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We are one mistake away from a global recession

Daniel Moss
Daniel Moss • 3 min read
We are one mistake away from a global recession
SINGAPORE (Oct 18): Here is the silver lining to slowing world growth: We are a long way from 2009, when the global economy contracted. The bad news is that this balancing act is looking increasingly shaky.
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SINGAPORE (Oct 18): Here is the silver lining to slowing world growth: We are a long way from 2009, when the global economy contracted. The bad news is that this balancing act is looking increasingly shaky.

The International Monetary Fund on Oct 15 cut its forecast for global GDP to 3% in 2019 and 3.4% next year. That is the weakest outlook in a decade, and down slightly from the lender’s projections in July. (The IMF views a pace of less than 2.5% a recession.) So, while that is not exactly rosy, comparing these numbers with the disaster of 2009, when GDP fell 0.1%, is very wide of the mark. The IMF also trimmed its outlook for China, which helped revive world growth after the past two slumps.

Another key difference with 2009 is monetary-policy coordination. Central banks have been easing “simultaneously”, IMF chief economist Gita Gopinath told reporters on Oct 15 in Washington. Without that stimulus, which is likely to increase, the lender reckons the trajectory of world growth would be 0.5% lower.

Back in 2007 to 2009, policy was disjointed at first. The US Federal Reserve began cutting rates in the late summer of 2007 while the European Central Bank (ECB) hiked just two months before Lehman Brothers Holdings collapsed. China only joined the effort towards the end of 2008. The Bank of Japan’s (BOJ) main rate, meanwhile, had already been near zero for a decade.

In the current downdraft, global central banks have gotten in sync a lot more quickly. The People’s Bank of China was out of the gate first, reducing reserve requirements for lending last year. The Fed’s first cut of this cycle came in July, about six months after the central bank stopped hiking. The ECB followed fast by restarting its quantitative-easing programme and lowering rates, and the BOJ — which has carried on buying bonds — has foreshadowed more moves to juice growth.

Australia’s response has also been instructive, especially because its economy has been on a pedestal for fostering decades of expansion. After two quick cuts this year, observers had thought the Reserve Bank of Australia would take a breather. Yet, another reduction came quickly, with dovish signals to boot. The Bank of Korea signalled some reluctance to lower rates further after cutting again on Oct 16, but we will see how that plays out: Exports are tumbling and deflation is on the horizon.

All this points to the precarious nature of the global economy. Manufacturing is slumping, fiscal policy is patchy and an awful lot rides on the shoulders of consumers, whose spending is buttressed by low unemployment across major economies. The IMF’s Gopinath warned that a policy mistake could easily push this expansion off the rails.

Measures to spur growth are always more effective when coordinated across jurisdictions. What we have now is the opposite: a deep reluctance to embrace multilateral policies, and trade prescriptions designed to unravel the links between economies instead of knitting them closer together. US President Donald Trump and Chinese Vice-Premier Liu He barely shook hands on the first phase of a trade accord before sceptics began picking it apart, with some justification.

In the context of 2009, this muddling-through economy is something to protect. All policy levers need to be working to nourish, not starve, it. — Bloomberg LP

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