1 / 15

MACRO-ECONOMIC DIMENSIONS OF THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS

MACRO-ECONOMIC DIMENSIONS OF THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS. Presentation to Economic Society of Singapore Pre-University Junior College Seminar Manu Bhaskaran August 2009. IN A NUTSHELL. What will post-crisis world look like? Exit from the crisis - unusual Not U or V

jubal
Télécharger la présentation

MACRO-ECONOMIC DIMENSIONS OF THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MACRO-ECONOMIC DIMENSIONS OF THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS Presentation to Economic Society of Singapore Pre-University Junior College Seminar Manu Bhaskaran August 2009

  2. IN A NUTSHELL What will post-crisis world look like? • Exit from the crisis - unusual • Not U or V • The new “normal”: a tougher world • Big changes in global landscape • Big shift in economic power • Singapore and Asia must change too The benign era is over

  3. EXIT FROM CRISIS

  4. EXIT FROM CRISIS We are not out of the woods yet • Deleveraging process not over • Banks reducing leverage, cutting loans… • Households doing same • A few more shocks/stresses to come • Commercial property etc in US • Emerging Europe to hurt Western banks • Currency turmoil?

  5. EXIT FROM CRISIS (2) Huge policy response  huge costs • Monetary easing: huge increase in $$$

  6. EXIT FROM CRISIS (3) Implications • Short term: party time! • Economic recovery firmed up • Asset bubbles: stocks, housing booming • Longer term: payback time! • Inflation fears  interest rates surge • Asset bubbles burst, more crises

  7. EXIT FROM CRISIS (4) What is the shape of the exit? • Looks like V initially • But more shocks  W-shaped • A messy, troubled exit • Will we recover? • Yes, adjustments underway, will take time • Cut debt, raise savings, … all happening

  8. POST-CRISIS WORLD

  9. POST-CRISIS WORLD Global economy transformed • Slower growth for many years • Patterns of growth changed • Different structure of competitiveness • New balance of economic power • Distribution of income shifts

  10. SLOWER GROWTH Coming decade • Lower growth in US, Japan, EU • Household savings must rise • Banks have to clean up • Shadow banking system dead • Energy prices likely to rise • Shift of power to OPEC from non-OPEC • Demand growing

  11. SLOWER GROWTH (2) • No escaping climate change • By 2020, 2-3deg rise in temperatures • Businesses will face taxes, other costs • Increased regulation • Financial: much tighter, curtail innovation • Income distribution: political backlash • Protectionism

  12. IMPLICATIONS A WORLD TRANSFORMED • Balance of global economic power • US declines but not as fast as some say • China stronger but gradually • US Dollar will gradually lose role • Will have to share role with EUR etc

  13. IMPLICATIONS (2) Changed structure of competitiveness • Currency changes • Chinese RMB must rise • Other Asian currencies as well • Country changes • China: moving up value chain • India: a rising manufacturing power • Taiwan?Indonesia/Vietnam: a new surge

  14. CONCLUSION: SINGAPORE AND ASIA MUST CHANGE

  15. CONCLUSION Old economic models may not work well • Main source of growth changes • Not G3 but emerging markets • World trade and FDI growth may slow • Regulation, protectionism • More volatile  more shocks, stresses • Countries must raise resilience

More Related