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From: info <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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Sent: Thursday, March 29, 2001 9:58 AM
Subject: [mobilize-globally] Warnings of Global Recession Grow Louder


Saturday March 24 7:37 AM ET
Warnings of Global Recession Grow Louder

 By Daniel Sternoff

NEW YORK (Reuters) - As global stock markets topple, the Japanese and
U.S.
economies sputter and financial seams begin to pop in major emerging
markets, anxiety is bubbling into financial markets that the world may
face
its first global recession in a quarter century.

The alarm is not yet full-throated. Analysts are slashing forecasts
for
world growth but still looking for modest global expansion in 2001.

But the distress signals were strong enough this week to spur central
banks
around the world to warn that their home-grown problems may be
exacerbated
by a darkening international outlook.

``The concern is that a synchronous global slowdown can accumulate
into a
recession. We would say the odds are pretty high at 1 in 4,'' said
Allen
Sinai, chief global economist at Decision Economics.

The world's top economies have not simultaneously fallen into
recession
since 1974, after the 1973 oil shock battered industrialized nations.

Different business cycles and regional diversification have generally
ensured that when one part of the world slows, another center has been
able
to pick up the slack.

But the accelerated globalization of markets, firms and industries in
the
1990's means world business cycles are more closely intertwined,
leaving the
world more susceptible to common shocks.

And a potent cocktail of rising global interest rates in 1999 and
soaring
energy costs, tumbling equity prices and a world technology slump in
2000
appear to have combined to engineer a world slowdown in 2001.

The problem is that when all ships begin to sink, there is no one left
to
throw the world a lifeline.

``World economies are now so tightly intertwined in trade and finance
and
even in policy that if a big chunk of the world economy goes down, it
can
bring down the whole,'' Sinai said.

International Monetary Fund (news - web sites) Managing Director Horst

Koehler this week said the world economy was slowing much faster than
expected. He forecast 2001 world growth of 3.4 percent -- a benign
expansion -- but that is well below a September forecast of 4.2
percent
growth, and 4.8 percent in 2000.

Many private analysts have lower forecasts, and expectations are
clearly
headed down.

Engine Troubles

In the 1990's, the booming United States was the backbone of global
stability as Japan drifted in and out of recession, financial crises
roiled
Southeast Asia and Latin America, and Europe slogged ahead with
lukewarm
growth.

But Japan's economy is again at the brink, and a number of analysts
see the
United States at real risk of contraction in the first half of 2001.

The two powerhouses together comprise more than 40 percent of world
output.
Add mounting troubles in Asian nations reliant on Japanese and U.S.
export
markets and investment capital, and some 55 percent of the world
economy is
in the doldrums.

Europe is in better health, but is starting to stumble and looks an
unlikely
candidate to do the world's heavy lifting.

``What happens in synchronous downturns is they tend to be long and
deeper
because there is no locomotive to pull anyone out of it,'' said
Anirvan
Banerji, director of research at the Economic Cycle Research Institute
in
New York.

Fed Looks Overseas

The U.S. Federal Reserve (news - web sites), which cut interest rates
three
times this year to cope with an industrial slump and sagging consumer
confidence, this week warned of external risks to U.S. growth for the
first
time since the 1998 Russian financial crisis threatened a global
credit
crunch.

The irony is that America is to a large degree importing weakness
which it
exported overseas in the first place.

``I think a good share of the worldwide economic slowdown is
originating
here,'' said Princeton University economist Alan Blinder, a former Fed

vice-chairman.

Japan, the world's second largest economy, is struggling with
self-inficted
problems of deflation, massive public sector debt, and a banking
sector
saddled with bad loans which foreign investors fear could destabilize
global
financial markets.

But the Bank of Japan, which this week drove short-term interest rates
to
zero, said this week slumping exports and sickly stock markets had now

choked off the country's tepid economic recovery.

European Central Bank Chief Economist Otmar Issing on Thursday
reversed
months of upbeat ECB comments that the euro zone was sufficiently
independent of exports to weather the troubles brewing overseas.

Issing said the central bank would revise down its forecasts for euro
zone
growth of nearly 3 percent this year due to a significant worsening in
the
world environment. Analysts now look for the ECB to lower interest
rates
soon.

``Everywhere you look, the U.S. locomotive has developed engine
trouble, and
the rest of the world is already feeling it,'' said Roger Kubarych,
senior
fellow for international economics at the Council on Foreign
Relations.

The risk is that international developments could feed into a vicious
cycle.

For example, Kubarych said that while a weakening Japanese yen could
alleviate deflation problems and help Japan's exporters, it would
likely
pressure other Asian currencies as well, piling pain on already ailing
U.S.
industry.

``It's a pretty nasty situation,'' Kubarych said.

Emerging Crises

Financial turbulence in large emerging market countries have revived
bitter
memories of the global market contagion sparked by Asian and Russian
crises
in the late 1990's.

Turkey roiled world markets last month when it was forced to devalue
its
lira currency, in effect scuppering an International Monetary Fund
disinflation plan.

A financial and political storm in Argentina is sending shockwaves
through
markets in Brazil, highlighting the indebted Latin American giants'
dependency on international borrowing.

While these strains have yet to touch off global contagion, a deep
U.S.
slowdown could turn today's problems into tomorrow's crisis.

``We are only in the second inning here. It is a long game. If the
U.S.
economy stays sloppy for the rest of this year or if there is a 'false
dawn'
recovery, you don't think there is going to be a hit on other
countries?''
Kubarych said.
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