by MrBill » Wed 20 Sep 2006, 04:03:16
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tyler_JC', 'I') have a hard time understanding scenario three.
It seems like a 5% reduction in US oil consumption would have to translate into a massive increase in oil consumption in China, right?
With today's global economy, it's hard to imagine an export-driven economy like China growing in the face of falling demand for its export products.
The redistribution scenario will only work if some nation or group of nations can pick up the slack of the American consumer or if the export-driven economies can figure out a way to dramatically stimulate domestic demand.
It's certainly possible, but it doesn't seem likely in the short term.
The redistribution scenario requires significantly leadtime and in an age of violent price swings and economic turmoil, might take even longer.
But I agree with the first poster. A recession starting next year would stop the demand growth for oil and thus production would level off or maybe drop. When the economy started growing again, production might be unable to match the new demand and prices would hit the triple digits before the recession resumed.
Scenario Three hinges on growth in Chindia and the rest of Asia decoupling from America who has been fulfilling the role of consumer of last resort very well, but on borrowed money, by issuing lot's of debt. Maybe you read the latest Mogambo Guru rant?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')pparently, both the Federal Reserve and their fellow American morons missed the significance of the
Modigliani Lifetime Income Hypothesis, which holds that, in the particular and in the aggregate, people cannot spend more over a lifetime than they make over a lifetime. If you try to, through assuming debt and then cleverly dying before you have to pay it back, then the loss incurred by creditors will be the offset to THEIR lifetime income, proving Modigliani's original hypothesis.
Hear me, doomed ones!
So basically, at its most basic, in a basic way the Modigliani Lifetime Income Hypothesis applies both to US and world growth, or should we say sustainable long-term growth. By borrowing, the US can temporarily boost growth above long-run average, but as they have to paydown debt, growth returns to the long-run average, and to fully payback debt it would actually have to drop below the long-run average. This is independent of inflation. Inflation does not change the dynamic. Basically.
So back to really basic, boring ECON 101, you can either have your growth now or later by saving now or saving later. Consuming now or consuming later.
So at the moment the USA is growing faster than it should because it is stimulating the real economy through debt and that is sucking in more Chinese imports than it would do if only growing at trend. That growth is compounded by Chinese currency manipulation because in order to keep the yuan undervalued, to stimulate export growth, they keep interest rates low, which encourages over borrowing and over investment. And in order to keep inflation under control, they sterilize export earnings, by holding dollars, and printing yuan, which also gives the Chinese a nice monetary stimulus as well. Those extra yuan also find their way into factories and other assets. If Assets = Liabilities, then Chinese assets = American liabilities.
But back to our point. America goes down hard and can no longer keep issuing debt at reasonable levels, so they raise interest rates to attract the capital they need to cover their budget deficit, and their trade deficit narrows as they can no longer afford to import so much. As a nice aside, some exports increase due to the weaker dollar, shrinking the current account deficit as well. So far so good.
What happens to China? They lose a part of their export market directly to the USA, plus they lose a part of their overall export market because some of the USA's $1 trillion dollar per year stimulus is also removed from the world economy, so less oil exports for example. That is in the short-run.
However, China has already invested in all that export capacity and Chinese jobs, and therefore stability, depend on those exports and those jobs. What would you do? Mothball factories or look for new markets? Run at full capacity, covering your variable costs, if not your fixed, while trying to make up for lost margins with volume. Revenue = Volume x Sales
Who has money? Oil exporters as well as commodity exporters and those countries who already have current account surpluses. If America runs a $1 trillion deficit and consumes two-thirds of the world's current account surplus, that means that the total deficit is approximately $1.5 trillion. Therefore, some countries out there do have surpluses either to invest or to spend. If Chinese exports are cheap enough, some of those surpluses will get spent regardless.
Plus as we mentioned, China can spend some of their own foreign exchange reserves and export receipts on domestic infrastructure projects to stimulate homegrown consumption and demand.
But that is all in the short-term. Obviously, the long-term until all the deficits are paid down or until real economic growth makes them relatively less important the whole world will grow more slowly than it would have. Never the less, populations are still expanding and the developing world now accounts for about +/-50% of global GDP, so there are other sources of growth and income ex-America.
Nine or ten billion souls will still consume more than six billion of God's children, even if in the short-term His chosen people have to pay down debt and live parsimoniously while they work off their excesses. Forget globalization, we still live in a closed economy, so all the old rules still apply until we start trading with other galaxies.
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.