The big news this week is that gold has popped back up over $2,000. When it will exceed its all–time high of $2,070 is as yet unknown but the pieces are lining up to send it well on its way. This week we look in depth at what poor economic policies mean beyond interest rates, inflation and high gold prices.
Latin America suffered a lost decade in the 1980s and Japan in the 1990s. Both instances came from misguided government policies and too much debt. The World Bank now warns if government policies continue the current course that we are facing a global lost decade.
“History doesn’t repeat itself, but it does rhyme” – Mark Twain
The World Bank’s report Falling Long-Term Growth Prospects: Trends, Expectations, and Policies opens with:
The overlapping crises of the past few years have ended a span of nearly three decades of sustained economic growth that brought the world a massive reduction in extreme poverty. Starting in 1990, productivity surged, incomes rose, and inflation fell. Within a generation, about one out of four developing economies leaped to high-income status.
Today nearly all the economic forces that drove economic progress are in retreat. In the decade before COVID-19, a global slowdown in productivity—which is essential for income growth and higher wages—was already adding to concerns about long-term economic prospects……. International trade—which from the 1990s through 2011 grew twice as fast as GDP growth—is now barely matching it. The result could be a lost decade in the making—not just for some countries or regions as has occurred in the past—but for the whole world (bolding added).
A lost decade in making?
Readers should note that the World Bank is not infallible. Yet the above discussion does ring true for a key reason. Also, 1990 was the year Capitalism defeated Communism. Communism was discredited by the fall of the Berlin wall in November 1989.
That a global superpower could no longer deny its people the standard of living provided by Capitalism in West Germany meant that East Germany’s reason to exist (namely the iterative perfection of communism by the state on behalf of the people) had expired unfulfilled.
Months later in August 1991, the Soviet Union itself imploded when hardline communists tried to oust Gorbachev but ended up with Yeltsin. Further, Yeltsin declared democracy and the end of communism. Additionally, within a few short years, an entire region of Earth had decided to join the global economic competition for the first time in several decades. Instead of building tanks, the Russians began to build products of more peaceful export like steel.
Western Europe and America as a result were also able to become more productive since military spending could fall simultaneously for everyone. Global GDP grew because jeans and movies were better thing to sell than missiles.
1990 also saw the discredit of communism in favour of capitalism inside China. Deng Xiaoping’s idea that Marxism could not feed all Chinese dates back to 1978. But 1990 was the year, following 1989’s Tiananmen Massacre that communist party leaders struck a new social contract with the population.
Moreover, getting rich through capitalism was now acceptable within China and communism was redefined. This new social contract could be summarized as ‘the communist party allows everyone to better themselves through capitalism, but no matter how rich all we get, the party shall remain in power’. As with Russia’s change, the Chinese change gave global GDP a huge boost which lasted decades until the 2020s.
Now that China wants to turn away from capitalism under Xi, and Russia has abandoned global trade since invading Ukraine; the World Bank concerns seem very timely. What we find very interesting about the World Bank report is that no mention is made of communism’s absence from 1900 until 2020.
The report goes on to say that it will take a big and broad policy push to rejuvenate the global potential growth rate that is expected to fall to a three-decade low of 2.2% a year between now and 2030, down from 2.6% average from 2011-21, and a steep drop from the 3.5% that prevailed in the first decade of this century.
DON’T MISS
This has been an exciting week for both gold and silver. We welcomed chart guru Patrick Karim back to the show, to take us through his expectations for the new quarter and he was even kind enough to give us some tops tips for any newbies to technical analysis.