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This week, the leaders and finance ministers of the 20 most economically important
nations, or G-20, will convene in London to develop coordinated policies that
they hope will prevent a worldwide depression. The leaders will also consider
greater transnational regulatory oversight of the financial industry and the
future of the U.S. dollar as the world's 'reserve' currency. By any reckoning,
this meeting will be the most important international economic conference since
Bretton Woods in 1944, or the Great Powers economic meeting in Rome in 1922.
All the leaders are now acknowledging what was formerly in dispute: that the
world is facing a severe recession. But as is evident by the pre-meeting media
blitz, the London G-20 will reveal a split of the group into two opposing camps.
On one hand we have the Americans and the British who have been calling most
loudly for a 'team' approach, in which all nations 'pull together' in support
for spending-based remedies. To some extent we are indeed all in it together.
The shock currently felt by the American consumer is has translated into massive
losses for exporting countries around the world. But this does not mean that
all favor massive government spending along the lines envisioned by Pennsylvania
Avenue and Downing Street.
In fact, many of these countries are leading the other side of the debate.
The Europeans, led by Germany with its inbred fear of hyperinflation, have
balked at the Anglo super-stimulus approach. The continental powers all maintain
socialized medical care, comprehensive social security and unemployment benefits.
They can therefore afford to accept high levels of unemployment before they
face riots and insurrection in the street. The United States has no such cushion.
The German view is that recession is the natural cure for excessive inflation
and growth. They see that the world economy is overleveraged, based on the
reckless injection of cheap dollars under Bush-Greenspan. They believe that
their economies will not return to health unless deleveraging is allowed to
take place. These leaders understand that deleveraging will create massive
unemployment, but they are prepared to accept it in order to allow their economies
to restructure in a competitive manner. In short, they will accept short-term
pain for long-term gain.
The Anglo-Saxons, led by America and socialist Britain, believe that the solution
is to spend their way out of recession. Even Lord Keynes would balk at their
non-solution of sending good money after bad in such an overleveraged environment.
The Anglo-Saxons know they are falling off a cliff, but they are trying to
break the fall with additional capital borrowed from the other developed and
developing economies. One must assume all this is being done to help political
leaders survive the next election cycle, because the long-term consequences
will be an even larger crisis -- and even the collapse of the dollar.
If the German-led Europeans are joined by the Chinese and Australians, the
opposition to a global spending binge will be impossible to overcome. A fundamental
split will then develop in the recovery and restructuring rates of the world's
economies. The forces of decoupling will be reinforced, and the Anglo-Saxon
economies will exit from the center stage of the global economic order.
Such an outcome would also raise to a crescendo the current calls for a gold-linked
global reserve currency to replace the U.S. dollar. If that were to occur,
exchange controls would surely be imposed to stop a panic run out of the Anglo-Saxon
currencies.
Investors should watch the G-20 meeting with very great care and look behind
the inevitable, bland 'groupthink' final communiqué of superficial cooperation.
While this class of grade-A economies looks harmonious, the Anglo-Saxons are
most afraid of the impending D's: deleveraging and decoupling.
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