Yesterday, David Lipton, the first deputy managing director of the
International Monetary Fund (IMF), delivered a speech at the National
Association for Business Economics in Washington, D.C. What can we learn from
his lecture?
Lipton Warns Against Economic Derailment
Something is up with the global economy. You know this for sure when the
very economic elites are warning of a recession or “risk of economic
derailment”. Just a few days ago, the
BIS published its quarterly report warning against the unintended effects
of negative interest rates and consequences of fading confidence in central
banks and policymakers. Yesterday, David Lipton, the IMF’s influential
second-in-command, called for action to boost global growth as “we are
clearly at a delicate juncture, where risk of economic derailment has grown”.
Let’s take a closer look at his speech.
Lipton started with noticing that the IMF’s latest reading of the global
economy once again showed a weakening baseline. He pointed out that risks
have increased further and concerns about the health of the global economy
are intensified by a growing perception that policymakers are running out of
ammunition. True. Importantly, Lipton noted that the weak recovery is
partially caused by unresolved legacies, i.e. a high share of non-performing
loans in many banks’ balance sheets, especially in Europe. What he failed to
notice is that the sluggishness of the repair of bank balance sheets is
caused by the very loose monetary policy, since low interest rates and free
bank reserves hinder the incentives to deleverage. This is why his calls for
further stimulating aggregate demand by monetary policy and mostly by fiscal
policy (since the scope for monetary policy to boost domestic demand further
is limited) are nonsensical.
Global Economy Needs Structural Reforms
We are curious when economists will realize that Keynesian recipes to
stimulate the economy have failed. We have finally reached the long term,
when we can no longer cut corners and boost growth through borrowing. Lipton
intuitively senses it, because he says that without structural reform the
long-run growth prospects will be inadequate. He calls for lowering barriers
to entry in product and services markets, reducing the labor tax wedge,
removing barriers to competition, cutting red tape, enhancing labor mobility,
and investing more in education and research. True. Unfortunately, structural
reforms should not be expected in the near future. Instead, we could get
further monetary accommodation, for instance, from the ECB
this week. The possible further ECB monetary easing may not be fully factored
into the price of gold, so Draghi may negatively surprise the gold market
(through a stronger U.S. dollar). On the other hand, given the current market
sentiment, further actions may revive concerns about the NIRP and the limits
of monetary policy. In the very long term, the lack of structural reforms
will be positive for the gold market, since global growth will remain
stubbornly low without pro-growth, supply-side policies.
Challenges for Emerging Markets
Lipton also addressed the problems of emerging markets. He noted that
excess capacity has been unwinding there through sharp declines in capital
spending, while rising private debt, often denominated in foreign currency,
is increasing risks to banks and sovereign balance sheets. He also pointed
out that the rise in global risk aversion (sovereign
credit spreads widened – in Latin America and Africa by over 300 basis
points over the past year), led to a sharp retrenchment in global capital and
trade flows from emerging markets, which saw about $200 billion in net
capital outflows last year. Indeed, many emerging markets are doomed. China
is slowing down, Russia is still shrinking, while Brazil is facing the worst
recession in decades, just to name a few. The problems of emerging markets
should strengthen the U.S. dollar and exert some downward pressure on the
price of gold, however, gold has recently been able to rise despite the
appreciation of the greenback.
Conclusions
The take-home message is that Lipton described the global economy like a
scary place. His speech perfectly fits into the dominant narrative of
weakening global growth, higher risks of economic derailment and impotent
monetary policy. Therefore, it should be grist for the gold bulls’ mill.
Disclaimer: Please note that the aim of the above
analysis is to discuss the likely long-term impact of the featured phenomenon
on the price of gold and this analysis does not indicate (nor does it aim to
do so) whether gold is likely to move higher or lower in the short- or medium
term. In order to determine the latter, many additional factors need to be
considered (i.e. sentiment, chart patterns, cycles, indicators, ratios,
self-similar patterns and more) and we are taking them into account (and
discussing the short- and medium-term outlook) in our trading alerts.
Thank you.
Arkadiusz Sieron
Sunshine Profits‘ Gold News
Monitor and Market Overview Editor
Gold News Monitor
Gold Trading Alerts
Gold Market Overview
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