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Economy
Washington meeting fails to discuss global financial crisis
When will the US bubble burst?
By Nick Beams
22 April 1998
All of the press statements and public pronouncements centred
on the need for new guidelines for the international banking system
following the Asian meltdown, and the demand for "financial
restructuring" in Japan. But another crisis hung over the
meetings of the treasury and bank officials of the major capitalist
powers in Washington last week. There are now growing signs that
the third major financial crisis of the 1990s--following Mexico
1994-95 and East Asia 1997-98--will take the form of a Wall Street
sharemarket collapse.
Even as the finance ministers and bankers met to consider the
stagnation of the Japanese economy, the world's second largest,
and the crisis in Asia--responsible for half of the growth in
world output in the 1990s--Wall Street surged ahead to new record
highs. Yet, except for some warnings by German Bundesbank President
Hans Tietmeyer that Wall Street had to be "closely watched,"
there was no official discussion of the US "bubble economy."
And the Asian crisis was, to a great extent, swept under the
carpet as well. While the April 16 meeting of the Group of 22
countries was called to discuss a new "architecture"
for the international monetary system, discussion of major reform
proposals was pushed aside by a pre-emptive strike by US Treasury
Secretary Robert Rubin.
He set out the US agenda in an address to the Brookings Institute
on the eve of the G22 meeting. Rubin called for greater information
to be provided to international markets, a higher standard of
domestic banking regulations, and measures to ensure that banks
and financial institutions suffered greater losses for bad lending
decisions, rather than being bailed out by the International Monetary
Fund (IMF).
Rubin's proposals formed the basis of discussion at the G22
meeting, which resolved to establish working groups to develop
concrete proposals on their implementation. But the failure to
undertake more substantial measures leaves all of the questions
arising from the Asian meltdown hanging over the international
financial system. The biggest issue is the absence of a central
authority which can both regulate the global financial markets
and provide lender-of-last resort facilities when the collapse
of a bank or financial institution poses dangers to the entire
system. This problem is causing increased concern in financial
circles.
In an editorial published on the morning of the G22 meeting,
the London-based Financial Times said that the Asian financial
crisis had shattered "complacency." It welcomed a review
of the architecture of the global financial system.
"At least policy makers are grappling with some of the
difficult questions," it declared. "The biggest issue,
however, is how to balance the lender-of-last resort function
against the need to ensure private sector responsibility for mistakes.
To this Mr. Rubin has not provided the solution, perhaps because
there is none."
Warnings of disaster
In an editorial published two days later, entitled "The
global standard of capitalism," the newspaper raised even
more far-reaching issues. "The 20th century," the editorial
began, "seems to be ending where it began. Imperialism, fascism,
socialism and now Asian dirigisme seem to be diversions en route
between the unregulated liberal capitalism of a century or more
ago and its more institutionalised form of today. Or so many in
the west believe."
However, there were dangers in what it called "Anglo-Saxon"
capitalism, based on "shareholder dominance," becoming
the "global standard." According to the editorial, "The
contemporary triumph of the US may rest, in part, on a financial
bubble. The liberal order of a century ago was destroyed by national
rivalry and financial collapse. The same dangers could lie in
wait. The new global standard has much to commend it. Its enduring
triumph cannot be assumed, all the same."
Similar warnings about the Wall Street spiral have been sounded
in the current issue of the Economist magazine in a report
on "America's bubble economy." The magazine's editorial
noted that while the spring meetings of the IMF and World Bank
were dominated by discussions on Japan and the Asian financial
crisis, "It is asset-price inflation, especially in the United
States, that now poses a bigger and more imminent threat to the
global economy."
It dismissed the widely-repeated claims that the stock market
spiral, which has seen share values increase by 65 percent over
the past two years, was due to the fact that America "has
entered a new economic era of faster, inflation-free growth, and
hence stronger profits, thanks to new technology and globalisation."
Pointing out that assertions of a "new economy" have
preceded past collapses, the Economist reproduced the following
comment from Forbes magazine: "For the last five years
we have been in a new industrial era in this country. We are making
progress industrially and economically not even by leaps and bounds,
but on a perfectly heroic scale." That statement, it noted,
was issued in June 1929, just four months before the stock market
crashed.
A spectacular disparity
A series of statistics have revealed the rapidly widening gap
between US sharemarket values and the real economy. US company
profits are expected to rise between 3 and 5 percent this year,
but sharemarket values have risen by 15 percent over the past
four months alone. The share value of a single firm--Microsoft--rose
by more in the first quarter of this year than all the growth
in the entire US economy.
Figures like these recall the calculations made in 1989 when,
according to market values, the land on which the Imperial Palace
stood in Tokyo was worth as much as the entire state of California.
Today the Japanese sharemarket index stands at 40 percent of its
1990 value. The economy has been virtually stagnant since the
Tokyo "bubble" burst in the early 1990s.
One of the major factors pushing up US share prices is a record
wave of mergers and acquisitions. The Dow passed through the 9,000
mark earlier this month in the wake of the world's largest ever
merger, between Citicorp and the Travelers Group.
Deals worth $957 billion, or 12 percent of Gross Domestic Product,
were announced last year--an increase from $138 billion, or 2
percent of GDP, in 1991. This year is set to be another record,
with $441 billion worth of mergers announced by the middle of
April.
The stock exchange upsurge is being fuelled by a continuous
flow of cash from mutual funds which, for the first time in history,
are estimated to be larger than the savings bank system. Tens
of millions of working class and middle class families have been
forced to channel their savings into the funds in the hope that
they can earn a sufficient rate of return to cover health, education
and retirement costs. Money allocated to these funds from pension
schemes alone amounts to between $30 and $40 billion per month.
Consequently, unlike in 1987, when ordinary families were relatively
unaffected by the sharemarket crash, a social disaster is in the
making. When the stock market bubble bursts, as it inevitably
must, tens of millions of people will see their savings and assets
disappear virtually overnight.
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