John Mauldin
Globalization is one of the dominant economic forces in the world today and given the politics of the world it is also one of the most controversial. Globalization has been one of the leading forces of overall global growth and is continuing to grow, albeit at a slower pace, yet the forces which would roll back or hinder globalization are increasing as well.
My friend Ian Bremmer, professor at New York University and founder of the Eurasia Group, is one of the foremost authorities on geopolitical trends in the world. In addition to the previous link, they have a comprehensive Wikipedia page. The Eurasia Group’s clientele base is a who’s who of large corporations, funds, and other organizations. They have an all-star group of advisors and personnel. They produce a large volume of materials on a wide variety of geopolitical topics.
Ian himself writes a weekly letter that hits my inbox on Monday morning and takes the form of a weekly briefing on global events. Two weeks ago Ian wrote a very solid essay on the issues surrounding globalization. This letter is normally seen only by his private (very-high-paying) clients, but he has graciously allowed me to make it this week’s Outside the Box. I think you will find it highly informative and well worth your time.
I am in Dallas, working away in a hopefully productive manner, but will stop a little early tomorrow afternoon to begin to prepare chili and all the fixings for my Brexit party tomorrow evening. The recent polls don’t make it look quite as close as it did last week, but things are rather fluid in the United Kingdom, so we’ll see who comes out to vote. And speaking of Brexit and parties, my friend Neil Howe, author The Fourth Turning and subject of last week’s Thoughts from the Frontline, is flying in to be here and sent me this interesting note:
Not really in my wheelhouse to cover this stuff hour to hour. But after a new poll came out 2 hours ago showing Brexit ahead by 1 percent, the FTSE and FXB turned south. If Brexit wins, or if it is even close, there’s going to be a lot of investigating about whose money is skewing the betting odds. It’s a multitude of small-money individuals on one side and a few big-money London financial houses on the other.
Don’t you just love conspiracies? They make everything so extra-special juicy… Have a great week. And now I’ll let you move right on to Ian’s essay.
You’re worried about protectionism analyst,
John Mauldin, Editor
Outside the Box
Update on Globalization
By Ian Bremmer
This weekend witnessed the worst mass shooting in
the history of the United States. It will also surely be the most politicized.
Some 50 dead at the hands of a self-declared ISIS supporter with an automatic
assault weapon, in the midst of the most polarized presidential election the
country has experienced in the post-war period.
The responses are divided strongly along political
lines: the left focusing on gun control; the right on radical Islam. There’s no
policy change coming: the act of terrorism was by all counts “homegrown”
despite an ISIS pledge, and the Obama administration will avoid any politics
that pushes towards further American intervention across the Middle East or a
post-9/11 style Patriot Act redux at home. While domestic American lobbies
against gun control are set in stone until the next election at least.
The greater impact will be on the campaign, where a
large attack on the homeland plays into Donald Trump’s (temporary) “ban the Muslims”
platform. Hillary Clinton’s hawkish tone on terrorism and us intervention made
for a stronger statement than President Obama’s... But it’s still a bigger
opening for Trump, especially since the attack, along with the recent mass
killing in San Bernadino, happened on Obama’s Democratic administration’s
watch. Doesn’t change my overall electoral call, where the demographics and
weak GOP (political and financial) support still give Clinton a significant
edge. But it will make identity politics over the course of the election – and
after – far more toxic, with negative long-term consequences for both
constructive political legislation and, as a consequence, market sentiment.
***
Given the short-term situation (enormous headlines,
a horrible tragedy, but limited US and global impact) I’m not planning on
writing this week’s update on the shooting. Rather, I’ve been spending quite a
bit of time thinking about something bigger:
Globalization.
It’s single most important trend of the past half
century. Simply put, the various processes by which ideas, information, people,
money, goods, and services cross borders at unprecedented speed and with
unprecedented depth.
Those processes are world-changing, and many of
them are still accelerating. But just as the Soviet collapse didn’t bring the
end of history, globalization hasn’t made the world flat. Today’s ever-smaller
world still has as many peaks and valleys: more clearly visible to one another,
but still every bit as sharp in relief. That in turn is creating fragmentation,
as a wide variety of deglobalization trends gain currency and momentum. The two
sets of forces are interlinked and yet rarely considered together. Proponents
of utopia and dystopia are getting ever-louder… and talking ever more past each
other.
I think it’s worth considering the arguments for
both globalization and deglobalization. To stack up the most important factors
on both sides of the aisle, and see where we end up.
First, let’s look at globalization:
Migration. The world is crossing
borders at record speeds. International tourism receipts are increasing, on the
back of a strongly growing global middle class and a steady rise in visa-free
travel: above average growth for six years straight; and for the fourth year in
a row, global tourism spend has grown much faster than merchandise trade. The
rise of China is dominant here, with 120 million Chinese now traveling abroad
every year; a trend showing no sign of slowing (interestingly, around the
world, only tourism from the former Eastern bloc is significantly shrinking).
It’s also developed world interest in ever-more global destinations: even North
Korea’s repeated arrests of visitors has not deterred westerners from reaching
as far as the hermit kingdom.
The same trend holds for international students.
2015 saw nearly 1,000,000 international students coming to the United States
(by far the most important destination for higher education); a 10%
year-on-year increase, and the fastest rate of growth since 1979. The rise of
China again drives the trend; making up 31% of the total foreign student count
(India has 14%, Korea 7%, and Saudi Arabia 6%).
Overall, international migration figures are
sharply up; reaching 244 million in 2015, up 40% since the beginning of the
century. 3.3% of the world’s population is composed of migrants; 50% of them
come from Asia, and 2/3 of migrants live in either Asia or Europe. Not all of
this travel is welcome. The fastest recent migration growth has been in
refugees – generally forced by climate change and/or conflict, and creating the
biggest refugee crisis since World War II. 1 in 122 individuals on earth has
been forcibly displaced, for a total of 60 million people. That in turn creates
the potential for greater and faster contagion of externalities such as terrorism
and disease – the latest illustration of which being the rapid spread of the
Zika virus (prompting a realization that normal tourism flows make postponing
the Olympics of little use; very much an illustration of our points here on the
tension between globalization and deglobalization).
There’s pushback to all this moving around. Some as
a consequence of the refugee flows: walls being built, tougher border checks –
leading to freedom of movement being curtailed. That’s been easiest to
accomplish in areas where borders are well guarded – most notably Europe in
response to the refugee crisis, with what’s amounted to a de facto suspension
of the Schengen agreement – while across the Middle East and in Sub-Saharan
Africa there’s been little effective policy response to growing northbound
flows.
Open borders are also being filtered by growing
interstate conflict. Take the tourism ban between Russia and Turkey. Iran and
Saudi Arabia have cut off direct travel and restricted use of each other’s
airspace; most significantly with the Iranian government forbidding its
citizens from traveling to Saudi Arabia for the hajj. And, finally, there’s
been some enforcement of travel restrictions out of broader stability concerns
from authoritarian regimes; with Russia and China implementing restrictions on
government and public sector international travel – an effort to maintain
loyalty and control. But these are outliers. Overall, vastly more people are
moving across borders. Freedom of the seas and air travel continues to be largely
unfettered.
On balance, the impact of these trends has been unprecedented
internationalization of ideas and culture – a strong facto r for continued
globalization.
Communications. The communications
revolution has made it easier for people of all walks of life and every corner
of the world to be in touch with one another. Smart phone and internet
penetration now stands at nearly 50% of the entire world population, and
infrastructure improvements should continue to increase those rates in the
coming decade. And, as anybody reading this knows, it’s a life changing
technology, a real-time and near-completely immersive default connection of
citizens to the rest of the world. Virtual networks have become a critical
component – and, for many, the defining component – of
personal identity.
To effectively restrict communication, governments
would need to dominate technologies whose forced control is a double-edged
sword – when social instability spikes, internet shutdowns work at best
sporadically and risk leading to greater discontent and violence. Enterprising
citizens and new technologies quickly find workarounds. Despite all the hype
around China’s great firewall, efforts to completely shut out international
communications are increasingly seen by government actors as unworkable. While,
for their part, non-state organizations of every stripe use virtual networks to
their advantage – corporations and non-profits with new collaboration models,
the Arab spring and colored revolutions’ operators everywhere, and, of course,
even terrorists. More common and larger-scale cyber-attacks (from Sony pictures
to Spanish renewable energy companies) are ye t another example of this
unprecedented “communication” flow; just as growth of the dark web has allowed
for more effective connections in illegal activities – drug trade, human
trafficking, and the like. For better and for worse, communications are
becoming far more global and efficient.
The global middle class. The
biggest “winner” of the past decades of globalization has been the rise of a
global middle class. Vast poverty reduction in China in particular, and in
emerging markets more broadly, has depended on access to international markets.
700 million have been lifted out of poverty since the turn of the century, with
global poverty essentially dropping under 10 percent for the first time – even
though most of the world’s new middle class remains financially vulnerable. The
resulting empowered billions of people may not support the Washington
consensus, but they’re no less interested in smartphones, cars, and the other
fruits of globally-connected supply chains. Without an acute war-type crisis,
few political leaders will attempt to override popular demands for global
goods. This all means economic power becoming mor e evenly distributed around
the world, even as global inequality compared to the world’s top earners has
grown within countries.
Corporations. The rise of the
global middle class, particularly in Asia, means that most Western-based
multinational corporations around the world continue to see their most
important growth as global (even as see technology-driven “onshoring” trends
for production facilities makes a comeback). There’s also been a sea change
coming from China itself, with beijing’s largest companies now embracing a
strong interest in global expansion strategies as they try to replicate their
domestic significance in the international market. Alibaba Group has made
international expansion its top priority in recent years, on both the sales and
hiring fronts. There’s also a globalization trend emerging in small and medium
enterprises: the so called “micro-multinational;” mid-sized firms deploying new
technological strategies to allow them acces s into new markets earlier in
their growth process.
Indeed, the world’s most dynamic economic actors
have a powerful interest in maintaining global connectivity even when
governments falter. Google, Microsoft, and Facebook are doubling down on
undersea cabling. Jack Ma has bought an English-language newspaper and listed
his company in New York. Vodafone built a mobile payments system in Africa that
is far superior to those in Western markets. Multinational corporations face
challenges from slowing growth and more market volatility, but neither trend
will derail an ever-increasing globalization trend.
Commerce. Alternative payment
systems enable globalization. Paypal and Venmo allow global transactions to be
made instantaneously. With Bitcoin, there’s no need for even an exchange
process. Movement of money is becoming faster and easier through both
legitimate and illegitimate channels. Then there’s the growth in real estate
acquisitions by foreign investors, particularly in global cities like New York
and London. Silicon Valley start-ups raising money from Saudi venture
capitalists. And explosive growth in collaborations for commerce in the
cultural arena – movie and music industries cutting across Hollywood, a nascent
Chinese industry, Bollywood, and even Nollywood (in Nigeria).
Energy. Energy supplies long acted
as a globalization chokepoint. Today, they are a driver of it. A nuclear deal
has brought iran back as one of the world’s largest energy producers. Cuba
reconciled with the United States in part due to Venezuela’s diminished energy
clout (and of course limited ability to provide a socialist alternative to the
Americans). The biggest shift is technology ending “peak oil;” an
unconventional energy revolution quickly making the United States the world’s
largest producer. All of which has decentralized production, stripping
government control out of global energy markets and essentially ending OPEC.
Climate change. After decades of
“north versus south” and climate-change skeptics holding sway over policy in a
number of core carbon-emitting nations, there’s now growing international
consensus on the scale of the challenge and the importance of policy redress.
Decades of limited cooperation among central governments in a series of failed
global summits – all the while extreme climate conditions created greater human
impact – has led non-governmental actors to take up a leadership role in the
climate change agenda, notably creating incremental but meaningful success in
last year’s Paris meeting. It’s the first meaningful example of a global crisis
creating progress (albeit to date limited) toward global governance.
Now, the forces of deglobalization:
Geopolitics. Geopolitical
volatility is at unprecedented levels in the world today. The Middle East is
both imploding and exploding due to failed models of governance, increasingly
stretched economies, and fracturing security. Failed states across the extended
Middle East, North Africa, and South-Central Asia; an unprecedented refugee
crisis; and the world’s most powerful ever terrorist organization are all
having profound spillover effects across those regions and into Europe (though,
notably, that’s not been true of East or Southeast asia, and it’s certainly not
true of the Western Hemisphere).
Then there’s the fact that the United States –
globalization’s standard bearer for nearly 75 years – is now proving to be
considerably more reluctant to be the world’s indispensable nation. That means
less appetite for upholding global security, promoting global trade, or
cheerleading global values. There’s recently been slightly more support among
Americans for foreign policy intervention than during the historic lows of
2013, but the overall tendency is still less engagement and more unilateralism,
if not isolationism (a solid majority of americans – Democrats and Republicans
alike – thinks the United States does too much internationally, and wants
whoever takes power in 2017 to focus on domestic rather than foreign affairs).
Meanwhile the world’s other largest economies – China and Japan – have neither
the willingness nor the capacity to step into the breach.
All of which means the geopolitical condition I
call the g-zero is intensifying, and weighing on a world that’s more
de-globalized than at any point since the end of World War II. I don’t view
today’s state of dis-equilibrium as sustainable, but it’s unclear whether what
replaces the g-zero is a return to a more globalized geopolitical order or
something even more fragmented. For now, I’d bet on the latter.
State capitalism. One of the most
acute forces of deglobalization is the rise of state capitalism, with China –
soon to be the world’s largest economy – dominated by a government player. Yes,
Beijing is reforming. But China is growing faster than it’s reforming, and as a
consequence it’s projecting its domestic model of government heavy-handedness
on the international stage. That means the end of the global free market and
its replacement with a model marked by bilateral, rather than multilateral,
political and commercial ties, with Beijing playing a greater role in directly
determining outcomes. That will lead to growing necessity for economic actors
to align themselves with China in many markets, as well as a significant
increase in the growth of strategic sectors – sectors in which companies need
to be seen as strategically comp elling to governments in the countries in
which they invest.
The growth in importance of strategic sectors is
arguably the most important new dimension of this new global economy when it
comes to impacting multinational corporations; which is happening in ways that
are fundamentally opposed to a world meant to be marked by increasingly
borderless globalization. The technology sector is a good example: in many
countries (including Russia, and now increasingly Iran), local industries tend
to flourish independently of (and shielded from) the government; but as soon as
their growth, success, and strategic importance becomes evident, they’re taken
over by government oversight. Whether this also happens in developed countries
as technology gets added to the usual military-industrial dyad is one of the
most important questions for the future of the global marketplace.
Global architecture & standards.
Playing into the tension between (growing) state capitalism and (historically dominant)
free market is China’s ongoing development of its own version of the Marshall
Plan – displaying the world’s only global economic strategy driven by a
trillion-plus dollars of investment into international infrastructure. China’s
plan involves very different strings than the postwar American checks did: no
interest in promoting the rule of law, free markets, and (US-led) global
standards, but a rather simple “buy from Chinese state owned corporations,
accept Chinese currency, employ Chinese standards.” Foreigners perceive both
the American and Chinese models as threatening and are looking to create “third
way” alternatives (think European regulatory approaches to technology).
The fault lines undercutting the prospect of
globally unified standards are also at play within countries,
as each private sector company seeks to push its own version of a global
industry model in areas such as the internet of things: Tencent vs. Huawei,
Apple vs. Google vs. Intel. Such competition’s only normal when McKinsey’s
estimated gains of over $11 trillion in the next ten years. Tech companies like
Google are already facing backlash in Europe, Apple in China, Huawei in the US.
That competition will only get greater as the prospects of economic gains
become more evident.
Populism/nationalism. Populist
movements are expanding across the world, with the strongest and most sudden
trajectory found in developed states. That’s a direct reaction from populations
hollowing out economically and feeling faced with otherness culturally – it’s
essentially the other side of the coin of the rise of the globalized middle
class. It’s the Brexit movement and Euroskepticism more broadly. The rise of
Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders in the united states. European far right and
far left movements, now showing record levels of support in Austria, France,
Italy, and beyond. It’s separatism in Scotland, Catalonia, and Northern Italy.
It’s the erosion of rule of law and legitimacy of political institutions across
East, Central, and Southeast Europe. It’s a growing belief that political
outsiders aren’t welcome; that European supranationalism is a mistake.
Many of the core constituencies driving global
integration and connectivity over the past 30 years have now abandoned it. The
populist argument is that globalists have used powerful institutions to gut
what these countries and their cultures stand for. Populists want more
homogeneity. In the United States today, frontline politicians cannot be seen
to favor free trade, let alone for the reform of global institutions like the
United Nations; imf quota reform took intense pressure and came little and
late. Europe is more interested in breaking up its own integrating structures
than establishing new global relationships; not to mention its rapid abandonment
of the principles of free movement in reaction to the refugee crisis. And,
critically, as technology removes labor from the capital equation globally,
these trends are very likely to expand to the world’s emerging markets
&ndas h; a key trend playing against globalization in the coming years.
Protectionism. In lockstep with
increased populism, protectionist sentiment is growing among many in the
developed states, who don’t believe free trade benefits them personally. Yes,
citizens have benefited from cheaper products. But real wages have been flat –
in some cases even shrinking – and job opportunities in the developed world
have become more limited. This was less of a problem in the 80s with the rise
of Japan, but the rise of China has proved a larger shift… and the rise of
technology greater still. That’s led to significant pushback against free
trade, now making Transpacific Partnership (TTP) ratification at best a
toss-up, and the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP)
effectively a dead letter.
The process of negotiating TPP concessions for
agriculture, cars, and other traditionally-protected industries has been
protracted at best. Protectionist measures grew at their fastest pace since
2009 in 2015; led by India, Russia, and the United States. In latest data, for
the first 10 months of 2015, governments around the world passed 539
protectionist measures, up from 407 in the same period of 2014 and 183 in 2012.
It’s easier to erect trade barriers than to tear them down, as what starts off as
“anti-dumping” can quickly become “protect our workers.”
Measures put in place
in response to populist anger (Trump’s China penalties, Ukraine’s Russian
embargo) are particularly hard to dismantle. Global free trade deals have
stalled, giving way to bilateral and regional alternatives. All while the fora
for resolving disputes – the WTO, th e ICJ – are being increasingly ignored by
their principal actors (the US, China).
Capital flows & foreign exchange.
There was a significant slowdown in net capital flows into emerging markets
from Q4 2014 through Q3 2015 (and it’s likely Q4 2015 was just as bad). In
2010, net capital inflows into emerging markets amounted to 3.7% of GDP. By
2014-2015, emerging markets had a 1.2% of GDP net capital outflow
– due to a fall in inflows and high outflows. There were a few reasons: the
transition from Fed quantitative easing to anticipation of interest rate hikes
and worries about the impact of lower commodity prices and slowing Chinese
growth.
When it comes to foreign exchange, average daily
trading volume in April 2016 was $4.6 trillion dollars, slightly lower than the
$4.8 trillion of April 2015, with volumes little changed over three years.
Beyond the cyclical uncertainties affecting trading volumes, there may also be
structural factors at play, particularly an official rethink of the benefits of
open capital accounts, and fast-money cross-border capital flows in particular.
The greater respectability of capital controls is one of the most important
trends in global finance today. At least for now, we’ve passed the peak of
traditional financial globalization.
The global internet. The promise
of the internet is souring as digital infrastructure fails to keep pace with
the capabilities of states and malicious private actors. Major hacking
incidents have become routine. Unlike in finance, the ability of governments to
step in and stop a cyber panic, in which individuals would withdraw from online
life and commerce, is untested.
But even more threatening that the asymmetric
capabilities of non-state actors is the risk of internet fragmentation stemming
from government actions. The Chinese are well known for their attempts at
taming – and reshaping in their own image – the global internet. Beijing’s
attempts at ending anonymity on the internet by seeking to force all users to
have real-name registration will prove a strong pushback on globalization. The
coming years will see far more top-down filtering and surveillance from Beijing.
And many other countries are interested in taking from the Chinese model for
their own security and safety. That means different surveillance models,
different governance models, and different economic winners and losers.
What
had been the clearest “win” for globalization in a single open internet is now
fragmenting into a number of differently govern ed online spaces.
And some factors where the impact
isn’t so clear:
Information. This is the most
difficult issue to address on the globalization/deglobalization spectrum. On
the one hand, the advantages of big data becoming a source of global economic
growth are clear and driving game-changing business models in most every
sector. So too, the ability for consumers to have access to information flows
from all over the world, with virtually no (direct) cost to the individual. But
filtering and segmentation of information is at least as important a global
trend, and it firmly weighs on the deglobalization side.
Both of these trends are strong, and move in precisely
opposite directions. There’s vastly more information out there. But it’s
channeled much more among like-minded people (and in many cases marshaled – and
profited upon – by top-down systems). The proliferation of news sources sends
most people to media outlets that confirm their prejudices. This is a strong
form of self-censorship. While when it comes to traditional censorship, control
of information is a contest between censors and users that is likely to swing
in both directions. One will gain an advantage, and then the other will
respond. On balance, I’d say information flows have leaned rather in favor of
globalization when it comes to data, and against it when it comes to how people
actually relate to, and use, it.
Economic sanctions. Not only has
the United States used sanctions extensively as a non-lethal tool of
power-projection in the past few years, but this behavior has encouraged a
range of other countries to follow suit; from the EU to Russia, Turkey, and
Saudi Arabia. So, at first glance, the trend isn’t encouraging when it comes to
keeping the world globalized. But it’s also becoming ever harder for americans
employing unilateral coercive diplomacy to convince other important economic
actors, allies as well as non-allies, to play along. That may ease us sanctions
use a bit going forward. The United States is also starting to realize that its
“weaponization of finance” will increasingly lead to blowback in an
increasingly non-polar world, and hence isn’t sustainable in the long run.
Finally, the opposite policy approach is bearing success: Washington has begun
opening – rather than closing – doors, as evidenced by the Iran deal, the Cuba
rapprochement, and the possibility of a warming up with Russia if a compromise
is eventually found over Minsk.
Global trade. Lots of
anti-globalization types talk about the diminishment of global trade, but it’s
hard to make a call on which way trade is heading. On the one hand, trade
volumes have flattened among advanced economies and are shrinking for emerging economies
– subtracting about half a percentage point a year from the overall growth rate
in the developed world since 2012. The reason to worry is that trade growth
typically outpaces GDP by a wide margin; and after a post-recession rebound in
2010 to 12%, trade growth slipped to 7% in 2011, stagnated at 3% for the next
three years and then fell below 2% for 2015 – well below GDP for the first time
since 9/11 (the 1987-2007 average was 7.1%).
Global trade looks even more alarming when measured
in price terms: having fallen 13% in 2015 to 16.5 trillion from 19 trillion in
2014 (though this reflects both exchange rate effects (a stronger dollar) and
price effects (lower commodity prices)). China focusing on domestic demand
rather than exports for growth is worth watching closely: if wheels start
falling off Chinese reform, that’s the tipping point for a big hit to
globalization.
But that diagnosis is complicated by issues that
relate specifically to the way the Chinese business cycle is presently working.
Global trade growth appears to have slowed because China is importing less in
both price and volume terms (the price effects being directly related to the
volume effects); this will in part reflect a slowdown in Chinese growth. At the
same time, as China rebalances its economy away from investment and towards
consumption there’ll be a decrease in import intensity because consumption
(especially services consumption) is less import-intensive than investment.
Furthermore, an increase in domestic technological capacity will mean that a
larger portion of the value added in exports is added onshore in China (so
goods wholly or partially made in China will cross the country’s borders fewer
times). Not sure any of that is a structural move away from globalization.
Supply chains. Like global trade,
there’s been a lot of negative talk… but not yet a structural change. Overall,
I’d accept the argument that supply chains are going to get considerably
shorter. From Adidas to GE, companies are producing closer to their markets,
since labor is becoming a much smaller input cost in total production. Plus, 3D
manufacturing and just-in-time production capabilities argue for smaller supply
chains; as does greater decentralization in energy production and markets.
Companies won’t need to ship as much. And so, there’ll be fewer disruptions in
bringing goods to market, but also bigger investment concentrations in the
West. Like global trade, supply chains are probably now a trend towards
deglobalization, but it’s too early to make a clear call.
Who is winning?
First, a subtlety. One striking revelation is that
the same countries that most depend on a globalized world (the United States,
China) are also the ones leading the charge in harming globalization/creating
deglobalization. Second, there’s a difference between one-hub globalization and
multiple-hub globalization. Americans are used to one-hub globalization (the
post-war world, particularly since 1990), in which Americanization and
globalization were effectively the same thing. So you could easily mistake the
rise of alternative hubs coexisting alongside the dominant hub as a retreat
from globalization. That’s a fair point from a purely us perspective. But, by
creating multiple networks, alternative hubs can actually increase the
resilience of globalization, provided they are interoperable. In this context,
it’s a long term positive for globalization that alternative countries are
developing international architecture like Asian infrastructure investment
bank, the BRICS bank, and the like. The AIIB’s willingness, for example, to
fund projects the more conservative Asian development bank won’t because of
pressure from developed market non-governmental organizations is arguably good
for future globalization.
The biggest single takeaway is that
things/processes/technology tend to be globalizing. It’s the people that
aren’t. They’re resisting primarily because many don’t feel globalization
benefits them. In part that’s a drive from the hollowing-out developed market
middle class... That may soon extend to the emerging market middle class. And
in part an increasingly powerful Chinese government that supports aspects of
economic globalization but strong political deglobalization... that may soon
become more challenged by globalization overall.
That resistance is only going to grow in coming
years, as there’s very little that gives near-term hope in changing the
calculations of globalization’s “losers.” Given that the losers of globalization
aren’t being particularly effective at stopping it, and given that the
processes I’ve identified driving globalization themselves aren’t diminishing…
there’s a good chance the forces for deglobalization are only going to get
stronger. And so, with an increasing push on both sides of the equation, we’re
not likely to see a resolution.
For the coming years, i’d bet on more on momentum
from the forces of deglobalization. More risk-driven volatility. More
differentiation between sovereigns, sectors, and companies. Because as much as
“things” matter, they’re ultimately shaped by governance, architecture, and
“rule spaces”… all of which are becoming more deglobalized than not.
But I expect that’s not the end of globalization
per se. Rather, it’s a downward cycle on a curve that ultimately swings up… the
question being how far down it goes (and can it functionally break the curve).
I hope not. But we’re going to find out son.
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