07 February 2009

Obama's Unilateral Economics

We've had a global economy since Marco Polo made Venice rich by turning it into a trade center linking Europe and the Orient. By degrees, local economies have become more intertwined ever since.

This matters when assessing Obama's stimulus package. I suspect that historians biggest criticism will be that Obama is trying to do in the world of economics what Bush tried to do in the world of diplomacy - go it alone.

It is possible to save a single house on a block of burning buildings. It is meaningless to save a single room in a burning house. My own feeling is that our national economy is so intertwined with the global economy that our situation is closer to that of the room in the house than house on the block.

Today's economic problem is not contained to any one country. It spills across continents. There is no market immune from the global troubles or any market that is going to rise back up alone.

I still believe that Keynesian economics is powerful and offers a lesson worth remembering: in a down economy, if everyone does what makes sense they'll make things worse. As people cut costs to adapt to a drop in sales, sales everywhere drop and the ripple effect is to make a bad situation worse. A stimulus package in this context makes every kind of sense and is necessary.

But Keynes did not like the idea of allowing capital flows across borders. It made it difficult to effect national policy. But we'll never get back to this world of self-contained national economies, and yet the lesson of Keynes holds: when individuals do what makes the most sense in a recession we can easily tip into a depression.

So, what to do? I'll write more about it, but the real point of this post is simple: any solution that Obama tries to hammer out with the Senate is going to be too small in scope. Not because nearly a trillion dollars falls short of absurdly sufficient to stimulate. No. By too small in scope, I mean that any solution focused on a national economy is going to do little to reverse a global slow down. Until Obama focuses his attention on jointly creating a global solution, we'll likely scratch our heads and wonder what we got for our trillions.

5 comments:

David said...

This is great stuff Ron-O and as anti-Keynesian as I am mostly I agree that stimulus is needed and your basic global premise is valid. Boy, I'll bet that makes you feel good!

I'm sending you an email with the entire tome from Congress and you can decide for yourself on how targeted it is.

Ron Davison said...

Davos,
Thanks.
I wonder if you are as anit-Keynesian as you think. Keynes was not, contrary to popular misconception, supportive of chronic deficits. He actually thought that the government could help to counter the ups and down of the economy - spending less when the economy was expanding to the point of risking inflation and spending more when the economy was contracting to the point of recession or depression. It seems to me that the only real criticism that you can put against that is one of questioning the government's ability to diagnose and time such swings, thus countering them properly.

ronara said...

Ron, Ron here. I thought I would poke my head up while things have calmed down on the financial markets, that is if you ignore the fact that my old company is on the ropes and getting ready to bring doen the entire credit union industry (are you following this?).

I think the "global" angle you are highlighting here is spot on. The typical US consumer has no idea how globally integrated their behavior is....but they are about to find out. For me, it all comes down to jobs. The sooner we see even tepid job growth, the sooner confidence gets back into the system, which increase spending, which increases jobs, which increases confidence, and so on. There is no reason to believe that any of this can happen in isolation, meaning the US.
Even Nissan has figured this out with their announcement today that they will be seeking financial relief from Japan AND the US!

That's it for now....back to eeking out a living.

Ron Davison said...

Ron!
I did not see the news about your old company. So you are saying that we get a replay of the S&L crisis on top of the rest of this? Wow.
So, when you say that you're eeking out a living, you mean that as in "EEK!" Markets are in chaos?
It's good to have you drop in to R World.

Anonymous said...

How Far Will Deleveraging Go?
Credit will still have to shrink to keep leverage at precrisis levels.
By DAVID ROCHE

The global economy is in recession. Will this lead to depression? And if not, how long and deep will the recession be? The answers to both questions depend on the extent of deleveraging by financial institutions.

The amount of risk-free or "tier-one" capital a bank is holding is a good reverse indicator of how leveraged it is. Globally, financial institutions had about $5 trillion of tier-one capital on the eve of the credit crisis. Those in the United States and European Union had about $3.3 trillion of tier-one capital supporting a loan book of some $43 trillion.

Then came the crisis.

How much did they lose? There are three answers. If mark-to-market rules are applied, global financial sector losses are estimated to amount to 85% of tier-one capital. But mark-to-market rules are extreme and assume the banks are insolvent and that all their assets will have to be fire-sold for whatever they can fetch in today's dysfunctional markets.

If economic value, a concept based on the present value of future cash flows of the assets, is used instead, current losses are about half the amount calculated using mark-to-market rules.

Finally, if we use only the losses that have been recognized by the institutions themselves so far, we are a touch short of $700 billion.

Despite these losses, the loan books of banks have grown, not shrunk during the credit crisis. Only the balance sheets and leverage of the nondeposit-taking institutions, such as hedge funds, investment banks and prime brokers have shrunk, probably by 40%-60%.

All the bank losses have been offset by capital raisings of $420 billion from private sources and the promise of state capital injections of about $250 billion. The leverage of the U.S. and EU financial systems was 13 times tier-one capital before the crisis broke. Using mark-to-market rules, it is now more than double that. But using economic value or declared losses reveals that leverage is now back to what it was before the crisis began, thanks to capital raisings and the (assumed) full injection of promised state capital.

Why then is all not well and credit growth ready to resume? There are three reasons.

The first is that financial-sector leverage was too high before the credit crisis began, which is one good reason the credit bubble collapsed. All official reports that focus on "never again" prescriptions recommend a reduction in financial-sector leverage.

Second, the world economy has become accustomed to using $4 to $5 of credit for every $1 of GDP growth. Even if this profligate use of capital is halved, it still means credit expansion of 10%-15% is needed to achieve real GDP growth of 2%-3%. The recapitalization of financial institutions so far is only enough to maintain existing credit assets, but not expand them; ergo the credit crisis continues.

Third, the current bank-asset losses do not include any allowance for future losses which will result from global recession in (nonmortgage) consumer credit, leveraged buyouts and emerging-market, corporate foreign-currency debt. I estimate that, based on economic values, these losses will amount to a further $800 billion to $900 billion, putting total credit losses north of $1.7 trillion for the whole period of the crisis. Such future losses would eat up all the fresh capital contributions and reduce U.S. and EU financial institutions' tier-one capital to around $2.3 trillion yet again. That implies a leverage ratio of more than 18 times.

It seems likely that leverage, and therefore credit, of the financial system will shrink, even with state capital injections of two to three times what we have already seen.

State injections are temporary, expensive and impose constraints on existing shareholders and management. The injection of state capital is therefore not really an attractive base for even maintaining current leverage and credit.

Also, there is a need to reduce the banks' "customer funding gap." In other words, banks will need to focus on deposit rather than loan growth. That is a slow process in a recessionary environment. So closing the customer funding gap in the initial years can only be achieved by reducing assets and liabilities. This means cutting credit on the asset side of the balance sheet.

In today's Opinion Journal
REVIEW & OUTLOOK

Waiting for ObamaCrichton's WisdomRyan for Republicans

COMMENTARY

THE WEEKEND INTERVIEW: Rahm Emanuel
– Jason L. RileyWhy I'll Miss President Bush
– Jim ToweyWhat the Recession Means for Foreign Policy
– Richard N. HaassHow Far Will Deleveraging Go?
– David RocheCROSS COUNTRY: New York Is Headed for Dark Days Unless Bloomberg Chances Course
– Nicole GelinasThen there is continued risk aversion in wholesale money markets, as well as in longer-term debt markets. This will deny banks easy finance to grow assets. Finally, regulation will reduce bank leverage to well below what it was before the credit crisis.

The bottom line is that, assuming further credit losses from global recession take U.S. and EU tier-one bank capital back to where it was before state injections and capital raisings, then financial-sector credit would have to shrink 37% just to keep leverage constant at precrisis levels -- that's how you get global depression.

But government is now part of bank management. Government intervention could manage to limit the credit decline to less than 10%, at the cost of more capital injections, further longer-term guarantees of liabilities, tolerance of higher leverage within socialized banks, and not a little credit "dirigisme," i.e., directing banks to lend.

This will avoid the global depression that many fear, but at the high long-term cost of a socialized financial system. And it still heralds a very long, gray, global recession as the world learns to use less capital to meet its needs.

Mr. Roche is president of Independent Strategy, a London-based consultancy, and co-author of "New Monetarism" (Lulu Enterprises, 2007).