What is often abbreviated to GFC included three distinct crises: the 2007-8 North Atlantic financial crisis, a 2008-9 global economic crisis and public finance crises which became increasingly focussed on the eurozone in 2010-12. The relative weight of emerging market economies in the global economy, which had been increasing for several decades, grew even more rapidly in 2008-11 as the economies of the USA and Europe faltered, and other open economies recovered rapidly from the global economic crisis. This poses challenges for global economic governance, although there are constraints on Asia being a more assertive force. For the EU the greater dangers are, first, that if EU leaders see their economies as victims of a GFC then they will fail to address their economies’ own shortcomings, and, second, that preoccupation with internal crises will distract EU leaders from rising to the challenges and opportunities associated with the evolving multipolar global economy.
Authored by: Richard Pomfret
The World Economic Situation and Prospects 2012 Global economic outlook was pre-released on 1 December at UN Headquarters in New York. The report estimates growth of world gross product (WGP) at 2.8 per cent in 2011, and its baseline forecast projects growth of 2.6 per cent for 2012 and 3.2 per cent for 2013, well below pre-crisis pace of global growth. Risks for a double-dip recession have heightened, however.
Objective Capital's Global Resources Investment Conference 2011
Stationers' Hall, City of London
27-28 September 2011
Day 1- Session1: The context in which we operate
Speaker: Chris Watling, Longview Economics
- Grim prospects for world economy
- Premature fiscal austerity in developed countries is hampering recovery
- Developing countries remain vulnerable to downturns in the developed economies
The World Economic Situation and Prospects 2012 Global economic outlook was pre-released on 1 December at UN Headquarters in New York. The report estimates growth of world gross product (WGP) at 2.8 per cent in 2011, and its baseline forecast projects growth of 2.6 per cent for 2012 and 3.2 per cent for 2013, well below pre-crisis pace of global growth. Risks for a double-dip recession have heightened, however.
Objective Capital's Global Resources Investment Conference 2011
Stationers' Hall, City of London
27-28 September 2011
Day 1- Session1: The context in which we operate
Speaker: Chris Watling, Longview Economics
- Grim prospects for world economy
- Premature fiscal austerity in developed countries is hampering recovery
- Developing countries remain vulnerable to downturns in the developed economies
This paper takes a systematic look at the economic impact of the crisis that started in earnest in the fall of 2008 across countries and regions. Despite warnings of growing domestic and external imbalances in many countries years ahead of the crisis, the massive impact of the crisis came as a surprise to most. By correlating economic performance in the crisis with an extensive set of early warning, country insurance, and policy indicators, this paper provides some lessons on crisis prevention and management for the future. Although significant efforts have been made to develop robust early warnings systems, the paper shows the mixed success of some commonly analyzed indicators in predicting economic outcomes in this crisis. The only robust early warning indicator was increases in real estate prices while international reserves seem to have insured against the worst crisis outcomes on average. However, much work on building a robust early warning system remains and the analytical and empirical challenges in this area are substantial. The issues confronting early warning systems are also relevant to the more recent field of macro prudential supervision and regulation. Nevertheless, the cost of crises is massive and preventing future ones with better regulation, policies and supervision based on solid research must be a top priority among policy makers and academics alike.
We use newly compiled top income share data and structural breaks techniques to estimate common trends and breaks in inequality across countries over the twentieth century. Our results both confirm earlier findings and offer new insights. In particular, the division into an Anglo-Saxon and a Continental European experience is not as clear cut as previously suggested. Some Continental European countries seem to have experienced increases in top income shares, just as Anglo-Saxon countries, but typically with a lag. Most notably, Nordic countries display a marked “Anglo-Saxon” pattern, with sharply increased top income shares especially when including realized capital gains. Our results help inform theories about the causes of the recent rise in inequality.
This paper takes a systematic look at the economic impact of the crisis that started in earnest in the fall of 2008 across countries and regions. Despite warnings of growing domestic and external imbalances in many countries years ahead of the crisis, the massive impact of the crisis came as a surprise to most. By correlating economic performance in the crisis with an extensive set of early warning, country insurance, and policy indicators, this paper provides some lessons on crisis prevention and management for the future. Although significant efforts have been made to develop robust early warnings systems, the paper shows the mixed success of some commonly analyzed indicators in predicting economic outcomes in this crisis. The only robust early warning indicator was increases in real estate prices while international reserves seem to have insured against the worst crisis outcomes on average. However, much work on building a robust early warning system remains and the analytical and empirical challenges in this area are substantial. The issues confronting early warning systems are also relevant to the more recent field of macro prudential supervision and regulation. Nevertheless, the cost of crises is massive and preventing future ones with better regulation, policies and supervision based on solid research must be a top priority among policy makers and academics alike.
We use newly compiled top income share data and structural breaks techniques to estimate common trends and breaks in inequality across countries over the twentieth century. Our results both confirm earlier findings and offer new insights. In particular, the division into an Anglo-Saxon and a Continental European experience is not as clear cut as previously suggested. Some Continental European countries seem to have experienced increases in top income shares, just as Anglo-Saxon countries, but typically with a lag. Most notably, Nordic countries display a marked “Anglo-Saxon” pattern, with sharply increased top income shares especially when including realized capital gains. Our results help inform theories about the causes of the recent rise in inequality.
Understanding the network of Eurozone crises so that nodes of crises can be analyzed. We are interested in both financial and non-financial factors that are deepening the European crises.
This presentation explores the causes of the European debt crisis, timeline of the crisis, its extent, how it is being addressed, who is to blamed for the crisis and how it affects us.
Emerging market economies were major beneficiaries of the economic boom before 2007. More recently, they have become victims of the global financial crisis. Their future development depends, to a large extent, on global economic prospects. Today the global economy and the European economy are much more integrated and interdependent than they were ten or twenty years ago. Every country must recognize its limited economic sovereignty and must be prepared to deal with the consequences of global macroeconomic fluctuations.
The statistical data for 2009 provides a mixed picture with respect to the impact of the crisison various groups of countries and individual economies. On average, Central and Eastern Europe experienced a smaller output decline than the Euro area and the entire EU while the CIS, especially its European part, contracted more dramatically. However, there was a deep differentiation within each country group. Looking globally, richer countries, which are more open to trade and in which the banking sector plays a larger role and which rely more on external financing, suffered more than less sophisticated economies, which are less dependent on trade and credit (especially from external sources). With some exceptions, the previous good growth performance helped rather than handicapped countries in the CEE and CIS regions in the crisis year of 2009.
The post-crisis recovery has been rather modest and incomplete. It remains vulnerable to new shocks (like the Greek Fiscal crisis), the danger of sovereign default and other uncertainties. Full post-crisis recovery and increasing potential growth will require far going economic and institutional reforms on both national, regional (e.g., EU) and global levels.
Authored by: Marek Dąbrowski
Published in 2010
Jack Rasmus summarizes, in his article Global Economy: Towards the big storm?, saying to be three global significant global economic trends that began to intensify and to converge in recent months: (1) China's economy slowing along with increased financial instability in its shadow banking system; (2) a collapse of the currencies of emerging markets (India, Brazil, Turkey, South Africa, Indonesia etc.) and their respective economic downturns; (3) a continuous shift towards deflation in the economies of the euro area, driven by an increase problems in Italy and the economic stagnation that reaches to France, the second largest economy in the euro zone.
This paper attempts to confront various theoretical and empirical approaches to the East Asian currency crisis in 1997, but also with emphasis on two recently dominated literature about East Asian financial crisis. One, strongly supported by Corsetti, et. al (1998) stresses fundamental weaknesses, particularly in the financial sector. The other explains the crisis as the problem of illiquidity and multiple equilibria or 'herd behaviour' [Radelet and Sachs, 1998]. These two controversial articles facilitate the main exchange of ideas about the evolution and causes of the collapse of these economies which were viewed initially as very successful on their way to development and integration with the global economy. An econometric probit analysis was done in order to establish the most important determinants of the currency crisis in East Asia. The results were mixed (the probit modelling turned out to be very sensitive to changes in sample size, introduction of new variables and brought up an important issue of causality, the solution of which, or at least limitation of the problem, requires an inclusion of lagged variables in the model), but at least it showed that this type of exercise without further sensitivity analysis could not support Radelet and Sachs' (1998) panic scenario of the Asian meltdown. If anything, it rather pointed to fundamental problems existing in these economies.
Authored by: Monika Blaszkiewicz
Published in 2000
Unlike the crisis years of 2007-2009 (when the insolvency of large banks was a major problem), the current round of the global financial crisis has fiscal origins. Almost all developed countries suffer from an excessive public debt burden that has been built up over the last two decades or more. The financial crisis caused a further deterioration of government accounts as a result of ill-tailored countercyclical fiscal response and, in some cases, a costly financial sector rescue. All excessively indebted countries must conduct fiscal adjustment, even if this involves economic and political costs in terms of lower output and higher unemployment. Central banks can reduce these costs through accommodative monetary policies but without compromising their anti-inflationary missions and institutional independence. The ECB is additionally constrained by its institutional status which is based on a delicate cross-country political consensus. Excessive ECB involvement in quasi-fiscal rescue operations can undermine this consensus and lead to a disintegration of the Eurozone. There are also strong arguments in favor of strengthening fiscal and banking integration within the EU, especially the fiscal discipline mechanism at national levels, and building the EU rescue capacity in respect to sovereigns and banks based on strong policy conditionality.
Authored by: Marek Dabrowski
Published in 2012
Presentation by Leszek Balcerowicz, Warsaw School of Economics at the Conference "Have We Learnt Anything from the Crisis?" in Riga, Latvia. 17.10.2014
As the global financial crisis entered its most dramatic phase, in the second half of 2008, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), many governments and several distinguished scholars advocated expansionary fiscal olicy as the second most effective tool (after monetary stimulus) to fight deep recession and deflation. Now, more than a year later, the previous excitement surrounding the supposed power of fiscal stimulus largely disappeared and instead has been replaced by ising concerns over the sustainability of public finances in many countries. Unfortunately, the previous enthusiasts of the active counter‐cyclical fiscal policy have not always realized the causality between the two.
Authored by: Marek Dąbrowski
Published in 2009
De acuerdo con el último informe difundido por Crédito y Caución, las insolvencias de muchas de las economías europeas se mantendrán muy por encima de los niveles de 2007 en 2014 y 2015.
El panorama económico mundial se ha deteriorado en los últimos seis meses. El ritmo de crecimiento en la zona euro y China ha sido más débil de lo esperado y la intensificación de la crisis geopolíticas referentes a Rusia y al Estado Islámico en Oriente Medio han minado la confianza internacional.
Ivo Pezzuto - Predictable and Avoidable: What's Next?Dr. Ivo Pezzuto
Abstract:
The author of this paper (Dr. Ivo Pezzuto) has been one of the first authors to write back in 2008 about the alleged "subprime mortgage loans fraud" which has triggered the 2008 financial crisis, in combination with multiple other complex, highly interrelated, and concurrent factors.
The author has been also one of the first authors to report in that same working paper of 2008 (available on SSRN and titled "Miraculous Financial Engineering or Toxic Finance? The Genesis of the U.S. Subprime Mortgage Loans Crisis and its Consequences on the Global Financial Markets and Real Economy") the high probability of a Eurozone debt crisis, due to a number of unsolved structural macroeconomic problems, the lack of a single crisis resolution scheme, current account imbalances, and in some countries, housing bubbles/high private debt.
In the book published in 2013 and titled "Predictable and Avoidable: Repairing Economic Dislocation and Preventing the Recurrence of Crisis", Dr. Ivo Pezzuto has exposed the root causes of the financial crisis in order to enables readers to understand that the crisis we have seen was predictable and should have been avoidable, and that a recurrence can be avoided, if lessons are learned and the right action taken.
Almost one year after the publication of the book "Predictable and Avoidable: Repairing Economic Dislocation and Preventing the Recurrence of Crisis", the author has decided to write this working paper to explore what happened in the meantime to the financial markets and to the financial regulation implementation.
Most of all, the author with this working paper aims to provide an updated analysis as strategist and scenario analyst on the topics addressed in the book "Predictable and Avoidable" based on a forward-looking perspective and on potential "tail risk" scenarios. The topics reported in this paper relate to financial crises; Government policy; financial regulation; corporate governance; credit risk management; financial risk management; economic policy; Euro Zone debt crisis; the "Great Recession"; business ethics; sociology, finance and financial markets.
This working paper aims to contribute to the debate about the change needed in the banking and finance industries and to supervisory frameworks, in order to enhance regulatory mechanisms and to improve global financial stability and sustainability.
Conclusion: This paper aims to demonstrate that, in spite of the artificially reduced volatility in the markets, systemic risks have not been reduced after the global financial crisis and that, currently (September 2014), adverse scenarios seem to be much more likely than previously expected by regulators and supervisory authorities, due to the prolonged massive accommodative monetary policies, the increased economic and geo-political risks, and some incomplete or unfit financial regulation. Thus, the stress testing models, their underlying assumptions, and the supervisory aut
The financial innovations and increased integration of capital markets have made the nature of balance of payments turmoil much more complex, than described by firstgeneration models. The severe financial crises, which erupted in 1990's in many seemingly "invulnerable" economies that in most cases were characterised by a balanced budget and a modest public debt have turned away the attention of analysts and policymakers from fiscal variables towards other determinants. The fiscal factors, nonetheless, still remain among important causes of financial turbulences, especially in emerging markets, what has been manifested by the 1998/1999 crises of FSU (Former Soviet Union) economies.
The purpose of this paper is to re-examine the theoretical and empirical links between fiscal sector and the emergence of financial crises, with an emphasis on transition economies.
Authored by: Joanna Siwinska-Gorzelak
Published in 2000
To
help senior executives weather this economic storm, the Economist Intelligence Unit has updated its
answers to some of the questions most frequently asked by clients, following the publication of the
four previous editions of Global crisis monitor. In answering each question, we outline our current
forecast, explain our thinking, and highlight any key risks or alternative scenarios.
The report examines the social and economic drivers and impact of circular migration between Belarus and Poland, Slovakia, and the Czech Republic. The core question the authors sought to address was how managing circular migration could, in the long term, help to optimise labour resources in both the country of origin and the destination countries. In the pages that follow, the authors of the report present the current and forecasted labour market and demographic situation in their respective countries as well as the dynamics and characteristics of short-term labour migration flows between Belarus and Poland, Slovakia, and the Czech Republic, concentrating on the period since 2010. They also outline and discuss related policy responses and evaluate prospects for cooperation on circular migration.
Podręcznik został opracowany w celu przekazania trenerom i nauczycielom podstawowej wiedzy, która może być przydatna w prowadzeniu szkoleń promujących pracę rejestrowaną. Prezentuje on z jednej strony korzyści z pracy rejestrowanej, z drugiej – potencjalne koszty związane z pracą nierejestrowaną. W pierwszej kolejności informacje te przedstawiono w odniesieniu do pracowników najemnych (rozdział 2), podkreślając w sposób szczególny to, że negatywne konsekwencje pracy nierejestrowanej są ponoszone przez całe życie. Ze względu na specyficzną sytuację cudzoziemców pracujących w Polsce konsekwencje ponoszone przez tę grupę opisano oddzielnie (rozdział 3). Ponadto zaprezentowano skutki dotyczące pracodawców z szarej strefy z wyodrębnieniem tych, którzy zatrudniają cudzoziemców (rozdział 4). Uzupełnieniem przedstawionych informacji jest opis działań podejmowanych przez państwo w celu ograniczenia zjawiska pracy nierejestrowanej w Polsce (rozdział 5) oraz prowadzonych w Wielkiej Brytanii, czyli w kraju będącym liderem w walce z szarą strefą (rozdział 6).
European countries face a challenge related to the economic and social consequences of their societies’ aging. Specifically, pension systems must adjust to the coming changes, maintaining both financial stability, connected with equalizing inflows from premiums and spending on pensions, and simultaneously the sufficiency of benefits, protecting retirees against poverty and smoothing consumption over their lives, i.e. ensuring the ability to pay for consumption needs at each stage of life, regardless of income from labor.
One of the key instruments applied toward these goals is the retirement age. Formally it is a legally established boundary: once people have crossed it – on average – they significantly lose their ability to perform work (the so-called old-age risk). But since the 1970s, in many developed countries the retirement age has become an instrument of social and labor-market policy. Specifically, in the 1970s and ‘80s, an early retirement age was perceived as a solution allowing a reduction in the supply of labor, particularly among people with relatively low competencies who were approaching retirement age, which is called the lump of labor fallacy. It was often believed that people taking early retirement freed up jobs for the young. But a range of economic evidence shows that the number of jobs is not fixed, and those who retire don’t in fact free up jobs. On the contrary, because of higher spending by pension systems, labor costs rise, which limits the supply of jobs. In general, a good situation on the labor market supports employment of both the youngest and the oldest labor force participants. Additionally, a lower retirement age for women was maintained, which resulted to a high degree from cultural conditions and norms that are typical for traditional societies.
Until now, the banking sector has been one of the strong points of Poland’s economy. In contrast to banks in the U.S. and leading Western European economies, lenders in Poland came through the 2008 global financial crisis without a scratch, without needing state financial support. But in recent years the industry’s problems have been growing, creating a threat to economic growth and gains in living standards.
For an economy’s productivity to increase, funds can’t go to all companies evenly, and definitely shouldn’t go to those that are most lacking in funds, but to those that will use them most efficiently. This is true of total external financing, and thus funding both from the banking sector and from parabanks, the capital market and funds from public institutions. In Poland, in light of the relatively modest scale of the capital market, banks play a clearly dominant role in external financing of companies. This is why the author of this text focuses on the bank credit allocation efficiency.
The author points out that in the very near future, conditions will emerge in Poland which – as the experience of other countries shows – create a risk of reduced efficiency of credit allocation to business. Additionally, in Poland today, bank lending to companies is to a high degree being replaced by funds from state aid, which reduces the efficiency of allocation of external funds to companies (both loans and subsidies), as allocation of government subsidies is not usually based on efficiency. This decline in external financing allocation efficiency may slow, halt or even reverse the process, that has been uninterrupted for 28 years, of Poland’s convergence, i.e. the narrowing of the gap in living standards between Poland and the West.
The economic characteristics of the COVID-19 crisis differ from those of previous crises. It is a combination of demand- and supply-side constraints which led to the formation of a monetary overhang that will be unfrozen once the pandemic ends. Monetary policy must take this effect into consideration, along with other pro-inflationary factors, in the post-pandemic era. It must also think in advance about how to avoid a policy trap coming from fiscal dominance.
This paper is organized as follows: Chapter 2 deals with the economic characteristics of the COVID-19 pandemic and its impact on the effectiveness of the monetary policy response measures undertaken. In Chapter 3, we analyse the monetary policy decisions of the ECB (and other major CBs for comparison) and their effectiveness in achieving the declared policy goals in the short term. Chapter 4 is devoted to an analysis of the policy challenges which may be faced by the ECB and other major CBs once the pandemic emergency comes to its end. Chapter 5 contains a summary and the conclusions of our analysis.
Purpose: This paper tries to identify the wage gap between informal and formal workers and tests for the two-tier structure of the informal labour market in Poland.
Design/methodology/approach: I employ the propensity score matching (PSM) technique and use data from the Polish Labour Force Survey (LFS) for the period 2009–2017 to estimate the wage gap between informal and formal workers, both at the means and along the wage distribution. I use two definitions of informal employment: a) employment without a written agreement and b) employment while officially registered as unemployed at a labour office. In order to reduce the bias resulting from the non-random selection of
individuals into informal employment, I use a rich set of control variables representing several individual characteristics.
Findings: After controlling for observed heterogeneity, I find that on average informal workers earn less than formal workers, both in terms of monthly earnings and hourly wage. This result is not sensitive to the definition of informal employment used and is
stable over the analysed time period (2009–2017). However, the wage penalty to informal employment is substantially higher for individuals at the bottom of the wage distribution, which supports the hypothesis of the two-tier structure of the informal labour market in Poland.
Originality/value: The main contribution of this study is that it identifies the two-tier structure of the informal labour market in Poland: informal workers in the first quartile of the wage distribution and those above the first quartile appear to be in two partially different segments of the labour market.
The rule of law, by securing civil and economic rights, directly contributes to social prosperity and is one of our societies’ greatest achievements. In the European Union (EU), the rule of law is enshrined in the Treaties of its founding and is recognised not just as a necessary condition of a liberal democratic society, but also as an important requirement for a stable, effective, and sustainable market economy. In fact, it was the stability and equality of opportunity provided by the rule of law that enabled the post-war Wirtschaftswunder in Germany and the post-Communist resuscitation of the economy in Poland.
But the rule of law is a living concept that is constantly evolving – both in its formal, de jure dimension, embodied in legislation, and its de facto dimension, or its reception by society. In Poland, in particular, according to the EU, the rule of law has been heavily challenged by government since 2015 and has evolved amid continued pressure exerted on the institutions which execute laws. More recently, the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic transformed the perception of the rule of law and its boundaries throughout the EU and beyond (Marzocchi, 2020).
This Study contains Value Added Tax (VAT) Gap estimates for 2018, fast estimates using a simplified methodology for 2019, the year immediately preceding the analysis, and includes revised estimates for 2014-2017. It also includes the updated and extended results of the econometric analysis of VAT Gap determinants initiated and initially reported in the 2018 Report (Poniatowski et al., 2018). As a novelty, the econometric analysis to forecast potential impacts of the coronavirus crisis and resulting recession on the evolution of the VAT Gap in 2020 is reported.
In 2018, most European Union (EU) Member States (MS) saw a slight decrease in the pace of gross domestic product (GDP) growth, but the economic conditions for increasing tax compliance remained favourable. We estimate that the VAT total tax liability (VTTL) in 2018 increased by 3.6 percent whereas VAT revenue increased by 4.2 percent, leading to a decline in the VAT Gap in both relative and nominal terms. In relative terms, the EU-wide Gap dropped to 11 percent and EUR 140 billion. Fast estimates show that the VAT Gap will likely continue to decline in 2019.
Of the EU-28, the smallest Gaps were observed in Sweden (0.7 percent), Croatia (3.5 percent), and Finland (3.6 percent), the largest – in Romania (33.8 percent), Greece (30.1 percent), and Lithuania (25.9 percent). Overall, half of the EU-28 MS recorded a Gap above 9.2 percent. In nominal terms, the largest Gaps were recorded in Italy (EUR 35.4 billion), the United Kingdom (EUR 23.5 billion), and Germany (EUR 22 billion).
The euro is the second most important global currency after the US dollar. However, its international role has not increased since its inception in 1999. The private sector prefers using the US dollar rather than the euro because the financial market for US dollar-denominated assets is larger and deeper; network externalities and inertia also play a role. Increasing the attractiveness of the euro outside the euro area requires, among others, a proactive role for the European Central Bank and completing the Banking Union and Capital Market Union.
Forecasting during a strong shock is burdened with exceptionally high uncertainty. This gives rise to the temptation to formulate alarmist forecasts. Experiences from earlier pandemics, particularly those from the 20th century, for which we have the most data, don’t provide a basis for this. The mildest of them weakened growth by less than 1 percentage point, and the worst, the Spanish Flu, by 6 percentage points. Still, even the Spanish Flu never caused losses on the order of 20% of GDP – not even where it turned out to be a humanitarian disaster, costing the lives of 3-5% of the population. History suggests that if pandemics lead to such deep losses at all, it’s only in particular quarters and not over a whole year, as economic activity rebounds. The strength of that rebound is largely determined by economic policy. The purpose of this work is to describe possible scenarios for a rebound in Polish economic growth after the epidemic.
A separate issue, no less important, is what world will emerge from the current crisis. In the face of the 2008 financial crisis, White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel said: “You never want a serious crisis to go to waste. And what I mean by that is an opportunity to do things that you think you could not do before.” Such changes can make the economy and society function better than before the crisis. Unfortunately, the opportunities created by the global financial crisis were squandered. Today’s task is more difficult; the scale of various problems has expanded even more. Without deep structural and institutional changes, the world will be facing enduring social and economic problems, accompanied by long-term stagnation.
"Many brilliant prophecies have appeared for the future of the EU and our entire planet. I believe that Europe, in its own style, will draw pragmatic conclusions from the crisis, not revolutionary ones; conclusions that will allow us to continue enjoying a Europe without borders. Brussels will demonstrate its usefulness; it will react ably and flexibly. First of all, contrary to the deceitful statements of members of the Polish government, the EU warned of the threats already in 2021. Secondly, already in mid-March EU assistance programs were ready, i.e. earlier than the PiS government’s “shield” program. The conclusion from the crisis will be a strengthening of all the preventive mechanisms that allow us to recognize threats and react in time of need. Research programs will be more strongly directed toward diagnosing and treating infectious diseases. Europe will gain greater self-sufficiency in the area of medical equipment and drugs, and the EU – greater competencies in the area of the health service, thus far entrusted to the member states. The 2021-27 budget must be reconstructed, to supplement the priority of the Green Deal with economic stimulus programs. In this way structural funds, which have the greatest multiplier effect for investment and the labor market, may return to favor. So once again: an addition, as a conclusion from the crisis, and not a reinvention of the EU," writes Dr. Janusz Lewandowski the author of the 162nd mBank-CASE seminar Proceeding.
Dla wielu rodaków europejskość Polski jest oczywista, trudno jest im nawet wyobrazić sobie, jak kształtowałyby się losy naszego kraju bez uczestnictwa w integracji europejskiej. Szczególnie młode pokolenie traktuje osiągnięty przez nas dzięki uczestnictwie w Unii ogromny postęp cywilizacyjny jako coś danego i naturalnego. Jednak świadomość tego, jaki był nasz punkt wyjścia, jaką przeszliśmy drogę i jak przyczyniły się do tego unijne działania oraz jakie wynikały z tego korzyści powinna nam stale towarzyszyć. Bez tej świadomości, starannego weryfikowania faktów i docenienia naszych osiągnięć grozi nam uleganie niesprawdzonym argumentom przeciwników integracji europejskiej i popełnienie nieodwracalnych błędów. Dla tych, którzy chcą poznać te fakty, przygotowany został raport "Nasza Europa. 15 lat Polski w Unii Europejskiej". Podjęto w nim ocenę 15 lat członkostwa Polski z perspektywy doświadczeń procesu integracji, z jego barierami i sukcesami, a także wyzwaniami przyszłości.
Raport jest wynikiem pracy zbiorowej licznych ekspertów z różnych dziedzin, od wielu lat analizujących wielowymiarowe efekty działania instytucji UE oraz współpracy z krajami członkowskimi na podstawie europejskich wartości i mechanizmów. Autorzy podsumowują korzyści członkostwa Polski w Unii Europejskiej na podstawie faktów, nie stroniąc jednakże od własnych ocen i refleksji.
This report is the result of the joint work of a number of experts from various fields who have been - for many years – analysing the multidimensional effects of EU institutions and cooperation with Member States pursuant to European values and mechanisms. The authors summarise the benefits of Poland’s membership in the EU based on facts; however, they do not hide their own views and reflections. They also demonstrate the barriers and challenges to further European integration.
This report was prepared by CASE, one of the oldest independent think tanks in Central and Eastern Europe, utilising its nearly 30 years of experience in providing objective analyses and recommendations with respect to socioeconomic topics. It is both an expression of concern about Poland’s future in the EU, as well as the authors’ contribution to the debate on further European integration.
Poland’s new Employee Capital Plans (PPK) scheme, which is mandatory for employers, started to be implemented in July 2019. The article looks at the systemic solutions applied in the programme from the perspective of the concept of the simultaneous reconstruction of the retirement pension system. The aim is to present arguments for and against the project from the point of view of various actors, and to assess the chances of success for the new system. The article offers a detailed study of legal solutions, an analysis of the literature on the subject, and reports of institutions that supervise pension funds. The results of this analysis point to the lack of cohesion between certain solutions of the 1999 pension reform and expose a lack of consistency in how the reform was carried out, which led to the eventual removal of the capital part of the pension system. The study shows that additional saving for old age is advisable in the country’s current demographic situation and necessary for both economic and social reasons. However, the systemic solutions offered by the government appear to be chiefly designated to serve short-term state interests and do not create sufficient incentives for pension plan participants to join the programme.
Belarus was among the few post-communist countries to resign from comprehensive market reforms and attempt to improve the efficiency of the economy through administrative means, leaving market mechanisms only an auxiliary role. Since its inception, the ‘Belarusian economic model’ has undergone several revisions of a de-statisation and de-regulation kind, but still the Belarusian economy remains dominated by the state. This paper analyses the characteristic features of the Belarusian economic system – especially those related to the public sector – as well as its evolution over time during the period following its independence. The paper concludes that during the post-Soviet period, the Belarusian economy evolved from a quasi-Soviet system based on state property, state planning, support to inefficient enterprises and the massive redistribution of funds to a more flexible hybrid model where the public sector still remains the core of the economy. The case of Belarus shows that presently there is no appropriate theoretical perspective which, in an unmodified form, could be applied to study this type of economic system. Therefore, a new perspective based on an already existing but updated approach or a multidisciplinary approach that incorporates the duality of the Belarusian economy is required.
Belarusian economy has been stagnating in 2011-2015 after 15 years of a high annual average growth rate. In 2015, after four years of stagnation, the Belarusian economy slid into a recession, its first since 1996, and experienced both cyclical and structural recessions. Since 2015, the Belarusian government and the National Bank of Belarus have been giving economic reforms a good chance thanks to gradual but consistent actions aimed at maintaining macroeconomic stability and economic liberalization. It seems that the economic authorities have sustained more transformation efforts during 2015-2018 than in the previous 24 years since 1991.
As the relative welfare level in Belarus is currently 64% compared to the Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) countries average, Belarus needs to build stronger fundaments of sustainable growth by continuing and accelerating the implementation of institutional transformation, primarily by fostering elimination of existing administrative mechanisms of inefficient resource allocation. Based on the experience of the CEE countries’ economic transformation, we highlight five lessons for the purpose of the economic reforms that Belarus still faces today: keeping macroeconomic stability, restructuring and improving the governance of state-owned enterprises, developing the financial market, increasing taxation efficiency, and deepening fiscal decentralization.
Inflation in advanced economies is low by historical standards but there is no threat of deflation. Slower economic growth is caused by supply-side constraints rather than low inflation. Below-the-target inflation does not damage the reputation of central banks. Thus, central banks should not try to bring inflation back to the targeted level of 2%. Rather, they should revise the inflation target downwards and publicly explain the rationale for such a move. Risks to the independence of central banks come from their additional mandates (beyond price stability) and populist politics.
Estonia has Europe’s most transparent tax system (while Poland is second-to-last, in 35th place), and is also known for its pioneering approach to taxation of legal persons’ income. Since 2000, payers of Estonian corporate tax don’t pay tax on their profits as long as they don’t realize them. In principle, this approach should make access to capital easier, spark investment by companies and contribute to faster economic growth. Are these and other positive effects really noticeable in Estonia? Have other countries followed in this country’s footsteps? Would deferment of income tax be possible and beneficial for Poland? How would this affect revenue from tax on corporate profits? Would investors come to see Poland as a tax haven? Does the Estonian system limit tax avoidance and evasion, or actually the opposite? Is such a system fair? Are intermediate solutions possible, which would combine the strengths or limit the weaknesses of the classical and Estonian models of profit tax? These questions are discussed in the mBank-CASE seminar Proceeding no. 163, written by Dmitri Jegorov, deputy general secretary of the Estonian Finance Ministry, who directs the country’s tax and customs policy, Dr. Anna Leszczyłowska of the Poznań University of Economics and Business and Aleksander Łożykowski of the Warsaw School of Economics.
The trade war between the U.S. and China began in March 2018. The American side raised import duties on aluminum and steel from China, which were later extended to other countries, including Canada, Mexico and the EU member states. This drew a negative reaction from those countries and bilateral negotiations with the U.S. In June 2018 America, referring to Section 301 of its 1974 Trade Act, raised tariffs to 25% on 818 groups of products imported from China, arguing that the tariff increase was a response to years of theft of American intellectual property and dishonest trade practices, which has caused the U.S. trade deficit.
Will this trade war mean the collapse of the multilateral trading system and a transition to bilateral relationships? What are the possibilities for increasing tariffs in light of World Trade Organization rules? Can the conflict be resolved using the WTO dispute-resolution mechanism? What are the consequences of the trade war for American consumers and producers, and for suppliers from other countries? How high will tariffs climb as a result of a global trade war? How far can trade volumes and GDP fall if the worst-case scenario comes to pass? Professor Jan J. Michałek and Dr. Przemysław Woźniak give answers to these questions in the mBank-CASE Seminar Proceeding No. 161.
This Report has been prepared for the European Commission, DG TAXUD under contract TAXUD/2017/DE/329, “Study and Reports on the VAT Gap in the EU-28 Member States” and serves as a follow-up to the six reports published between 2013 and 2018.
This Study contains new estimates of the Value Added Tax (VAT) Gap for 2017, as well as updated estimates for 2013-2016. As a novelty in this series of reports, so called “fast VAT Gap estimates” are also presented the year immediately preceding the analysis, namely for 2018. In addition, the study reports the results of the econometric analysis of VAT Gap determinants initiated and initially reported in the 2018 Report (Poniatowski et al., 2018). It also scrutinises the Policy Gap in 2017 as well as the contribution that reduced rates and exemptions made to the theoretical VAT revenue losses.
More from CASE Center for Social and Economic Research (20)
NO1 Uk Black Magic Specialist Expert In Sahiwal, Okara, Hafizabad, Mandi Bah...Amil Baba Dawood bangali
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how to sell pi coins effectively (from 50 - 100k pi)DOT TECH
Anywhere in the world, including Africa, America, and Europe, you can sell Pi Network Coins online and receive cash through online payment options.
Pi has not yet been launched on any exchange because we are currently using the confined Mainnet. The planned launch date for Pi is June 28, 2026.
Reselling to investors who want to hold until the mainnet launch in 2026 is currently the sole way to sell.
Consequently, right now. All you need to do is select the right pi network provider.
Who is a pi merchant?
An individual who buys coins from miners on the pi network and resells them to investors hoping to hang onto them until the mainnet is launched is known as a pi merchant.
debuts.
I'll provide you the Telegram username
@Pi_vendor_247
Poonawalla Fincorp and IndusInd Bank Introduce New Co-Branded Credit Cardnickysharmasucks
The unveiling of the IndusInd Bank Poonawalla Fincorp eLITE RuPay Platinum Credit Card marks a notable milestone in the Indian financial landscape, showcasing a successful partnership between two leading institutions, Poonawalla Fincorp and IndusInd Bank. This co-branded credit card not only offers users a plethora of benefits but also reflects a commitment to innovation and adaptation. With a focus on providing value-driven and customer-centric solutions, this launch represents more than just a new product—it signifies a step towards redefining the banking experience for millions. Promising convenience, rewards, and a touch of luxury in everyday financial transactions, this collaboration aims to cater to the evolving needs of customers and set new standards in the industry.
What price will pi network be listed on exchangesDOT TECH
The rate at which pi will be listed is practically unknown. But due to speculations surrounding it the predicted rate is tends to be from 30$ — 50$.
So if you are interested in selling your pi network coins at a high rate tho. Or you can't wait till the mainnet launch in 2026. You can easily trade your pi coins with a merchant.
A merchant is someone who buys pi coins from miners and resell them to Investors looking forward to hold massive quantities till mainnet launch.
I will leave the telegram contact of my personal pi vendor to trade with.
@Pi_vendor_247
Falcon stands out as a top-tier P2P Invoice Discounting platform in India, bridging esteemed blue-chip companies and eager investors. Our goal is to transform the investment landscape in India by establishing a comprehensive destination for borrowers and investors with diverse profiles and needs, all while minimizing risk. What sets Falcon apart is the elimination of intermediaries such as commercial banks and depository institutions, allowing investors to enjoy higher yields.
Latino Buying Power - May 2024 Presentation for Latino CaucusDanay Escanaverino
Unlock the potential of Latino Buying Power with this in-depth SlideShare presentation. Explore how the Latino consumer market is transforming the American economy, driven by their significant buying power, entrepreneurial contributions, and growing influence across various sectors.
**Key Sections Covered:**
1. **Economic Impact:** Understand the profound economic impact of Latino consumers on the U.S. economy. Discover how their increasing purchasing power is fueling growth in key industries and contributing to national economic prosperity.
2. **Buying Power:** Dive into detailed analyses of Latino buying power, including its growth trends, key drivers, and projections for the future. Learn how this influential group’s spending habits are shaping market dynamics and creating opportunities for businesses.
3. **Entrepreneurial Contributions:** Explore the entrepreneurial spirit within the Latino community. Examine how Latino-owned businesses are thriving and contributing to job creation, innovation, and economic diversification.
4. **Workforce Statistics:** Gain insights into the role of Latino workers in the American labor market. Review statistics on employment rates, occupational distribution, and the economic contributions of Latino professionals across various industries.
5. **Media Consumption:** Understand the media consumption habits of Latino audiences. Discover their preferences for digital platforms, television, radio, and social media. Learn how these consumption patterns are influencing advertising strategies and media content.
6. **Education:** Examine the educational achievements and challenges within the Latino community. Review statistics on enrollment, graduation rates, and fields of study. Understand the implications of education on economic mobility and workforce readiness.
7. **Home Ownership:** Explore trends in Latino home ownership. Understand the factors driving home buying decisions, the challenges faced by Latino homeowners, and the impact of home ownership on community stability and economic growth.
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Equip yourself with the knowledge to leverage Latino buying power, tap into their entrepreneurial spirit, and connect with their unique cultural and consumer preferences. Drive your business success by embracing the economic potential of Latino consumers.
**Keywords:** Latino buying power, economic impact, entrepreneurial contributions, workforce statistics, media consumption, education, home ownership, Latino market, Hispanic buying power, Latino purchasing power.
how to sell pi coins on Bitmart crypto exchangeDOT TECH
Yes. Pi network coins can be exchanged but not on bitmart exchange. Because pi network is still in the enclosed mainnet. The only way pioneers are able to trade pi coins is by reselling the pi coins to pi verified merchants.
A verified merchant is someone who buys pi network coins and resell it to exchanges looking forward to hold till mainnet launch.
I will leave the telegram contact of my personal pi merchant to trade with.
@Pi_vendor_247
The European Unemployment Puzzle: implications from population agingGRAPE
We study the link between the evolving age structure of the working population and unemployment. We build a large new Keynesian OLG model with a realistic age structure, labor market frictions, sticky prices, and aggregate shocks. Once calibrated to the European economy, we quantify the extent to which demographic changes over the last three decades have contributed to the decline of the unemployment rate. Our findings yield important implications for the future evolution of unemployment given the anticipated further aging of the working population in Europe. We also quantify the implications for optimal monetary policy: lowering inflation volatility becomes less costly in terms of GDP and unemployment volatility, which hints that optimal monetary policy may be more hawkish in an aging society. Finally, our results also propose a partial reversal of the European-US unemployment puzzle due to the fact that the share of young workers is expected to remain robust in the US.
Currently pi network is not tradable on binance or any other exchange because we are still in the enclosed mainnet.
Right now the only way to sell pi coins is by trading with a verified merchant.
What is a pi merchant?
A pi merchant is someone verified by pi network team and allowed to barter pi coins for goods and services.
Since pi network is not doing any pre-sale The only way exchanges like binance/huobi or crypto whales can get pi is by buying from miners. And a merchant stands in between the exchanges and the miners.
I will leave the telegram contact of my personal pi merchant. I and my friends has traded more than 6000pi coins successfully
Tele-gram
@Pi_vendor_247
If you are looking for a pi coin investor. Then look no further because I have the right one he is a pi vendor (he buy and resell to whales in China). I met him on a crypto conference and ever since I and my friends have sold more than 10k pi coins to him And he bought all and still want more. I will drop his telegram handle below just send him a message.
@Pi_vendor_247
What website can I sell pi coins securely.DOT TECH
Currently there are no website or exchange that allow buying or selling of pi coins..
But you can still easily sell pi coins, by reselling it to exchanges/crypto whales interested in holding thousands of pi coins before the mainnet launch.
Who is a pi merchant?
A pi merchant is someone who buys pi coins from miners and resell to these crypto whales and holders of pi..
This is because pi network is not doing any pre-sale. The only way exchanges can get pi is by buying from miners and pi merchants stands in between the miners and the exchanges.
How can I sell my pi coins?
Selling pi coins is really easy, but first you need to migrate to mainnet wallet before you can do that. I will leave the telegram contact of my personal pi merchant to trade with.
Tele-gram.
@Pi_vendor_247
what is the best method to sell pi coins in 2024DOT TECH
The best way to sell your pi coins safely is trading with an exchange..but since pi is not launched in any exchange, and second option is through a VERIFIED pi merchant.
Who is a pi merchant?
A pi merchant is someone who buys pi coins from miners and pioneers and resell them to Investors looking forward to hold massive amounts before mainnet launch in 2026.
I will leave the telegram contact of my personal pi merchant to trade pi coins with.
@Pi_vendor_247
Even tho Pi network is not listed on any exchange yet.
Buying/Selling or investing in pi network coins is highly possible through the help of vendors. You can buy from vendors[ buy directly from the pi network miners and resell it]. I will leave the telegram contact of my personal vendor.
@Pi_vendor_247
how to sell pi coins in South Korea profitably.DOT TECH
Yes. You can sell your pi network coins in South Korea or any other country, by finding a verified pi merchant
What is a verified pi merchant?
Since pi network is not launched yet on any exchange, the only way you can sell pi coins is by selling to a verified pi merchant, and this is because pi network is not launched yet on any exchange and no pre-sale or ico offerings Is done on pi.
Since there is no pre-sale, the only way exchanges can get pi is by buying from miners. So a pi merchant facilitates these transactions by acting as a bridge for both transactions.
How can i find a pi vendor/merchant?
Well for those who haven't traded with a pi merchant or who don't already have one. I will leave the telegram id of my personal pi merchant who i trade pi with.
Tele gram: @Pi_vendor_247
#pi #sell #nigeria #pinetwork #picoins #sellpi #Nigerian #tradepi #pinetworkcoins #sellmypi
what is the future of Pi Network currency.DOT TECH
The future of the Pi cryptocurrency is uncertain, and its success will depend on several factors. Pi is a relatively new cryptocurrency that aims to be user-friendly and accessible to a wide audience. Here are a few key considerations for its future:
Message: @Pi_vendor_247 on telegram if u want to sell PI COINS.
1. Mainnet Launch: As of my last knowledge update in January 2022, Pi was still in the testnet phase. Its success will depend on a successful transition to a mainnet, where actual transactions can take place.
2. User Adoption: Pi's success will be closely tied to user adoption. The more users who join the network and actively participate, the stronger the ecosystem can become.
3. Utility and Use Cases: For a cryptocurrency to thrive, it must offer utility and practical use cases. The Pi team has talked about various applications, including peer-to-peer transactions, smart contracts, and more. The development and implementation of these features will be essential.
4. Regulatory Environment: The regulatory environment for cryptocurrencies is evolving globally. How Pi navigates and complies with regulations in various jurisdictions will significantly impact its future.
5. Technology Development: The Pi network must continue to develop and improve its technology, security, and scalability to compete with established cryptocurrencies.
6. Community Engagement: The Pi community plays a critical role in its future. Engaged users can help build trust and grow the network.
7. Monetization and Sustainability: The Pi team's monetization strategy, such as fees, partnerships, or other revenue sources, will affect its long-term sustainability.
It's essential to approach Pi or any new cryptocurrency with caution and conduct due diligence. Cryptocurrency investments involve risks, and potential rewards can be uncertain. The success and future of Pi will depend on the collective efforts of its team, community, and the broader cryptocurrency market dynamics. It's advisable to stay updated on Pi's development and follow any updates from the official Pi Network website or announcements from the team.
3. CASE Network Studies & Analyses No.439 – The Post - 2007 Crises and Europe’s Place …
1
Contents
Abstract ............................................................................................................................... 3
Introduction ......................................................................................................................... 4
1. The North Atlantic Financial Crisis of 2007-8 ................................................................ 5
2. The Global Economic Crisis of 2009 .............................................................................. 8
3. Public Finance Crises ....................................................................................................10
4. The Post-2007 Crises beyond the North Atlantic .........................................................17
5. Implications for Global Economic Governance ...........................................................19
6. The Significance for Europe of Asia’s Economic Rise ................................................21
7. Conclusions ....................................................................................................................24
References ..........................................................................................................................27
4. CASE Network Studies & Analyses No.439 – The Post - 2007 Crises and Europe’s Place …
Richard Pomfret has been Professor of Economics at the University of Adelaide
since 1992. From 1980 to 1991, he was Professor of Economics at the Johns
Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies in Washington DC,
Bologna and Nanjing. He previously worked at Concordia University in Montréal and
the Kiel Institut für Weltwirtschaft in Germany. In the first half of 2012 he is teaching
at the Johns Hopkins Bologna Center and at the University of Trento. In 1993 he
was seconded to the United Nations for a year, acting as adviser on macroeconomic
policy to the Asian republics of the former Soviet Union. Recent consultancy work
includes projects for the World Bank, Asian Development Bank and the OECD. He
has published over a hundred papers on economic development and international
economics, and has written nineteen books. His most recent books are Regionalism
in East Asia: Why has it flourished since 2000 and how far will it go? (World
Scientific) and The Age of Equality: The twentieth century in economic perspective
(Harvard UP).
2
5. CASE Network Studies & Analyses No.439 – The Post - 2007 Crises and Europe’s Place …
3
Abstract
What is often abbreviated to GFC included three distinct crises: the 2007-8 North Atlantic
financial crisis, a 2008-9 global economic crisis and public finance crises which became
increasingly focussed on the eurozone in 2010-12. The relative weight of emerging market
economies in the global economy, which had been increasing for several decades, grew
even more rapidly in 2008-11 as the economies of the USA and Europe faltered, and other
open economies recovered rapidly from the global economic crisis. This poses challenges
for global economic governance, although there are constraints on Asia being a more
assertive force. For the EU the greater dangers are, first, that if EU leaders see their
economies as victims of a GFC then they will fail to address their economies’ own
shortcomings, and, second, that preoccupation with internal crises will distract EU leaders
from rising to the challenges and opportunities associated with the evolving multipolar global
economy.
6. CASE Network Studies & Analyses No.439 – The Post - 2007 Crises and Europe’s Place …
4
Introduction
European Crises And The Asian Economies1
The post-2007 crises, often abbreviated to the Global Financial Crisis (GFC), included three
distinct crises. The North Atlantic financial crisis of 2007-8 hit the USA, UK and some small
European economies (e.g. Iceland, Ireland, Latvia), but there was no general financial crisis
in Latin America, Africa or Asia. The 2007-8 financial crisis was less global than the 1997-8
financial crisis which started in Southeast Asia and spread to Korea, Russia, and South
America as investors questioned the riskiness of emerging market debts, and reached the US
financial system through the collapse of Long-term Capital Management. Even countries
closely linked to the US economy, notably Canada, did not suffer from financial contagion
effects in 2007-8, and nor did countries such as Australia that experienced similar housing
booms to those in the USA and UK. In Europe the 2007-8 financial crisis had little impact on
the financial sectors of major eurozone countries such as France, Germany and Italy.2 The
GFC only seemed global when viewed from the media centres in the north-eastern USA and
London
A global economic crisis followed in 2008-9 because recession in two of the world’s largest
economies (USA and UK) impacted on global demand and world trade. However, the
consequences of exogenous negative trade shocks are short-lived compared to the direct
consequences of financial crises, and the global trade crisis was over before the end of
2009.3 Indeed, the US economic crisis was over by 2010, although recovery was slow as
firms and households deleveraged and there were fears of a double-dip recession.
In 2010-12 public finance crises resulted from large bail-out or stimulus packages,
exacerbated by falling taxes due to recession (as in Ireland, USA, or the UK). If central banks
are committed to low inflation, then increased budget deficits mean larger public debts and
potential sovereign debt crises. However, at the time of writing governments of these
1 The author is grateful for very helpful comments from James Riedel and Marek Dabrowski.
2 Many large banks suffered losses on “toxic” assets issued by US and UK financial institutions, but these losses
were not sufficient to cause crises. In contrast to the situation after July 1997, when investors questioning the
creditworthiness of foreign issuers found some large countries’ debts unpalatable (notably Russia and later
Argentina), there was no such discovery after September 2008.
3 Eichengreen (2011, 386-9) provides references, and discusses the difficulty of determining the counterfactual
with which to compare the aftermath of financial crises. Giles et al. (2012) date China’s recovery from the middle
of 2009.
7. CASE Network Studies & Analyses No.439 – The Post - 2007 Crises and Europe’s Place …
countries appeared to be taking adequate measures to maintain sovereign creditworthiness.
At the same time, and to some extent coincidentally, other sovereign debt crises occurred,
most notably in Greece due to cumulating budget deficits fuelled by cheap debt since joining
the euro.
By 2011 the sovereign debt crisis was clearly a European crisis. Although European
policymakers were understandably focussed on resolving their crisis, it is important to keep it
in perspective. The post-2007 crises have exacerbated an already important redistribution of
global economic power, as emerging market economies continued to enjoy economic growth
while the established economies largely experienced economic stagnation. In particular, the
three largest eurozone economies (Germany, France and Italy) grew at less than two-thirds
of the speed of the world economy in the fifteen years before 2007; the gap widened further
in 2007-10.
The first three sections of this paper briefly review the three economic crises of 2007-12.
The fourth section analyses the impact of these crises on Asian countries. The Asia-Pacific
region did not experience significant financial crises. The open economies were affected by
the global economic crisis, but they recovered relatively rapidly after a drop in exports and in
economic growth in 2009. In consequence, the weight of Asian economies in the global
economy, which had been increasing for several decades, grew even more rapidly in 2009-
11 as the economies of the USA and Europe faltered. Section 5 analyses the challenge
posed for global economic governance, currently dominated by the USA and western
European countries, and concludes that competition for leadership among the larger
economies and limited leadership resources within the smaller economies constrain Asia
from becoming a more assertive force. The sixth section analyses the challenges Europe
faces as a result of Asia’s increased weight in the global economy, focusing on the risk of
being absent from the negotiating table for plurilateral trade agreements among the major
economies. The final section draws conclusions.
5
1. The North Atlantic Financial Crisis of 2007-8
The USA experienced a major financial crisis in 2007-8. The trigger was falling house prices
from a mid-2006 peak, which led to the subprime mortgage crisis. The crisis was realized in
April 2007 when New Century Financial filed for bankruptcy, and in the remainder of 2007
many institutions announced losses associated with delinquent mortgages. An additional
8. CASE Network Studies & Analyses No.439 – The Post - 2007 Crises and Europe’s Place …
component of the US financial crisis was the collapse of the investment banks which first
became apparent in March 2008 when Bear Stearns was bought by JP Morgan Chase in a
fire sale (paying $240 million for a company worth $18 billion a year earlier) supported by a
loan from the Fed.
The US financial crisis peaked in September 2008. On September 7 the U.S. government
placed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac into a conservatorship, effectively nationalizing them at
the taxpayers' expense. On 15 September 2008 Lehman Brothers went bankrupt and Merrill
Lynch was bought by Bank of America. The following day the Fed announced an $85 billion
rescue package for AIG, the country's biggest insurance company, in return for an 80% stake
in the firm. On 25 September 2008 Washington Mutual, which had assets valued at $307
billion, was closed down by regulators and sold to JPMorgan Chase.
The US government moved quickly to provide support for the financial sector. On 28
September US lawmakers announced a bipartisan agreement on a rescue package, allowing
the Treasury to spend up to $700 billion buying bad debts from ailing banks. The plan was
rejected by Congress the next day, but a revised plan was passed on 3 October. On 14
October the US government unveiled a $250 billion plan to purchase stakes in a variety of
banks in an effort to restore confidence in the sector. On 23 November the US government
announced a $20 billion rescue plan for Citigroup after its shares plunged by more than 60%
in a week. On 25 November the Fed announced that it would inject a further $800 billion into
the economy to stabilise the financial system and encourage lending; about $600 billion
would be used to buy up mortgage-backed securities while $200 billion would be targeted at
unfreezing the consumer credit market.
More or less at the same time and speed, the UK faced a financial crisis triggered by
mortgage loans. In September 2007 Northern Rock sought and received a liquidity support
facility from the Bank of England, and in February 2008 Northern Rock was taken into state
ownership; the bank's principal problem was non-performing mortgage loans. In September
2008 the mortgage lender Bradford & Bingley was nationalized; the British government took
control of the bank's £50 billion mortgages and loans, while its savings operations and
branches were sold to Santander. The banking crisis spread and on 3 October 2008 the UK
government announced plans to pump £37 billion of taxpayers' money into three
banks: Royal Bank of Scotland, Lloyds TSB and HBOS.
In September and October 2008 other large EU economies faced specific banking problems,
which were met by bail-outs, but the systemic impact was nowhere near as large as in the
UK. For example, the Belgian, French and Luxembourg governments contributed 6.4 billion
6
9. CASE Network Studies & Analyses No.439 – The Post - 2007 Crises and Europe’s Place …
euros to bail out Dexia, and the German government announced a €50 billion deal to save
Hypo Real Estate, but these were isolated cases rather than severe shocks to the national
financial system. A much larger national crisis occurred in Ireland, whose government
foolishly guaranteed all deposits in the country's main banks. Relative to the size of the
national economy, the largest banking crisis was in Iceland, whose banking system collapsed
in October 2008, leading the government to negotiate a $2 billion loan from the International
Monetary Fund, the first IMF loan to a western European country for over a quarter of a
century.4
A striking feature of the 2007-8 financial crises was that they did not have serious
transcontinental contagion effects. The 1997-8 Asian Crisis triggered a reconsideration of
emerging market debts that led to crises in Brazil and Russia, with the latter contributing to
the Long Term Capital Management crisis in the USA. In 2007-8 there was no financial crisis
in South America, Africa or Asia. Even countries closely linked to the US economy, notably
Canada, had no financial crisis. Although financial liberalization, and the associated pre-
2007 economic boom, contributed to the likelihood of a crisis, Australia illustrated that a crisis
was not inevitable.
In the USA and the UK the financial crisis was over by the end of 2008. In the first half of
2009 most banks were back to good health. In June 2009 ten of the largest US banks
announced that they would be able to repay the US Treasury the money they were
lent under the October 2008 bail-out. Goldman Sachs announced a net profit of $3.44 billion
for April to June, and set aside $6.65 billion for pay and bonuses in the quarter. In the UK,
Barclays announced an 8% rise in first-half profits, and other banks announced mixed results
for the period (profits at HSBC and RBS, losses at Lloyds and Northern Rock).5 In both
countries the popular focus had shifted from worrying over a financial crisis to outrage over
high earnings in the financial sector.
The financial crises were important for their impact on the real sector. As people's financial
and real estate wealth declined, aggregate demand fell, starting with deferred purchase of
4 Other countries, notably in Eastern Europe (e.g. Latvia), experienced financial crises that were related to the
difficulties of western European banks or to a sudden stop in capital inflows. In Central Asia, Kazakhstan had a
financial crisis that was largely home-grown, resulting from a real estate bubble that was fuelled in part by foreign
depositors and that burst in 2007. None of these had serious impact beyond the affected countries’ national
borders.
5 The common pattern was that, although some financial institutions were hard hit (albeit with a blow often
softened by public assistance), other banks, such as Barclays, benefitted from selective purchase of assets sold
by the ailing institutions or by their liquidators.
7
10. CASE Network Studies & Analyses No.439 – The Post - 2007 Crises and Europe’s Place …
consumer durables.6 Already by December 2008 governments in the USA and EU were
becoming as worried about the health of their automobile sector as about that of the financial
sector. On 4 December French President Nicolas Sarkozy unveiled a 26 billion euro
stimulus plan, with money to be spent on public sector investments and loans for the
country's carmakers. On 19 December President George W Bush announced that the US
government would use up to $17.4 billion of the $700 billion meant for the banking sector to
help the Big Three US carmakers, and on 29 December the US Treasury unveiled a $6
billion bail-out for GMAC, the car-loan arm of General Motors. Over the following year the
US and EU economies would experience a deep recession, whose impact would be
transmitted to the rest of the world through reduced demand for imports.
8
2. The Global Economic Crisis of 2009
In 2008 average growth in the high-income countries had slowed to a standstill and in 2009
their GDP fell by 3.5 percent (Table 1). The decline was driven by the recessions in the USA
and UK and was transmitted through reduced demand for imports, which first hit countries
exporting consumer durables whose purchase could be postponed, e.g. car exporters in
Japan, Germany and France.7 By the start of 2009 the volume of world exports had fallen to
about three-quarters of their level in April 2008, and alarm bells were sounding about the
scale of the decline in world trade (Baldwin and Evenett, 2009); analysis of the causes was in
full swing by November (Baldwin, 2009), although by then trade volumes were starting to
recover.8 Over the year 2009 the world's real output fell by 0.5 percent, after growing by 3
percent per year in 2000-8, and the volume of trade in goods and services fell by 10.9
percent (IMF, 2011, Table A9). In sum, the financial crisis was not global, but, when two of
6 This contributed to falling share prices. The world's stock markets fell by about a third in the final quarter of
2008, in many countries continuing to decline to a trough in the first or second quarter of 2009, which added to the
negative wealth effect on aggregate demand.
7 Alessandria et al. (2010; 2011) show that sales of foreign cars began to decline in the USA in mid-2008 and the
ratio of inventories to sales increased by 45 percent over the next six months. Car sales began to revive in early
2009, but imports only picked up after inventories had been run down. In 2010 the car cycle benefited especially
Germany whose carmakers had competitive model ranges.
8 Some authors saw a direct link between the financial crises and the decline in trade. Ahn, Amiti, and Weinstein
(2011) claim that financial factors may explain about 20 to 30 percent of the decline in world trade that occurred in
the 2008-2009 crisis, and they support this claim by showing that the prices of manufactured exports rose relative
to domestic prices during the crisis and that U.S. seaborne exports and imports, which they assume to be more
sensitive to trade finance problems, saw their prices rise relative to goods shipped by air or land. Others have
argued that trade finance was not a major contributor to reduced trade volume in 2008-9. One difficulty is the lack
of hard data on trade finance (Korinek, Le Cocguic and Sourdin, 2010).
11. CASE Network Studies & Analyses No.439 – The Post - 2007 Crises and Europe’s Place …
the world's largest importers (the USA and UK) run into a serious domestic recession, the
world economy is affected.
The global economic crisis struck countries with differing degrees of severity. Countries
which suffered both from a financial crisis and the slowdown in global demand inevitably saw
large dips in economic activity. The countries of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet
Union, which had grown rapidly over the previous decade and in many cases had become
closely connected to the economies of the pre-2004 EU15, saw the largest declines in output
in 2009. In some cases, notably the Baltic countries and Bulgaria, the immediate effect was
exacerbated by a strong policy response in the form of cutting budget deficits, driving an
internal devaluation (i.e. falling wages and prices) while maintaining a fixed exchange rate.9
Countries less integrated into the global economy, such as low-income countries in Africa,
were relatively less impacted by the global crisis. Asian economic growth dipped in 2008-9,
but recovered to a historically high rate in 2010 (Table 1).
9
Table 1. Growth by Region, 2000-2010
Ave 2000-7 2008 2009 2010
High-income countries 2.4 0.3 -3.5 2.6
Asia 7.7 6.5 5.1 8.8
Eastern Europe & Central Asia 6.1 4.1 -5.4 3.9
Latin America & Caribbean 3.6 4.1 -2.0 5.8
Middle East & Africa 5.5 5.3 1.6 4.3
Source: real GDP growth from IMF World Economic Outlook, as reported in Didier et al. (2011, 33).
Notes: regional averages are weighted by 2007 nominal GDP in USD; high-income countries are as defined by
the World Bank July 2010 classification; Asia includes South and East Asia except Japan, and Pacific
except Australia and New Zealand.
A noteworthy pattern was that emerging market economies as a group weathered the storm
better than the high-income countries. Several authors confirm that GDP growth declined
less in emerging economies, even after controlling for several variables (Frankel and
Saravelos, 2010; Rose and Spiegel, 2010; Rose, 2011). Didier et al. (2011) argue that,
using the drop from pre-crisis highs as the criterion, there is no significant difference between
high-income and emerging economies, but they acknowledge that emerging economies
recovered faster and as a group had returned to pre-crisis levels of industrial output in 2010,
whereas high-income countries did not achieve this until 2011. A superior recovery was
evident in the large emerging economies with sound economic policies before the crisis,
such as China, India, Brazil and Indonesia.
9 Aslund (2011) argues that the policy response helped the countries to a rapid recovery and improved long-term
growth prospects. Darvas (2011) claims that in Latvia internal devaluation was a failure because private sector
wages hardly changed and because of harmful social consequences, although given the size of Latvia’s crisis the
latter would accompany any policy.
12. CASE Network Studies & Analyses No.439 – The Post - 2007 Crises and Europe’s Place …
Why did emerging economies ride out the crisis so calmly? They were open economies and
hence exposed to sharp drops in export demand. However, trade shocks typically are
shorter-lasting than financial crises, which may be followed by a lengthy period of
deleveraging and domestic recession. Moreover, and in contrast to earlier decades, many
emerging economies had shifted from being net external debtors to net creditors and held
liquid foreign assets (e.g. in the form of reserve assets) and illiquid foreign liabilities (e.g. as
direct foreign investment), so they were not exposed to a sudden deterioration in the capital
account of the balance of payments. Finally, some countries, notably China, introduced pre-emptive
stimulus packages to prevent the initial negative shock from turning into a major
10
recession.10
3. Public Finance Crises
By 2010 all regions of the world were enjoying positive economic growth. However, the
sense of crisis persisted as a number of countries experienced difficulties reducing their
public sector deficit and ran into debt problems. Some of these debt crises were related to
the financial crisis in cases where governments had been involved in expensive bail-outs
(e.g. Ireland or Iceland) and others to the size of the stimulus packages adopted to deal with
the economic crisis (e.g. the USA and UK), while other debt crises were essentially
independent of the financial and economic crises but came at a bad time (e.g. Greece).
In 2010-11, public sector budget crises were debt crises because all governments were
committed to not monetizing budget deficits. This was, of course, not an option for individual
eurozone countries (or for countries like Latvia which remained committed to a fixed
exchange rate), but neither the USA, nor the UK nor the ECB appeared to be contemplating
the inflation option.11 The US, UK and eurozone central banks sought to expand the
10 Warnings by the US government of systemic risk and a new Great Depression contributed to global uncertainty
(Taylor, 2009). The media working out of the northeastern USA and London, spooked by the dramatic US and UK
financial collapses in September and October 2008, may have contributed to panic among policymakers in late
2008, even in countries which experienced no financial crisis such as Australia or China.
11 Iceland, with a population of just over 300,000 was small enough to be a special case (Benediktsdottir et al.,
2011). In the last quarter of 2008 the three major banks went into receivership and at year’s end the external debt
to GDP ratio was around 1000%. The government guaranteed deposits held in Iceland, but not deposits held
elsewhere, and introduced capital controls to insulate the economy, while allowing the currency to depreciate by
50%. This policy combination led to a reasonably soft landing given the size of the debt, but the capital controls
probably contravened the country’s obligations as a member of the European Economic Area and by a larger
economy the external defaults would have been sufficiently unacceptable to have triggered retaliation. Moreover,
the recovery in the BOP was helped by increased aluminium exports (26% of Iceland’s exports in 2010), which
13. CASE Network Studies & Analyses No.439 – The Post - 2007 Crises and Europe’s Place …
monetary base sufficiently to accommodate deleveraging without fuelling inflation, so far with
reasonable success.12 The specifics of the fiscal tightening required to reduce debt burdens
were politically controversial, but there was little question of its necessity. By 2011, the
countries that had run up debts while stimulating their economies during financial crises
appeared to be largely on track, and fears of default (or even of further downgrades of these
countries’ credit ratings) had diminished by the year’s end.
The eurozone sovereign debt crises had varying origins. The Irish government made one
foolish policy decision, guaranteeing all creditors of the major Irish banks and had to pay a
large price for that error.13 The Spanish economy had experienced a construction bubble in
some respects like that of the other Atlantic crisis economies and, although concerns were
raised about it being one of the indebted PIIGS, Spain’s debt/GDP ratio was not
exceptionally high (Table 2). Italy had a much higher debt/GDP ratio, indeed the highest in
the eurozone in 2007, but this was inherited from poor public finance management in the
1990s rather than something that emerged in the 2000s. The Greek debt differed in that it
had mushroomed after adoption of the euro and the use of the borrowed funds was
opaque.14
11
Table 2. Eurozone Debt/GDP Ratios, end of 2010
Country Debt/GDP Country Debt/GDP
Austria 72 Italy 118
Belgium 96 Luxembourg 19
Cyprus 62 Malta 69
Estonia 7 Netherlands 63
Finland 48 Portugal 93
was due to increased capacity in preceding years rather than to currency depreciation (Darvas, 2011, 22), and the
$2 billion IMF package was supplemented with $3 billion from Nordic countries (Gylfason, 2011, 2).
12 In 2008 the monetary base (notes and coins plus reserves held with the central bank) was 4-6% of GDP in the
US and UK and 10% in the eurozone. By early 2012 the ratio had increased to 16-18% in all three, but the
increase in the money supply (M2) was much smaller because banks used easier access to central bank funds to
improve their capital ratios rather than for loans to the private sector. The US Fed was the most successful in
2010-11 in stimulating easier private sector credit without an inflationary surge and notably refrained from further
quantitative easing in the first quarter of 2012. The ECB was the least successful in moderating the economic
slowdown, and hence became the most active in providing liquidity to banks in the first quarter of 2012.
13 This was a choice. The Icelandic government pointedly refused to guarantee foreign deposits in Icelandic banks
that went under, and stuck to this position despite heavy pressure from the UK and Netherlands in both of which
subsidiaries of Icelandic banks had attracted large numbers of depositors. Whelan (2011) argues that the Irish
economy already faced serious problems in 2007-8 after a real estate bubble had burst, which made it even more
incredible that the government on 30 September 2008 announced a near-blanket guarantee to the creditors of
Irish banks. When Allied Irish Bank's losses were assessed at €30 billion in September 2010 and the government
issued promissory notes to cover the bank's debts, Ireland's budget deficit reached 32% of GDP. By spring 2011
the total bill to Irish taxpayers for bank bailouts had exceeded €70 billion, for a country of less than 4.5 million
people.
14 Greece had accumulated a substantial debt since the early 1980s, but high and increasing interest rates on
drachma-denominated debt would have forced a much earlier reckoning had Greece not adopted the euro. Low
global interest rates due to major central banks’ expansionary monetary policies facilitated debt accumulation by
many countries in the early 2000s, but for Greece the impact was magnified by the absence of country risk
premia. With lenders only requiring standard eurozone interest rates in the 2000s (Figure 1), Greece’s day of
reckoning was postponed by many years.
14. CASE Network Studies & Analyses No.439 – The Post - 2007 Crises and Europe’s Place …
12
Country Debt/GDP Country Debt/GDP
France 82 Slovakia 41
Germany 83 Slovenia 39
Greece 145 Spain 61
Ireland 93
Source: Eurostat at
http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/tgm/table.do?tab=table&plugin=1&language=en&pcode=tsieb090
accessed 9 March 2012.
The adoption of the euro led to rapid convergence of interest rates on debt issued or
guaranteed by eurozone member governments, and between 2001 and 2008 these rates
were practically identical (Figure 1). After adopting the euro the Greek government) “went on
a borrowing spree at artificially low interest rates” (Sally, 2012) to finance non-transparent
budget deficits, including for prestige projects like the 2004 Olympic Games.15 A Greek
default was a potential contagion event for two reasons. First, it sounded a warning to
creditors that they should check whether other eurozone countries had been borrowing
heavily on the basis of low interest rates which ignored individual countries' default risk; they
found Portugal, which like Greece had been running large current account deficits since
introducing the euro (Table 3).16
Figure 1. Interest Rates on Eurozone Sovereign Debt, 1989-2011
15 Some of the non-transparency was due to fraudulent presentation of macro data, while some was expenses
ballooning out of control. The original budget for the 2004 Athens Olympic Games was $1.6 billion, but actual
spending is believed to have exceeded $16 billion and, while this was not unique (the public debt from the 1976
Montréal Olympics was only paid off in 2005), in Greece’s case it added to a debt that was already passing
beyond hope of repayment.
16 The argument here is not that a current account deficit is necessarily a problem, but that it did provide an
indicator of the size of net capital inflows and this magnitude may be a cause for concern.
15. CASE Network Studies & Analyses No.439 – The Post - 2007 Crises and Europe’s Place …
Table 3. Balance on Current Account, Selected Countries, 2003-2010 (per cent of GDP)
13
2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
USA –4.7 –5.3 –5.9 –6.0 –5.1 –4.7 –2.7 –3.2
Canada 1.2 2.3 1.9 1.4 0.8 0.4 –2.8 –2.8
UK –1.6 –2.1 –2.6 –3.4 –2.6 –1.6 –1.7 –2.5
Eurozone 0.4 1.2 0.4 0.4 0.2 –0.6 –0.2 0.1
Germany 1.9 4.7 5.1 6.5 7.6 6.7 5.0 5.3
France 0.7 0.5 –0.5 –0.6 –1.0 –1.9 –1.9 –2.1
Italy –1.3 –0.9 –1.7 –2.6 –2.4 –2.9 –2.1 –3.5
Spain –3.5 –5.3 –7.4 –9.0 –10.0 –9.7 –5.5 –4.5
Netherlands 5.6 7.6 7.4 9.3 6.7 4.3 4.6 7.1
Belgium 3.4 3.2 2.0 1.9 1.6 –1.9 0.8 1.2
Austria 1.7 2.2 2.2 2.8 3.5 4.9 2.9 3.2
Greece –6.6 –5.9 –7.4 –11.2 –14.4 –14.7 –11.0 –10.4
Portugal –6.5 –8.4 –10.4 –10.7 –10.1 –12.6 –10.9 –9.9
Finland 4.8 6.2 3.4 4.2 4.3 2.9 2.3 3.1
Ireland –0.0 –0.6 –3.5 –3.6 –5.3 –5.6 –3.0 –0.7
Japan 3.2 3.7 3.6 3.9 4.8 3.2 2.8 3.6
China 2.8 3.6 7.1 9.3 10.6 9.6 6.0 5.2
India 1.5 0.1 –1.3 –1.0 –0.7 –2.0 –2.8 –3.2
Korea 2.4 4.5 2.2 1.5 2.1 0.3 3.9 2.8
Taiwan 9.8 5.8 4.8 7.0 8.9 6.9 11.4 9.4
Indonesia 3.5 0.6 0.1 3.0 2.4 0.0 2.6 0.9
Malaysia 12.0 12.1 15.0 16.4 15.9 17.5 16.5 11.8
Philippines 0.4 1.9 2.0 4.5 4.9 2.2 5.8 4.5
Singapore 22.7 17.0 21.1 24.8 27.3 14.6 19.0 22.2
Thailand 3.4 1.7 –4.3 1.1 6.3 0.8 8.3 4.6
Source: IMF World Economic Outlook, April 2011 (Tables A11 and A12), at
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/weo/2011/01/pdf/tables.pdf (accessed 9 September 2011).
Notes: Eurozone calculated as the sum of the balances of individual eurozone countries excluding Estonia.
A second source of contagion arose because banks in other eurozone countries held large
amounts of the sovereign debt or, equally disastrous, loans to Greek banks that would go
under if the Greek government defaulted. This was especially true for banks in EU countries,
such as France and Germany, which had not been involved in pre-2008 real estate lending
to the same extent as banks in Spain, Ireland or the UK. The French and German banks
weathered the 2008 financial storm better, but in 2010 found themselves over-exposed to
Greek borrowers. Thus, EU leaders, with the French President and German Chancellor in
the vanguard, spent much energy in 2010 and 2011 organizing relief for Greece, ideally to
avoid default but at a minimum to buy time so that foreign banks and others could reorganize
their balance sheets before they had to write down the value of their Greek assets.17
17 Some confusion surrounds the term "default". As Reinhart and Rogoff (2009) point out, any outcome that
leaves creditors short of their contracted real returns, including "voluntary" rescheduling or inflation, is tantamount
16. CASE Network Studies & Analyses No.439 – The Post - 2007 Crises and Europe’s Place …
The debt crises, earlier financial crises and debt resolution programs illustrated the ubiquity
of time inconsistency problems. Short-run measures that buy popularity for governments
may have long-run implications that are recognized as adverse but are ignored.
Governments that had accumulated assets in sovereign wealth funds (e.g. Chile or
Kazakhstan) or as reserves held by the central bank had foregone opportunities to spend
during the boom, but were better placed to weather the storm in 2009. Countries which used
crises as opportunities to cut out wasteful government expenditures and carry out difficult but
desirable reforms (e.g. the Baltic countries) experienced deeper recessions but emerged in
better shape. A key question for creditors of eurozone governments was which countries
would fall into this category, and which would simply have an unsustainable debt burden. By
March 2012 the emerging consensus seemed to be that Italy and perhaps Spain would
remain solvent, but Greece’s debt problems would be resolved by a mixture of financial
bailout from other eurozone countries and the ECB and a massive write-down of private
sector debts, led by French and German banks under pressure from their respective
governments. Whether the mix will be sufficient to defuse the Greek crisis remains unclear,
but it does generate a new time inconsistency (or moral hazard) problem if creditors believe
that the eurozone countries collectively will bail out future profligate eurozone members.18
Another apparent dilemma was that countries more integrated into the global economy or
with more liberal financial sectors were likely to be hit the hardest, whereas countries outside
the global economy were insulated from the crises. This is, however, not an argument for
autarchy or financial reregulation. Countries with more liberal financial sectors enjoyed
superior growth in the decades before 2007, which far exceeded the size of the decline in
GDP in 2008-9 (Pomfret, 2010); Table 4 provides some comparisons. The gains from
financial liberalization are primarily in terms of improved allocation of capital rather than
increased saving and investment, as evidenced from financially repressed economies in the
twentieth century19 and also in recent empirical work based on a broader range of countries
to default. Legally, however, the semantics matter because many institutions are barred from holding assets
whose issuer is in default. The March 2012 rescheduling of Greek debt was not labelled “default” because formal
default would force pension funds and others to hold a fire sale of assets, but it was a “credit event” which
triggered payments to creditors who held credit-default swaps (CDSs) as insurance against their Greek bonds
turning into bad debts.
18 There may also be a psychological issue, if policymakers who laboured to avoid formal Greek default in 2010-
12 do not want default to happen on their watch. President Sarkozy and Chancellor Merkel may have continued to
organize aid packages beyond the point at which new leaders would be ready to draw a line (and blame their
predecessors for failing to recognize Greek insolvency sooner). As Dean (2012) points out, already in early 2010
it was known that Greece was insolvent, and for most economists the sensible policy would have been a quick
write off, whose wider impact would have been trivial given that the Greek economy is smaller than that of Greater
Miami.
19 Countries that repressed their financial sectors during the 1950s and 1960s import-substitution era suffered
negative consequences for long-term economic growth; there was little loss of savings because the interest
elasticity of supply of saving is low, but excess demand for loans at low interest rates was associated with
misallocation of capital (Fry, 1988). In countries like India or the Soviet Union in the 1970s and 1980s inefficient
14
17. CASE Network Studies & Analyses No.439 – The Post - 2007 Crises and Europe’s Place …
(Kukenova, 2011; Buera et al., 2011). These benefits tend to be more pronounced in the
longer term, although financial liberalization inevitably exposes an economy to greater
volatility.
The less dynamic EU financial sectors, notably those of France and Germany, did not stoke
real estate bubbles in the first decade of the twenty-first century, but instead they took the
conservative path of lending to European governments or to borrowers assumed to have
sovereign backing. The French and German banks that took this path failed to recognize
that eurozone sovereigns’ creditworthiness differed and that some governments might
irresponsibly borrow beyond hope of repayment. The most positive outcome, from an early
2012 perspective, would be if this characterization only applied to Greece, but even for an
economy as small as that of Greece debt resolution is dragging out.
15
Table 4. GDP in Current US Dollars (billions), 1992-2007
1992 2007 % change 1992 2007 % change
USA 6,286.8 13,811.2 119.7 Germany 2,062.1 3,297.2 59.9
UK 1,074.0 2,727.8 154.0 France 1,372.8 2,562.3 86.6
Spain 612.6 1,429.2 133.3 Italy 1,265.8 2,107.5 66.5
Ireland 54.3 255.0 369.6 Greece 128.4 360.0 180.4
Australia 320.6 821.7 156.3
High-income
OECD
19,764.1 38,219.0 93.4
World 24,533.6 54,347.0 121.5
Source: Pomfret (2010, 26) -- data from World Bank World Development Indicators.
The Greek debt crisis differed from the 2007-8 crises in which private borrowers defaulted,
financial institutions collapsed and the government had to accept the cost of a bankrupt
institution (like Lehmann) or of nationalizing (the UK) or bailing out (the USA) financial
institutions. The latter costs quickly appeared on public sector balance sheets. The size of
the increased public debt was known, and responsibility accepted. On a political level, the
population recognized the need for policies to maintain public sector creditworthiness, even if
the government that had accumulated the debt was thrown out (as in Ireland) or the prime
minister was formally charged and tried for incompetence (Iceland).20
allocation of capital was indicated by increasing incremental capital-output ratios (ICORs). India’s ICOR increased
from 4-4.5 in the first half of the 1960s to a peak of 10.5 in 1975 (reported in the Asian Development Bank’s Asian
Economic Outlook 1990, p. 138), i.e. an additional unit of capital made less than half the contribution to output in
1976 than it had made a dozen years earlier. In the Soviet Union the ICOR increased from 3.7 in the period 1950-
60, to 5.0 in 1960-75 and 14.8 in 1975-85 (Gregory, 1994, 129). Countries with well-functioning financial sectors
typically have ICORs that remain in the 3-4 range.
20 Darvas (2012) describes how three of the countries with the highest debt/GDP ratios (Iceland, Ireland and
Latvia) adopted a variety of drastic measures, and in each case reduced the debt successfully.
18. CASE Network Studies & Analyses No.439 – The Post - 2007 Crises and Europe’s Place …
By contrast, Greece was kept technically solvent and the main lending banks neither folded
nor were nationalized, so the Greek debt crisis dragged on with ongoing uncertainty about
the eventual costs to public and private balance sheets and about the systemic outcome.
The likelihood is that such uncertainty will delay resolution of the regional imbalances in
Table 3 and a return to sustained economic growth in the eurozone, as leaders continue to
argue over who bears the cost of debt resolution and over long-term systemic reform within
the eurozone. Moreover, unlike the cases described in the previous paragraph, a lengthy
resolution process may erode the population’s willingness to accept responsibility for
accumulating the past debt and contribute to a tendency to blame external actors (the IMF or
leaders of other EU countries) for imposing harsh policies on the country. By the March
2012 agreement, Greece has already defaulted on a large portion of its debt, but the
debt/GDP ratio remains high and disagreement over “blame” will complicate further
resolution. Meanwhile, EU leaders focus on designing pre-emptive measures to prevent
recurring debt crises due to eurozone members accumulating unsustainable debts.
In sum the public financial crises that emerged in 2010 had two different complexions.
Those that arose from the financial crises of 2008 have been tackled – more purposively by
the smaller economies concerned, and less purposively by the USA and UK which being
without original sin (i.e. not having debts denominated in a foreign currency) can, in the last
resort, reduce their real debt by inflation. The debts accumulated by eurozone members,
which over-borrowed on the basis of low interest rates fuelled by banks’ foolish
misconception that all eurozone sovereign debt was equal, are being resolved by drawn-out
political negotiations whose endpoint is uncertain.21 The eurozone crisis could have global
implications, if the problem is not restricted to the small economies of Greece and Portugal,
but more certainly it is a European problem distracting EU economic policymakers from
global issues.
21 Article 125 of the Treaty of the Functioning of the European Union prohibits any direct bailout of member states,
but especially in March 2012 this appeared to be being subverted by the ECB providing indirect bail-out funds via
increased liquidity for banks which were being pressured to write down their Greek loans (Dabrowski, 2011, 31).
Commentators, especially in Germany, became increasingly concerned about the potential impact on inflation,
e.g. on 26 February 2012 Welt am Sonntag carried the front-page headline “Europa ertrinkt im Geld” (Europe is
drowning in money) and a four-page report detailing the ECB’s out-of-control money creation. As long as Sarkozy
and Merkel remain in power, however, there is unlikely to be admission of policy error in handling the Greek crisis
in 2010-11 or acceptance of the fact that sovereign default is not incompatible with continued use of the common
currency (e.g. many countries defaulted before 1914 and remained on the gold standard, and US states and cities
have defaulted without leaving the dollar-zone).
16
19. CASE Network Studies & Analyses No.439 – The Post - 2007 Crises and Europe’s Place …
17
4. The Post-2007 Crises beyond the North Atlantic
There was no significant financial crisis in Asia (except Kazakhstan, and that was largely
home-grown), Latin America, Africa or Australasia. There was an economic crisis in 2009 as
global demand fell, but outside the USA and EU recovery was relatively rapid and emerging
economies' share in world trade continued to increase. There are no public finance crises,
as in the USA and Europe, although some governments undertook large prophylactic
stimulus packages (e.g. China and Australia),22 and some faced independent shocks
(notably Japan's natural disaster in March 2011).23 These are ad hoc and need not be long-term
negatives (although they could turn out to be negative if the monies were poorly used or
if returning to prudent budgets is difficult).
An important reason for Asian financial stability in the first decade of the twenty-first century
was the lessons drawn from the 1997-8 Asian Crisis. The strongest image from that event
was of the managing director of the IMF standing over the President of Indonesia who was
signing a loan request, and many in the region resolved to reduce their dependence on the
Euro-US-dominated IMF. A Japanese push for greater Asian financial integration and
creation of Asian multilateral financial institutions met with little success.24 Countries did not
want to compromise their monetary policy autonomy and looked to their own defences by
building up national reserves (Table 5).
By 2010 China and Japan were the largest holders of US Treasury securities, with over two
trillion dollars between them, and South Korea and Taiwan also held large amounts of US
government debt. The desirability of monetary stability to facilitate trade was, however,
22 China’s stimulus program introduced in 2008Q4 included RMB 1.18 trillion in central government funding, but
more importantly it unleashed massive spending from sub-national governments much of which was funded by
local investment corporations (difang zhengfu rongzi pingtai) whose activities are often non-transparent. LICs had
been successful in promoting growth, e.g. in Shanghai which had provided the inspiration for the model, but
before 2009 they tried to maintain a low profile. The stimulus announcement released any perceived political
constraints on the LICs' scale of activities, and in 2009 the actual gross stimulus from all levels of government
reached about a fifth of GDP (Wong, 2011). Many of these loans had a three-year maturity, and in March 2012
the central government instructed lenders to roll them over; the London Financial Times (13 February 2012, page
1) reported that the debt of provinces and cities was equivalent to $1.7 trillion or about a quarter of Chinese GDP.
23 The Japanese central government approved 14.3 trillion yen ($175 billion) in extra expenditures for recovery
from the disaster that killed 19,000 people and made 325,000 homeless and caused huge environmental and
property damage.
24 The 2000 Chiang Mai Initiative, a swap arrangement among the ASEAN+3 group (the ten ASEAN members
plus China, Japan and South Korea), was expanded and multilateralized in 2009, but the amounts remained small
compared to, say, the credit lines some of the participants had with the US Fed and the facility proved to be
redundant during the 2008-9 crises (Pomfret, 2011, 58-73).
20. CASE Network Studies & Analyses No.439 – The Post - 2007 Crises and Europe’s Place …
recognized; Asian governments mostly maintained a loose de facto dollar peg and low
inflation, so that bilateral real exchange rates within East Asia did not fluctuate greatly in the
2000s.
18
Table 5. Foreign Reserves held by Emerging and Developing Countries,
2003-2010 (billion US dollars)
2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
Total 1,341 1,792 2,304 3,073 4,369 4,950 5,597 6,481
Developing Asia 670 935 1,156 1,489 2,129 2,534 3,078 3,658
China 409 616 823 1,070 1,531 1,950 2,418 2,890
India 100 127 133 171 268 248 266 292
CIS and CEE 206 282 378 564 813 764 813 902
Russia 74 122 176 296 468 413 418 456
LAC 195 221 255 310 445 497 548 651
Brazil 49 53 53 85 180 193 237 288
Mexico 59 64 74 76 87 95 100 120
MENA 230 294 434 596 837 1,000 1,001 1,108
SSA 39 61 81 114 145 156 158 162
Source: IMF World Economic Outlook, April 2011 (Table A15), at
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/weo/2011/01/pdf/tables.pdf (accessed 9 September 2011).
Notes: CIS= Commonwealth of Independent States, CEE = Central and Eastern Europe, LAC = Latin American
countries, SSA = Sub-Saharan Africa.
A second and more long-term lesson taken from the Asian Crisis was the desirability of
reducing dependence on international financial markets by building up Asian bond markets.
Artificial attempts to stimulate Asian bonds made limited progress but by 2010 some
domestic bond markets had become substantial, and between 2010Q2 and 2011Q2 local
currency bond markets in emerging East Asia grew by almost eight percent to US$5.5 trillion,
of which China accounted for $3,052 billion, South Korea $1,149 billion, Malaysia $247
billion, Thailand $225 billion, Singapore $179 billion and Indonesia $107 billion (ADB, 2011,
5-6).25 Capital inflows were primarily in the form of foreign direct investment, which in
combination with the large official reserve assets holdings, meant that the Asian countries
were in the happy position of having external assets which were more liquid than their
external liabilities (in contrast to the situation faced by the crisis countries in 1997 which
suffered a sudden and large call on their external liabilities).
Whatever the role of these individual drivers, East Asian countries have not experienced a
financial crisis in the twenty-first century. After the financial turmoil of September 2008 in
New York and London, financial markets showed concern about the creditworthiness of
some Asian countries, but the concern was misplaced. In October-November 2008 credit
default swap spreads soared to 1200 basis points for Indonesia and lower (but still high)
peaks for the Philippines, Thailand, South Korea and others, but the spreads fell during 2009
25 Emerging East Asia is defined here as China, Hong Kong, South Korea, Malaysia Philippines, Singapore,
Thailand and Vietnam.
21. CASE Network Studies & Analyses No.439 – The Post - 2007 Crises and Europe’s Place …
and by the end of 2010 the spreads were less than 200 basis points for all Asian countries,
which was less than the spreads for Italy or Spain (ADB, 2011, 5).
Since 2000 Asian economic integration has centred on a network of bilateral trade
agreements, especially in East Asia. This has been driven by the increased density of
regional value chains, and perhaps by lack of progress on trade facilitation in the Doha
Development Round (Pomfret, 2011; Orefice and Rocha, 2011; Xing, 2011; Sourdin and
Pomfret, 2012). A consequence of the value chains is that the extent of the decline of global
trade, which is measured by summing gross value at each border crossing, relative to the
decline in GDP, which is measured by summing value-added, was exaggerated. Factory
Asia was hit in 2009 because North America and Western Europe are still major markets for
the final products of the regional value chains, but this is changing as consumers in Asian
and other markets become more affluent. Between 2009 and 2011, the Chinese economy
grew from just under $5 trillion to $6.5 trillion and the Indian economy from $1.3 to $1.7
trillion, while ASEAN has a combined GDP of over $1.5 trillion.26
In sum, East Asia did not suffer a major crisis in 2008-9 - certainly nowhere near as bad as
that of 1997-8 - and the reasons are sound.27 Creation of deeper domestic financial markets,
avoidance of large balance of payments or public sector deficits, outward-oriented trade
policies and specialization by comparative advantage are all part of a recipe for continued
economic growth. Such growth will narrow the income gap between East Asia and the USA
and European countries that continue to experience deleveraging and slow growth.
19
5. Implications for Global Economic Governance
The major shift in global economic weight described in the previous section poses challenges
to the system of multilateral institutions established in the 1940s and other fora for global
economic governance. The G7/G8 grouping has been challenged by the rise of the G20,
which includes six Asian economies (not counting Russia): Australia, China, India, Indonesia,
Japan and South Korea. However, despite dissatisfaction in Asia, the IMF and World Bank
26 For more details see Sanchita Basu Das "Asia Holds Promise as US, Eurozone Falter", The Business Times
(Singapore), 24 August 2011.
27 Asia may have been helped by the collapse of commodity prices in 2008-9. Flexible labour markets also
facilitated rapid recovery in some countries. In China, where 20-36 million jobs were lost between October 2008
and April 2009 and unskilled wages fell by over 10%, those dismissed were overwhelmingly migrant workers; the
decentralized stimulus package alleviated hardship by case-specific interventions, and employment and wages
were increasing again in the second half of 2009 (Giles et al., 2012).
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remain US/EU dominated, e.g. with no Asian candidate to challenge Christine Lagarde's IMF
nomination in 2011 or nominated to head the World Bank in 2012. These situations are
clearly unstable.
By contrast, the emerging Asian economies have managed to make substantial progress in
liberalizing trade to meet the needs of their strengthening regional value chains. The WTO is
the only one of the three major economic multilateral organizations that has had an Asian
head, and there is almost universal WTO membership and acceptance of its international
trade law and dispute resolution mechanisms. The slow process of multilateral trade
negotiations has been augmented by substantial unilateral trade liberalization in East Asia
and by trade facilitation measures within ASEAN. 28 In the twenty-first century, these
patterns continue in bilateral and plurilateral agreements and in Asia-Pacific Economic
Cooperation (APEC) and in negotiations to create a TransPacific Partnership (TPP). A
regional approach to trade liberalization may be second-best, but as emphasis shifts from
tariffs to trade facilitation regional agreements are less likely to be discriminatory; measures
such as simplified customs procedures or single windows benefit all trading partners.
There are, however, constraints on a concerted Asian push for greater global influence. The
region lacks a clear hegemon, and is characterized by pervasive competition between the big
states (China-Japan, and to lesser extent India) and historically based distrust (China-Japan-
Korea). There has been no counterpart to the post-1945 Franco-German agreement on
Europe or the North Atlantic security alliance.29 In the emerging economies there is a further
constraint of scarce leadership resources, which is perhaps exacerbated by domestic
political uncertainties in China, India, Indonesia, Thailand, Philippines, and elsewhere. At the
same time, in southeast Asia ASEAN does not have even the limited degree of unity of the
EU, and the governments of other large ASEAN economies may have reservations about
Indonesia being the only country from their region sitting at the G20 table.
Finally, EU assumptions that the Asian economic powers will be concerned by their eurozone
woes and may help out financially are likely to be misplaced. China has diversified its foreign
exchange holdings and is hence concerned about the value of the euro.30 However, Chinese
28 Asian regional agreements in the 1990s and 2000s are described and analysed in Pomfret (2011). Pomfret and
Sourdin (2009) provide evidence of trade facilitation within ASEAN also reducing the costs of trading with non-members.
29 There is, in fact, an emerging arms race in East and South Asia. Between 2007 and 2011, the world’s five
largest importers of conventional weapons were India, South Korea, China, Pakistan and Singapore (Holtom et
al., 2012).
30 China may have supported the euro by diversifying its stock of reserve assets from US dollars to euros, which
helped to limit the fall in value of the euro as the eurozone crisis emerged. However, this was done in China’s
own interests after the US financial crisis reduced faith in the US dollar. China will not to want to put all its eggs in
20
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offers of assistance do not include gifts of cash or loans to an insolvent debtor. Chinese
financial support will be channelled through international agencies such as the IMF,
accompanied by calls for reforming of voting in the institution. Alternatively, Chinese funds
may flow into Europe as direct foreign investment. Neither of these outcomes will be
uncontroversial in the EU.
21
6. The Significance for Europe of Asia’s Economic Rise
The outstanding feature of Asian economic dynamism in the 1990s and 2000s has been the
establishment of global value chains in which Asian producers play a key role. The many
sources of political discord in East Asia have rarely affected trade relations. Even between
China and Japan, two countries vying for leadership with a fraught history and easily evoked
nationalist emotions, trade has not been disrupted by spats like EU turkey wars or NAFTA
lumber disputes. Individual European firms participate, of course, in these chains even if the
highest profile poster children for offshoring have been US icons such as Barbie dolls or
iPhones.
What should be of greater concern to European policymakers is the US embracing of the
need to engage in trade facilitating negotiations, as in the TPP, while EU engagement as in,
for example, ASEM is feeble. APEC has for two decades been a forum where the major
non-European leaders meet, but since the mid-1990s Europeans could take some comfort
from APEC’s descent into apparent irrelevance (Pomfret, 2011, 27-38). President G.W.
Bush appeared uninterested in Asia. President Obama has, however, taken steps to reorient
US policy towards the Pacific, hosting the 2011 APEC summit in his birth-state, Hawaii.
Even more striking was US participation in the 2011 East Asia summit together with the
ASEAN+3, India, Russia, Australia and New Zealand.31 The third element in the US tilt
towards the Asia-Pacific region has been its participation in the Trans-Pacific Partnership
(TPP) negotiations.
a euro basket, especially as the dollar’s continuing weigh in China’s reserves ensures that China does not want to
precipitate a sudden fall in the dollar’s value.
31 ASEAN+3 consists of the ten Association of Southeast Asian Nations members plus China, Japan and South
Korea. Half-hearted EU attempts to be invited to the summit were undermined by substantive concerns about
what the EU had to offer and by procedural concerns about how big, and hence disproportionate to its current
world role, an EU delegation would be (Parello-Plesner, 2010). Before the Summit US Secretary of State Hilary
Clinton attended the ASEAN Regional Forum and made a strong presentation of US concerns about peace in the
South China Sea, an issue that resonated with the ASEAN hosts. Russia, like the USA, has signed the ASEAN
Treaty of Amity and Cooperation, a step upon which EU leaders cannot agree.
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The TPP negotiations grew out of a few countries’ disappointment with APEC’s failure to
move towards a Free Trade Area of the Asia-Pacific (FTAAP). The Trans-Pacific Strategic
Economic Partnership Agreement, commonly known as the P4, was announced at the 2005
APEC Trade Ministers’ meeting. Since the Four were small economies (Brunei, Chile, New
Zealand and Singapore) the P4 agreement was not of major concern to others – especially
as the largest bilateral trade flow (Singapore-New Zealand) was already covered by a
bilateral trade agreement. The game changer was the September 2008 announcement by
the US Trade Representative that the USA would seek to join the P4; this was quickly
followed by similar announcements by Australia and Peru. After a hiatus due to the change
in US Administration, formal negotiations among the now P7 began in March 2010 in
Melbourne. Vietnam and Malaysia joined the negotiations during 2010. Although
negotiations were not finalized by the target date of the November 2011 APEC summit, an
outline of agreement was publicized there. At that point, Japan, Canada and Mexico
announced their intention of seeking entry into the TPP.
The TPP is intended to supersede existing agreements, going beyond them both in
traditional areas of trade liberalization and, more importantly, in new areas. For example,
TPP negotiations specifically include regulatory coherence and supply chain management.32
Thus, it aims to deepen integration among members by reducing trade barriers and
simplifying rules of origin (compared to the existing “noodle bowl” of bilateral agreements),
and to do this in the context of facilitating participation in international supply chains. With
the new members, the TPP will cover a large share of global trade, but there are major non-members
in Asia. China, Korea and the seven ASEAN non-TPP countries may be relying on
the less comprehensive ASEAN+1 free trade agreements, or the East Asian regionalism
advocated by Japanese economists associated with the Asian Development Bank (ADB,
2008). However, the content of the two tracks does not differ so much, and Petri et al.
(2011) argue that the momentum of liberalization in both tracks could lead to the
establishment of a Free Trade Area of the Asia-Pacific within a decade, and that this would
yield substantial benefits to all participants.
The issues being negotiated in the TPP Agreement, and potentially providing the basis for a
FTAAP agreement, are issues that could be dealt with at the WTO, but the Doha
Development Round is not progressing because there is no global consensus on deep
integration. The TPP is a bold step for a group of like-minded countries to move forward on
a trade agreement in tune with a world economy characterized by global value chains. If it
32 The seriousness of this topic is illustrated by the rejection of Canada’s 2010 request to joint the TPP. Canada’s
unwillingness to negotiate its supply management system for dairy products, eggs and some other food items was
considered unacceptable (Elms and Lim, 2012, 12).
22
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turns into an FTAAP, the group will include the world’s three largest economies, plus other
complementary economies at various levels of economic development. It will not include any
European countries.
Meanwhile the Asia Europe Meeting (ASEM) convenes every two years (2010 in Brussels
and 2012 in Vientiane), to little purpose. The number of participants is large for meaningful
negotiation, and the “three pillars” of ASEM (political dialog, security and the economy, and
education and culture) represent a vague mandate, with economic matters reduced to half a
pillar.33 The EU is pursuing new generation FTAs, but the speed with which the first of these
was concluded with Chile, contrasts to the halting progress of Asian Negotiations. The only
EU-Asian FTA was negotiated with South Korea in 2007 (a month after the US-Korea FTA
was negotiated), and signed in October 2009, but provisional implementation was delayed
until July 2011 as an intra-EU compromise was hammered out with Italy, which feared
increased car imports. A mandate to negotiate with ASEAN in 2007 was negated by the
EU’s inability to negotiate region-to-region, and negotiations with seven ASEAN countries
(excluding Cambodia, Laos and Myanmar) broke down. Bilateral negotiations with
Singapore were initiated in 2009, and the Singapore agreement is expected in 2012, and in
March 2012 negotiations with Vietnam were announced. The current state-of-play
resembles something from the first decade of the twenty-first century.
EU absence from the major negotiating tables could affect the design of trade facilitation
measures in ways inimical to European best interests. It is in striking contrast to the origins
of the GATT/WTO system where seven of the twenty-three GATT signatories in 1947 were
European.34
33 ASEM8 in Brussels had 48 participants: the 27 EU member states plus the Commission, ASEAN+3 plus the
ASEAN Secretariat, India, Pakistan, Mongolia, Russia, Australia and New Zealand.
34 The 23 founding members were: Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Burma, Canada, Ceylon, Chile, China, Cuba,
Czechoslovakia, France, India, Lebanon, Luxembourg, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Pakistan, Southern
Rhodesia, Syria, South Africa, United Kingdom and the United States.
23
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24
7. Conclusions
Europe’s Role in a Multipolar Global Economy
Semantics can be important in political debates and for public perceptions. As a description
of the post-2007 financial crises, “global” obscured the ongoing economic prosperity of
countries such as China, India, Brazil, Indonesia, Canada, Australia and many others outside
Europe that did not suffer from a crisis other than the brief downturn in global trade in 2009.
Japan had a crisis in 2011 with roots in a natural disaster, and oil exporters such as Russia
suffered from the fall in oil prices in 2008-9, but these are only indirectly part of a global
financial crisis. The “global” in GFC is a figment of the view of the world as seen from
leading North Atlantic economies.
Europe’s self-centred view of an ongoing “global” crisis is even more harmful because it is
nurturing a view born in the “GFC” that financial deregulation or liberalization elsewhere
brought disaster upon the continental European countries, and that the response must be
more regulation, which must be imposed on the entire global financial system, or failing that,
on the entire EU. Yet, the reason why the eurozone is still in crisis mode is internal: a
mixture of uncertain design of the zone and the role of the ECB, and excessively regulated
(formally and informally) financial sectors. While countries with more nimble financial sectors
enjoyed economic growth above the high-income OECD average over the decade and a half
before 2007, the large eurozone countries (Germany, France and Italy) experienced
economic growth below that average; even though Germany and France had a shallow
recession in 2007-10 compared to the UK or Spain, their overall economic growth
performance over the 1990s and 2000s was much worse.35 Among the smaller EU
economies, the less regulated Baltic and Irish economies had a more volatile ride, but
ultimately to greater prosperity than the less volatile but weaker long-term economic
performance (and ultimately unsustainable situation) in Greece or Portugal.36 By assuming
35 Italy’s performance since the turn of the century has been especially anemic, the third worst in the world
according to some calculations. The longer-term comparisons are in the Appendix table.
36 Schrader and Laaser (2012) argue that Portugal is better placed than Greece because its debt problem is less
severe and it had a better diversification and growth strategy after joining the EU in the 1980s, although Portugal
slipped up in the 2000s by failing to respond to the challenge of competition from low-wage Eastern European
countries. Portugal needs to get back on track, whereas in their view Greece has never been on track since
joining the EU.
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the role of economic victims, political leaders such as Merkel, Sarkozy and Berlusconi
distracted blame from their national governments’ past policies, but this stance makes reform
harder.37 The situation is poisoned if re-regulation is adopted as the answer to failure to
sufficiently deregulate their economies, and especially the financial sector, in the past.
A second potentially harmful consequence of misperceptions about a GFC and eurozone
debt is that European leaders are failing to acknowledge that much of the rest of the world,
and especially East Asia, continues to enjoy rapid catch-up growth. Asia weathered the
global economic recession of 2008-9 remarkably well. This was partly because no country in
East Asia, South Asia or Australasia experienced a financial crisis, and these countries were
also well placed to deal with an external trade shock because their economic growth in the
twenty-first century had firm foundations. In addition, many countries had built up substantial
foreign exchange reserves or sovereign wealth funds, which provided a cushion against
balance of payments problems.38 Continued Asian economic growth, as the EU and US
faltered, accelerated a decades-long trend of increasing Asian weight in the global economy.
For the global economy, a question posed by the relative success of Asian economies as the
USA and western Europe went through major recessions is whether this will be the catalyst
for reform of the multilateral economic institutions established over sixty years ago by the
World War II victors. Agreements such as the head of the World Bank being from the USA
and the head of the IMF being European are clearly anachronistic. The composition of the
Gx groups has been a little more malleable, as the G7 expanded to a G8 in the 1990s after
Russia abandoned central planning, and was later superseded by the G20, but an arbitrary
division between twenty important countries and the unimportant rest of the world is
unstable, in Asia as much as anywhere else.39 Economic reasons for why the potential role
of Asia in reform of these institutions for global economic governance has increased are easy
to find, but the political constraints within and among Asian countries will impede any clear-cut
regional leadership in pushing a reform agenda. Given Asia’s fissiparous political
37 Similarly the Schadenfreude in some European financial circles when US, UK, Spanish, Irish and other banks
encountered difficulties due to their aggressive real estate lending may have made it harder to acknowledge that
French and German banks were also guilty of poor lending. Indeed, the loans to delinquent sovereigns who spent
on current consumption or wasteful investment (e.g. facilities for the Athens Olympics) may be even worse than
the real-estate lending which, in addition to fuelling bubbles, financed some construction of real value in Ireland
(new housing) and Spain (infrastructure).
38 Some of the larger regional economies, notably China and Australia, undertook large pre-emptive fiscal
stimulus programs. The only serious long-term implication for the national economies is whether those programs
can be reversed without significant political disruption before the countries run into sovereign debt issues.
39 Membership of the G7 was on the objective criteria of the market-based economies with the largest GDP, and
by chance there was a significant gap between the seventh and eighth ranking. The transition from central
planning rendered the criteria obsolete and Russia, but not China, was invited to join the group. By 2012 Brazil
also had a higher GDP than Canada, Italy or the UK, but breaks in the ranking list are no longer clear-cut, and
can quickly change due to exchange rate or primary product price volatility.
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relations, it is unsurprising that the leading outsider candidates for the top IMF and World
Bank positions in 2011 and 2012 were Latin American and African. Nevertheless, many
Asian countries support non-EU candidates for the IMF or non-US candidates for the World
Bank, especially when the candidacies are couched in the meritocratic terms of finding the
best person for the job
Battles over leadership of the IMF or World Bank or the composition of the G20 are, however
symbolically significant, less important than the changes in the global economy. The major
change in the world economy during the last three decades of the twentieth century was the
adoption of more market-based outward-oriented economic systems by many of the world’s
most populous countries. Individual countries may falter in the process of integrating into the
world economy, but more complex global value chains will encompass an increasing range
of countries at different levels of development. It is also noteworthy that, despite an
obsession with China’s rise, the US policy tilt under Obama covered the wider Asia-Pacific
region. US policy has also reached out to other large emerging economies. President
Obama in 2010 endorsed India’s bid for a permanent seat on the UN Security Council. US
relations with Brazil have been more fraught, and concrete progress during President
Rousseff’s April 2012 visit to Washington was limited to increased security cooperation
through regular meetings of defence ministers and an increase in the number, from four to
six, of US consulates in Brazil, but this still represented a thaw.
The EU is a major player in the world economy and many EU firms are global leaders.
Nevertheless, if the EU is to continue to maintain pre-eminence, its economy needs to move
with the times, and policies must be such as to encourage, or at least accommodate, such
change. Barbie and the iPhone are useful symbols: the US firms Mattel and Apple have
developed products with massive global appeal not by manufacturing those products in the
USA but because technically skilled or entrepreneurial workers in the USA have designed
and marketed the products, entrusting manufacture to Factory Asia. For EU countries the
challenge in the twenty-first century is to ride with dynamic comparative advantage, using
their wealth to invest in human capital for future competitiveness.40
40 A very rough parallel might be drawn with the high-income agricultural exporters of the early 1900s. Canada
and Australia made an economic transformation over the twentieth century that included world-beating companies
outside the farm sector, while Argentina did not. Whatever the cause of divergence, the point is that high-income
countries in the early 2000s may or may not still be high in future global rankings in 2100.
26
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27
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33. CASE Network Studies & Analyses No.439 – The Post - 2007 Crises and Europe’s Place …
Appendix
Table. GDP in Current US Dollars (billions), 1992-2007
1992 2007 2010
% change
1992 2007 2010
% change
92-07 07-10 92-10 92-07 07-10 92-10
USA 6,286.8 13,811.2 14,586.7 119.7 5.6 132.0 Germany 2,062.1 3,297.2 3,280.5 59.9 -0.5 59.1
UK 1,074.0 2,727.8 2,248.8 154.0 -17.6 109.4 France 1,372.8 2,562.3 2,560.0 86.6 -0.1 86.5
Spain 612.6 1,429.2 1,407.4 133.3 -1.5 129.7 Italy 1,265.8 2,107.5 2,051.4 66.5 -2.7 62.1
Ireland 54.3 255.0 211.4 369.6 -17.1 289.3 Greece 128.4 360.0 301.1 180.4 -16.4 134.5
High Income
OECD
19,764.1 38,219.0 40,819.6 93.4 6.8 106.5 World 24,533.6 54,347.0 63,123.9 121.5 16.1 157.3
Source: Pomfret (2010, 26) -- data from World Bank World Development Indicators, updated 27 March 2012.
Notes: the 31 high-income OECD countries are Australia, Canada, Iceland, Japan, Republic of Korea, New Zealand, Norway, Switzerland USA and 21 EU member
countries (all except Bulgaria, Cyprus, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta and Romania)