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Percy Allan sees 4 potential economic scenarios for the rest of the decade and reluctantly picks one

Economy / opinion
Percy Allan sees 4 potential economic scenarios for the rest of the decade and reluctantly picks one

By Percy Allan*

In January a year ago, two-thirds of the leading economists surveyed by the World Economic Forum forecast a global recession for 2023.

We didn’t get one. This year at the forum they are talking about a soft landing in 2024, notwithstanding financial conditions the US Federal Reserve says have been the tightest since the 2008 global financial crisis.

There are reasons to think that this time, for this year, they are right.

Global inflation has been falling (especially for goods, but soon for services as labour markets weaken). This means interest rates are likely to have peaked. While short-term cash rates will remain high until inflation is clearly heading back to target bands, longer-term bond rates should turn down as economies slow.

4 scenarios for the rest of the 2020s

But what about the rest of the decade?

Few economists are prepared to venture forecasts beyond 2024. Having gotten 2023 very wrong a mere year ago, that’s understandable.

But it is still worth considering each of the likely scenarios for the rest of this decade, because our prosperity and equity will depend on how the exit from the COVID pandemic plays out.

As I see it, there are four competing storylines: reflation, stagnation, stagflation and rejuvenation. I’ll outline the case for each, and then the one I’ve reluctantly come to believe is the most likely.

Scenario 1: reflation

Portfolio managers Alex Stiles and Steve Becker of Goldman Sachs developed the concept of “secular reflation” back in 2017.

It is characterised by high investment and low savings, and as a result, high growth and inflation.

Strategist Gerard Minack sees a surge of investment in Australia and elsewhere driven by a new focus on resilience in place of efficiency.

This would mean onshoring (making goods at home), friendshoring (obtaining goods from politically aligned nations) and higher inventories to insure against shortages.

As well, governments would spend more on defence, climate mitigation and public infrastructure at the same time as the private sector spends more on capital equipment to cope with tight labour markets.

Minack says it should all work to reverse what’s been a long-term trend from the 1970s right through to the 2008 global financial crisis – declining investment as a share of gross domestic product in developed economies.



Scenario 2: stagnation

The contrary view is that we will get a return of the “secular stagnation” we had before COVID – it’s a mix of high savings, low investment, low growth and low inflation.

Olivier Blanchard, a former International Monetary Fund chief economist, and Lance Roberts, chief strategist for US investment adviser Real Investment Advice, are among those expecting this sluggish outcome, for several reasons.

One reason is a set of ageing populations, which are likely to become more risk-averse, and so more likely to save.

Another is that private investment is likely to be crowded out by bigger government investment and increased government regulation and higher taxes and industry protection as part of a de-risking of supply lines.

As well, governments themselves are likely to be less keen on GDP growth, being weighed down by debt and preferring to focus on national security at the expense of dynamism.

Central banks might try to help by resuming quantitative easing (“printing money” by buying government bonds) in order to suppress interest rates and make government borrowing affordable.

But the conservatism of ageing populations means low rates are more likely to encourage asset speculation than productive investment.

Technological progress is unlikely to turbo-charge growth any more than the internet and the smartphone did.

Inflation will be restrained because wages will continue to grow slowly.

Former US treasury secretary Larry Summers was the first to describe the period before COVID as one of “secular stagnation” marked by a glut of savings and a dearth of investment. But in late 2022 he told the American Economic Association he did not expect a return to secular stagnation.

Summers now sees inflation rather than deflation.

Scenario 3: stagflation

The Summers view is that after an economic slowdown in 2024, which will temporarily tame inflation, stagflation will emerge with low savings, low investment, low growth and high inflation.

The World Bank puts forward this thesis in its June 2023 Global Economic Prospects Report, as does Colin Twiggs, editor of the Patient Investor.

Economic growth would be subdued for the same reasons as in the stagnation scenario, but it would be coupled with high inflation as the world deglobalises and decouples from “cheap China” and finds it needs to spend increasing amounts shifting from polluting fossil fuels to renewable energy.

Inflation is also likely to be driven by increasing worker shortages as baby boomers retire, voters turn against high immigration and employment regulations are tightened to give workers a better work-life balance.

As in the stagnation scenario, central banks will turn to quantitative easing to help governments fund bigger deficits and debt, but it will be inflationary.

Scenario 4: rejuvenation

The best of all worlds – the Goldilocks outcome – is rejuvenation, in which high savings and high investment produce robust growth and low inflation.

Micro-economic reforms in the fields of taxation, labour markets and regulations would boost productivity and enable both real wages and profits to climb while also generating enough tax revenue to meet social goals.

The renewables transition would cut the cost of energy, and artificial intelligence would supercharge knowledge work in the same way as automation overhauled manual work. Higher interest rates would keep inflation in check.

Politically, Washington and Beijing would reach a détente whereby they focused on economic co-operation rather than military conflict.

The focus of leaders would return to striving for economic efficiency through the use of global markets rather than aiming for self-sufficiency.

Reluctantly, the one I am picking is….

Which scenario is most likely to emerge in advanced economies post-2024?

I am afraid I think it is the second scenario, stagnation. It seems likely to me that the supply disruptions and economic stimulus of the pandemic interrupted rather than ended the low-inflation stagnant growth we had before COVID.

Continued low investment and low productivity growth will retard economic growth while re-globalisation (resuming cheap imports from China as well as alternative locations) and high immigration will contain inflation.

Official interest rates might be in the 2% to 4% range rather than the 0% to 2% we became used to before COVID because central banks will be less inclined to fund government deficits by buying bonds.

This would be a gloomy outcome because it would favour speculation over productive investment and set the scene for stagnant wages, which would in turn help build inequality and polarised politics. I hope I’m proved wrong.The Conversation


*Percy Allan, Professor, Institute for Public Policy and Governance, University of Technology Sydney. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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19 Comments

Highly academic, not stupid.

But NO mention of the real drivers; depletion, degradation and entropy. 

My pick is stagflation followed by collapse or war(s) over what's left. 

Growth? Schmoth. In the rearview mirror. 

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Agree. The issue seems to be that our economists havent updated their methods to include the higher probability massive economic upsets (we used to call black swan events)

Up until the GFC we had a long period of global stability, US backed security and economic growth....   then came the GFC, Pandemic, Trump, Brexit, Ukraine-Russia War and Israel-Palestine War. All in about 10 years) At the same time we were experiencing huge climatic disasters, the US debt ws (and is) leading to massively diminished global security and the global order is shifting and is unlikely to revert.

Most important of ll is that the probability of another war/pandemic/weather event/tradewar has now reached the point where something huge and new will definitely start each year.. and the next global events are starting even before the previous events have finished, which will only accelerate

We have to also consider the impact of China being able to mass produce advanced smart phones and electric cars far cheaper, at great scale and develop faster than the US and Europe - which will have a massive impact on income and employment in some leading western economies and likely result in the end of manufacturing unions (and job security/wellbeing for the working class) at the same time that AI starts to affect service industry jobs

There is an onus on the economic forecasters to start to predict likely events and include the impact in forecasting.

 

 

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Well laid out thought. I am picking stagflation for NZ. The amount of tradeable inflation will be sticky with international conflicts and shipping routes disrupted. The Reserve bank will counter with minimal effect. Inflation to remain stuck at 4% and retail interest rates at about 6%

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sounds a lot like like the old joke: "Economists have forecast nine out of the last five recessions"

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Rejuvenation in the US, Mexico, Argentina, and SE Asia. 
 

Stagnation then collapse in China.

Stagflation in Western countries with housing bubbles.

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Stagflation in Western countries with housing bubbles.

Which means a collapse in the consumption economy. That starts with the nice to haves - artisan foods, craft beer, ski holidays, etc (except for the 1%ers). Depending on how deep the wealth effect is diminished, I can't see how the bubble can be maintained without massive broad money supply expansion. Remember for broad money to be generated from base money, you need to have willing borrowers.   

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Best time to learn a new skill to save money. Brew your own craft beer and have friends round, grow a garden and have delicious food from it, plant fruit trees, share skills with friends and family, watch youtube to learn to cook new foods for cheaper, and take some time to give time, money or both to support your local community. 

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Continued economic decline in China, contributing to a Taiwan invasion circa 2027-2030 (possibly sooner if Trump is elected and restarts his strategy of aggravating China). Then all bets are off, both in terms of war outcomes and the economy.

Obviously I am not optimistic. 

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If something major kicks off in the middle east and the Ukraine war keeps going it will over stretch the USA and China could take the opportunity to go after Taiwan. The whole world is approaching a tipping point.

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Only if there is existential risk to the CCP. They’re not capable of such an invasion within the foreseeable future.

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Wouldn’t continued economic decline, growing unemployment, growing unrest potentially be that (internal) existential threat?

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I like the simplicity of the explanation regarding rejuvenation;

The best of all worlds – the Goldilocks outcome – is rejuvenation, in which high savings and high investment produce robust growth and low inflation.

Micro-economic reforms in the fields of taxation, labour markets and regulations would boost productivity and enable both real wages and profits to climb while also generating enough tax revenue to meet social goals.

Happily, NZ can get to work on all three of those matters, despite what happens internationally.

So, for example, if we ask the simple question: how do we increase individual rates of savings - and make a list!  In making building materials/supplies more competitive, it can be done through regulation. etc. etc.

To my mind, a focus on rejuvenation is long, long, long overdue in NZ.  We are running very much the same type of economy on all those scores as we were since the 1980s with minor tweeks here and there.

NZ does not need to go where the world goes to my mind. Our relative isolation and size should be advantageous - as we're not that big a ship to turn around.

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Agree, Kate. But doubt there’s much appetite. Vested interests and status quo reign supreme!

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'in which high savings and high investment produce robust growth'

But Kate, they don't.

The growth is of the extraction, throughput and wasting of resource-stocks. Period. Putting your foot down on the accelerator makes the car go faster, sure. But if you run the tank dry, putting your foot down DOES NOT MAKE THE CAR GO FASTER. Economists have been measuring the distance the pedal is depressed, and comparing it to the speedo. Hills (unmeasured) baffled them, both up and down, but the tank emptying is not in their spreadsheets. Not at all. 

High savings and high investment may produce high demand, and/or high expectation - neither guarantee high growth (whatever high means, in exponential terms). 

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NZ does not need to go where the world goes to my mind. Our relative isolation and size should be advantageous - as we're not that big a ship to turn around.

Admire your optimism Kate but think size and other factors are a disadvantage. Let's just take housing construction. Nu Zillun does not have the technical capabilities, competencies, resources of the Sekisuis, Daiwas, Panasonics, Sumitomos. You cannot create this expertise and experience out of a genie lamp.  

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100% agree

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My pick is that Middle East will blow up, Trumpy will get in, he will give up Nato and Ukraine in late 2024. taiwan will be at risk, NZ/Australia could be the safe land and places like Singapore will be the heaven for the riches (already is for the rich russians). Economically, who knows..

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AI will be big. Many administration & customer contact jobs will disappear as it gets better & better. It will also be used for evil as bad actors twist things to their way of thinking - which, to be fair, is already happening [via real people] in our universities, media, the state services & more recently within our legal systems. Sigh.

Global demographics keep declining [especially in the civilised world] although there are many in Africa, the Middle East & South America who will jump at the chance to be part of the western way of life. This will fundamentally change the western way of life. It already is.

China will fight on. They may be unloved at present but will garner enough support to 'dictate' their advantages with like-minded nations. You need to know that there are far more autocratic nations out there than democracies. And the democracies are being successfully targeted from within their own borders by the socialists running the above mention industries.

Trump!!! My pick is that he will be 'taken out' before the election this November. Those people who are really running the DNC are very powerful people who can do almost anything & get away with it. Power is the drug & they will do anything to keep it. This would probably lead to civil unrest in the US, but that was already happening with BLM & other groups such as Antifa before.

And if Russia stopped underwriting Greenpeace internationally we might be able to have a half decent conversation about how we can sensibly survive to the end of the century.

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