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GLOBALIZATION AND THE GLOBAL ECONOMY: PERSPECTIVES AND PROSPECTS FOR THE SHORT RUN AND LONG RUN

GLOBALIZATION AND THE GLOBAL ECONOMY: PERSPECTIVES AND PROSPECTS FOR THE SHORT RUN AND LONG RUN. JOSEPH E. STIGLITZ VALENCIA JUNE 2006. MAJOR CHANGES IN THE GLOBAL ECONOMY. GLOBALIZATION THE EMERGENCE OF THE EMERGING MARKETS RISING OIL (ENERGY) PRICES

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GLOBALIZATION AND THE GLOBAL ECONOMY: PERSPECTIVES AND PROSPECTS FOR THE SHORT RUN AND LONG RUN

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  1. GLOBALIZATION AND THE GLOBAL ECONOMY:PERSPECTIVES AND PROSPECTS FOR THE SHORT RUN AND LONG RUN JOSEPH E. STIGLITZ VALENCIA JUNE 2006

  2. MAJOR CHANGES IN THE GLOBAL ECONOMY • GLOBALIZATION • THE EMERGENCE OF THE EMERGING MARKETS • RISING OIL (ENERGY) PRICES • INCREASING GLOBAL FINANCIAL INSTABILITY • A NEW GEOPOLITICS?

  3. GLOBALIZATION • The closer integration of the countries of the world • As a result of lowering of transportation and communication costs and the reduction of man-made barriers to the movement of goods, services, people, capital • So that the world has become more interdependent • Successes and failures in one locale have global ramifications • China’s rapid growth has driven up commodity prices • America’s war in Iraq has driven up oil prices • What will be the consequences of a downturn in the U.S.?

  4. THE EMERGENCE OFTHE EMERGING MARKETS • 2.5 billion people in India, China, and other countries in Asia • Were formerly excluded and marginalized • As a legacy of colonialism • Are now being integrated into the global economy • This is an event of historical proportions • And so is their unprecedented success

  5. GLOBAL SUCCESS AND CHINA • Previous economic revolutions—like the industrial revolution of the nineteenth century—had seen growth rates peak at around 2 to 3% • The golden age of growth in America in the 1950s and 1960s saw similar growth rates • China’s growth rates have been three times this • Even faster than Asia’s miracle countries • Its success has been not only in increasing GDP • The fraction of China’s population living on less than $1 a day fell from 63.8% in 1981 to 16.6% twenty years later

  6. INDIA’S IMPRESSIVE GROWTH • India has also had enormous economic success • Over two decades of 5-6% growth, now approaching 8% • A crucial element has been India’s commitment to investment in education, particularly in technology • Created an educated middle class able to take advantage of the changes brought about by globalization • Now wealthier countries outsource technology work to India • In Bangalore, Infosys has built the world’s largest corporate residential education center, can train 4,500 employees at once • Not quite as successful as China at fighting poverty • In 2000, 35% were still living on less than $1 a day

  7. IS THE WORLD FLAT? • Thomas Friedman has suggested “the world is flat” • Poor countries are finally competing on a level playing field • But the world is not flat • Disparities between the haves and have-nots have increased • Importance of research gives enormous advantage to those who have the resources and skills to undertake it • The Uruguay Round made the world less flat, especially TRIPs • Power of entrenched monopolies, like Microsoft, is probably greater than ever before • The nature of competition is enormously changed • Cannot simply rest on laurels • These changes will affect everyone

  8. CHINA AND INDIA UNDERSTAND • That what separates developed from less developed countries is not only a gap in resources but also a gap in knowledge • And are working hard – and successfully – to narrow that gap • Education and technology are also the basis of success of other high growth economies, like Brazil • Brazil’s Embraer airplane • Energy independence through research • Huge growth of exports

  9. CHALLENGES FACING ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL COUNTRIES • To find new “comparative advantage” – market niche – which may require considerable restructuring • To invest more in education and research • In the U.S., expenditures on research are declining • As a percentage of GDP, federal funding has declined 37% since 1970 • Reflected in part in share of worldwide patents • Since 1980, Japan’s share of worldwide patents increased from 12% to 21%, mostly at the expense of the U.S., whose share declined by 8 percentage points

  10. EDUCATION STATISTICS ARE EQUALLY DISMAL • Of the 2.8 million 1st university degrees in science and engineering issued annually worldwide • 1,200,000 are issued in Asia • 830,000 are issued in Europe • 400,000 are issued in U.S. • Asia produces 8 times more engineers than the U.S. • Since 1993, the number of Americans in graduate science programs has fallen by nearly 25% while the global supply of science Ph.D.s increased 25% - mostly in Asia • Nearly half of all U.S. doctorate degrees in engineering and computer science are earned by foreign students, many of whom have had serious visa problems since 9/11

  11. PROBLEMS START EARLIER • In elementary and secondary schools • Evidenced by performance in standardized tests in science and math. • For example, on 8th grade exams • 44% of Singapore students performed at the highest level • 38% of Taiwanese students performed at the highest level • 7% of U.S. students performed at the highest level

  12. THREATS TO GLOBAL ECONOMIC STABILITY • High oil prices • Global financial instability • Including increase in interest rates • Or risk premia • US economic downturn • Enormous transfer of wealth • Dampening effect on growth • Little leeway

  13. HIGH OIL PRICES • Enormous wealth transfer to oil producing countries • To parts of world marked by high political instability and • Dampening global growth • Result of imbalance of supply and demand • Demand increase largely anticipated • Major “disturbance” to global market result of Iraq invasion • Middle East remains low cost producer • Instability means that investments in Middle East are not forthcoming • But long term investments in supply alternatives are also not forthcoming

  14. AN ALTERNATIVE GLOBAL STRATEGY IS NEEDED • More conservation • Bio-fuels • Brazil has shown viability • Would have enormous geo-political and environmental benefits • Europe needs to pressure U.S. to join Kyoto protocol • If necessary using trade sanctions • Low energy price constitutes an unfair trade subsidy

  15. GLOBAL FINANCIAL INSTABILITY • Underlying force – huge U.S. trade and fiscal deficits • The U.S. borrows close to $3 billion a day from rest of world • Twin deficit – huge U.S. fiscal deficit • Structural problem compounded by low household savings – negative! • Result of tax cut well beyond country’s ability to afford • And unbridled spending – including corporate welfare • No evidence of fiscal restraint • Overall cost of Iraq war now estimated in excess of $1 trillion • Abandoned rules that had been used to maintain discipline • Deficits crowd out investments needed for competitiveness • Problems have become so deep they will be hard to reverse

  16. THE ROLE OF CHINA • Is China playing unfairly with an undervalued exchange rate? • The exchange rate is undervalued • But the U.S. trade imbalance is more than 15 times greater • Appreciation of the yuan will not significantly affect global imbalances • It will simply change the countries with which the U.S. has trade imbalances (import textiles from Bangladesh rather than China) • And these other countries would likely be less willing to lend to U.S. than China has been • Thus the risk is that global instability increases further

  17. PROSPECTS FOR FINANCIAL MARKETS • Of instability continuing/increasing • Particularly difficult for Europe – the weakening dollar and strong euro will make exporting difficult • Problem could get worse if ECB increases interest rates in response to inflationary pressures

  18. REFORMS NEEDED • ECB should focus more on growth and unemployment • U.S. Fed’s mandate focuses on growth, employment, and inflation • Reform to global reserve system • The dollar has been the basis of the reserve system • But confidence in the dollar is eroding, so that it is no longer a good store of value • The system is fraying • Alternative – Bancor or Global Greenbacks

  19. U.S. ECONOMIC DOWNTURN • Emerging markets have increasingly become drivers of global growth • But the U.S. is still the largest global economy • So a U.S. slowdown would have global consequences • Standard projections are that growth will continue at just under the current rate • But there are serious reasons for concern

  20. WORRYING ABOUT THE U.S. ECONOMY • The U.S. is heavily energy dependent • An increase in oil prices would have serious consequences • Weakening of the dollar and high oil prices would have inflationary consequences • Fed, to show resolve, would continue to raise interest rates • Thus slowing the economy • Lack of confidence in the dollar would induce investors to pull money out of the U.S., including bond markets, driving up long run interest rates • Misconceived actions by politicians might make matters worse – discouraging China’s holding of bonds

  21. RISING INTEREST RATES • Rising interest rates could be a major problem for U.S. • For past 5 years, growth based on real estate • Withdrawal of equity from housing amounted to 7.5% of consumption • Even if real estate prices and interest rates stabilized, would have been hard to sustain consumption growth • Slowdown in real estate price increase will slow down consumption • Large number of American households with high level of indebtedness • Median debtor household already spending close to 20% of income servicing debt; significant increases in interest rate would impose severe strains, force cutbacks in consumption • Compounding effects of oil price increases • Especially significant among lower income families (more than a quarter with debt in excess of 40% of income) • Beginning to be evident in slowdown in sales in Walmart • Investment in real estate will also slowdown

  22. COMPENSATING FOR DROP IN DOMESTIC CONSUMPTION • What will take up this slack and can do so in a timely way? • Government expenditures? • With huge deficit, there’s little scope • Increases in other forms of investment? • Unlikely, if consumption is slowing down • Exports? • But significant increase will require large depreciation • Significant disturbance to global economy

  23. A NEW GEOPOLITICS? • With globalization, geography is less important than it previously was • With the end of the cold war, the benefits and costs of alliances changed dramatically • Though Cold War patterns still predominate • As does Cold War thinking, especially in U.S. • Who is the enemy against which the U.S. spends huge sums in defense, more than rest of the world combined? • Little of that money is fighting the war on terrorism • And who is the “enemy” in the war on terrorism?

  24. IMPACT OF THE IRAQ WAR • With Iraq war, U.S. unilateralism • The U.S. seems to show lack of commitment to democratic approaches to solving global problems • But Iraq has shown the limits of military power • The U.S. cannot establish stability in a country a tenth of its population and one percent of its GDP • Emphasizes importance of “soft power” • In much of world, the U.S. no longer perceived as a model for democracy, human rights

  25. THE U.S. TRADE AGENDA • In trade, the U.S. has pursued bilateral trade strategies, highly damaging to multilateral system (based on non-discrimination, most favored nation principle) • Advanced industrial countries have reneged on promises made in Doha for a Development Round

  26. THE WORLD IN FLUX • Latin America rethinking patterns of trade, alliances • Recent elections have shifted Latin American political power farther left than in recent years • New “Berlin” Wall between Mexico and U.S. of enormous symbolic significance • Asia source of global growth, new found confidence, becoming increasingly focus of global attention • American MBAs are beginning to spend summers in India and China in order to gain valuable experience • Henry Paulson Jr., recently appointed U.S. Treasury Secretary: intimate knowledge of the Chinese economy viewed as major source of strength

  27. New challenge for Europe: Finding its place in this world in flux • Lowering unemployment, sustaining growth, maintaining living standards—and not just for those at the top • Will require more flexible macro-economic policies • Reforms in its “innovation” system • New trade policies • New global strategic vision • Making use of “soft power”—far more important that military power

  28. Within Europe, there are some real successes • Ireland, Nordic Countries • Nordic countries have been so successful, not only in growth, but in broader measures of success • Readjusted their “welfare state” model to new realities • But still retained model—including high taxes • Required to finance investments in education and research, fund safety net • With better safety net, there can be more risk taking, entrepreneurship • Success in modern technology based economies requires risk taking

  29. Lessons from these successes: Pragmatism and balance • Success requires “balance” • For countries—a balanced role of government and the market • Market is at the center of the economy • But in every successful economy the government has played a large role • In science and technology (internet) • In making markets work (sound banking and securities market regulation • In protecting the environment • In maintaining social cohesion (income distribution, safety nets)

  30. Europe’s success is important not just for Europe • But for the world as a whole • The world needs a new balance of power • America’s Constitution based on checks and balances • But in the area of foreign policy, it was assumed that the checks and balances would be provided by those abroad • But this is no longer the case • Europe can and must succeed

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