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World Economic Outlook

In January of 2009, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) forecasted that advanced economies would not exit the global recession until the middle of 2010.  However, these economies posted, on average, GDP growth of about 2% in 3Q 2009, and growth in emerging economies accelerated to about 8% in 2Q and 3Q – 2% higher than forecasted.  Additionally, global trade and industrial production are on a sharp recovery path.

Although most projections show a continuation of positive growth in 2010, questions about the strength and sustainability of the recovery remain. To provide an economic outlook for the new year, the Carnegie Endowment hosted a distinguished panel of the heads of the economic forecasting unit at their respective organizations.  The discussion provided a number of insights and perspective on the global economic outlook that many may find of interest; to some, a surprise.  For instance, the consensus was that Asia would lead the global recovery, and that high unemployment and high sovereign debt levels would be experienced in the developed economies. The panelists included Hans Timmer of the World Bank; Jörg Decressin of the IMF; Phillip Suttle of the International Institute of Finance (IIF); Desmond Lachman of the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), and Uri Dadush of the Carnegie Endowment.  The panel moderator was Pieter Bottelier of the Carnegie Endowment.

First up, Dadush of the Carnegie Endowment highlighted several factors behind this stronger-than-expected recovery:

§  Most importantly, unprecedented stimulus and financial rescue efforts in advanced economies largely worked.

§  Asia, where fundamentals like financial sectors and public budgets were healthy before the crisis, recovered rapidly, helping pull the rest of the world to recovery.

§  The world succeeded in avoiding large-scale contagion effects, including sovereign debt crises, competitive exchange rate devaluations, and trade wars.

Next, Timmer from the World Bank noted that, despite these improvements, production levels across the world remain 7-10 % below pre-crisis levels, unemployment in many countries is around 10 percent, and fiscal positions have deteriorated significantly: ultimately, there is still a long way to go.

What to Expect for 2010

Suttle of the IIF, and Dadush offered optimistic outlooks for 2010, citing several supporting factors:

§  The growing role of emerging economies, which did not suffer a financial crisis and remain fundamentally strong, will support the global recovery.

§  The corporate sector, particularly non-financial firms in the United States, reacted quickly and aggressively to the crisis, registering better than expected earnings in 2009. As a result, a significant turnaround is expected soon in their labor, inventory, and investment demand, with employment expected to improve by the middle of 2010.

§  Policy will remain supportive. Much of the fiscal stimulus has yet to enter the market, with only one third of the U.S. stimulus package spent so far. Financial rescue is being withdrawn gradually in response to market signals. In addition, as risk appetites increase, low policy interest rates will be much more effective in increasing consumer and investment demand.

The AEI’s Lachman, however, presented a grimmer picture, projecting a very subdued recovery with a return to recession possible in the United States:

§  With unemployment close to 10 percent in advanced economies, low wage and income growth will depress consumption.  The weak private sector will struggle to support the recovery.

§  Banks, still suffering from huge losses, will be forced to cut credit.  Additionally, regional banks in particular will likely be hit by commercial property market weaknesses.

Advanced Versus Emerging Economies

Major differences have emerged between advanced economies and emerging markets. Emerging economies, which are increasingly driven by domestic growth factors rather than exports, are now contributing significantly more to growth and investment than advanced countries.

§  Decressin of the IMF noted that both groups saw growth from 2007 to 2009 contract by approximately 6 percent, falling from 3 percent to -3 percent in advanced countries and from 8 percent to 2 percent in emerging markets. They remained “cyclically” coupled, though the underlying growth rate in emerging markets is much higher.

§  At the same time, there was much heterogeneity among the emerging economies. While Asia—and China in particular—has led the recovery, Eastern Europe (with the exception of Poland) has been less successful, with little sign of recovery.  Latin America paints the most diverse regional picture, with countries like Brazil faring relatively well and others, like Chile, lagging behind.

§  Decressin argued that as long as the differences between the advanced economies, which are weighed down by both structural and cyclical weaknesses, and emerging ones persist, capital will continue to flow to emerging markets.

Panelists agreed that China must evolve to fit this new paradigm. China is already or may soon be the world’s second largest economy and the largest trader and emitter of C02.  Bottelier argued that China must embrace this new role and take a more prominent leadership role in crucial areas such as global trade reform and climate change. Domestically, China should pursue structural reform and a more flexible exchange rate.  Dadush noted that a flexible and appreciated exchange rate is in China’s interest, as it will help rebalance the economy towards consumption and reduce long-run inflationary pressure. However, placing external imbalances at the center of policy dialogue is misguided.

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Philosophy of the Economy – Central Banking System Policies

A central banking system allowed issuing of capital and underwriting of low interest rate loans to countries around the world is possible in the new economic environment of Market Globalization, Great Capitalization and Rising Productivity when all these new developments are capitalized by the most developed countries by imposing new economic regulations and requirements to the rest of the world to enhance the less developed and developing markets’ “security” and make these “markets” play under the same rules, but first, these financial, business and other economic regulations must be implemented by the most developed countries and markets themselves (as explained in Quantum Economics-Philosophy of the Economy’s articles). The central bank lending system is to finance not just less developed and developing countries and markets but also any market which present projects complying with the general policies of Global development such as environmental protection, renewable energies, etc.

World Bank, IMF and WTO as we all know well exist and do what they are thought and tell to do: lend on high interest rates over tight deficit, social expenses and infrastructural matrix; these kinds of policies were well justified by:

  • First, political division in a Cold war World, isolation and political struggles, remoteness and socialization created sometimes great instability and interruptions of international relations to the extend of disrupting paybacks of international loans.
  • Second, closed and independent market structures such as the Communist of Eastern Block countries and China, or the constantly changing market structures of South America, Asia and Africa shifting left or right provoked constant inflations and other economics turbulences as many of these less developed and undeveloped markets had very diverse system of economics consequently effected the needed “security” for the lending institutions therefore the interest rates were to be set high enough to offset the estimated risk.
  • Third, low productivity and market remoteness could bring to a less developed or undeveloped country a “quick” turn to a recession if financial discipline is not followed

Which new economic developments in the world are making low rates lending possible?

Obviously, the ongoing market globalization and rising productivity are setting a prejudice in the ways of global development where new possibilities of central bank financing with “controlled” deficit matrix and “very low” interest rates are possible to be the new economic tools for such global development that could allow “quantum” leaps from underdevelopment onto high tech environmentally friendly development; The new “Quantum Economics-Philosophy of the Economy” is not only “production” related (tighten to) as the Marx’s systems are but it (Quantum Economics-Philosophy of the Economy” is related (tighten to) the equity of (limited and controlled deficit) social and infrastructural expenses, the return on the invested capital and the value of intellectual properties.

What is “quantum leap” in “Quantum Economics-Philosophy of the Economy?”

Quantum leap is a possible jump in economic development based on “artificial (externally)” financed projects for practically financing and loan servicing environmentally friendly projects on a Global scale. Quantum leap is financed by a capital issuing central banking system more like the World Bank and IMF on a very low interest rate, because of the enhanced “security” in a new Global marketplace. This financing is done and promoted through private commercial banks on very low margin and set matrix.

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