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marmar

(77,078 posts)
Tue May 3, 2016, 08:20 AM May 2016

The global economy is in bad shape and getting worse


by Nouriel Roubini


NEW YORK (Project Syndicate) — The International Monetary Fund and others have recently revised downward their forecasts for global growth — yet again. Little wonder: The world economy has few bright spots, and many that are dimming rapidly.

Among advanced economies, the United States has just experienced two quarters of growth averaging 1%. Further monetary easing has boosted a cyclical recovery in the eurozone, though potential growth in most countries remains well below 1%. In Japan, “Abenomics” is running out of steam, with the economy slowing since mid-2015 and now close to recession. In the United Kingdom, uncertainty surrounding the June referendum on continued European Union membership is leading firms to keep hiring and capital spending on hold. And other advanced economies — such as Canada, Australia, Norway — face headwinds from low commodity prices.

Things are not much better in most emerging economies. Among the five BRIC countries, two (Brazil and Russia) are in recession, one (South Africa) is barely growing, another (China) is experiencing a sharp structural slowdown, and India is doing well only because — in the words of its central bank governor, Raghuram Rajan — in the kingdom of the blind, the one-eyed man is king. Many other emerging markets have slowed since 2013 as well, owing to weak external conditions, economic fragility (stemming from loose monetary, fiscal, and credit policies in the good years), and, often, a move away from market-oriented reforms and toward variants of state capitalism.

Worse, potential growth has also fallen in both advanced and emerging economies. For starters, high levels of private and public debt are constraining spending, especially growth-enhancing capital spending, which fell (as a share of GDP) after the global financial crisis and has not recovered to pre-crisis levels. That fall-off in investment implies slower productivity growth, while aging populations in developed countries — and now in an increasing number of emerging markets (for example, China, Russia, and Korea) — reduce the labor input in production.

The rise in income and wealth inequality exacerbates the global saving glut (which is the counterpart of the global investment slump). As income is redistributed from labor to capital, it flows from those who have a higher marginal propensity to spend (low- and middle-income households) to those who have a higher marginal propensity to save (high-income households and corporations). ....................(more)

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/the-global-economy-is-in-bad-shape-and-getting-worse-2016-05-02




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