New world order will emerge in 2009, with U.S. plunging

 

By Paul Kennedy

01/05/2009

 

 Every so often in the history of international affairs, a great
transnational turbulence shakes the foundations of the world and brings many
of its older structures tumbling to the ground, as we witnessed in 1919,
1945 and 1989. In the confusion and babble that follow, it’s difficult to
see through the dust and recognize the shape of the altered strategic
landscape.

Peering through the wreckage of the past year’s financial crisis, it seems
clear that every nation was a loser in 2008. The world’s developed economies
have taken a heavy beating, whether measured by their collapsing industrial
production, tumbling exports, surging unemployment, frozen credit markets or
the near- paralysis of maritime trade.

Yet we also hear cries of distress across the globe. Vladimir Putin’s proud
Russia is reeling toward internal collapse. China is sending factory workers
home to the countryside. The International Monetary Fund is trying to rescue
Iceland and Ukraine from economic oblivion. Brazil’s currency is plummeting
against the U.S. dollar. And the brief honeymoon for commodity-exporting
African countries is over. Which national economy didn’t take a blow to the
head in this annus horribilus?

When the dust settles, will we see all countries equally battered, like the
streets of Dresden after the Allied bombings in February 1945? Will every
power simply have taken several steps backwards, so that the “order of
things” that existed in January 2008 will be the same in December 2009? I
doubt it.

In the midst of general turmoil, there are always relative winners and
losers. Those who are likely to lose most in the coming year will include
Russia, Venezuela and Iran (too dependent on oil), most of Africa and Latin
America (too tied to commodities), and Japan, Taiwan and South Korea (too
wedded to exports, shipping, electronics).

By contrast, and unless it falls into the trap of a Pakistan war, India will
advance; none of its banks (so far) are on the Bear Stearns Cos. track.
China will take hits, but that probably means an increase in economic growth
of 5 percent or 6 percent, deriving more from domestic development, and less
from cheap exports.

Europe’s prospects for 2009 are mixed, which is simply another way of saying
that here, too, there will be relative winners and losers. Norway will ride
the storm on its still-massive currency reserve and the rest of Scandinavia
has strength in depth — unlike the less competitive economies of East and
Central Europe. Germany’s combination of ultra-high-quality production,
superb infrastructure and financial caution (few Germans use credit cards:
Americans, take note!) give it strengths that are lacking in the U.K.,
France, Italy, Spain, Greece and other European countries that fell for easy
credit and large government deficits. Prussian fiscal rectitude will keep
the euro high, and compound the dollar’s weaknesses.

The biggest question concerns the United States. My instinct tells me it
will lose ground in 2009. I simply don’t see how the Treasury can print $1
trillion to cover deficit spending, offer those bills at very low interest
rates, and expect foreigners (not Americans, because we don’t have the
savings) to buy them, persuading the world to keep afloat its greatest
debtor since Phillip II of Spain. Why should sensible Chinese investors do
that when they can buy Swiss bonds, gold, or Scottish real estate? Yet if
Asians decline to buy tens of billions of Treasuries each month in 2009,
U.S. interest rates will have to go up again.

So: India up, China up, Germany up (all relatively). The developing world
down, Russia down, most of Europe and Japan down, and President Barack
Obama’s America down and down. I’d like to believe I am very wrong. I worry
that I’m not.

Paul Kennedy is professor of history and director of International Security
Studies at Yale University. He is the author/editor of 19 books, including
The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers. He wrote this column for Bloomberg
News.

 
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