I like this guy Billy.  He seems to get the big picture, lists the issues,
but he has the humility to pull back from a dramatic prediction.

 

Chris 

 

 

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of [email protected]
Sent: Sunday, April 15, 2012 9:37 AM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: [RC] Walter Russell Mead analysis of world economy --turmoil ahead

 

 

 

Via Meadia

Walter Russell Mead

 

April 14, 2012 


The World Economy: Back on the Brink?


Via Meadia isn't an economic forecasting site; if I knew what the world
economy was going to be doing tomorrow I would be too busy making zillions
by trading exotic financial instruments the rest of you bozos know nothing
about to share my secret insights with the rest of you. (Indeed, one useful
thing to remember about all economic talking heads and pundits: these are
people who think they can make more money by giving their opinions rather
than acting on them. If you knew what markets were going to do, you would
have no incentive to share that knowledge.)

But for what it's worth, the world economy is beginning to look a little
shaky again. The two problems: Europe has papered over its euro difficulties
but hasn't solved anything, and China is reaching the limits of its old
development model without having found a way to shift to something new.

In past decades, the relative health of the US economy might have provided
enough of a global stimulus to overcome these problems, but the train is too
long and the hill is too steep for the old locomotive to pull the world
economy to the top of the mountain on its own. In Pharaoh's dream, the seven
lean cows devoured the seven fat ones and that is our fear today: that the
parts of the world economy will bring down the successful ones.

The danger is greater because the US is in the middle of its transformation
from a blue model, industrial economy to something postindustrial that we
don't yet understand. The interaction of Asian, European, Latin American and
Anglosphere economies also confounds policy makers. We've never had anything
quite like the global economy in view today, with its mix of huge surplus
and titanic deficit economies, with its fiat money and globally integrated
financial markets. The experts and pundits stroke their chins very
convincingly on TV, but neither they nor anybody else really grasps either
the big picture or all the moving parts that make up the world economy
today.

The immediate problem is that Europe's latest dose of pain meds is beginning
to wear off. Investors are looking at the Portuguese, Spanish and Italian
economies and they don't like what they see. Nor should they. Bond yields
are rising sharply across Europe as people think more clearly about just how
unlikely it is that the current mix of fiscal austerity and financial market
life support can generate the kind of growth Europe needs.

News that China's GDP growth has slowed more dramatically than expected
<http://www.forbes.com/sites/robertolsen/2012/04/13/chinas-economic-growth-s
lowest-in-nearly-3-years/>  also has investors worried. The political
turmoil over the Bo Xilai scandal isn't helping; China's model requires a
strong, technocratic economic management team that is able to act
decisively. China's leaders look more embattled than usual, and its not
clear if the government will be able to stick to its economic playbook as it
seeks to keep the population sweet.

How all this plays out in the world's volatile stock markets is not
something Via Meadia can predict, unfortunately. And the long term outlook
in our view remains bright.

There is a vital truth about the economy that doomsayers often forget:
People want to make money, are constantly looking for ways to make money,
and are creative and adaptive. More people than ever before live in
countries where they are allowed to try to improve their situation in life,
and where governments are more focused on creating conditions favorable to
growth. We have more scientific and technical knowledge than ever before,
and the information revolution in particular is creating new industries and
new opportunities with breathtaking speed.

Given all that, optimism about the medium to long term seems like the right
approach. But with the potential for rapid, transformative growth also comes
the danger of growth pains. Between the Civil War and 1910 the US became the
world's largest and most advanced economy and huge new cities and industries
sprang up across the country. That was also a time of painful depressions,
sudden economic crises that ruined investors and bankrupted companies, and
of social conflict and economic inequality.

Good news for the big picture does not translate automatically into smooth
and predictable economic progress in the short term. In fact, the better the
big picture looks, and the more powerful are the forces pushing the world
economy toward major growth and change, the more market turmoil we are
likely to experience - and the harder it is for policy makers to know what
to do.

Growth hurts. Change brings risk. Welcome to our brave new world.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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