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IMF bombshell: Age of America nears end


lord_casek

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http://www.marketwatch.com/story/imf-bombshell-age-of-america-about-to-end-2011-04-25?link=MW_home_latest_news

 

For the first time, the international organization has set a date for the moment when the “Age of America” will end and the U.S. economy will be overtaken by that of China.

 

And it’s a lot closer than you may think.

According to the latest IMF official forecasts, China’s economy will surpass that of America in real terms in 2016 — just five years from now.

Put that in your calendar.

It provides a painful context for the budget wrangling taking place in Washington, D.C., right now. It raises enormous questions about what the international security system is going to look like in just a handful of years. And it casts a deepening cloud over both the U.S. dollar and the giant Treasury market, which have been propped up for decades by their privileged status as the liabilities of the world’s hegemonic power.

According to the IMF forecast, whomever is elected U.S. president next year — Obama? Mitt Romney? Donald Trump? — will be the last to preside over the world’s largest economy.

Most people aren’t prepared for this. They aren’t even aware it’s that close. Listen to experts of various stripes, and they will tell you this moment is decades away. The most bearish will put the figure in the mid-2020s.

 

 

 

 

But they’re miscounting. They’re only comparing the gross domestic products of the two countries using current exchange rates.

That’s a largely meaningless comparison in real terms. Exchange rates change quickly. And China’s exchange rates are phony. China artificially undervalues its currency, the renminbi, through massive intervention in the markets.

The comparison that really matters

 

The IMF in its analysis looks beyond exchange rates to the true, real terms picture of the economies using “purchasing power parities.” That compares what people earn and spend in real terms in their domestic economies.

Under PPP, the Chinese economy will expand from $11.2 trillion this year to $19 trillion in 2016. Meanwhile the size of the U.S. economy will rise from $15.2 trillion to $18.8 trillion. That would take America’s share of the world output down to 17.7%, the lowest in modern times. China’s would reach 18%, and rising.

Just 10 years ago, the U.S. economy was three times the size of China’s.

 

 

 

Naturally, all forecasts are fallible. Time and chance happen to them all. The actual date when China surpasses the U.S. might come even earlier than the IMF predicts, or somewhat later. If the great Chinese juggernaut blows a tire, as a growing number fear it might, it could even delay things by several years. But the outcome is scarcely in doubt.

 

This is more than a statistical story. It is the end of the Age of America. As a bond strategist in Europe told me two weeks ago, “We are witnessing the end of America’s economic hegemony.”

We have lived in a world dominated by the U.S. for so long that there is no longer anyone alive who remembers anything else. America overtook Great Britain as the world’s leading economic power in the 1890s and never looked back.

And both those countries live under very similar rules of constitutional government, respect for civil liberties and the rights of property. China has none of those. The Age of China will feel very different.

Victor Cha, senior adviser on Asian affairs at Washington’s Center for Strategic and International Studies, told me China’s neighbors in Asia are already waking up to the dangers. “The region is overwhelmingly looking to the U.S. in a way that it hasn’t done in the past,” he said. “They see the U.S. as a counterweight to China. They also see American hegemony over the last half-century as fairly benign. In China they see the rise of an economic power that is not benevolent, that can be predatory. They don’t see it as a benign hegemony.”

 

 

 

 

The rise of China, and the relative decline of America, is the biggest story of our time. You can see its implications everywhere, from shuttered factories in the Midwest to soaring costs of oil and other commodities. Last fall, when I attended a conference in London about agricultural investment, I was struck by the number of people there who told stories about Chinese interests snapping up farmland and foodstuff supplies — from South America to China and elsewhere.

This is the result of decades during which China has successfully pursued economic policies aimed at national expansion and power, while the U.S. has embraced either free trade or, for want of a better term, economic appeasement.

“There are two systems in collision,” said Ralph Gomory, research professor at NYU’s Stern business school. “They have a state-guided form of capitalism, and we have a much freer former of capitalism.” What we have seen, he said, is “a massive shift in capability from the U.S. to China. What we have done is traded jobs for profit. The jobs have moved to China. The capability erodes in the U.S. and grows in China. That’s very destructive. That is a big reason why the U.S. is becoming more and more polarized between a small, very rich class and an eroding middle class. The people who get the profits are very different from the people who lost the wages.”

The next chapter of the story is just beginning.

U.S. spending spree won’t work

 

What the rise of China means for defense, and international affairs, has barely been touched on. The U.S. is now spending gigantic sums — from a beleaguered economy — to try to maintain its place in the sun. See: Pentagon spending is budget blind spot .

It’s a lesson we could learn more cheaply from the sad story of the British, Spanish and other empires. It doesn’t work. You can’t stay on top if your economy doesn’t.

 

 

 

Equally to the point, here is what this means economically, and for investors.

Some years ago I was having lunch with the smartest investor I know, London-based hedge-fund manager Crispin Odey. He made the argument that markets are reasonably efficient, most of the time, at setting prices. Where they are most likely to fail, though, is in correctly anticipating and pricing big, revolutionary, “paradigm” shifts — whether a rise of disruptive technologies or revolutionary changes in geopolitics. We are living through one now.

The U.S. Treasury market continues to operate on the assumption that it will always remain the global benchmark of money. Business schools still teach students, for example, that the interest rate on the 10-year Treasury bond is the “risk-free rate” on money. And so it has been for more than a century. But that’s all based on the Age of America.

No wonder so many have been buying gold. If the U.S. dollar ceases to be the world’s sole reserve currency, what will be? The euro would be fine if it acts like the old deutschemark. If it’s just the Greek drachma in drag ... not so much.

The last time the world’s dominant hegemon lost its ability to run things singlehandedly was early in the past century. That’s when the U.S. and Germany surpassed Great Britain. It didn’t turn out well.

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We don't have over a billion people to spread all that money around to thus more of it can be spent on goods as opposed to basic necessities.

We'll still be the best trade market and enjoy privilege status over China.

Also, 2016 seems a bit soon, no way they'll overtake us in 5 years.

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This is just numbers.

 

I'm not sure much will actually change.

Wall St will still remain the financial capital of the world. Washington's influence on global politics will remain. etc...

And all this talk about China always leaves out their increasing reliance on foreign resources, increasing social inequality, increasing educational inequality, the inefficiency of their state run enterprises, countless other issues....

 

A 'paradigm shift' is still decades away.

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People are pretty quick to pronounce the death of american hegemony. In the 70s everyone thought the soviets were coming out on top in the cold war, in the 80s everyone thought a resurgent Japan was emerging as a challenger to America in the Asia Pacific.

 

There are a lot of domestic issues in China that will have to be solved before it can focus more of its energy into foreign affairs. IF China does successfully solve these issues and decides to pursue expansionist foreign policy it is going to face a coalition of pretty much the entire rest of Asia (including India which might not be so far behind China itself in a decade or two) and the United States (Which even if it is overtaken in terms of GDP by China in the next decade will not be done so militarily for a lot longer) that will go from the current dominant policy of integrating China into the existent international system to balancing against it.

Over the coming decades we will see a gradual shift of relative power in China's favour but China being able to achieve regional hegemony is quite spurious and the likelihood of a Chinese global hegemony similar to what the US has enjoyed at times is extremely low.

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Because that worked out so well for the USSR.

 

 

Don't mean to derail this, but...

 

Calling the USSR a communist state is like calling the USA a free-market capitalist state.

 

"Stalinist USSR was not socialist (and not communist), but a bureaucratised degenerated workers' state — that is, a non-capitalist state in which the exploitation of labor is controlled by a ruling caste which, although not owning the means of production and not constituting a social class in its own right, accrued benefits and privileges at the expense of the working class."

 

Communism and Socialism really can work as long as the state doesn't get its hands on it. For Example, look at Argentina's recovered factory movement where workplaces are self managed by the workers without any help from the government. Instead of working for a wage handed out by the boss, they actually own an equal share of the product of labor. No need for management to "organize" the labor force.

 

There's a coffee roaster in my town for example that was organized by the I.W.W. (or Industrial Workers of the World), a radical anarcho-syndicalist workers union. It runs itself from within. There is direct democracy in the workplace, where everyone gets 1 vote in every fiscal and non-monetary aspect of the work, rather than electing a union official to make all decisions (and hope they act in your best interest) or even WORSE having an owner or manager making all of the decisions. An owner's interests are always directly opposed to the workers, because the more work he can squeeze out of the least amount of workers the more he gets paid. The working class and the employing class have nothing in common.

 

Primitive hippie communes would be another example of a form of communism that works.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rAaWvVFERVA

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