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Chartbook #198 Globalization: The shifting patchwork [Adam Tooze, Chartbook]

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  • Globalization is shifting – Ian Bremmer, Ngair Woods, Niall Ferguson and I debated this at Davos and continued the train of thought in the FT and in Chartbook #192.
  • Hyun Song Shin of the BIS gave a new outing and an update to his fundamental paper on how to envision globalization – as an island model or a network of balance sheets and how to connect financial and real economic globalization.
  • Globalization has regressed since 2008 – World goods exports in relation to GDP are now back to where they were in 2000.
  • Real and financial globalization are not separate processes but tightly interlinked – Credit finances transactions between a series of sub-contractors.
  • European banks were the main drivers of financial globalization from the 1990s onwards – This went into reverse in 2008.
  • Finance is fungible – A contraction in European lending shrinks funding across the entire system.
  • The world economy has always consisted of a patchwork – Sectors differ from each other in their logics and large parts of the world are not included.
  • Data from S&P’s Capital IQ (CIQ) database provides a snapshot of inter-firm linkages – This allows us to form an impression of the extent of corporate interconnections by country and by sector.
  • Different modes of globalization prevail in the textiles, automotive and information technology sectors – Textiles globalization takes the form of relatively simple China-Asia networks, the automobile industry is multi-polar, and IT involves a mesh of interconnections between Japanese, Chinese, Korean and US firms.
  • Comparing the network of firms in February 2020 with that in December 2021 – The automotive industry network remained largely stable whereas that for Information Technology was subject to significant contraction.
  • Tools of this kind, covering both real and financial interconnections, will enable us to trace future trends in globalization.

Published February 27, 2023
Visit Chartbook to read Adam Tooze’s original post Chartbook #198 Globalization: The shifting patchwork

Chartbook #197: The Ukraine-Aid Reality Gap [Adam Tooze, Chartbook]

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  • There is a gap between collective awareness of major social, environmental, political and economic problems and the resources mobilized to meet them. This gap can be interpreted as a problem of hypocrisy, policy, or perception (a “reality gap”).
  • The Kiel Institute has tracked €143.6 billion of financial, humanitarian, and military aid committed to Ukraine between January 24, 2022 and January 15, 2023. Poland is contributing the most in proportional terms (2.1% of GDP), followed by the US and Germany (0.375% of GDP).
  • The US and Germany are not contributing as much as they have in past military-economic efforts. Furthermore, their contributions to Ukraine are less than their contributions to other emergencies.
  • Ukraine is in need of $3.5 billion per month. The US and Europe have committed to providing enough to cover that, but payments do not arrive in a steady or reliable fashion.
  • The gap between declared intentions and actual delivery of aid to Ukraine is vast. This raises questions of cynicism, incompetence, and a “reality gap”.
  • The course of the war in 2023 is highly uncertain. If Russia does not crumble, the “reality gap” may close in the direction of greater financial and military aid.
  • Chartbook Newsletter is free to readers around the world. It is sustained by voluntary subscriptions from paying supporters. Subscribe now to join the group of supporters.

Published February 25, 2023
Visit Chartbook to read Adam Tooze’s original post Chartbook #197: The Ukraine-Aid Reality Gap

Chartbook #197: The Ukraine-Aid Reality Gap [Adam Tooze, Chartbook]

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  • The Main Criticism – The main criticism I have heard is that I’m just another old man (I’m 59) shaking his fist and complaining about “kids these days,” when in fact “the kids are alright.”
  • Self-Reported Depression and Anxiety – Section 1 of the Collaborative Review summarizes self-report surveys that have been conducted at regular time intervals since 2010 or earlier. Do members of Gen Z *say* that their mental health is declining? Yes, in every study we can find.
  • Self-Harm – If Phillips and Friedman were correct that “the kids are alright” and the appearance of an epidemic is an illusion based on Gen Z’s “more honest relationship with their mental health,” then we would not see any change in objective measures of mental health, such as hospitalizations for self-harm, or deaths by suicide. But in fact, we do see such changes.
  • Suicide – Section 3 of the Collaborative Review doc presents the most tragic data of all: a large increase in the number of completed suicides. For suicide, the rates are always higher for boys and men. Girls and women make more suicide attempts, but they are more likely to use reversible means.
  • Conclusion – The evidence that this time is different is very strong. In 2010 there was little sign of any problem, in any of the long-running nationally representative datasets (with the possible exception of suicide for young teen boys). By 2015 the teen mental health was a 5 alarm fire, according to all the datasets that Jean Twenge and I can find. The kids are not alright.

Published February 24, 2023
Visit Chartbook to read Adam Tooze’s original post Chartbook #197: The Ukraine-Aid Reality Gap

Chartbook #195: How to pay for Putin’s war?Russia’s technocrats torn between defense of the austerity status quo and national mobilization. [Adam Tooze, Chartbook]

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• The Russian economy emerged from the first shock of the war and sanctions in 2022 far better than many expected, with a fall in GDP of just 2.2%.
• Putin’s reaction was to crow that the experts were wrong, but the underlying issue is economic management.
• The track record of stability clocked up by Putin’s regime comes at a heavy price in terms of macroeconomic imbalance.
• Putin’s regime has increasingly resorted to “War Keynesianism”, with large salary payments to soldiers propping up incomes and building a constituency loyal to the regime.
• Russia must manage the bottlenecks imposed by sanctions and ensure that aggregate demand continues to bubble along.
• The truce between the war economists and the conservative advocates of continuity as personified by Nabiullina has held, but it will be tested in 2023.
• The budget deficit is 1.8 trillion RUB (1.2% of GDP) and liquid assets in the National Welfare Fund amount to 4% of GDP.

Published February 8, 2023
Visit Chartbook to read Adam Tooze’s original post Chartbook #195: How to pay for Putin’s war?Russia’s technocrats torn between defense of the austerity status quo and national mobilization.

Chartbook #194 Can Beijing halt China’s housing avalanche? The most important economic-policy question for 2023?

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• China’s real estate sector is facing a crisis, with developers defaulting on bonds and a large backlog of troubled projects.
• The construction boom has been the main driver of China’s unbalanced, investment-heavy, consumption-poor growth.
• In the late 1990s, real estate accounted for 8% of GDP, but by 2021 it had risen to 25%.
• In a single generation, China has built enough homes to house a billion people.
• The IMF report shows the Chinese authorities in a relatively calm mood, but Western observers are skeptical.
• Beijing has shifted from a restrictive and deflationary course to one of re-stimulating the real estate economy.
• A key challenge to restoring confidence is the large backlog of partially built housing.
• To stabilize the Chinese real estate market, a commitment of 5% of GDP is needed.
• If Beijing succeeds in managing the fallout, it would be an example of macro-prudential economic management on a world historic scale.

Published February 5, 2023
Visit Chartbook to read Adam Tooze’s original post Chartbook #194 Can Beijing halt China’s housing avalanche? The most important economic-policy question for 2023?

Chartbook #193 Indian nation-building, Modi and the Adani crisis

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• The Adani business empire has been rocked by global developments in the last week, including continuing losses on the market, the cancelation of the share sale, and moves by foreign investors to clarify their exposure to Adani.
• Mihir Sharma argues that Adani is a “national champion” and that the real fear is that they cannot do what they say they will.
• Arvind Subramanian and Ashoka Mody provide critical perspectives on India’s growth outlook.
• India’s digital infrastructure, known as the “India Stack”, has enabled the incorporation of hundreds of millions of people into the governmental machinery of the Indian state and a national market.
• India’s energy system has been heavily dependent on coal, but PM Modi has committed India to decarbonization by 2070.
• Both the Ambani and Adani groups have seized on the new agenda, promising to make India a hydrogen champion and “indigenising the entire supply chain”.
• Nation-building is the key boast of the Adani group, and it is that model that is at stake in this crisis.

Published February 3, 2023
Visit Chartbook to read Adam Tooze’s original post Chartbook #193 Indian nation-building, Modi and the Adani crisis

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