THE LAST DITCH

I have just been listening to Anatole Kaletsky, the economist, journalist and "Editor at large" of The Times, talking to a conference about the global economy and its future. He attributes the economic stability of the past 15 years to four global economic trends:

1.    Globalisation
2.    Financial revolution
3.    Low inflation
4.    Emerging markets “3bn new capitalists”

Contrary to the hysterics of the unwashed anti-capitalists, he argues that globalisation has led to greater stability; what Ben Bernanke calls "the great moderation". It has led (as economists would always predict when markets become more open) to increased specialisation – an intensification of "the division of labour".

Western companies built on manufacturing expertise have offloaded that most volatile part of wealth-creation to companies in the emerging markets. Freed both from exposure to capital investment in production facilities and to having to deal with organised labour, their businesses have become more stable. Exposed to less volatility, they have been able to raise more funds, more cheaply, to grow their businesses. Multinational companies have become mere "platforms" on which products are developed, produced and marketed.

At the same time, the 1980’s deregulation of financial markets has allowed funds to find their best home more readily. Even individuals have been able to access debt more cheaply and easily. Kaletsky thinks the results of that have been wholly positive. I am not so sure, but I seem to be isolated in that view.

The collapse of communism has given the world "3 billion more capitalists" ready to play their part in all this. Paradoxically old-fashioned manufacturing is also less volatile than agriculture, so those emerging markets are now more stable too. Everyone has won. Kaletsky believes they will continue to do so for the foreseeable future.

I asked him to what extent current policy-makers were entitled to take the credit for this (in his view) rosy situation. His answer was direct. "They aren’t". He said that, possibly, some people might credit Thatcher and Reagan with contributing to the collapse of communism. He also thought praise was due to governments that had given central banks more independence. He doubted, though, that it made any significant difference to the overall trend.

So much for Gordon Brown’s contribution. I don’t share Kaletsky’s optimistic assessment of the world but, to the extent it is correct, Brown is just a witch doctor standing in the life-giving rain, claiming his dance caused it.

4 responses to “Anatole Kaletsky on world economic prospects”

  1. Richard Hoddinott Avatar
    Richard Hoddinott

    Right on the mark, Gordon Brown’s personal ‘economic miracle’ seems to be one of the last and biggest New Labour half truths they still get away with.

    Like

  2. Richard Havers Avatar

    Your last sentence is brilliant!

    Like

  3. Ian Avatar
    Ian

    As usual, you hit the nail right on the head

    Like

  4. David B. Wildgoose Avatar
    David B. Wildgoose

    Bang On. I’ve been saying for years that whatever his (many) personal failings, Norman Lamont was a far better Chancellor than he is given credit for given the circumstances he was working in. And Ken Clarke and Gordon Brown’s success is all down to the luck of when they got to do the job.

    Like

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Tom is a retired international lawyer. He was a partner in a City of London law firm and spent almost twenty years abroad serving clients from all over the world.

Returning to London on retirement in 2011, he was dismayed to discover how much liberty had been lost in the UK while he was away.

He’s a classical liberal (libertarian, if you must) who, like his illustrious namesake, considers that

“…government even in its best state is but a necessary evil; in its worst state an intolerable one.”

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