growth-permanently-lower/

Is economic growth permanently lower?
Gavyn Davies | Oct 26 15:56

In the years after the Great Recession of 2008-09, forecasts for global economic growth have persistently proven too high. This tendency has been particularly pronounced in the major emerging economies, where there has been a gradual realisation that long term trend growth potential should be revised downwards (seethis blog).

In the developed economies, growth expectations have also proven persistently too high, causing an increasing focus on “secular stagnation”.

Three of my colleagues at Fulcrum have been examining the behaviour of long run GDP growth in the advanced economies, using developments of dynamic factor models to produce real time estimates of long run GDP growth rates. See the summary paper here by Juan Antolin-Diaz, Thomas Drechsel and Ivan Petrella, and the more academic version here [1].

The results (Graph 1) show an extremely persistent slowdown in long run growth rates since the 1970s, not a sudden decline after 2008. This looks more persistent for the G7 as a whole than it does for individual countries, where there is more variation in the pattern through time.

Averaged across the G7, the slowdown can be traced to trend declines in both population growth and (especially) labour productivity growth, which together have resulted in a halving in long run GDP growth from over 4 per cent in 1970 to 2 per cent now.

Some version of secular stagnation does seem to be taking hold. This may partly explain why, for the last five years, forecasts of G7 real GDP growth have been persistently biased upwards.


The factor models reported here are innovative because they allow the long run rate of growth to vary through time, rather than assuming that it is a constant. These methods should should make “nowcasts” more robust to future changes in trend GDP growth. They will also allow economists to track long run GDP growth on a more up-to-date basis than has been possible before, which should be useful for investors and policy makers alike.

The long run growth rate, as identified in the Fulcrum study, is defined as the trend component of the growth rate. Economic cycles will fluctuate around this rate. But the trend component can also change through time.

As Lawrence Summers and Lant Pritchett recently wrote:

The single most robust and striking fact about cross-national growth rates is regression to the mean. There is very little persistence in country growth rates over time and hence current growth has very little predictive power for future growth.

The regression to the mean that Summers/Pritchett have identified is a reversion to the global average growth rate. But that growth rate may also change. The assumption that the mean growth rate is one of the great economic constants in advanced economies is simply wrong.

Economists have often assumed that the long run growth rate will be roughly constant in developed economies, because labour productivity will tend to rise at about 2 per cent per annum for countries at the frontier of technology, and because population growth will be stable for long periods. In the US, for example, the long run growth rate prior to 2000 is usually estimated to be about 3.25 per cent, with many earlier studies showing just one downward break in productivity growth after 1973.

A stable long run growth rate does not, however, emerge from the data. In the US, there seem to have been two recent declines in the long run growth series, clustered around 2005/06 and another around 2010/11. Together, they have taken the long run growth rate down by a full percentage point to 2.25 per cent.

In other developed countries, the decline in long run growth has been even larger, though it has taken place at somewhat different times. The steady decline in the underlying G7 growth rate shown in Graph 1 is a surprise, since economists are accustomed to think of long run growth as broadly stable, with one or two breaks occurring when technology changes. Instead, with differences between countries cancelling out, the deterioration in the growth process looks more like an inexorable trend.

As already noted, the decline in long run G7 GDP growth can be (inexactly) split into two causes. First, there has been a continuous slowdown in population growth (Graph 2). For the G7, this has dropped from 0.6 per cent per annum in the early 1980s to 0.3 per cent now, and it will drop further in coming decades. Germany and Japan have both seen their population growth rates dipping into negative territory.

The second factor has been a slowdown in labour productivity growth (Graph 3). Two phases of deceleration are apparent. In the 1970s, the decline in Japan and Europe is particularly pronounced, while in the 2000s, it appears everywhere.

Overall, G7 productivity growth fell from about 4 per cent to about 2.5 per cent per annum during the 1970s, and then seems to have fallen to about 1 per cent in the early 2000s, before the financial crash. A slowdown in technical progress is the reason usually given for this progressive deceleration in productivity growth.

Conclusion

The slowdown in long run growth in the developed economies therefore seems to have become a permanent fact of life, rather than a temporary result of the financial crash that will disappear over time. But the actual path for GDP has fallen well below even the depressed long run equilibrium path since 2009.

Is this “secular stagnation”? The term is interpreted differently by different schools of economists. Some believe that the disappointments in growth since 2009 have been mainly due to persistent shortages of demand because of balance sheet problems after the Great Recession, while others attribute them to a slowdown in supply potential over a longer period of time.

The Fulcrum study does not attempt to settle this debate. However, if we assume that G7 activity was broadly at trend in 2007, and that long run growth since then has been about 2 per cent, then the current level of GDP is still about 8 per cent below its long run level.

This is one indication of how much damage is left to be repaired by improved demand and supply side policy in the future.

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[1] Dynamic factor models were originally proposed by Domenico Giannone and Lucrezia Reichlin to “nowcast” GDP.
 
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