-Caveat Lector-

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Morgan Stanley's chief economist says:
Date: Sun, 29 Jul 2001 23:54:00 -0500 (CDT)
From: Michael Eisenscher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Organization: ?
To: undisclosed-recipients:;

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From: Charles Brown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
      Subject: From H. Liu

This is not from some radical but Stephen Roach, Morgan Stanley's chief
economist. It is capitalism acknowledgment that politics is all and local
politics at that. The signs are everywhere. The global system has to be
inclusive and equalitarian, two characteristics that capitalism cannot
produce. Each nation would have to move towards socialism in its own way
reflective of its historical conditions and political culture.  But move
they will.

Henry C.K. Liu

The Hollow Ring of Globalization

by Stephen Roach (New York)

It all started in Seattle about 20 months ago. A small band of anarchists
and anti-globalists took to the streets and disrupted a high-profile
ministerial conference of the World Trade Organization. In the months that
followed, similar protests have been aimed at many major international
economic gatherings - from Washington, D.C. and Prague to Quebec City and
now Genoa. In theory, globalization is all about a shared prosperity -
bringing the less-advantaged developing world into the tent of the far
wealthier industrial world. But, in reality, when there's less prosperity
to share, these benefits start to ring hollow. As the world economy now
tips into recession, the assault on globalization can only intensify.

The Genoa summit of G-8 leaders was probably doomed from the start.
Pre-summit disharmony over the Kyoto Protocol on global warming drove a
wedge between the United States and the other major countries of the
world.  The Missile Shield proposal of the Bush Administration was only
slightly less contentious. U.S.-European disagreement over the
GE-Honeywell merger added insult to injury. The world's most powerful
leaders were hardly in a mood of reconciliation. Genoa was aimed at
face-saving - nothing more.

That's pretty much all that was accomplished. The communiqui addressed the
usual potpourri of the world's problems - from AIDS and food security to
the digital divide and transnational organized crime. Special mention was
made of global poverty reduction - underscoring the need to narrow
ever-widening disparities in the world income distribution between the
developed and industrialized world. In that vein, G-8 leaders
congratulated themselves for continued emphasis on debt relief of heavily
indebted poor countries. They also endorsed a call for a new round of
global trade negotiations. As always, the communiqui was noble in purpose
- but lacking in any semblance of actionable initiatives.

But it was also lacking in context. And perhaps that's the most disturbing
aspect of the just-concluded summit. Forget about paying even lip service
to the mounting risks of a synchronous worldwide slowdown - to say nothing
of our own global recession call. The latest strain of emerging-market
contagion - dominated by the nasty turn of events in Argentina - was not
even mentioned. Nothing about currencies either - despite looming
pressures on the yen. Nor was there any discussion of the post-bubble
perils of the U.S. economy.  In short, this was a communiqui that could
have been written years ago - but for a very different world and an
equally different phase in the global business cycle.  The authorities are
evidently in denial - hamstrung by domestic politics and unable to grasp
the context of the broader global economy.

All of this points up the intrinsic tensions of globalization:
Market-driven forces of cross-border economic integration are increasingly
at odds with the politics of fragmentation and nationalism.

As the experience of 1998 taught us, global policy coordination is both
rare and reluctant - it only happens at times of crisis, and on a
piecemeal basis, even then. The authorities have come to believe that the
best global policies are, in effect, a combination of the best collection
of national policies. America's "strong dollar" policy is a classic
example in that regard - as are the desires of Japanese and European
authorities to resist depreciation of their own currencies. Never mind,
foreign exchange rates are relative prices and not all the major
currencies can be strong at once. The internal inconsistency of this
supposition drives the point home - global policies rarely add up.

In the end, it probably boils down to jobs, voters and the social
contracts that bind politicians to these key constituencies. Disparities
in social contracts around the world underscore the inherent contractions
of globalization. Europe's public welfare state and Japan's corporate
welfare state both stand in sharp contrast to America's far more tenuous
social contract. Such disparate political values make it exceedingly
difficult to merge the world economy into one big happy global village.
German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder said it all in Genoa: "We will not
pass laws that create insecurity for employees. We don't want an
American-style labor market."

That pretty much lays down the gauntlet for a world in recession: It's
each country for itself. In the U-shaped world we envision over the next
couple of years, persistently subpar global growth spells rising
joblessness in most, if not all, of the major countries. Intensified
reforms could add to the upside of mounting unemployment. As always,
workers will have the final say about such an outcome in the polling
booth. The Japanese electorate is about to render an important verdict on
Koizumi's agenda of reform. Germany's Schroeder and France's Jospin are
both facing elections next year. And wouldn't it be ironic if George W.
Bush faced the same strain of "jobless prosperity" that cost his father
his job back in 1992? Stranger things have happened.

In the end, I fear we are all probably guilty of taking globalization for
granted. Courtesy of new technologies, trade liberalization, globalized
supply chains and the rapid expansion of multinational corporations, most
believe it is impossible to turn back the clock on globalization. I want
to believe that, as well. But politics could well be the ultimate fly in
the ointment.

The cross-border integration of markets - both financial and real - is
driven by economics, not politics. The economic version of this model
works only if the "outsiders" embrace the market-based system of the
insider - the United States. That can only occur if the outsiders follow
through by drawing up an agenda of structural reform and deregulation -
one that initially displaces redundant workers in an effort to unlock
hidden efficiencies. Without such reforms, globalization pits one system
against another - in effect, a battle of social contracts.

That's when politics enters the globalization equation. Political
disparities can be obscured by upside of the business cycle - especially
if that upside is as powerful as it was in the late 1990s. But the same
political disparities can be unmasked by a downshift in the global
business cycle. That's precisely what's unfolding at this very moment.
Politics versus economics - for a world in recession, that battle may have
only just begun. One can only hope that globalization will not ring
hollow.

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