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In spite of all the
talk about the 'global economy' and the importance of
'global action', economic recovery for the United States
depends mostly on our own actions
Mark Weisbrot
"This is the day that the world came together, to fight back
against the global recession. Not with words but a plan for
global recovery and for reform and with a clear timetable,"
said U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown at the end of the G-20
Summit last week.
This was somewhat exaggerated. There was no plan for global
recovery or even a commitment to increased fiscal stimulus.
It remains to be seen what kinds of reforms will actually
materialize.
But recovery and reform will not necessarily hinge on what
the G20 agrees to do. Roll back to the last major economic
crisis - that which began in Asia in 1997 and spread to
Russia, Brazil, Argentina, and other countries. In September
1998 Fed Chair Alan Greenspan warned that "it is just not
credible that the United States can remain an oasis of
prosperity unaffected by a world that is experiencing
greatly increased stress."
But the U.S. economy kept booming right through the crisis,
as a result of consumption driven by the stock market
bubble. This continued until the bubble burst, pushing the
U.S. economy into recession in 2001.
It should not be surprising that the United States economy
has the potential to grow even while many other economies
are contracting. Eighty-seven percent of what is produced in
the United States is consumed here. To be sure, the other
thirteen percent can make a difference - but U.S. recessions
are not brought on by falling exports. It is not comparable
to the 47 percent of GDP that Germany exported last year, or
even the 28 percent for Mexico.
Of course the current world recession is much worse and more
widespread than the crisis of the late 1990s. The
high-income countries that comprise the majority of the
world economy, including the U.S., European Union, and Japan
are mostly in recession. There are some big imbalances,
built up over many years, that are adjusting at a pace that
is not easy to predict - including the U.S. savings rate,
which had fallen to zero by 2007. And there are major
weaknesses in much of the world's financial system.
Nonetheless the United States is capable of recovering on
its own, with a sufficient domestic economic stimulus and a
sensible resolution of the major insolvencies in the
financial system - regardless of what other governments do.
The U.S. recovery will in turn help the rest of the world.
The fact that the dollar is the key reserve currency of the
world gives the U.S. even more leeway. There are loud
complaints from conservatives about our recession-induced
free-spending ways, but investors world-wide are willing to
lend the U.S. government money at the historically low (both
real and nominal) rate of 2.9 percent on ten year Treasury
bonds. This is not the sign of an impending fiscal crisis.
It is good that the G-20 leaders are at least talking about
increased international co-operation in order to deal with
the world recession, and there are some areas - e.g.
regulation of the financial sector or preventing illegal
international capital flows and international tax avoidance
- where increased international co-operation can be
especially helpful. But even in these areas, many of the
most important reforms can be implemented by individual
governments.
The global nature of the "global economy" has been grossly
exaggerated, as have been its implications. The world today
is still much more a collection of national economies, and
national governments - especially in the larger economies -
have the potential to choose most of their economic policies
much as they did thirty or forty years ago. The government
of China, for example, has for decades controlled capital
flows into and out of the country, regulated foreign
investment in accordance with national development needs and
plans, fixed its exchange rate, and owned most of the
banking system. In this way it was able to take advantage of
"globalization" - both international trade and foreign
direct investment -- to achieve the fastest economic growth
in world history.
The contemporary idea of the "global economy" is based on a
misapplied analogy to the historical development of national
economies. For example, the United States economy was much
less stable, with more frequent and much longer recessions,
before the creation of regulatory institutions, including
most importantly the Federal Reserve (1913) and the New Deal
reforms of the 1930s. (The current crisis, which has
occurred after decades of deregulatory reforms, appears to
be the exception that proves the rule).
Thus, it is reasoned, we now live in a "global economy," and
this too must be regulated to iron out some of the
irrationalities and instabilities inherent in a market
economy.
Of course there is some truth to this argument. The idea of
a world reserve currency to replace the dollar, for example,
most recently floated by China, is a potential reform that
could improve world macroeconomic stability.
But the concept of the "global economy" is very often an
exaggerated one, generating confusion and negative political
consequences. Reforms that are both necessary and feasible
at the national level, such as appropriate exchange rate,
fiscal, and monetary policies (especially in normal times),
or capital controls, are rejected as incompatible with the
"global economy." At the same time, reformers often
mistakenly look to supra-national institutions that are
mainly deregulatory, unaccountable, and regressive - the
International Monetary Funs (IMF), World Bank, and World
Trade Organization are prime examples - to resolve the
problems that these institutions have themselves helped to
create. Finance Ministers (or Treasury Secretaries) that are
beholden to powerful interests at home are even less
accountable to the public when making decisions in these
bodies that are another step removed from the electorate of
member countries. If they won't do the right thing at home,
they are far less likely to do it at the IMF or the World
Bank. For the present, at least, reform at the national or
perhaps regional level is a much better bet.
Indeed, "globalization" under inappropriate rules and
policies has contributed significantly to the current
crisis. Even the European Union, a project that compares
favorably to the "race-to-the-bottom" economic integration
of the NAFTA variety, is currently hampering the Eurozone's
recovery. The restrictions on budget deficits and the
ultra-conservative central bank set up by the Maastricht
treaty are making it more difficult for Europe to counteract
this recession.
Efforts to redraw the rules for global commerce in a more
equitable and rational manner - such as those of the UN
commission headed by Joseph Stiglitz - are a vital part of
creating a better future for the generations to come. But
the world cannot wait for the time when the governments of
the rich countries are willing to cede decision-making power
to institutions - such as the United Nations -- that they
cannot completely dominate. Nor does it have to wait.
Mark
Weisbrot is co-director of the
Center for
Economic and Policy Research in Washington, D.C. This
op-ed first appeared in the
The Guardian
Unlimited and may be viewed at
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2009/apr/07/global-economy-us-g20
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