What the world needs now… is growth sweet growth
The United States of America is the only economic engine that keeps today’s low world growth rates from degenerating into a horrible global depression. It is no wonder, then, that all eyes are on this country’s economic performance. Actual consensus, based on a fiscal surplus, a very low unemployment rate and a basically non-existent inflation rate, implies that this performance is nothing short of spectacular. For those who still doubt, it should be enough to simply analyze the incredibly high acceptance rating garnered by President Clinton in spite of events which in other times, due to their nature, would most probably have resulted in his impeachment.
I would classify all other nations in two broad groups. The first group consists of those countries that have lost the international market’s confidence and who reluctantly or not must accept traditional Monetary Fund style recipes such as the reduction of fiscal deficits and increases in interest rates. The second group includes those that still can count on basic strengths. Japan, for example, is one of these. Apart from lowering interest rates to their minimum expression, they dabble (albeit sometimes timidly) with Keynesian measures such as the issue of consumer coupons.
Confusion basically exists only in Europe. There is still much discussion between the European Central Bank, wishing to prove its orthodoxy in the face of the birth of the Euro, and the individual governments, anxious to get their economies back on the road of growth.
You may ask why, as a local columnist, I am writing about the world economy. There are two basic reasons. The first is that Venezuela is a living example that helps us to remember what happened during those times when each country tried to put its house in order individualistically. The accumulated global result was worldwide economic contraction.
By striving to adopt measures gleaned from the manual of good economic behavior, our country slowly managed to go from a state of obesity to one of severe economic anorexia, a condition which makes it impossible for companies to pay adequate salaries and for those who receive this meager pay to purchase goods or services from those same companies. The world should pay attention so it can avoid going the same route.
The second reason is simply the need to alert anyone who will listen as to the fact that it is absolutely necessary for Venezuela and the world in general to get back on the track of international growth. In Venezuela’s case, the situation is obvious. Either we grow or we disappear. Simple as that! It is slightly more difficult to perceive the urgency of the situation globally, except for those countries that, like Venezuela, have had serious problems with their debt load.
I am under the impression that due to the abundance of bad news generated by the world today, which in turn promotes belief in wonderful saintly Superman-like saviors, markets have blithely been ignoring the increasingly nettlesome problem of the United States’ commercial deficit. Please do not confuse the message with the messenger. I don’t wish to stoke the fire, but I do wish to remind everyone that this country’s commercial deficit boils down to a whopping US$ 1 billion per day.
Since the United States’ public sector maintains that it’s budget is in the black, the only economic counterbalance to the above mentioned commercial deficit is the private sector’s indebtedness. In other words, the fuel that today’s economic engine has been using to continue on its most opportune buying binge, in the best “its cheap, give me two” tradition, is the funding that the rest of the world pumps into its tank. In Venezuela, we can safely testify to the fact that this source of energy does not last forever.
There is only one way that the world will survive this problem relatively unscathed. It must simply begin to grow again before the problem begins to cause strong increases in dollar interest rates, driven either by the United States’ need to curb its growth rate, contain internal inflationary pressures and control its commercial deficits, or by an international market that will slowly but surely loose its confidence in the dollar’s future.
To grow! So easy to say, but so difficult to actually do. Above all else, however, I believe it is the result of mental attitude. Amongst friends I have often said that when citizens of the United States decide to buy goods and services from one another and go out for dinner every evening, the consequence is growth. When Europeans, in a steadfast show of responsibility in the face of hardship decide to stay home, the result is contraction.
Simply put, what Venezuela and world urgently needs, is leadership that knows how to stimulate growth sweet growth.