The Crash and its International Consequences
Remarks to the Pacific Pension Institute Winter Roundtable
Ambassador Chas W. Freeman, Jr.
It’s good to be back at PPI, an organization that includes so many old friends, one whose formal launch I helped stimulate, and one that my wife, Margaret Carpenter (who sends her regards from afar) can take considerable credit for institutionalizing.
Since mention has been made of my pending appointment to a government position, I will reiterate what you already know, if you know me at all. I speak only for myself and do not represent anyone else, certainly not the Obama Administration, still less Projects International, the Middle East Policy Council, or any other private sector organization I have headed or on whose board or advisory council I have served, including PPI. Nothing whatsoever has changed. My views on absolutely everything remain tentative because I have an apparently disconcerting habit of revising them as I encounter new facts. I still have more questions than answers. And my remarks this evening are directed at launching the exploration we will carry out over the next two days, not at framing a government press release or claiming access to any information beyond what I read in the papers and on the internet.
We certainly live in challenging times, in which change is upon us, whether we like it or not. The world we knew is gone. We don’t quite understand the one we now live in.
The 20th
Century ended a decade ago with the
In 2009, that world seems unimaginably distant. The first years of the 21st Century have not been kind to us or to our place in world affairs. I have spoken elsewhere of the extent of our global political comedown and its causes. There is no need for me to review the sorry story of the collapse of our moral standing, prestige, and influence since the world last stood with us on 9/11.
Blessedly, the
first decade of the new century is ending with the
Since my topic tonight is the consequences of the crash for the world order and our evolving place in it, I will leave further discussion of political and military matters to the dialogue that will follow the filibuster. I am very mindful that you are investment professionals and I am not. I suspect I shouldn’t be talking about financial, fiscal, and monetary matters in your presence. Fortunately, the price of admission wasn’t to say anything profound or insightful or accurate. It was just to give a talk. Talk is, of course, cheap, because supply always exceeds demand. But sound advice is priceless. So I very much look forward to your comments and corrections and to listening to the presentations of others on related matters over the next few days.
I will try to be brief but believe that a short review of what preceded the current financial crisis and economic collapse may be helpful as a starting point.
This century began with our surprised rediscovery, as the dot-com bubble burst, that 8,000 years of economic history were not in fact irrelevant and that profits, not puffery, remain the only reliable foundation for enterprise value. This revelation belied the earlier conventional wisdom. Public trust in portfolio investment declined as shocked investors realized that what goes up can also come down and that faith-based investment only works in bubbles.
Then came 9/11.
Anti-Muslim hysteria, greatly heightened visa barriers, humiliatingly
intrusive inspections at our borders, seemingly capricious foreign assets
seizures, and heightened controls on funds transfers began to inhibit foreign
business and investment in our country.
The Enron scandal followed immediately after 9/11. It brought down Enron and Arthur Anderson, of
course. But, more than that, it greatly
tarnished the reputation of American business and raised serious questions
about corporate governance under modern capitalism. It also added the burdens of Sarbanes-Oxley
to our unique practice of class action law suits as a serious disincentive to
foreign investment here. The already damaged
One result of
all this was the eclipse of New York by Hong Kong and London as the preferred
markets in which to launch new companies financially through initial public
offerings (IPOs). We helped catalyze a
big increase in euro bond issuance and circulation. In recent years,
Meanwhile, the
Real shortages of supply and rapidly rising demand underlay the rise in prices of energy and raw materials but hedging against the dollar through commodity purchases bid prices far higher than they otherwise would have risen. This created a huge windfall for commodity producers and a further massive shift in wealth to them.
Bubbles are beautiful but fragile things. The commodity bubble burst when the sub-prime mortgage crisis forced deleveraging by hedge funds and other commodity investors. The collapse of mortgage-backed securities and other derivatives put credit markets into cardiac arrest. The revelation that even those who had invented them did not understand, could not explain, and had no way to cover the tens of trillions of dollars of credit default swaps they had exchanged discredited financial institutions everywhere. The housing market collapsed amidst a rolling fusillade of foreclosures. What confidence remained in US financial markets has just been dealt a further heavy blow through the discovery that Mr. Madoff – living up to his name – had made off with $50 billion or so in an unprecedentedly immense Ponzi scheme that had escaped regulatory detection for forty years. The scams are beginning to look like they’re endemic. The latest to be outed is Stanford International Bank.
The response of
governments to the ensuing global crash and slump has everywhere been the
same. First, to try to
save banks from the consequences of their own greed and folly, and then to
spend a whole lot of money to stimulate job creation, or at least retard job
destruction. Where financial
institutions have approached insolvency – mainly here and in
The poster
child for a stimulus package most closely meeting these criteria is
I know some of
you have heard and others have read my remarks to other gatherings. I won’t bore you by replaying the list of
challenges we face or the reasons we need to create new global financial
institutions, but I do want to repeat a key point I made at
All this is isn’t news. It is well understood by all of you here. While the crisis has yet to run its course, I think we can already see some elements of its likely consequences.
First, the discrediting of the American
free market economic system and its institutions means that countries will no
longer seek to emulate us. There is no
obvious candidate yet to succeed the
The one thing that seems certain is that there will be many national experiments in economic organization. They can be expected to have little in common except varying degrees of state control of the heights of the economy, a lot more policy-directed and less risk-based lending, the blurring of the distinction between the state and private sectors, intrusive state regulation of the economy, greater economic nationalism, and reduced protections for private property rights.
What this may mean for rates of economic growth is unclear, but the greater politicization of economic decision-making that it implies points to increased risk for investors on many levels, including less predictable rates of return on investment, an enhanced probability of insider deals that disadvantage foreigners, and the occasional nationalization of foreign investments.
Second, all things being equal,
low-leveraged economies – like China, Germany, and India – seem likely to come
out much stronger than highly leveraged ones like our own. They have the money to spend on human and
physical infrastructure to enhance their national competitiveness. But
As an adjunct
to
Many years ago,
it was said, ‘only capitalism can save
Third, a lot of deglobalization in both
the commercial and financial sectors seems likely to take place as different
national and regional economic models emerge.
With the
failure of efforts to liberalize trade at the global level through the Doha
Round, regional economic integration has emerged as a substitute. The EU continues to achieve success in the
economic integration of
Fourth, some sort of worldwide
successor to the failing dollar-based system may emerge from the April G-20
summit in
The euro has
already emerged as the dominant currency in
Willy-nilly the
dollar seems to be in the early stages of being dethroned as the unit of
account for international transactions. At a minimum, its role in international
trade and finance is evolving in ways that are not advantageous to anyone with
an interest in dollar hegemony, which certainly includes me, as an American
citizen, and, I suspect, almost everyone in this room. The implication, among other things, is the
potential end of the dollar seigniorage created by the unique role of the
dollar as the post-gold-standard universal medium of exchange. I am speaking here of the ability to print
little green portraits of dead presidents and to pocket the difference between
their printing cost and their face value.
It also follows that the
Fifth,
The Arab world,
which straddles Europe, Asia, and
Leverage is now
a bad word in many circles. As a
corollary, Islamic banking, with its nominal avoidance of leverage, is likely
to get a big boost. Already,
Sixth, infrastructure is the asset
class that will be the major beneficiary of stimulus packages. It presents the greatest potential for
profitable investment over the next few years.
With other asset classes showing poor results, global investors are
likely to focus on infrastructure, for which demand remains relatively strong
and which is large, tangible, stable, and relatively predictable in the long
term. The
All this means that construction companies and related industries, transportation, and telecommunications are likely to prosper. So are companies involved in environmental remediation, other aspects of the emerging green economy, and agriculture. By 2020 today’s 30 million refugees from climate change are likely to have become well over 150 million. By 2030, without massive new investment, nearly 4 billion people will live in areas of severe water stress. By that same year, energy demand will have risen 45 percent from current levels, with 87 percent of the increase occurring outside the industrial democracies.
Last but not least, nothing on the
horizon will significantly weaken
Hard times have
their silver linings in terms of promoting efficiency, if sensible policies
permit. The question is not whether the
There is a lot
for Americans to learn from what others are doing to rebuild financial
confidence, create jobs,
boost competitiveness, and green economies. If there were ever a moment in our history
when we must be alert to innovations and the successes and failures of friends
abroad, this is it. One of the few
positive consequences of our current difficulties is that they are pressing us
to set aside complacency and abandon arrogance.
We need to be both more alert and more humble. But, then, we have a lot more to be alert and
humble about than we once did. President
Obama and his cabinet have begun a serious effort to restore lapsed
partnerships and cooperation with foreign nations. That is good.
There is a lot of fossil friendship and admiration for the
In my view, the crash and its consequences greatly increase the value of transnational gatherings like this. The opportunities PPI affords for exchanges of experience and views among investment officers from the public and private sectors of the many countries and institutions represented here are unique. I will be listening especially carefully over the next few days. I have never attended a PPI meeting at which I did not have what I thought I knew corrected, put in broader context, and recalibrated in terms of importance. I do not expect to be disappointed at this roundtable. I do not know about you but I, for one, need all the help I can get to understand what may be in store for us, what it may mean, and what might make one scenario or another more or less likely to occur.
I apologize for taking so much of your time on a pretty depressing topic. Even non-economists can be dismal, it seems, when they try to reason about economic trends.
I have been much honored by your attention this evening. I hope that what I have said will help to stimulate a lively dialogue over the next two days.
Thank you.