conclusions Gavin Cameron University of Oxford OUBEP Topical Economics 2006

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Transcription:

the BRIC economies: conclusions Gavin Cameron University of Oxford OUBEP Topical Economics 2006

introduction Global Monetary Easing in 2001 3 Fuels consumer boom in West (esp. USA) Fuels investment boom in China China enters WTO in 2001 Huge potential to switch workers from fields into factories Also has fixed wages, input prices, interest rates, consumer prices, and exchange rate! Consider effects on four industries: consumer goods, commodities, banking, and services. OXFORD UNIVERSITY BUSINESS ECONOMICS PROGRAMME 2

the East As China begins to run huge trade surplus and FDI rises, Chinese firms find themselves receiving large quantities of dollars. They sell these to central bank in return for renminbi, reserves hit $800bn this year. Property rights in China uncertain payments on equity and debt don t rise in response to rise in earnings. Upward pressure on wages, prices, interest rates and the exchange rate, but elastic labour supply and state controls keep things fairly stable. Nothing else to do with retained earnings than re invest. Investment rate hits 45% of GDP, net exports 5%, so only half of GDP remains for consumption, government spending and stockbuilding. To recap, half of Chinese output is either exports or investment (that is, steel, concrete, factories, tools and buildings!). OXFORD UNIVERSITY BUSINESS ECONOMICS PROGRAMME 3

the West Firms selling commodities to the East and banks financing the consumer boom in the West make huge profits and free cash flow. There is no boom in Western consumer goods and no rise in investment The boom in Western services has a low ICOR so no rise in investment except in US ICT using services which can take advantage of new technologies and organisation. So, investment in West is flat, but aggregate profits and cashflow rise (driven by commodities, banks, and firms serving consumers). Valuations of equities remain moderate, since consumer goods and services not very exciting and market thinks that profits of commodities and banks are temporary not permanent. Private equity and hedge funds seek profit in exotic locations leading to asset & commodity price booms. OXFORD UNIVERSITY BUSINESS ECONOMICS PROGRAMME 4

China syndrome? A sudden dollar collapse could unwind this! Demand falls, interest rates rises, US trade deficit shrinks Private equity, hedge funds, commodities and banks suffer China discovers excess capacity (qv Japan) Russia s commodity boom crashes India s services do just fine Brazil is a far away country Or gradual adjustment is benign Dollar falls slowly, helping to correct deficit Europe and Japan take up some of world demand slack Reforms to wages & prices turn the Chinese from mercantilists to consumerists. OXFORD UNIVERSITY BUSINESS ECONOMICS PROGRAMME 5

hard landing or soft landing Difficult to estimate probability of recession for US economy. Estimates based on yield curve (01/09/06: overnight 5.25, 3 month 5.03, 10 year 4.76) suggest as high as 45% on basis of past history http://politicalcalculations.blogspot.com/2006/04/reckoning odds of recession.html past performance not necessarily a guide to the future Even a hard landing is likely to push down BRIC growth only over a 3 5 year period Key issue for growth over next 30 years is fundamentals OXFORD UNIVERSITY BUSINESS ECONOMICS PROGRAMME 6

convergence Scope for catch up growth and redeployment of labour is high across BRICS, probably highest in China (although note demographics) As BRICS develop, growth needs to accompanied by reform. In particular, Chinese reform needs to be handled carefully. Plausible scenarios show India and China constituting between 25 40% of world GDP (at PPP) by 2030. By which time, their ratios of PPP to market exchange rates will have fallen from 3 to perhaps 2, so their economies will look much more like ours. More services, more domestic consumption, lower invstment and lower net exports. The key term is convergence as they grow, the BRICs will become more like the West, rather than less like the West. Recent world trade growth driven by inter industry trade based on factor endowments will be replaced by growth driven by intra industry trade based on technology and tastes (quality and variety). OXFORD UNIVERSITY BUSINESS ECONOMICS PROGRAMME 7