Life After COVID: The Debt Tsunami That’s About To Hit The World
The great lockdown needed to contain the
Covid-19 outbreak has been economically devastating. The longer the lockdown,
the worse the damage. In response, governments have thrown fiscal caution to
the wind and increased spending at unprecedented levels, either to help
businesses keep workers on the payroll, as in Europe, or to directly compensate
the unemployed, as in the U.S. Consequently, a public sector debt tsunami is
coming. If not dealt with effectively, it could do even greater damage than
Covid-19.
Making matters worse is the fact that
governments in the developed world had allowed their debts to rise in the
decade after the global financial crisis despite record-low interest rates. For
example, government debt in the U.S. rose from 40% of GDP in 2007 to 89% in
2019, from 44% to 111% in the U.K., and from 81% to 134% in France, according
to the OECD. As a result, government debts were high before Covid-19. Though
estimates vary, the massive government spending since the Covid-19 outbreak
will increase these debt loads even further. In the U.S., for instance,
government debt as a percentage of GDP could easily surpass the previous peak
of 106% recorded in 1945 at the end of Word War II.
Under such conditions, conventional
policies for debt reduction are not just useless, but counterproductive.
Raising taxes, whether corporate, personal or both, would exacerbate the great
lockdown’s effect on corporate investment and consumer spending. Monetizing
government debt through central bank purchases, on the other hand, would likely
ignite new bouts of inflation, since the supply side has been impaired by the
great lockdown. Should governments contemplate austerity instead, the risk is
deflation of the kind demonstrated in southern Europe during the eurozone crisis.
There is, however, one way to avoid the
consequences of the coming debt tsunami. This is illustrated by how the U.S.
brought down its government debt from that 1945 peak. In the decades following,
the U.S. government didn’t actually try to pay down its debts. Instead, it was
through a combination of solid growth, moderate inflation and low interest
rates that the debt to GDP ratio was steadily reduced. By the mid-1970s,
government debt to GDP ratio had dropped to roughly 20%, a comfortable level
that does no harm to the economy. For today’s highly indebted governments, this
is the best option to dodge the debt tsunami.
To achieve sustained economic growth,
moderate inflation and low interest rates in the wake of Covid-19, the world
will need a recovery in global trade and investment. Boosting global trade
would raise demand while stimulating new investment in the global economy. In
other words, restarting and turbocharging globalization is the best way
forward, not only for highly indebted developed economies, but also emerging
markets. Doing so, however, will require reversing the deglobalization underway
prior to Covid-19. We will need effective global leadership promoting
enlightened self-interest. Either we reenergize globalization or risk being swept
away by the coming debt tsunami.
评论
发表评论