GLOBALIZATION
The forward march of globalisation has paused since the financial crisis, giving way to a more conditional, interventionist and nationalist model. Greg Ip examines the consequences.
FIVE YEARS AGO George W. Bush gathered the leaders of the largest
rich and developing countries in Washington for the first summit of the
G20. In the face of the worst financial crisis since the Great
Depression, the leaders promised not to repeat that era’s descent into
economic isolationism, proclaiming their commitment to an open global
economy and the rejection of protectionism.
They succeeded only in part. Although they did not retreat into the
extreme protectionism of the 1930s, the world economy has certainly
become less open. After two decades in which people, capital and goods
were moving ever more freely across borders, walls have been going up,
albeit ones with gates. Governments increasingly pick and choose whom
they trade with, what sort of capital they welcome and how much freedom
they allow for doing business abroad.
Virtually all countries still embrace the principles of international
trade and investment. They want to enjoy the benefits of globalisation,
but as much as possible they now also want to insulate themselves from
its downsides, be they volatile capital flows or surging imports.
Globalisation has clearly paused. A simple measure of trade
intensity, world exports as a share of world GDP, rose steadily from
1986 to 2008 but has been flat since. Global capital flows, which in
2007 topped $11 trillion, amounted to barely a third of that figure last
year. Cross-border direct investment is also well down on its 2007
peak.
Much of this is cyclical. The recent crises and recessions in the
rich world have subdued the animal spirits that drive international
investment. But much of it is a matter of deliberate policy. In finance,
for instance, where the ease of cross-border lending had made it
possible for places like America and some southern European countries to
run up ever larger current-account deficits, banks now face growing
pressure to bolster domestic lending, raise capital and ring-fence
foreign units.
World leaders congratulate themselves on having avoided protectionism
since the crisis, and on conventional measures they are right:
according to the World Trade Organisation (WTO), explicit restrictions
on imports have had hardly any impact on trade since 2008. But hidden
protectionism is flourishing, often under the guise of export promotion
or industrial policy. India, for example, imposes local-content
requirements on government purchases of information and communications
technology and solar-power equipment. Brazil, which a decade ago
compelled its state-controlled oil giant, Petrobras, to buy more of its
equipment from local companies, has been tightening restrictions
steadily since. And both America and Europe imposed, or threatened to
impose, tariffs on Chinese solar panels, alleging widespread government
support. At the same time, though, Western countries themselves offer
hefty subsidies for green energy at home.
Capital controls, which were long viewed as a relic of a more
regulated era, have regained respectability as a tool for stemming
unwelcome inflows and outflows of hot money. When Brazil imposed a tax
on inflows in 2009-10, it was careful to emphasise that not all foreign
investment was unwelcome. “Nobody here is rejecting people that want to
invest in our ports or our roads,” says Luiz Awazu Pereira, a deputy
governor at the central bank. “But if you are here just because you are
running an aggressive hedge fund and noticed that our Treasuries pay 10%
while US Treasuries pay zero, this is a less desirable outcome.”
The world has not given up on trade liberalisation, but it has
shifted its focus from the multilateral WTO to regional and bilateral
pacts. Months before Lehman Brothers failed in 2008, the WTO’s Doha
trade talks collapsed in Geneva largely because India and China wanted
bigger safeguards against agricultural imports than America felt able to
accept. Shortly afterwards America joined talks to form what is now
called the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which also includes Australia,
Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru,
Singapore and Vietnam. Barack Obama has held up the TPP as the sort of
agreement China should aspire to join.
The trend in foreign direct investment, too, is still towards
liberalisation, but a tally by the UN Commission for Trade and
Development shows that restrictions are increasing. Last December Canada
allowed a Chinese state-owned enterprise to buy a Canadian oil-sands
company, but suggested it would be the last. “When we say that Canada is
open for business, we do not mean that Canada is for sale to foreign
governments,” explained Stephen Harper, the prime minister.
The flow of people between countries is also being managed more
carefully than before the crisis. Borders have not been closed to
immigrants, but admission criteria have been tightened. At the same
time, however, many countries have made entry easier for scarce highly
skilled workers and for entrepreneurs.
Mr Obama sees globalisation not as something to be stopped but to be
shaped in pursuit of broader goals. He wants other countries to raise
their standards of labour, environmental and intellectual-property
protection so that American companies will be able to compete on a level
playing field and, perhaps, pay decent middle-class wages once again.
When a clothing factory collapsed in Bangladesh in April, killing more
than 1,000 people, Mr Obama suspended America’s preferential tariffs on
many imports from Bangladesh until it improves workers’ rights.
A clear pattern is beginning to emerge: more state intervention in
the flow of money and goods, more regionalisation of trade as countries
gravitate towards like-minded neighbours, and more friction as national
self-interest wins out over international co-operation. Together, all
this amounts to a new, gated kind of globalisation.
A state of imperfection
The appeal of gated globalisation is closely tied to state
capitalism, which allowed China and the other big emerging
markets—India, Brazil and Russia—to come through the crisis in much
better shape than the rich world. They proudly proclaimed their brand of
state capitalism as superior to the “Washington consensus” of open
markets and minimal government that had prevailed before 2008. But the
system also covered up structural flaws that are now becoming more
obvious. In China, state-owned enterprises and state-directed lending
have siphoned credit from the private sector and fuelled a property
bubble. In India and Brazil, inadequate investment in infrastructure has
resulted in rising inflation and sharply slowing growth.
The globalisation in the West before 2008 certainly had its flaws.
The belief that markets were self-regulating allowed staggering volumes
of highly levered and opaque cross-border exposures to build up. When
the crisis hit, first in America, then in Europe, the absence of
barriers allowed it to spread instantly. Voters, who had never been keen
on wide-open borders, took this badly, and support for
anti-globalisation parties grew.
A few constraints on global finance are not necessarily a bad thing.
Limiting banks’ foreign-currency borrowing, as South Korea has done,
makes them less likely to fail if the exchange rate falls. But gated
globalisation also carries hidden costs. Policymakers routinely
overestimate their ability to distinguish between good and bad capital,
and between nurturing exports and innovation and rewarding entrenched
interests. The opening up before the crisis had done wonders for
channelling capital to the best investment opportunities, lowering
prices for consumers and promoting competition. Interfering with this
process reduces a country’s growth potential.
This special report will seek to answer two big questions. Is gated
globalisation merely a pause on the path to more openness, or is it here
to stay? And is it, on balance, a good or a bad thing? The report will
look at finance, capital controls, international trade and protectionism
in turn to see how gated globalisation affects them for good or ill.
Start with finance.
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