September 17, 2006

IMF chief economist: It is not hard to imagine a sharp global slowdown, or even a devastating financial crisis"


Look, I'd pontificate, but you know the drill. We're screwed. Get ready.

You can't expect the International Monetary Fund to come out and say the world is headed for a global financial crash. And it isn't saying that.

But what it is saying, in its own careful way, is that the risk of such a calamity is increasing.

The most difficult risk is that of a "disorderly adjustment" of what finance officials call the global imbalances. This is a way of saying the global economy is skewed and it cannot keep on this way.

On one side is the huge and growing build-up of U.S. borrowings from the rest of the world to finance its unsustainable trade and budget deficits, and on the other, countries such as China and Japan ringing up huge trade surpluses with the United States and lending their surplus funds back to the U.S. to finance its deficits.

This cannot go on forever because the cost of servicing that debt would become too high, and well before that, the foreign investors in U.S. securities would become extremely nervous about continuing to add to their already high holdings of U.S. dollar assets.

The big question is whether these global imbalances can be corrected in an orderly way or whether there will be a disorderly adjustment instead.

Kenneth Rogoff, the former chief economist of the IMF, warns that the U.S. "is now soaking up roughly two-thirds of all global net saving, a situation without historical precedent." This year, the U.S. is expected to borrow $800 billion (U.S.), or about $2.2 billion a day.

As he argues, though, "this borrowing binge might end smoothly," but world financial leaders are right to be worried about "a more precipitous realignment that would likely set off a massive dollar depreciation and possibly much worse. Indeed, if policymakers continue to sit on their hands, it is not hard to imagine a sharp global slowdown, or even a devastating financial crisis."

31 comments:

Anonymous said...

Got Food?

Anonymous said...

I've never in my life been a doom and gloomer. But, that all changed in the 4th quarter of 2005. The US (and the world) are in for a likely 2nd great depression. Consumer debt is the catalyst. Fiat currency is the cause. Ever heard of a politician that didn't want to spend more money?
Price of goods (houses, for one) become unaffordable at some point! A $650k starter home in S. Cal is a GREAT example of unsustainable inflation.
Got food? is a great idea. Got gold? Got Forex? Got no debt? are a few more. Prepare to bug out.

Anonymous said...

The coming Depression is depressing.

Anonymous said...

The 'supply side' mantra of one political party in the US means there must be a supply, (borrowed money) to constantly feed the system.

I have always contended this premiss to be faulty, but with that party dominating both houses of congress, judicial, and the executive branches of government; I expect the twin deficits to escalate right up to the bitter end.

Kind of like the pied piper from hamlin, and all the minions hot on his heels joyfully singing and dancing along blindedly right up to the cliff without a care in the world.


One would think this country learned its lesson the hard way from the excesses of the 20's, but no; just like Nam' we learned nothing from it either as operation Iraqi rathole rages on.

Anonymous said...

It's looking as if the IMF is taking notice to the 'supply side' mantra of the US currently, as 'supply side' doesn't mean just borrow to grow in the US, anymore; but it now means borrow to just sustain.

The twin deficit charts in the US stack up nicely to the current housing bubble charts, they both are looking like mirror images to one another.

Anonymous said...

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Frequently Asked Questions

1. What is the requirement for DA membership?

The only requirement for membership is a desire to stop incurring unsecured debt.

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Anonymous said...

Signs of Compulsive Debting
1. Being unclear about your financial situation. Not knowing account balances, monthly expenses, loan interest rates, fees, fines, or contractual obligations.

2. Frequently "borrowing" items such as books, pens, or small amounts of money from friends and others, and failing to return them.

3. Poor saving habits. Not planning for taxes, retirement or other not-recurring but predictable items, and then feeling surprised when they come due; a "live for today, don't worry about tomorrow" attitude."

4. Compulsive shopping: Being unable to pass up a "good deal"; making impulsive purchases; leaving price tags on clothes so they can be returned; not using items you've purchased.

5. Difficulty in meeting basic financial or personal obligations, and/or an inordinate sense of accomplishment when such obligations are met.

6. A different feeling when buying things on credit than when paying cash, a feeling of being in the club, of being accepted, of being grown up.

7. Living in chaos and drama around money: Using one credit card to pay another; bouncing checks; always having a financial crisis to contend with.

8. A tendency to live on the edge: Living paycheck to paycheck; taking risks with health and car insurance coverage; writing checks hoping money will appear to cover them.

9. Unwarranted inhibition and embarrassment in what should be a normal discussion of money.

10. Overworking or underearning: Working extra hours to earn money to pay creditors; using time inefficiently; taking jobs below your skill and education level.

11. An unwillingness to care for and value yourself: Living in self-imposed deprivation; denying your basic needs in order to pay your creditors.

12. A feeling or hope that someone will take care of you if necessary, so that you won't really get into serious financial trouble, that there will always be someone you can turn to.

Anonymous said...

Business Week cover story on healthcare

also pointed out that our huge healthcare bill is being supported by foreign borrowing. . .we spend huge amount on healthcare - government, etc. and put it on the national credit card. . .and USA doesn't even get frequent flyer miles on the USA debt card!!

Anonymous said...

Anyone else buying gold?

Anonymous said...

So here are the solutions according to IMF:

1) greater exchange rate flexibility in China and other countries in Asia to accommodate a devaluation of the U.S. dollar,

2) a move by the U.S. to deal with its huge budget deficit through both spending restraint and tax increases,

3) more measures by Europe and Japan to raise productive growth and

4) additional spending by the major oil producers in their economies.

-----

#1? The Chinese have said flat "NO". Especially in the event of a "imbalance" they will maintain their peg in order to keep up their own domestic employment and insure total destruction of US industrial capacity.

#2? Probably not. At best a Democratic congress will have to do mean things to clean up the crap, people will whine, and next cycle we elect some new voodoo-economicians with a happy face (much more electable than government policy wonks with math who want to raise your taxes) and they'll really screw the pooch. Debt explosion, hyperinflation, and they'll blame it all on Jimmy Carter.

#3) Unlikely. They don't seem to do much even in good times. Would the unions become more acquiescent in bad times?

#4) No problem. More Mercedes to Arabia! But this will excacerbate Peak Oil even more as people in oil producing countries burn ever more oil domestically instead for export. And you can't raise prices domestically in a large oil producer---the political mentality is "there's plenty for us so why should we have to suffer?" So the net oil available for worldwide exports will crash even faster than total oil production.

This will suffocate the financial recovery just as it gets started: the moment relief from the depression appears to be at hand, oil prices will rocket up.

Anonymous said...

The pictured debt-bomb says it all.

The 9/11 terrorist attacks were instrumental in helping US politicians develop new strategies designed to boost the economy after the tech stock bubble crash of 2000.

A collapse of the housing bubble will probably be averted when a series of well-timed terrorist attacks create renewed economic stimulation.

Anonymous said...

Gen Y, who grew up spoiled by this easy access to money, is going to be so screwed when the depression hits. They don't know how to work, they think eating on $40 a day is cheap and they have no idea how resource dependent their lifestyle is.

Anonymous said...

Panicearly,

I think what you're saying was also featured on TV and was the biggest reason why private, even public colleges are very expensive now. Little emphasis is given in academics and research. Instead they spend more time and money on recreation like this.

Anonymous said...

Who cares about the Dow, it is rigged right now with option managers and inside traders forcing it up while "laymen" are snoozing. If they panic, they will dump GOBS of stock. They are the savy people, they know the writing is on the wall. Take a look at 1929. Dow reached highs in October, the thing completely busted.

Situation is right for a speculative bubble to burst world wide.

Anonymous said...

Naked shorting will carry the day!

Anonymous said...

I'm going to spend the depression in Europe on my bicycle eating crosiants and drinking merlot.

Unless there is WWIII in europe in which case I'm heading south to search central American.

In case the famine down there then I plan to head north to Canada, live out a van and ski all day long.

Anonymous said...

The Pope is a failure, forced to apologize, George Bush is pissed off and plans to bomb the Vatican.

Anonymous said...

I'm going back college.

Anonymous said...

Hilary Clinton is our only hope to get us out of this mess as Bill Clinton did last time around.

It can only be done through massive innovation and real growth in export value as happen with the Internet boom in silicon valley.

We could perhaps kill GM and Ford allowing true innovation is some of these old school industries. Capital would flood in and export our reducing the decficit.

The GOP knows nothing about modern business all they know about is defense company that needs wars to survive and oil & gas companies

Anonymous said...

Keef--

Could we please have a serious discusion on where to park cash? For the somewhat-risk-averse, not-quite-doomsday crowd?

Thanks!

Anonymous said...

"I'm going back to college."

Good for you and might consider healthcare.

Anonymous said...

LMAO

Anonymous said...

PMD: I'm not a financial advisor , but there's a new mutual fund that "locks in" market highs (with some stipulations, like you have to hold on to it for a while). Seemed like a reasonable hedge against a complete wipeout to me.

Anonymous said...

Cash is meaningless in this phony economy. With the stroke of a pen or the press of a key a government bureaucrat can wipe out your cash position by forcing you to exchange X dollars for Y "new" dollars.

When they asked Rockefeller the secret of true wealth his reply was "Own nothing, but control everything."

Anonymous said...

Hillary Clinton? So you think another dotcom bubble will save this economy? LMAO

Anonymous said...

imf, got 200mil last week of taxpayers money, why worry about housing bubbles, or economic collapses if you skim some of that, said politican, making the rules, or who the hell is the imf, but self appointed government kicbback , of government, payers money, how did the get their hand in your pocket,bug out run for the hills, osama, beat you to it!

Anonymous said...

This is the one reason why the Housing Bubble might not be much of a bubble. If housing values have doubled or tripled, but the dollar falls 90%, guess what, that $500K condo might not be so expensive when you are buying $1000 happy meals and $2000 loaves of bread. then the $500K condo becomes a $50 million condo, because $500K might only buy you a few days of food. Pretty smart to be in REAL Estate if dollar plummets. Look around the world at currency devaluations. Cash becomes worthless, and everything tangible becomes re-valued at the new currency values.

Anonymous said...

In a hyper inflation environment, paper wealth gets wiped out and all debt gets paid off. So, who would lose? Everyone who sold their homes and are sitting on worthless paper money, and the guy leveraged to his eyeballs with his 6 homes and crazy debt gets to pay off his debt with his 1 paycheck from his $100,000 per hour (devalues dollar) paycheck from McDonalds.

Anonymous said...

In a hyper inflation environment, paper wealth gets wiped out and all debt gets paid off. So, who would lose? Everyone who sold their homes and are sitting on worthless paper money, and the guy leveraged to his eyeballs with his 6 homes and crazy debt gets to pay off his debt with his 1 paycheck from his $100,000 per hour (devalues dollar) paycheck from McDonalds.

Anonymous said...

In a hyper inflation environment, paper wealth gets wiped out and all debt gets paid off. So, who would lose? Everyone who sold their homes and are sitting on worthless paper money, and the guy leveraged to his eyeballs with his 6 homes and crazy debt gets to pay off his debt with his 1 paycheck from his $100,000 per hour (devalues dollar) paycheck from McDonalds.

Would probably get very ugly as those who have lived responsibly open up with their cache of weapons against the creators of this mess. Let's hope this doesn't happen

Anonymous said...

all debt gets paid off.

That's what I'm Takin about.