Didn't Abe plan to increase taxes, structural reforms , and create demand by 
spending money -- a neoliberal wet dream.  Not that much different from Obama's 
program, except for his weak Recovery and Reinvestment Program.

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Louis Proyect
Sent: Monday, November 17, 2014 11:27 PM
To: Activists and scholars in Marxist tradition; Progressive Economics
Subject: [Pen-l] Japan recession, Europe stagnation cast pall over global 
economic outlook

Washington Post, Nov. 18 2014
Japan recession, Europe stagnation cast pall over global economic outlook By 
Lori Montgomery and Griff Witte

A sharp slowdown in Asia and stagnation in Europe are putting the global 
economy at risk of a prolonged slump, economists say, marked in places by 
sky-high unemployment, sluggish wage growth and some of the worst economic 
conditions in decades.

On Monday, Japan said it had entered its fourth recession in six years - this 
one despite aggressive efforts by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to boost growth. 
Meanwhile, British Prime Minister David Cameron warned that the world's economy 
could be headed toward another disaster.

"Six years on from the financial crash that brought the world to its knees, red 
warning lights are once again flashing on the dashboard of the global economy," 
Cameron wrote Monday in Britain's Guardian newspaper.

Two of the world's economic powerhouses - Europe and Japan - are failing to 
bolster global growth, and their economies appear to be getting worse. With an 
unemployment rate of 11.5 percent, the euro zone is experiencing conditions 
that some economists say echo the Great Depression.

Emerging markets, which helped lift the world out of the ugly downturn that 
followed the 2008 financial crisis, are also lagging. Russia and Brazil have 
been dogged by recession, and China's double-digit growth has slowed rapidly as 
the country has matured and a speculative real estate bubble has let out air.

China is "the thousand-pound gorilla in the emerging world and a big, big 
question mark," said Nariman Behravesh, chief economist at the consulting firm 
IHS.

Conditions differ markedly from the financial meltdown of 2008 that sparked a 
worldwide crisis. "It's not like the world is leveraged up and ready to plunge 
back into the abyss," said Jay Bryson, a global economist at Wells Fargo. "The 
challenges today are a lot different."

For the United States, the developments have raised few concerns. The U.S. 
economy is growing at a solid pace of 3 percent per year, and falling gasoline 
prices have pumped roughly $80 billion into American wallets. The Dow Jones 
industrial average rose 13 points Monday, and the Standard & Poor's 500-stock 
index edged toward a record high as lucrative mergers at home obscured bad news 
abroad.

Still, exports represent 13 percent of the U.S. economy and have slumped a bit, 
the first sign that sustained weakness abroad could limit the American recovery.

Economists said stagnation and political paralysis in Europe are perhaps the 
most worrisome features on the global landscape. In the Guardian, Cameron 
described the euro zone as "teetering on the brink of a possible third 
recession, with high unemployment, falling growth and the real risk of falling 
prices too."

Add in stalled trade talks, conflict in the Middle East, fighting in eastern 
Ukraine and the alarming spread of the Ebola virus, Cameron warned, and the 
world is functioning against "a dangerous backdrop of instability and 
uncertainty."

Cameron's bleak prognosis came at the end of the Group of 20 summit in 
Brisbane, Australia, where leaders of the world's biggest economies struggled 
with strategies for kick-starting growth. Similarly negative pronouncements 
have echoed from other sources in recent days, particularly in relation to 
Europe.

Mark Carney, the governor of the Bank of England, told reporters in London last 
week that "a specter is now haunting Europe - the specter of economic 
stagnation." International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde has warned of 
"the risk of a new mediocre" in Europe, with low growth, low inflation, high 
unemployment and high debt.

On Monday, European Central Bank President Mario Draghi presented European 
lawmakers with a list of policy recommendations to stimulate growth, arguing 
that monetary policy alone cannot solve the problem.

Draghi said that "2015 needs to be the year when all actors in the euro area - 
governments and European institutions alike - will deploy a consistent common 
strategy to bring our economies back on track."

Leaders in Europe and the United States have urged Germany - Europe's largest 
economy, teetering on the edge of recession itself - to boost public spending. 
But German leaders continue to insist that other struggling euro-zone countries 
need to restructure their economies first.

Europe is hardly the only sick patient. Government figures released Monday in 
Japan showed the world's third-largest economy shrinking for the second quarter 
in a row, with gross domestic product falling by 1.6 percent.

The report stunned forecasters, who had been expecting solid 2 percent growth, 
and served to undermine Abe's plan for reviving an economy that has suffered 
two decades of stagnation, falling prices and dangerously high government debt.

That plan included an increase in the national sales tax in April - the first 
in 17 years - that slowed consumer spending far more than expected, Japan's 
economy minister acknowledged Monday.

"The numbers are absolutely awful, beyond-description awful," said Peter 
Tasker, a longtime analyst of Japan's economy and a supporter of Abe's 
policies. "It's clear that the tax hikers and the fiscal hawks have tanked the 
economy."

In response, Abe is expected to announce Tuesday that he will dissolve the 
lower house of Japan's parliament and call a snap election for December, 
enabling him to delay a second sales tax increase scheduled for the fall of 
2015.

By contrast, India, Britain and the United States have been among the world's 
bright spots. U.S. job growth has been steady for a full year, and unemployment 
is back to pre-crisis levels. With oil prices plummeting, economists said even 
a recession in Europe probably would not knock the United States off track.

"Things would have to get really bad in the global economy for the U.S. 
economy to begin to suffer again," Behravesh said.

Still, "we have to be on guard about possible ramifications for the U.S. 
economy," said Joel Prakken, senior managing director of the forecasting firm 
Macroeconomic Advisers, which has already knocked a few points off its 
projections for U.S. growth in 2015.

Prakken called "a freshened round of financial turbulence the most insidious 
threat."

"Financial contagion," he said, "knows no boundaries."

Witte reported from London. Anna Fifield in Tokyo contributed to this report.

Lori Montgomery covers U.S. economic policy and the federal budget, focusing on 
efforts to tame the national debt.
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