David Smith (The Sunday Times) David Smith The Sunday Times 7 February 2011 After the great recession The global financial crisis and the changing world economy The global economy’s shifting sands The big upheaval How did we get here and where are we going? www.tutor2u.net 1 David Smith (The Sunday Times) A self-feeding cycle 7 February 2011 The global economy looked unstoppable Prolonged growth Excessive lending Rising confidence The (brief) rise and fall of sub-prime www.tutor2u.net A leveraged buyout boom 2 David Smith (The Sunday Times) 7 February 2011 The long credit boom The financial sector lent to itself … and to the rest of the economy Housing boom and bust: Spain, UK, US, Japan www.tutor2u.net 3 David Smith (The Sunday Times) House of cards topples 7 February 2011 The biggest financial storm in a century US house prices start to fall sharply, first big national fall since the depression. Subprime loans and securities start to look unsafe – not AAA but junk. Banks realise they are heading for huge losses and, importantly, so are other banks. Time heals – a long time since 2008 www.tutor2u.net A dramatic response (central banks) 4 David Smith (The Sunday Times) 7 February 2011 But the worst post-1945 world recession The 1970s, 80s and 90s in context A world trade collapse And a rise in unemployment www.tutor2u.net 5 David Smith (The Sunday Times) 7 February 2011 Shrinking banking capacity And very painful fiscal hangovers … which will endure Plenty of global green shoots www.tutor2u.net 6 David Smith (The Sunday Times) 7 February 2011 Global PMIs have recovered well As world trade bounces back Led by Asia … globalisation threat averted www.tutor2u.net 7 David Smith (The Sunday Times) 7 February 2011 A more open world A V-shaped recovery from the IMF A fast-changing world China and India were mighty before www.tutor2u.net 8 David Smith (The Sunday Times) 7 February 2011 Start of the great divergence No double-dip with emerging economies strong A recovery led by Asia Barely a missed beat in China www.tutor2u.net 9 David Smith (The Sunday Times) 7 February 2011 Back to the future But how quickly will it happen? Where the growth will come from But global imbalances remain www.tutor2u.net 10 David Smith (The Sunday Times) Large reserve holdings 7 February 2011 Accelerating the global shift 2007: China was expected to overtake Japan’s GDP in 2015, America in the mid2030s. 2010: China has already overtaken Japan; will overtake America in the 2020s. Global crisis and its aftermath has accelerated the shift by 5-10 years. China, India and America will be the world’s big three: only one is flagging. What could go wrong (short-term)? What could go wrong (long-term?) Credit Crunch II – refinancing and Politics – a backlash against capitalism; deleveraging by the banks. Sovereign debt – the euro zone and beyond. Currency wars – China versus America as the new heavyweight bout but also others. Protectionism – either provoked by or in addition to currency manipulation. Fiscal consolidation and the economic and political reaction to it. The unknown unknowns. www.tutor2u.net pressures for greater democracy; inequality. Growth momentum fades dramatically as the easy catch-up phase comes to an end. Globalisation goes into reverse, led by the actions of the advanced economies. Resource constraints. 11
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