The
Great Malaise Continues
By Joseph E. Stiglitz
January
10, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"Project
Syndicate" -
NEW
YORK – The year 2015 was a hard one all around.
Brazil fell into recession. China’s economy
experienced its first serious bumps after almost
four decades of breakneck growth. The eurozone
managed to avoid a meltdown over Greece, but its
near-stagnation has continued, contributing to
what surely will be viewed as a lost decade. For
the United States, 2015 was supposed to be the
year that finally closed the book on the Great
Recession that began back in 2008; instead, the
US recovery has been middling.
Indeed,
Christine Lagarde, Managing Director of the
International Monetary Fund, has declared the
current state of the global economy the New
Mediocre. Others, harking back to the profound
pessimism after the end of World War II, fear
that the global economy could slip into
depression, or at least into prolonged
stagnation.
In early
2010, I warned in my book
Freefall, which describes the events
leading up to the Great Recession, that without
the appropriate responses, the world risked
sliding into what I called a Great Malaise.
Unfortunately, I was right: We didn’t do what
was needed, and we have ended up precisely where
I feared we would.
The
economics of this inertia is easy to understand,
and there are readily available remedies. The
world faces a deficiency of aggregate demand,
brought on by a combination of growing
inequality and a mindless wave of fiscal
austerity. Those at the top spend far less than
those at the bottom, so that as money moves up,
demand goes down. And countries like Germany
that consistently maintain external surpluses
are contributing significantly to the key
problem of insufficient global demand.
At the
same time, the US suffers from a milder form of
the fiscal austerity prevailing in Europe.
Indeed, some 500,000 fewer people are employed
by the public sector in the US than before the
crisis. With normal expansion in government
employment since 2008, there would have been two
million more.
Moreover,
much of the world is confronting – with
difficulty – the need for structural
transformation: from manufacturing to services
in Europe and America, and from export-led
growth to a domestic-demand-driven economy in
China. Likewise, most natural-resource-based
economies in Africa and Latin America failed to
take advantage of the commodity price boom
underpinned by China’s rise to create a
diversified economy; now they face the
consequences of depressed prices for their main
exports. Markets never have been able to make
such structural transformations easily on their
own.
There are
huge unmet global needs that could spur growth.
Infrastructure alone could absorb trillions of
dollars in investment, not only true in the
developing world, but also in the US, which has
underinvested in its core infrastructure for
decades. Furthermore, the entire world needs to
retrofit itself to face the reality of global
warming.
While our
banks are back to a reasonable state of health,
they have demonstrated that they are not fit to
fulfill their purpose. They excel in
exploitation and market manipulation; but they
have failed in their essential function of
intermediation. Between long-term savers (for
example, sovereign wealth funds and those saving
for retirement) and long-term investment in
infrastructure stands our short-sighted and
dysfunctional financial sector.
Former US
Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke once
said that the world is suffering from a “savings
glut.” That might have been the case had the
best use of the world’s savings been investing
in shoddy homes in the Nevada desert. But in the
real world, there is a shortage of funds;
even projects with high social returns often
can’t get financing.
The
only cure for the world’s malaise is an increase
in aggregate demand. Far-reaching redistribution
of income would help, as would deep reform of
our financial system – not just to prevent it
from imposing harm on the rest of us, but also
to get banks and other financial institutions to
do what they are supposed to do: match long-term
savings to long-term investment needs.
But some
of the world’s most important problems will
require government investment. Such outlays are
needed in infrastructure, education, technology,
the environment, and facilitating the structural
transformations that are needed in every corner
of the earth.
The
obstacles the global economy faces are not
rooted in economics, but in politics and
ideology. The private sector created the
inequality and environmental degradation with
which we must now reckon. Markets won’t be able
to solve these and other critical problems that
they have created, or restore prosperity, on
their own. Active government policies are
needed.
That means
overcoming deficit fetishism. It makes sense for
countries like the US and Germany that can
borrow at negative real long-term interest rates
to borrow to make the investments that are
needed. Likewise, in most other countries, rates
of return on public investment far exceed the
cost of funds. For those countries whose
borrowing is constrained, there is a way out,
based on the long-established principle of the
balanced-budget multiplier: An increase in
government spending matched by increased taxes
stimulates the economy. Unfortunately, many
countries, including France, are engaged in
balanced-budget contractions.
Optimists
say 2016 will be better than 2015. That may turn
out to be true, but only imperceptibly so.
Unless we address the problem of insufficient
global aggregate demand, the Great Malaise will
continue.
Joseph E. Stiglitz, a Nobel laureate in
economics and University Professor at Columbia
University, was Chairman of President Bill
Clinton’s Council of Economic Advisers and
served as Senior Vice President and Chief
Economist of the World Bank. His most recent
book, co-authored with Bruce Greenwald, is Creating
a Learning Society: A New Approach to Growth,
Development, and Social Progress.
© 1995 – 2016 Project Syndicate