-Caveat Lector-

Published on Monday, September 16, 2002 in the Guardian/UK
Oiling the Wheels of War:
Iraq Campaign May Spark Global Recession
Editorial

History is not always a reliable guide to the future. But the fact that
every global recession in the past 30 years has been preceded first by a
crisis in the Middle East and then a spike in the oil price does little to
reassure those fretting over the economic consequences of a war on Iraq. It
may explain why the International Monetary Fund, a body not given to
exaggeration, warned last week that ousting Saddam Hussein would not be "a
very healthy development", and one that could lead to the panic selling of
shares. The fund's image of "fear feeding on fear" on the world's stock
exchanges emphasizes that the devastation would not be confined to the
Middle East. Although there may be political capital in equating the Iraqi
leader to Hitler there is none in comparing world war two's reinvigoration
of the US economy to any putative boost that America might enjoy if it
bombed Baghdad. The assessment this time is clearly tilting towards the view
that a strike against Saddam would be more of a burden than a boon.
The reason is oil, on which America runs. Contrary to hawkish opinion, a
battle-scarred Iraq - even a post-Saddam one sympathetic to the US - will
not instantly produce millions of barrels of oil, despite the country's
extensive reserves. So oil is unlikely to head down quickly apart from
shedding the "war premium" currently built into its price. But if the Iraqis
lashed out at Saudi Arabian and Kuwaiti installations crude, according to
former Saudi minister Sheikh Yamani, could end up costing $100 a barrel.
This would not help Opec, whose members meet this week, as high prices hurt
oil-consuming, and hence oil-producing, nations. Experts reckon that a $10
rise in the price of oil cuts more than 0.2% off growth in America and
Europe.

Any draining away of growth will come at a time when the strength of the
biggest economies is ebbing. American consumers are still spending on cheap
Jeeps and property, but the stock market is slipping ominously downwards.
George Bush's America is attracting less foreign direct investment, and is
likely to produce fewer patents than under Bill Clinton. The result is that
the country is moving from economic miracle - 3% growth a year for a
decade - to mirage in one presidency. If the US economy is spluttering,
other economic superpowers are sinking. Europe is struggling to export
goods, and consumers appear reluctant to spend. Japan, the land of falling
prices and wages, appears incapable of reviving its own fortunes, let alone
the world's.

Previous experience may not be enough to avert disaster, as no recession is
the same as the last. Crises in the past have been marked by high inflation
and low growth, but today the shadow of deflation is being cast. Too many
airline seats, too much steel and too much unused airtime on telephones all
point to a collapse in prices in these goods. Rising oil prices at first
spark inflation, but end up being deflationary by reducing purchasing power.
These two conditions could usher in a very different downturn - one which
policymakers have not dealt with in Britain since the 1920s and in the US
since the 1930s. The White House ought to be worrying about how to reflate
the economy when its parlous state will have supplanted the war on terror in
opinion polls. War will do more harm than good to the US economy, and it is
foolish to suggest otherwise. The 1973 Arab-Israeli conflict, the Iranian
revolution and the first Gulf war all punctured global growth. The last of
these saw George Bush's father win a war and lose an election. If the
president takes the battle to Iraq, he risks history repeating itself.

Guardian Newspapers Limited 2002

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