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Risks
to the Global Economy in 2019
Over the
course of this year and next, the biggest economic risks will emerge in those
areas where investors think recent patterns are unlikely to change. They will
include a growth recession in China, a rise in global long-term real interest
rates, and a crescendo of populist economic policies.
CAMBRIDGE – As Mark Twain never said, “It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into
trouble. It’s what you think you know for sure that just ain’t so.” Over the
course of this year and next, the biggest economic risks will emerge in those
areas where investors think recent patterns are unlikely to change. They will
include a growth recession in China, a rise in global long-term real interest
rates, and a crescendo of populist economic policies that undermine the
credibility of central bank independence, resulting in higher interest rates on
“safe” advanced-country government bonds.1
A significant Chinese slowdown may already be
unfolding. US President Donald Trump’s trade war has shaken confidence, but
this is only a downward shove to an economy that was already slowing as it
makes the transition from export- and investment-led growth to more sustainable
domestic consumption-led growth. How much the Chinese economy will slow is an
open question; but, given the inherent contradiction between an ever-more
centralized Party-led political system and the need for a more decentralized
consumer-led economic system, long-term growth could fall quite dramatically.1
Unfortunately, the option of avoiding the
transition to consumer-led growth and continuing to promote exports and
real-estate investment is not very attractive, either. China is already a
dominant global exporter, and there is neither market space nor political
tolerance to allow it to maintain its previous pace of export expansion.
Bolstering growth through investment, particularly in residential real estate
(which accounts for the
lion’s share of
Chinese construction output) – is also ever more challenging.1
Downward pressure on prices, especially outside
Tier-1 cities, is making it increasingly difficult to induce families to invest
an even larger share of their wealth into housing. Although China may be much
better positioned than any Western economy to socialize losses that hit the
banking sector, a sharp contraction in housing prices and construction could
prove extremely painful to absorb.
Any significant growth recession in China would hit
the rest of Asia hard, along with commodity-exporting developing and emerging
economies. Nor would Europe – and especially Germany – be spared. Although the
US is less dependent on China, the trauma to financial markets and politically
sensitive exports would make a Chinese slowdown much more painful than US
leaders seem to realize.1
A less likely but even more traumatic outside risk
would materialize if, after many years of trend decline, global long-term real
interest rates reversed course and rose significantly. I am not speaking merely
of a significant over-tightening by the US Federal Reserve in 2019. This would
be problematic, but it would mainly affect short-term real interest rates, and
in principle could be reversed in time. The far more serious risk is a shock to
very long-term real interest rates, which are lower than at any point during
the modern era (except for the period of financial repression after World War
II, when markets were much less developed than today).
While a sustained rise in the long-term real
interest rate is a low-probability event, it is far from impossible. Although
there are many explanations of the long-term trend decline, some factors could
be temporary, and it is difficult to establish the magnitude of different
possible effects empirically.
One factor that could cause global rates to rise,
on the benign side, would be a spurt in productivity, for example if the
so-called Fourth Industrial
Revolution starts
to affect growth much faster than is currently anticipated. This would of
course be good overall for the global economy, but it might greatly strain
lagging regions and groups. But upward pressure on global rates could stem from
a less benign factor: a sharp trend decline in Asian growth (for example, from
a long-term slowdown in China) that causes the region’s long-standing external
surpluses to swing into deficits.
But perhaps the most likely cause of higher global
real interest is the explosion of populism across much of the world. To the
extent that populists can overturn the market-friendly economic policies of the
past several decades, they may sow doubt in global markets about just how “safe”
advanced-country debt really is. This could raise risk premia and interest
rates, and if governments were slow to adjust, budget deficits would rise,
markets would doubt governments even more, and events could spiral.
Most economists agree that today’s lower long-term
interest rates allow advanced economies to sustain significantly more debt than
they might otherwise. But the notion that additional debt is a free lunch is
foolish. High debt levels make it more difficult for governments to respond
aggressively to shocks. The inability to respond aggressively to a financial
crisis, a cyber attack, a pandemic, or a trade war significantly heightens the
risk of long-term stagnation, and is an important explanation of why most
serious academic studies find that very high debt levels are associated
with slower
long-term growth.
If policymakers rely too much on debt (as opposed
to higher taxation on the wealthy) in order to pursue progressive policies that
redistribute income, it is easy to imagine markets coming to doubt that
countries will grow their way out of very high debt levels. Investors’
skepticism could well push up interest rates to uncomfortable levels.1
Of course, there are many other risks to global
growth, including ever-increasing political chaos in the United States, a messy
Brexit, Italy’s shaky banks, and heightened geopolitical tensions.1
But these outside risks do not make the outlook for
global growth necessarily grim. The baseline scenario for the US is still
strong growth. Europe’s growth could be above trend as well, as it continues
its long, slow recovery from the debt crisis at the beginning of the decade.
And China’s economy has been proving doubters wrong for many years.
So 2019 could turn out to be another year of solid
global growth. Unfortunately, it is likely to be a nerve-wracking one as well.1
Writing for PS since 2002
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Kenneth Rogoff, Professor of Economics and Public Policy at Harvard
University and recipient of the 2011 Deutsche Bank Prize in Financial
Economics, was the chief economist of the International Monetary Fund from 2001
to 2003. The co-author of This Time is
Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly, his new book, The Curse of Cash, was
released in August 2016.
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