What the G2 must discuss now the G20 is over
Published: April 7 2009 19:57 | Last updated: April 7 2009 19:57
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Did the meeting of the Group of 20 in London last week put the world economy
on the path of sustainable recovery? The answer is no. Such meetings cannot
resolve fundamental disagreements over what has gone wrong and how to put it
right. As a result, the world is on a path towards an unsustainable
recovery, as I argued last week. An unsustainable recovery might be better
than none, but it is not good enough.

This summit had two achievements: one broad and one specific.

First, ³to jaw-jaw is better than war-war², as Winston Churchill remarked.
Given the intensity of the anger and fear loose upon the world, discussion
itself must be good.

Second, the G20 decided to treble resources available to the International
Monetary Fund, to $750bn, and to support a $250bn allocation of special
drawing rights (SDRs) ­ the IMF¹s reserve asset. If implemented, these
decisions should help the worst-hit emerging economies through the crisis.
They also mark a return to a big debate: the workings of the international
monetary system.

This is the point at which the eyes of countless readers will glaze over. It
is easier for most to believe that the explanation for the crisis is solely
the deregulation and misregulation of the financial systems of the US, UK
and a few other countries. Yet, given the scale of the world¹s macroeconomic
imbalances, it is far from obvious that higher regulatory standards alone
would have saved the world.

This is not just a matter of historical interest. It is also relevant to the
sustainability of the recovery. Fiscal deficits are now generally far bigger
in countries with structural current account deficits than in those with
current account surpluses. This is because the latter can import a
substantial part of the stimulus introduced by the former. The Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development forecasts a jump in US public debt
of almost 40 per cent of gross domestic product over three years (see
chart). It is quite likely, therefore, that the next crisis will be
triggered by what markets see as excessive fiscal debt in countries with
large structural current account deficits, notably the US. If so, that could
prove a critical moment for the international economic system.

Intriguingly, the country raising these big questions is China. This is, no
doubt, for self-serving reasons: China is worried about the value of its
foreign currency reserves, most of which are denominated in US dollars; it
wants to relieve itself of blame for the crisis; it wishes to preserve as
much of its development model as possible; and it is, I suspect, seeking to
countervail US pressure on the exchange rate of the renminbi.

Wen Jiabao, the Chinese prime minister, has noted his country¹s concern over
the value of its vast reserves. At close to $2,000bn, these are almost half
of 2008 GDP. Imagine what Americans would say if their government had
invested about $7,000bn (the equivalent relative to US GDP) in the
liabilities of not altogether friendly governments. The Chinese government
is beginning to realise its mistake ­ too late, alas.

Meanwhile, Governor Zhou Xiaochuan of the People¹s Bank of China has
produced a remarkable series of speeches and papers on the global financial
system, global imbalances and reform of the international monetary system.
These are both a statement of the Chinese point of view and a contribution
to global debate. One may not agree with all he is saying. Yet the fact that
he is speaking out is itself significant.

Governor Zhou argues that the high savings rate of China and other east
Asian countries is a reflection of tradition, culture, family structure,
demography and the stage of economic development. Furthermore, he adds, they
³cannot be adjusted simply by changing the nominal exchange rate². In
addition, he insists, ³the high savings ratio and large foreign reserves in
the east Asian countries are a result of defensive reactions against
predatory speculation², particularly during the Asian financial crisis of
1997-98.

None of this can be changed swiftly, insists the governor: ³Although the US
cannot sustain the growth pattern of high consumption and low savings, it is
not the right time to raise its saving ratio at this very moment.² In other
words, give us US frugality, but not yet. Meanwhile, adds the governor, the
Chinese government has produced one of the largest stimulus programmes in
the world.

Moreover, the vast accumulations of foreign currency reserves, up by
$5,400bn between January 1999 and their peak in July 2008 (see chart),
reflect the emerging economies¹ demand for safety. But since the US dollar
is the world¹s main reserve asset, the world depends on US monetary
emissions. Moreover, the US tends to run current account deficits, for this
reason. The result has been a re-emergence of a weakness discussed in the
twilight years of the Bretton Woods system of fixed exchange rates, which
broke down in the early 1970s: over-issuance of the key currency. The
long-term answer, he adds, is a ³super-sovereign reserve currency².

It is easy to object to many of these arguments. Much of the extraordinary
increase in China¹s aggregate savings is the result of rising corporate
profits (see chart). It would surely be possible to tax and then spend a
part of these huge corporate savings. The government could also borrow more:
at the 3.6 per cent of GDP forecast by the IMF this year, its deficit
remains decidedly modest. It is also hard to believe that a country such as
China should be saving half of its GDP or running current account surpluses
of close to 10 per cent of GDP.

Similarly, while the international monetary system is indeed defective, this
is hardly the sole reason for the world¹s vast accumulations of foreign
currency reserves. Another is over-reliance on export-led growth.
Nevertheless, Governor Zhou is correct that part of the long-term solution
of the crisis is a system of reserve creation which allows emerging
economies to run current account deficits safely. Issuance of SDRs is a way
of achieving this goal, without changing the fundamental character of the
global system.

China is seeking to engage the US. That is itself enormously important.
However self-seeking its motivation, that is a necessary condition for
serious discussion of global reforms. Yet China must also understand an
essential point: the world cannot safely absorb the current account
surpluses it is likely to generate under its current development path. A
country as large as China cannot hope to rely on such large current account
surpluses as a source of demand. Spending at home must still rise sharply
and sustainably, relative to growth of potential output. It is as simple ­
and difficult ­ as that.

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More columns at www.ft.com/wolf

Read and post comments at Martin Wolf¹s blog

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2009
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