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WSWS : News & Analysis : North America : US Economy
Federal Reserve conference spotlights financial instability
By Nick Beams
1 September 2000

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This year's annual conference of US Federal Reserve Board officials and
economic policymakers at Jackson Hole, Wyoming threw some further light on the
increasingly unstable financial position of the US economy and pointed to
concerns in ruling circles that a decline in economic growth could have major
political ramifications.

In his address to the conference, Federal Reserve Board chairman Alan Greenspan
warned that �deep-seated antipathy toward free-market competition� could emerge
if economic growth began to falter.

�Any notable shortfall in economic performance from the standard set in recent
years ... runs the risk of reviving sentiment against market-oriented systems
even among some conventional establishment policymakers. At present, such a
shortfall is not anticipated, and such views are not widespread. But they
resonate in some of the arguments against the global trading system that
emerged in Washington, D.C. and Seattle over the past year.�

One of the most noteworthy features of Greenspan's speech was that it
pinpointed what could well be called the �dirty secret� of the US economic boom
and the inflow of foreign capital upon which it has become increasingly
dependent.

According to Greenspan, one of the main reasons why there was a greater level
of high-tech capital investment in the US than in Europe and Japan was that �by
law and by custom, American employers have faced many fewer impediments in
recent years to releasing employees.� In other words, US firms are more
profitable because of the greater ease with which they can carry out mass
sackings and downsizing as compared to their rivals in other countries.

�This difference,� he continued, �is important in our new high-tech world
because much, if not most, of the rate of return from new technologies results
from cost reduction, which on a consolidated basis largely means the reduction
of labour costs. Consequently, legal restraints on the ability of firms to
readily implement such cost reductions lower the prospective rates of return on
the newer technologies and, thus, the incentives to apply them. As a result,
even though these technologies are available to all, the intensity of their
application and the accompanying elevation in the growth of productivity are
more clearly evident in the United States and other countries with fewer
impediments to implementation.�

As a result of the greater rates of profit in the US, Greenspan noted,
�Europeans have been finding investments in the United States increasingly
attractive and have accounted for an increasing share of the expanding total of
foreign investment in US direct and portfolio assets.�

These conclusions have decisive political implications. They point to the fact
that one of the most crucial factors in the continued ability of the US to suck
in the foreign capital needed to finance its growing international debt and
rising balance of payments deficit�now running at around $400 billion per year
or 4 percent of gross domestic product�is the suppression of all independent
struggles by the working class for wages or in defence of jobs.

A paper by economists Maurice Obstfeld and Kenneth Rogoff focused on the
escalation in the US current account deficit in the recent period. After
running at an historically high rate of 1.7 percent of GDP from 1992 to 1998,
the deficit surged to 3.7 percent of GDP in 1999 and is expected to reach 4.4
percent in 2001.

While among the major capitalist nations this was still below the level of
Australia (which recorded a deficit averaging 4.3 percent from 1991 to 1999),
the deficit of $316 billion was �still the largest imbalance in history, in
absolute terms�. This raised the question as to how long the global economic
system could sustain such borrowings from its largest member and what the
consequences would be of a sudden reversal.

The authors pointed out that by the end of the year 2000 the net indebtedness
of the US would be around $1.9 trillion or 20 percent of GDP and that even if
the current US growth rate of 5 percent per annum could be sustained, an
ongoing current account deficit of 4.4 percent of GDP �would imply a sharply
rising foreign debt-GDP ratio into the foreseeable future.�

The paper pointed out that while the 20 percent debt to output ratio seemed
manageable it was �extremely high by historical standards.�

�At the end of the 19th century, when the US was an emerging economic giant,
its debt-GDP ratio never exceeded 26 percent (a high-water mark reached in
1894). If today's trends continue, that figure will shortly be surpassed. One
only has to recall that prior to the Latin American debt crisis in 1980,
Argentina's net foreign debt stood at 22 percent, Brazil's 19 percent and
Mexico's 30 percent, to see that the US external debt-GDP ratio has already
reached a high level.�

The mere fact that the US debt position is even being mentioned in the same
breath as debt-ridden Latin American countries indicates that while official
pronouncements continue to hail the wonders of the �new economy� there are
signs of growing instability.

The Obstfeld-Rogoff paper pointed out that while other advanced capitalist
countries such as Canada, Finland and Sweden had experienced debt to GDP ratios
of 40-50 percent, and even 60 percent in the case of Australia, the
international financial system could not support such a debt level in the
world's largest economy.

�The most obvious �shock' would be a sudden decline in the US growth rate
relative to the rest of the world, perhaps also leading to an investment
collapse. Such a shock might cause foreigners to reduce the flow of savings
into the United States and, at the same time, induce a greater flow of US
savings abroad�both factors would tend to reduce the US current account
deficit.�

In their conclusion, the authors warned that a �sudden adjustment of the US
current account could involve a very large depreciation of the dollar�. Such
depreciations had �wreaked havoc� in other countries and while the US economy
was more resilient �the risk of such a steep and rapid depreciation is real.�
On the other hand, if nothing at all happened and US savings remained at their
current low levels �the US economy might eventually face the worst of both
worlds�a big external debt and a heightened chance that foreign investors panic
and force a sudden end to US foreign borrowing.�

The paper presented by Princeton economics professor and New York Times
columnist Paul Krugman was significant not for any fresh insights it offered
but because it expressed the general bewilderment of the entire bourgeois
economics profession in the face of the increasing instability of the global
capitalist system.

According to Krugman: �Anyone who has followed international financial affairs
over an extended period of time knows the feeling; call it conventional wisdom
d�j� vu. You are listening to or reading about some current debate in which
there are certain propositions that everyone takes as given, and suddenly you
get a dizzy feeling, because you remember the propositions everyone took as
given five or 10, or 15 years previously�and they weren't the same
propositions.�

While the Asian crisis had led to a �torrent of both academic and policy
papers, no canonical model of that crisis had emerged� with economists still
divided over whether it was a �temporary jump to a bad equilibrium� or the
result of an �inherently fragile system.�

�This lack of agreement over the nature of modern economic crises makes
assessing the effects of other factors on vulnerability to crisis difficult, to
say the least: if we can't agree on what happened, how can we say whether
increasing trade or whatever makes it more or less likely to happen again?�

Krugman offered the general conclusion that the �growing integration of the
world economy has increased the risk of financial crises. Basically, growing
potential gains from trade and foreign investment make it increasingly
expensive for countries to maintain controls that might interfere with inflows
of goods and services or deter multinational enterprise. But removing these
controls makes it more likely that countries will develop the financial
vulnerabilities that make financial crises possible.�

While holding out the prospect that the risk of crisis could be weakened and
eventually things would start to get calmer again, the �closer integration of
the world economy is ... likely to mean an increased risk of crisis in the
years ahead� and the �best guess is surely that the ride will continue to be
very bumpy for many years to come.�

What the highly-paid economist euphemistically calls a �bumpy ride� means for
the majority of the world's people, including the population of the United
States, economic chaos, bankruptcies and the destruction of jobs and living
conditions of which the Asian crisis was a foretaste.

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[[For a New Liberty:  The Libertarian Manifesto, Murray N. Rothbard,
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