Global Finance, Debt and Sustainability

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Global Finance, Debt and Sustainability Adair Turner Chairman Institute for New Economic Thinking Council on Economic Policies International Monetary Fund Zurich, 3 October 2016 300 Park Avenue South - 5 th Floor, New York, NY 10010 USA 22 Park Street, W1J 2JB London, UK

Private domestic credit as a % of GDP: Advanced economies 1950 2011 Source: Financial and Sovereign Debt Crises: Some Lessons Learned and Those Forgotten, C. Reinhart & K. Rogoff, 2013 1

A growing body of empirical analyses [ ] demonstrate a strong positive link between the functioning of the financial system and long-run economic growth [ ] better developed financing systems ease external financing constraints facing firms Ross Levine: Finance and Growth: Theory and Evidence. Handbook of Economic Growth, 2005 Positive correlation between growth and: Liabilities of financial system GDP Bank credit to private enterprise GDP Turnover of equity markets market capitalisation 2

Textbook descriptions of banks and bank lending Banks take deposits of money from savers and lend it to borrowers Banks lend money to entrepreneurs/ businesses, thus allocating funds between alternative investment projects 3

Share of real estate lending in total bank lending Source: The Great Mortgaging, Professor Alan Taylor, University of California, Davis 4

With very few exceptions, the banks primary business consisted of non- mortgage lending to companies in 1928 and 1970. By 2007 banks in most countries had turned primarily into real estate lenders. The intermediation of household savings for productive investment in the business sector the standard textbook role of the financial sector constitutes only a minor share of the business of banking today. Oscar Jordá, Moritz Schularick and Alan Taylor The Great Mortgaging, 2014 5

Credit and asset price cycles: upswing Increased credit extended Increased lender supply of credit Increased borrower demand for credit Increased asset prices Expectation of future asset price increases Favourable assessments of credit risk Low credit losses: high bank profits Confidence reinforced Increased capital base 6

Japanese government and corporate debt: 1990 2010 250 200 Bank lending to non-financial corporates General Government debt % GDP 150 100 50 0 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Source: BoJ Flow of Funds Accounts, IMF WEO database (April 2011), FSA calculations 7

Global debt excluding financials % of GDP Emerging Markets Developed Markets World 280 260 240 220 200 180 160 140 120 100 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 2013 2015 Source: Geneva Report No 16 Deleveraging, What Deleveraging? ICMB / CEPR September 2014 for years 2001 to 2013 Source: BIS for years 2013 and 2015 8

Traditional policy levers blocked Funded fiscal deficits First round stimulative effect But concerns about long-term debt sustainability Ultra loose monetary policy Interest rate at zero bound QE Asset prices inequality Stimulates financial speculation before real economy Currency devaluation channel is zero sum game Only works by re-stimulating growth of private credit 9

Debt overhang : the unavoidable choice? Sustained low growth and low inflation debt burdens never decline Debt erosion via ultra low interest rates Debt write-off, default and restructuring But leads to new debt creation But has disruptive / depressive effect 10

The Dilemma Pre-crisis path of nominal GDP growth 4% - 5% 2% real growth 2% inflation Pre-crisis path of credit growth 10% - 15% If central banks had raised interest rates to slow credit growth. this would presumably mean slower nominal GDP growth? We seem to need Ċ NGḊP to ensure adequate NGḊP but this produces financial instability and post-crisis recession 11

Three fundamental drivers of credit intensive growth Inequality Real estate Global current account imbalances 12

Capital in Britain 1700 2010 800% 700% 600% Net foreign assets Other domestic capital Housing Agricultural land 500% 400% 300% 200% 100% 0% 1700 1750 1810 1850 1880 1910 % national income 1920 1950 1970 1990 2010 Source: Capital in the Twenty First Century, T. Piketty (2013) 13

Monetary aggregates matter The mix of debt by category matters But not because excessive money growth is a robust forward indicator of inflation But because excessive credit growth and level are forward indicators of crises, debt overhang, post crisis depression and deflation Finance for investment Real estate Other vs Finance for consumption vs Finance of purchase of existing scarce supply assets 14

Estimated change in per capita GDP growth when credit intermediation increases by 10% of GDP 3 2.5 2 Percentage points 1.5 1 0.5 0-0.5-1 -1.5 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130 140 Intermediated credit, % of GDP Source: OECD Policy Paper No. 14, June 2015 15

Reconciling Levine vs OECD Growth, productivity, social welfare Emerging advanced economies Advanced economies last 40/50 years Financial Intensity 16

Most debt is not needed to drive growth - and creates debt overhang which traps us in slow growth But what if maximum growth is not a desirable objective? 17

Happiness and income per capita in the USA Source: Bruno Frey & Alois Stutzer, Happiness and Economics, Princeton University Press, 2002 18

Income and Human Contentment: Possible stylised pattern over time Pre-industrial societies The Great Transformation Income / Contentment Developed economies China Income Human wellbeing contentment / happiness Africa Economic and technological progress 19

Different marginal utility of different goods Utility / Happiness Utility / Happiness Utility / Happiness Income Income Income Good health? Branded fashion goods? Congestion and environmental damage? 20

Growth in already rich countries: a possible position Growth in average per capita GDP has diminished potential to deliver human welfare Human ingenuity plus economic freedom will produce rise in productivity and thus growth Maximising growth should not be the objective But economic freedom is valuable in itself and will produce growth Different forms of growth have different potential to increase human welfare Public policy needs to ensure that - the harmful impacts of growth are minimised - The positive impacts maximised 21

Growth and debt Debt is an apparently low risk claim on future money income Both the private credit creation system and the public political process can create too much debt relative to future prospective money income This can leave economics stuck in a debt overhang trap This problem is more likely to be severe if future money growth prospects Are reduced for bad reasons Should be reduced for good reasons If maximum growth is not the objective, we should be even more wary of accumulating excessive debt 22

Policy implications: Preventing harmful debt build-up Fixing Fundamentals Inequality Real estate Global imbalances Radically changed regulation Far more bank capital Stronger counter-cyclical levers LTV and LTI limits Risk weights to reflect social risk not private Discouraging harmful debt Encouraging more useful /more sustainable growth 23

Policy implications: escaping the debt overhang Ultra-loose monetary policy can only ultimately work by reigniting private credit growth Fiscal policy could stimulate the economy and could be skewed to more sustainable ends but appears blocked by public debt sustainability concerns Money finance of fiscal deficits is the always available option 24

The case for monetisation Government expenditures would be financed exclusively by tax revenues or the creation of money. the chief function of the monetary authority [should be] the creation of money to meet government deficits and the retirement of money when the government has a surplus. Milton Friedman (1948) The price level should be controlled by expanding and contracting issues of actual money [and] monetary rules should be implemented and in turn should largely determine fiscal policy. Henry Simons (1936) A tax cut for households and businesses that is explicitly coupled with incremental BoJ purchases of government debt, so that the tax cut is in effect financed by money creation.. [with it clear that].. much or all of the increase in the money stock is viewed as permanent. Ben Bernanke (2003) 25

26

Two essential sources of nominal demand growth Private credit and money creation Sovereign fiat money creation now or expected in the future 27

Fiat money creation Private credit and money creation Modern orthodoxy Dangerous Forbidden Free market ensures optimal result States fail because of short-term politics Markets efficient and rational Chicago Plan Essential to deliver some nominal demand growth Can be contained by rules So dangerous that banks should be abolished Bank credit markets inherently inefficient and unstable Political processes can be rational 28