China’s “Balance Sheet Recession” Has Already Started | Richard Koo
Ringkasan
TLDRThe video explores the concept of balance sheet recessions, using the recent burst of the Chinese real estate bubble as a current example. It draws comparisons to Japan's similar economic downturn 30 years ago, where both households and businesses were primarily focused on paying down debt rather than taking out new loans, despite low interest rates. This deleveraging can stall economic growth and requires government stimulus to offset the lack of private sector spending. The conversation also highlights historical approaches taken by countries like the U.S. and Japan to navigate post-recession landscapes, with a focus on government fiscal policy and international trade dynamics. Additionally, the discussion touches on how China's situation could play out, given its current debt levels and the role of government intervention in stabilizing the economy. The speaker emphasizes that while government intervention is necessary in such conditions, it is a delicate balance to maintain sustainable economic growth without exacerbating deficits or international tensions.
Takeaways
- ⚠️ China is experiencing a real estate bubble burst similar to Japan 30 years ago.
- 📉 Balance sheet recessions occur when debt repayment is prioritized over spending.
- 🏢 Low interest rates are ineffective if no one is borrowing or spending.
- 🌐 Large trade surpluses limit China's ability to export its way out of recession.
- 🏛️ Government fiscal policy is crucial in offsetting private sector deleveraging.
- 🚫 Trade friction arises when countries heavily rely on exports during a recession.
- 🔍 Lessons from the past show the need for timely and adequate fiscal stimulus.
- 🧮 Government bond yields often fall during balance she recessions.
- 💡 Understanding economic cycles helps manage future financial challenges.
- 📊 China's economic strategy requires careful adjustment to prevent further decline.
Garis waktu
- 00:00:00 - 00:05:00
The speaker warns about a real estate bubble burst in China, likening it to Japan's situation 30 years ago. He believes this is a balance sheet recession and that government intervention is needed. Additionally, the speaker announces this as their final episode of the podcast, passing the mantle to Felix Javen.
- 00:05:00 - 00:10:00
Richard Koo, Chief Economist at the Nomura Research Institute, explains the concept of a balance sheet recession, first discovered in Japan during the 1990s. He noticed companies in Japan paying down debt at zero interest rates due to being technically bankrupt, which was unfamiliar from traditional economic education, indicating a need for government fiscal intervention.
- 00:10:00 - 00:15:00
Richard Koo describes the phenomenon where, despite zero interest rates, entities such as companies are focused on minimizing debt rather than maximizing profits as they face balance sheet recession. He highlights the economic downturn risk when everyone pays down debt simultaneously.
- 00:15:00 - 00:20:00
Koo highlights the critical role of the government borrowing and spending when entities are paying down debt in a balance sheet recession. He credits the U.S. for managing this better post-2008 via bold fiscal measures but criticizes Europe for its austerity measures that prolonged their economic issues.
- 00:20:00 - 00:25:00
The discussion suggests that the U.S. managed to emerge from its balance sheet recession post-2008 faster than Europe, due to embracing fiscal expansion despite political pressures for austerity. Speaker uses Spain's severe shift from borrower to saver post-crisis as an example of the recession impact.
- 00:25:00 - 00:30:00
China is showing signs of a balance sheet recession akin to Japan's past economic issues. Koo notes low interest rates in China, decreasing bond yields, and repayment instead of borrowing among the private sector, suggesting government fiscal stimulus as the necessary response.
- 00:30:00 - 00:35:00
Richard Koo emphasizes that during balance sheet recessions, interest rate reductions alone do not work unless there are borrowers who respond to them. He urges China to acknowledge it's in such a recession and to use fiscal stimuli, criticizing misaligned actions by state-owned banks.
- 00:35:00 - 00:40:00
Koo explains China's difficulty of using exports to escape its economic downturn due to being the largest trade surplus holder, which politically limits further surplus expansion. This mirrors Japan's past struggles and he emphasizes China's need to enhance fiscal stimulus rather than depend on exports.
- 00:40:00 - 00:45:00
The conversation delves into historical and current dynamics in global trade deficits, particularly how the U.S. handles a continuous trade deficit while benefitting from foreign investment. This longstanding tendency eliminates significant political pressure to balance trade through currency adjustments.
- 00:45:00 - 00:50:00
Koo argues that while tariffs are used in trade wars, a fairer approach to U.S.-China trade imbalance is exchange rate adjustments rather than tariffs. He warns against protectionism, suggesting a targeted weaker dollar to avoid potential trade wars, similar to 1985's Plaza Accord strategy.
- 00:50:00 - 00:55:00
Koo continues discussing why the U.S. should consider dollar valuation adjustments to improve its trade deficits, referencing historical episodes like the Plaza Accord. He warns that without addressing dollar strength, political dissatisfaction will rise leading to adverse economic policies.
- 00:55:00 - 01:00:00
The discussion examines the U.S. fiscal strategy and private sector debt. While bank lending has increased, Koo recommends reducing fiscal deficits if private sector borrowing continues growing. He notes Japan and Europe's slower recovery due to continued private sector conservativism in borrowing.
- 01:00:00 - 01:08:12
The speaker concludes with reflections on his podcast journey and transitions hosting duties, noting the podcast’s reach and engaging audience. He expresses confidence in his successor, Felix Javen, to uphold the show's insightful discourse, reflecting on economic changes since the show began.
Peta Pikiran
Pertanyaan yang Sering Diajukan
What is a balance sheet recession?
A balance sheet recession occurs when companies and individuals focus on paying down debt instead of spending, which slows economic growth despite low interest rates.
How does a balance sheet recession impact the economy?
During a balance sheet recession, despite low interest rates, businesses and consumers prioritize debt reduction over spending, leading to weakened economic activity and growth.
How does Japan's economic situation 30 years ago relate to today?
Japan experienced a balance sheet recession after its real estate bubble burst, similar to what is happening in China now, with a focus on debt repayment over investment.
What role does government spending play during a balance sheet recession?
Government spending is crucial in a balance sheet recession as it needs to compensate for the decline in private sector spending to stabilize the economy.
Why is China compared to Japan in terms of economic bubbles?
China's current real estate bubble and economic issues mirror Japan's past experience, where falling asset prices led to balance sheet recessions.
How can a country recover from a balance sheet recession?
Recovery involves significant government intervention and fiscal stimulus, as private sectors are focused on deleveraging.
What challenges does China currently face economically?
China's real estate bubble has burst, leading to potential balance sheet recession issues similar to past Japanese experiences.
What is the significance of government bond yields in a balance sheet recession?
Government bond yields tend to fall to low levels as a signal of low borrowing and high saving in the private sector during a balance sheet recession.
How does trade affect countries during a balance sheet recession?
Countries with large trade surpluses may face international pressure if they try to export excessively to recover from a recession, as this can destabilize global trade balances.
What can a currency devaluation indicate?
Currency devaluation can indicate an attempt to boost exports, but for major surplus countries it may lead to international trade tensions.
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My way of holding a ruler while using a knife to cut leather
- 00:00:00I've been warning about this issue for a
- 00:00:02while but I'm afraid the uh real estate
- 00:00:04bubble burst in China and so the
- 00:00:08situation is very similar to what
- 00:00:09happened to Japan uh 30 years ago when
- 00:00:13real estate prices started falling
- 00:00:15Chinese people who bought these
- 00:00:17apartments and houses suddenly realized
- 00:00:19that their wealth is falling balance
- 00:00:21sheet is underwater so they start paying
- 00:00:24down debt I really want to write to the
- 00:00:26Chinese Central Bank by saying that the
- 00:00:29market is trying to tell you that this
- 00:00:30is a balance sheet recession and that
- 00:00:33government spending is needed and the
- 00:00:35central bank will not have much uh
- 00:00:37impact one way or the other so the
- 00:00:39econom is still are weakening quite
- 00:00:42rapidly hey everyone before we get into
- 00:00:44it I do have some big news this will be
- 00:00:46my final episode of forward Guidance the
- 00:00:48very talented Felix Javen in whom I have
- 00:00:51complete and utter confidence will be
- 00:00:52taking over as host of forward guidance
- 00:00:54going forward I'll be leaving to start
- 00:00:57my own Financial podcast and YouTube
- 00:00:58channel called monetary matters which
- 00:01:00will include links to in the description
- 00:01:02oh and by the way if you already know
- 00:01:04what a balance sheet recession is and
- 00:01:05you want to get immediately to the China
- 00:01:07part in this interview skip to the
- 00:01:0815minute Mark I wouldn't do that but
- 00:01:11just so you know all right let's get
- 00:01:12into
- 00:01:16it I so pleased to welcome to forward
- 00:01:19guidance for the first time Richard coup
- 00:01:21Chief Economist at the namura research
- 00:01:23institute and Senior adviser at csis a
- 00:01:26former Economist with the Federal
- 00:01:28Reserve Richard has advised former Fed
- 00:01:30chair Paul vulker as well as five
- 00:01:32Japanese prime ministers he notably is
- 00:01:34the founder of the concept of a balance
- 00:01:37sheet recession a significant
- 00:01:38advancement in the field of
- 00:01:40macroeconomics and recession Theory
- 00:01:43Richard thank you so much for for
- 00:01:44joining us here today welcome to forward
- 00:01:46guidance well thank you for having me
- 00:01:49it's a great pleasure the pleasure is is
- 00:01:51all mine Richard let's start off the
- 00:01:54concept of a balance sheet recession you
- 00:01:57first uh discovered this very relevant
- 00:02:00to what happened in post bubble
- 00:02:01economies such as the Japan in the 1990s
- 00:02:05as well as Western economies after the
- 00:02:06great financial crisis as well as
- 00:02:08perhaps China right now so what is the
- 00:02:10balance sheet recession and how does it
- 00:02:12apply to to all those regions I came up
- 00:02:14with this concept of balance sheet
- 00:02:16recession around 1997 or so 1996 1997
- 00:02:21trying to understand what was going on
- 00:02:22in Japan and as a chief Economist of
- 00:02:25numra the largest Investment Bank in
- 00:02:27Japan I had to be able to explain what
- 00:02:29was happening all around us after the
- 00:02:32bubble burst the bubble burst 1990 and
- 00:02:35the economy kept on slowing down uh B of
- 00:02:38Japan brought race down to zero fairly
- 00:02:41quickly nothing happened we had a a
- 00:02:44fiscal stimulus but every time you put
- 00:02:47in the fiscal stimulus the economy
- 00:02:48responded but when you removed it it
- 00:02:51tanked again no so-called pump priming
- 00:02:54the Kian pump priming that we we come to
- 00:02:56expect and of course structural policies
- 00:02:58were discussed in actually implement it
- 00:03:01but nothing helped and so we were
- 00:03:03completely lost at that time what was
- 00:03:05happening to us and then one day I
- 00:03:08looked at how much money Japanese
- 00:03:09companies actually raising from the
- 00:03:11capital market and the banking system
- 00:03:14and I was shocked to find that the
- 00:03:15number was actually negative at zero
- 00:03:19interest rates meaning that Japanese
- 00:03:21companies are actually paying down debt
- 00:03:24at zero interest rates and nothing in
- 00:03:27economics that I study in graduate
- 00:03:29schools prepared me for something like
- 00:03:31this so that got me start
- 00:03:34thinking and well the only possibility
- 00:03:38that can explain this kind of phenomenon
- 00:03:40is that they have balance she problems
- 00:03:42financial problems that they are
- 00:03:45possibly technically bankrupt then in
- 00:03:49that case you have to pay down thatb to
- 00:03:51come out of this negative equity
- 00:03:53territory and so then that was the
- 00:03:55starting point and then I start looking
- 00:03:57into and asking questions to a lot of uh
- 00:04:00corporate Executives and we found I
- 00:04:03found out that none of them are
- 00:04:05particularly willing to talk about that
- 00:04:07subject because they of course don't
- 00:04:08want to tell the whole world that they
- 00:04:10are technically bankrupt and they're
- 00:04:12actually paying down debt not maximizing
- 00:04:14profits they're minimizing debt but then
- 00:04:17you gather data from flow funds banking
- 00:04:20numbers what happened was during the
- 00:04:23bubble people leverage themselves up
- 00:04:25thinking that they're going to make
- 00:04:26thousand of money but once the bubble
- 00:04:28burst
- 00:04:30uh liabilities remain asset prices
- 00:04:32collapse and they realize their balance
- 00:04:34sheets under water well balance sheets
- 00:04:36under water means these guys are
- 00:04:37bankrupt technically bankrupt there
- 00:04:39actually two kinds of bankruptcies when
- 00:04:41you think about it the one with cash
- 00:04:43flow and the one without cash flow now
- 00:04:47without cash flow of course you're out
- 00:04:48of business right away and then you have
- 00:04:50to step off the stage but if your
- 00:04:52Mainline of business still doing okay
- 00:04:55that your cars and cameras are still
- 00:04:56selling very well which was the case for
- 00:04:58the Japanese companies back in
- 00:05:001990s but the balance sheet is horribly
- 00:05:03underwater because of uh this wrong
- 00:05:05decision that management made in
- 00:05:07investing in C certain properties and so
- 00:05:09forth in that case what is the right
- 00:05:12thing to do the right thing to do is for
- 00:05:15these companies to use the cash flow to
- 00:05:17pay down debt and as long as you can pay
- 00:05:19down debt slowly and slowly at some
- 00:05:21point your balance sheets will be
- 00:05:22balanced again and then then you go back
- 00:05:24to the original profit maximization
- 00:05:27instead of thatb minimization but when
- 00:05:29you're in process you're actually
- 00:05:31minimizing debt but that is the right
- 00:05:34thing to do at the individual level in
- 00:05:35that by doing so you don't have to tell
- 00:05:38your shareholders it's all piece of
- 00:05:40paper now you don't have to tell Bankers
- 00:05:41that sorry I can't service your debt
- 00:05:43it's all nonperforming loans and most
- 00:05:45importantly you don't have to tell your
- 00:05:47workers that you have no more jobs
- 00:05:48tomorrow so for all the individual all
- 00:05:51the stakeholders involved that is the
- 00:05:53right thing to do whether you're
- 00:05:55Japanese American or German or Taiwanese
- 00:05:57that is the right thing to do and it's a
- 00:06:00responsible thing to do as well but the
- 00:06:03problem is what happens everybody when
- 00:06:05everybody does this all at the same time
- 00:06:08because in the National economy if
- 00:06:10someone is saving money someone has to
- 00:06:12be borrowing and spending that money to
- 00:06:13keep the economy going right and usually
- 00:06:17those of us in the financial sector will
- 00:06:19take the money from the Savers give to
- 00:06:21someone who can use it that's how
- 00:06:23economy moves forward and if there too
- 00:06:25many borrowers Central and the econom is
- 00:06:27doing well well Central Bank will raise
- 00:06:29interest rates too few borrowers Central
- 00:06:31Bank will bring rates down and that's
- 00:06:33basically how economy usually functions
- 00:06:37but in the balance sheet recession
- 00:06:39Central Bank bring Rate rates down to
- 00:06:41zero nothing happens because all these
- 00:06:43people still paying down their repairing
- 00:06:45balance sheets and when you're in that
- 00:06:47situation economy could tank very very
- 00:06:50quickly uh then if I may give you a
- 00:06:53numerical example suppose I have $1,000
- 00:06:55of income myself and I spend $900 save
- 00:06:58$100 the 00 is already someone else's
- 00:07:01income so that's not a problem but $100
- 00:07:03that I decide to say will go through
- 00:07:05financial sector give it to someone who
- 00:07:07can use it that person borrows and
- 00:07:09spends it then the total expenditure in
- 00:07:11the economy will be 900 that I spent
- 00:07:13$100 that this borrower spent $ thousand
- 00:07:16against the original income of the th000
- 00:07:18and the economy moves forward but in the
- 00:07:20balance recession when I have th of
- 00:07:23income and I have n and spend $900 and
- 00:07:25$1,000 I saved this $100 get stuck in a
- 00:07:29financial sector it cannot come out
- 00:07:32because people not borrowing money even
- 00:07:34at zero interest rates then economy
- 00:07:36shrinks from 1,000 to 900 the 900 is
- 00:07:39someone's uh income if that person says
- 00:07:43okay let's say 10% spends 810 and saves
- 00:07:46$90 the $90 get stuck in a financial
- 00:07:48system and it gets it happens like this
- 00:07:51because repairing balance sheets
- 00:07:54typically takes a long time Japan took
- 00:07:58some companies nearly 20 years and US
- 00:08:01Europe after 2008 also took five five to
- 00:08:05six years in the case of United States
- 00:08:07much longer in Europe and so if nothing
- 00:08:09is done to this situation the economy
- 00:08:12could go from 1,900 810 730 very very
- 00:08:16quickly and that's basically what
- 00:08:18happened to United States during the
- 00:08:19Great Depression when everybody was
- 00:08:22paying down that no one was pay uh
- 00:08:24borrowing money and the economy lost 46%
- 00:08:27of its GDP in just 4 years from 1929 to
- 00:08:321933 that's why it was called the Great
- 00:08:34Depression but no one understood this
- 00:08:37process at the time and not until 1997
- 00:08:41or so uh because we always assumed the
- 00:08:43private sector is maximizing profits if
- 00:08:46re rates are low enough someone would
- 00:08:48borrow money and the economy will move
- 00:08:50forward well once you're in balancing
- 00:08:52recession with people having huge
- 00:08:54problems with their balance sheets that
- 00:08:57fundamental premise of fundamental
- 00:09:00assumption is violated and we have to
- 00:09:02operate on the assumption that private
- 00:09:04sector is not maximizing profits
- 00:09:06actually minimizing debt and that's
- 00:09:08basically the key point of the balance
- 00:09:10sheet recession so in a balance sheet
- 00:09:12recession the private sector which
- 00:09:14includes households as well as
- 00:09:16businesses is deleveraging and and
- 00:09:19paying down debt uh economics 101
- 00:09:21mainstream economic theory uh
- 00:09:24traditionally had the the theory that
- 00:09:25businesses are always maximizing profits
- 00:09:28but you're saying in instances after
- 00:09:30recession after the burst of a bubble
- 00:09:32they they really want to pay down debt
- 00:09:34even if they would make more money and
- 00:09:36make more profits by uh borrowing more
- 00:09:39money when interest rates are really low
- 00:09:41they they delever how did you see that
- 00:09:44concept play out after the great
- 00:09:46financial crisis in Europe as well as
- 00:09:49the United States well so the bubble
- 00:09:50burst 2008 uh especially after the Leman
- 00:09:54crisis that was September of 2008 and
- 00:09:57all these households suddenly decide not
- 00:10:01to borrow money start paying down debt
- 00:10:04and both in United States and Europe if
- 00:10:06you look at the flow of funds data there
- 00:10:07was a d dramatic change from being a
- 00:10:11borrower being a net borrower to a huge
- 00:10:14net Saver in the case of Spain which had
- 00:10:17uh suffered very badly from this
- 00:10:19recession the shift from being a net
- 00:10:22borrower to net saor for the Spanish
- 00:10:25household sector was as large as 20% of
- 00:10:28GDP and if the economy loses 20% of GDP
- 00:10:32almost overnight of course the economy
- 00:10:34will be in very sad shape and Spanish
- 00:10:36unemployment rate reached almost
- 00:10:3925% uh shortly thereafter and of course
- 00:10:43us we all know how much us suffered many
- 00:10:45other countries in Europe suffered as
- 00:10:47well because the housing bubble burst on
- 00:10:49both sides of the Atlantic almost at the
- 00:10:51same time is this is a solution to a
- 00:10:53balance sheet recession one where the
- 00:10:55government borrows a lot of money
- 00:10:57because there are no private sector
- 00:10:58Borrowers who who want to to lever up
- 00:11:01the problem with balance sheet recession
- 00:11:03is that everybody's doing the right
- 00:11:04thing right and responsible and
- 00:11:06honorable thing that is to to repair
- 00:11:09their balance sheets with their cash
- 00:11:10flow so that at some point your balance
- 00:11:12sheets balanced again so it's very
- 00:11:15difficult to tell to the private sector
- 00:11:18please stop borrowing money and don't
- 00:11:21repair your balance sheets even if the
- 00:11:23government or even the dictator tell
- 00:11:25them to do that that's not going to
- 00:11:27happen and if you remember
- 00:11:29the banks are also not allowed to lend
- 00:11:31money to a bankrupt borrower if Bank
- 00:11:35examiner finds out that you're lending
- 00:11:37money to to the bankrupt borrower you
- 00:11:40know you go to jail and so lenders
- 00:11:43cannot move the borrowers cannot move
- 00:11:46and they're all doing the right things
- 00:11:48then the only thing only way to stop
- 00:11:51this 1,900 80010 730 that process is for
- 00:11:55the government to borrow the $100 if the
- 00:11:57government borrow the $100
- 00:11:59then it' be 900 plus
- 00:12:02$100,000 against the original income of
- 00:12:04,000 the economy will remain stable and
- 00:12:08this has to be continued until private
- 00:12:11sector balance sheets are repaired and
- 00:12:12they're back borrowing money again but
- 00:12:14that's going to be a fairly long process
- 00:12:17if you do it correctly from the very
- 00:12:19beginning when the GDP is largely
- 00:12:21maintained then you it might take less
- 00:12:25time but if you allow the economy to
- 00:12:27really collapse first and then you try
- 00:12:29to rebuild it with the government
- 00:12:31spending then it would take much longer
- 00:12:35and it be much costlier as well do do
- 00:12:38you think the US has emerged from the
- 00:12:39balance sheet recession it was in from
- 00:12:42the great financial crisis uh onwards
- 00:12:45compared to us and Europe United States
- 00:12:48actually did the right thing uh chairman
- 00:12:52Ben of the Federal Reserve for example
- 00:12:53came out and said please don't fall off
- 00:12:56the fiscal cliff you know that very
- 00:12:58famous quote f Cliff well he understood
- 00:13:01that we were in Balance recession he
- 00:13:04actually read my book and uh we actually
- 00:13:06testified together US Congress uh one
- 00:13:09time so with that remark with at that
- 00:13:13time if you remember uh Republicans were
- 00:13:16trying to balance the budget as they
- 00:13:18have done during the Great Depression
- 00:13:20try to do during the Great Depression
- 00:13:22but Jim
- 00:13:24banki with who was put in place with
- 00:13:27Republican support were actually telling
- 00:13:29the Republicans don't do that don't try
- 00:13:33to cut the deficit drastically or don't
- 00:13:35this is no time to cut the deficit and
- 00:13:38that kept the US Congress from really
- 00:13:41going down the route of uh
- 00:13:43austerity and I think that's how us came
- 00:13:46out of this that recession much faster
- 00:13:50than the
- 00:13:50Europeans it still took uh five six
- 00:13:53seven years if you look at the data on
- 00:13:56when people start borrowing money again
- 00:13:59but uh five six years is far better than
- 00:14:02almost 10 or 12 years the Europeans took
- 00:14:05and in the case of Europe if you
- 00:14:07remember there's this uh growth and
- 00:14:11stability pact which caps how much
- 00:14:15individual uh Euro Zone member countries
- 00:14:18can borrow and that's set at 3% of
- 00:14:22GDP but at the time as I indicated to
- 00:14:24you earlier Spanish private sector was
- 00:14:28saving 7% % of GDP at zero interest
- 00:14:31rates but the government was only
- 00:14:32allowed to borrow 3% out of the seven so
- 00:14:36what happens to the remaining 4% well
- 00:14:38that became the deflationary gap of the
- 00:14:40Spanish economy and that's how Spanish
- 00:14:42economy literally collapsed in spite of
- 00:14:45my repeated warnings to the European
- 00:14:47governments and to the ECB I was invited
- 00:14:50to speak at the ECB on numerous
- 00:14:53occasions because they also realized
- 00:14:55that they might be facing balance sheet
- 00:14:57recession even even though people at the
- 00:14:59researcher level economists many of them
- 00:15:02understood that this is a this new
- 00:15:04disease Co balancy recession the top
- 00:15:07guys the German government refused to
- 00:15:10listen to that and kept on talking about
- 00:15:14austerity and structural
- 00:15:16reform now structural reform sounds
- 00:15:19great and I have nothing against
- 00:15:21structural reform per se but if the
- 00:15:24issue is who's going to borrow the $100
- 00:15:27in a hurry
- 00:15:29and if you put in a structural reform if
- 00:15:31that structural reform just happened to
- 00:15:33prompt people to borrow the $100 and
- 00:15:35spend it then it would have
- 00:15:38worked but it's very difficult to
- 00:15:41predict something like that happening
- 00:15:45and even though Europeans did do a lot
- 00:15:48of structural reforms labor market
- 00:15:50reforms so so forth the economy
- 00:15:52continued to uh weaken stayed very uh
- 00:15:56weak for almost 10 years
- 00:16:00perhaps 10 11 years before things began
- 00:16:03to look better the difference in fiscal
- 00:16:05policy compared uh between United States
- 00:16:08on one hand and Europeans on the other I
- 00:16:11think makes it very very clear that in a
- 00:16:15situation like our balance recession
- 00:16:17fiscal policy is the only way to go and
- 00:16:21as we record this uh during the summer
- 00:16:23of 2024 you know we're looking back at
- 00:16:26the balance sheet recessions in the West
- 00:16:28after the great financial crisis of 2008
- 00:16:30we're looking back at the balance sheet
- 00:16:32recession of Japan after the the burst
- 00:16:34of the bubble in the early 1990s but uh
- 00:16:37what about China right now is China on
- 00:16:40the precipice of a balance sheet
- 00:16:42recession and why well I've been warning
- 00:16:45about this issue for a while but I'm
- 00:16:47afraid the uh real estate bubble burst
- 00:16:50in China and so the situation is very
- 00:16:53similar to what happened to Japan uh 30
- 00:16:56years ago when real estate prices
- 00:16:59started
- 00:16:59falling Chinese people who bought these
- 00:17:03uh apartments and houses suddenly
- 00:17:05realized that the wealth is falling
- 00:17:08balance sheet is underwater so they
- 00:17:10start paying down debt there's a slight
- 00:17:12difference between Japan and China in
- 00:17:15that in the Japanese case it was the
- 00:17:17commercial real estate that really led
- 00:17:19the bubble but in the Chinese case it
- 00:17:21was the housing and so it was the
- 00:17:24individuals that were beginning to pay
- 00:17:26down debt but Chinese statistics
- 00:17:28especially flow funds data are not not
- 00:17:32coming out uh quickly enough so it's
- 00:17:34very difficult to determine what is
- 00:17:37actually
- 00:17:38happening but we are now hearing that
- 00:17:41not only many people are not borrowing
- 00:17:43money or paying down Deb even with this
- 00:17:45very low interest rates in China which
- 00:17:47is exactly the same as what happened in
- 00:17:50in Japan 30 years earlier the bond rates
- 00:17:54are coming down to the 10year Chinese
- 00:17:56government bond rate is down to like 2
- 00:17:59.1% now for a developing country like
- 00:18:02China which still has lots of investment
- 00:18:04opportunities and they have lots of
- 00:18:06companies that are highly competitive on
- 00:18:09the export Market they should be
- 00:18:11borrowing and spending and expanding
- 00:18:13their
- 00:18:14capacities P the bond yield coming down
- 00:18:18to
- 00:18:192.1% means these private sector sorts
- 00:18:23are not borrowing money actually paying
- 00:18:25down debt and as a result this money
- 00:18:28comes back into the financial sector but
- 00:18:31those fund managers in financial
- 00:18:33institutions cannot find the place to to
- 00:18:35place these funds because private sector
- 00:18:37as a group is no longer borrowing money
- 00:18:39it's actually paying down debt then the
- 00:18:42only borrower left is the government and
- 00:18:45so in the balance sheet recession one of
- 00:18:47the key characteristics of balance sheet
- 00:18:50recession is that government bond yields
- 00:18:52come down to these ridiculously low
- 00:18:54levels we saw that in uh us you know um
- 00:18:57from 2008
- 00:18:59all the way to uh 2022 or so that's
- 00:19:02basically what's happening in China
- 00:19:04today but for some reason the Chinese
- 00:19:06Central Bank does not want to think that
- 00:19:09it's a balance sheet recession and not
- 00:19:11telling people that this bond market is
- 00:19:13a bubble don't buy into it I really want
- 00:19:17to write to the Chinese Central Bank by
- 00:19:19saying that the market is trying to tell
- 00:19:22you that this is a balance sheet
- 00:19:23recession and that government spending
- 00:19:25is needed and the central bank will not
- 00:19:28have much
- 00:19:29impact one way or the other because if
- 00:19:32people are not borrowing money monetary
- 00:19:34policy is largely
- 00:19:36ineffective we were not taught that
- 00:19:38during our University these days
- 00:19:41but looking at what happened to Japan or
- 00:19:44what happened to United States in Europe
- 00:19:45after 2008 even though central bank
- 00:19:48brought rates down to zero there were
- 00:19:50very little pickup in borrowing in all
- 00:19:53of these
- 00:19:55regions and for monetary policy to work
- 00:19:59someone has to be out there there has to
- 00:20:01be borrowers out there who would respond
- 00:20:04to you know higher interest rates or
- 00:20:06lower lower interest rates and it's
- 00:20:09their response that effect that produces
- 00:20:13the effect of monetary policy interest
- 00:20:15rates increases and decreases alone are
- 00:20:18actually neutral because it's just a you
- 00:20:21know transfer of income from debtors to
- 00:20:23creditors or creditor to the debtors and
- 00:20:25since the amount of the gain on one side
- 00:20:28the amount of loss on the other is
- 00:20:30exactly the same amount it should be
- 00:20:32neutral so interest rates increases or
- 00:20:35decreases alone uh should be neutral to
- 00:20:38the economy but if there are borrowers
- 00:20:40out there who respond to this uh
- 00:20:43changing signals from the central bank
- 00:20:45and if they change their behavior then
- 00:20:47we can see monetary policy acting on the
- 00:20:51economy but if these borrowers all
- 00:20:53absent absent themselves because they
- 00:20:55all repairing balance sheets then you
- 00:20:58bring ra down to zero nothing happens
- 00:21:00and you do need the fiscal policy to to
- 00:21:03offset this $100 that I mentioned to you
- 00:21:06earlier and huge number of Chinese have
- 00:21:10read my
- 00:21:11book all five of my English books were
- 00:21:15translate into Chinese they're doing
- 00:21:17very well actually even though many
- 00:21:19academics many people in the private
- 00:21:22sector are fully cognizant of the fact
- 00:21:25that they are facing balance sheet
- 00:21:27recession and many government economists
- 00:21:30also are aware of this fact somehow they
- 00:21:35haven't been able to put together uh
- 00:21:37sufficiently large fiscal stimulus to to
- 00:21:40stabilize the economy so the economy is
- 00:21:42still are weakening quite rapidly that's
- 00:21:46the point about a balance sheet
- 00:21:48recession as well as just a
- 00:21:50macroeconomic uh economy in general is
- 00:21:53that as you read in your book pursued
- 00:21:54economy 1 plus one does not equal two if
- 00:21:58I am saving money and you are saving
- 00:22:00money and everyone else in the economy
- 00:22:01is saving money that does not increase
- 00:22:04the savings of the entire economy
- 00:22:05actually the economy shrinks because
- 00:22:07people are not spending enough money and
- 00:22:09that's why in a balance sheet recession
- 00:22:11there needs to be someone to be
- 00:22:13borrowing money someone to be spending
- 00:22:14money because if everyone is saving at
- 00:22:16the same time households businesses uh
- 00:22:19uh corporations then then the economy uh
- 00:22:21uh shrinks so China is in a balance
- 00:22:24sheet recession right now H how do you
- 00:22:27see this playing out because uh you've
- 00:22:30got these fantastic charts showing the
- 00:22:33surpluses and deficits of the of
- 00:22:35households of Corporations of the
- 00:22:38government as well as the rest of the
- 00:22:39world and uh we can put that on the CH
- 00:22:41on on the screen right now uh for our
- 00:22:43viewers and it shows how starting in
- 00:22:461990 the uh the Japanese corporate
- 00:22:49sector which was running a huge deficit
- 00:22:51I.E borrowing money and stimulating
- 00:22:52growth began to save and they actually
- 00:22:55households and the corporations were
- 00:22:57running a surplus at the same time which
- 00:22:59was very contractionary do you think
- 00:23:01that uh in a few years the Chinese
- 00:23:03economy will have the same thing where
- 00:23:05households are saving money and
- 00:23:07corporations are saving money too and uh
- 00:23:09we can also put up chart this the same
- 00:23:11chart but for China yes you already
- 00:23:13mentioned what happened to Japan and
- 00:23:15that is that when Japan was doing very
- 00:23:18well household sector was saving money
- 00:23:20corporate sector was borrowing money and
- 00:23:22economy was moving uh very nicely
- 00:23:24forward China had that pattern until
- 00:23:27around 2016
- 00:23:29and after 2016 for some reason Chinese
- 00:23:34companies stopped borrowing money or
- 00:23:36stop deleveraging in a sense that they
- 00:23:38start reducing their borrowings and by
- 00:23:422020 uh 21 or so
- 00:23:462021 they were actually net Savers and
- 00:23:49this is long before the balance sheet
- 00:23:51recession actually uh came into Play
- 00:23:54Because at that time the B the housing
- 00:23:56bubble was still growing in some sense
- 00:23:59Chinese economy was kind of experiencing
- 00:24:02balancy recession type problem even
- 00:24:06before the balance she recession started
- 00:24:09in 2022
- 00:24:102023 because at that time you know house
- 00:24:13prices are still Rising as a result from
- 00:24:162016 to uh 2021 that period government
- 00:24:22had to borrow and spend the money to
- 00:24:24keep the economy going so even though
- 00:24:27Chinese economy looked pretty strong
- 00:24:29pretty stable from 2016 to 20 21 or so
- 00:24:34it was actually supported by government
- 00:24:36spending and as a result uh government
- 00:24:40General government budget defic General
- 00:24:43government uh Financial deficit was
- 00:24:46almost like 7% of GDP before the balance
- 00:24:50sheet recession happened and that may be
- 00:24:53one of the reason why Chinese government
- 00:24:55is reluctant to put in more fiscal
- 00:24:57stimulus because if you start with you
- 00:25:00know the deficit 7% of GDP to begin with
- 00:25:03and then you have to add let's say 5% of
- 00:25:06uh GDP stimulus that will give you the
- 00:25:11budget deficit 12% of GDP you know even
- 00:25:14if you fully understand that during a
- 00:25:16balance she recession government has to
- 00:25:18borrow and spend money if you shown this
- 00:25:20number that if you do this the budget
- 00:25:24deficit could be 12% of GDP then people
- 00:25:26get scared and I think that's one of the
- 00:25:29reason why Chinese haven't really put in
- 00:25:32the necessary fiscal stimulus because
- 00:25:35even before the uh before the balance
- 00:25:38sheet recession began budget deficit was
- 00:25:41already very large and this budget
- 00:25:44deficit was also concentrated in the
- 00:25:47local regional and local governments not
- 00:25:49at the central central government level
- 00:25:52these local governments provincial
- 00:25:53governments are all almost all bankrupt
- 00:25:56at this very moment even even if the
- 00:25:58Central Bank central government tells
- 00:26:01the regional government hey do do more
- 00:26:04infrastructure building do this and do
- 00:26:05that local governments are saying sorry
- 00:26:08we don't have the money and so central
- 00:26:11government has to really take on this
- 00:26:14additional
- 00:26:15responsibility but apparently they are
- 00:26:17not yet willing to do so and as a result
- 00:26:21the Chinese economy is continuing to
- 00:26:24lose its its uh for momentum Richard
- 00:26:28China from what I've read and heard the
- 00:26:32household savings rate is
- 00:26:33extraordinarily high and uh they have an
- 00:26:37investment driven model those savings
- 00:26:39are loaned out to to businesses which
- 00:26:41invest have invested heavily in
- 00:26:42infrastructure and real estate and
- 00:26:44lending to local governments Regional
- 00:26:46governments as you just said looking at
- 00:26:48at this chart now I was surprised that
- 00:26:49the uh Chinese household savings rate
- 00:26:53was only uh 15% of of GDP I thought i'
- 00:26:56I've heard it that the savings rate was
- 00:26:58you know 30% uh or maybe even even
- 00:27:01higher and also can you speak to just
- 00:27:03how levered the Chinese economy has been
- 00:27:06and how dependent on Bank credit growth
- 00:27:09and making real estate loans the Chinese
- 00:27:11economy has been you know many people
- 00:27:13say the US I is economically
- 00:27:15unsustainable because we have so much
- 00:27:17debt and that is true on a federal
- 00:27:18government level but private sector debt
- 00:27:21and bank credit debt uh has not been
- 00:27:23growing that much up until recently and
- 00:27:25actually as you say that's part of the
- 00:27:26problem that's why we had a balance
- 00:27:27sheet recession because Bank credit
- 00:27:29growth uh has not been growing however
- 00:27:30in China it has been growing like a weed
- 00:27:33uh since two the 2000s is that's my
- 00:27:35understanding well you know there are a
- 00:27:37lot of people out there who make this
- 00:27:39big issue out of the size of the debt
- 00:27:41that you know 100% 200% 3% of GDP and so
- 00:27:45forth I am not particularly fond of that
- 00:27:50kind of
- 00:27:51argument because if there's someone
- 00:27:54saving money someone has to be borrowing
- 00:27:56money and it's very very difficult to
- 00:27:59convince household sector in any country
- 00:28:01whether it's in United States or Japan
- 00:28:03or China not to save because if they are
- 00:28:07not comfortable or if they think that
- 00:28:09they have to have enough Insurance to
- 00:28:12make sure that they can you know live
- 00:28:14through rainy days and old age they will
- 00:28:17save it no matter what the government
- 00:28:19says when I was at the Federal Reserve
- 00:28:21Bank of New York you know the US thought
- 00:28:23that us households are not saving enough
- 00:28:27and they came out with all sorts of
- 00:28:29instruments All Savers account and so
- 00:28:31forth the tax relas and this and that
- 00:28:34that allows the money to move around
- 00:28:37among the household wealth but the net
- 00:28:40number hardly ever
- 00:28:42changed so we know from the fact that
- 00:28:46household savings behavior is very very
- 00:28:49difficult to change has lots of cultural
- 00:28:51his historical other other factors
- 00:28:53behind it so the only thing that can
- 00:28:56change is the the corporate sector side
- 00:28:59and the government side when the econom
- 00:29:02is developing with lots of investment
- 00:29:06opportunities corporate sector would be
- 00:29:08very busy borrowing money so that they
- 00:29:10can invest and expand their business and
- 00:29:13that was the case in Japan all the way
- 00:29:15until
- 00:29:151990s uh in the case of china until 2016
- 00:29:19that I mentioned to you earlier so in
- 00:29:21that
- 00:29:22case household sector is saving
- 00:29:24something like 10% of GDP according to
- 00:29:26the flow funds I'm not talking about
- 00:29:28savings rate because savings rate is a
- 00:29:29very difficult number to play with in my
- 00:29:32view I like to look at whether the
- 00:29:34sector is in financial Surplus or
- 00:29:35financial deficit because that that's
- 00:29:38the exact amount that was actually uh
- 00:29:40saved or or borrowed and household
- 00:29:44sector in China was was running
- 00:29:46Financial Surplus around 10 12% of GDP
- 00:29:49fairly consistently but as long as
- 00:29:51corporate sector is borrowing and
- 00:29:52spending it and expanding the business
- 00:29:55uh with that and if they you know
- 00:29:58careful with their borrowing so that
- 00:29:59they actually make money so that they
- 00:30:00can pay uh pay back debt that there's
- 00:30:03absolutely no problem with the size of
- 00:30:05the debt in fact it's good that
- 00:30:07corporate sector was borrowing money
- 00:30:09because you cannot tell the household
- 00:30:11sector not to not to save money but what
- 00:30:13what's the problem now is that that
- 00:30:15corporate sector is no longer borrowing
- 00:30:17money in China but the household sector
- 00:30:21continues to save and so if the
- 00:30:24government did not come in to borrow
- 00:30:26Chinese economy will be in
- 00:30:29in in a deflationary
- 00:30:31cycle as I mentioned to you earlier that
- 00:30:341,900 810 730 that process and so the
- 00:30:39size of the debt is not my primary
- 00:30:42concern my primary concern is
- 00:30:45whether whatever that is saved is borrow
- 00:30:49and spent and if that if the money is B
- 00:30:52and spent whether the money is spent
- 00:30:55wisely I think those are the factors one
- 00:30:58want not the size of the debt thank you
- 00:31:01and Richard in the US which we think of
- 00:31:04as a free market economy if CEOs and
- 00:31:07corporate Executives don't want to
- 00:31:08borrow money they don't want to invest
- 00:31:10and spend money they want to hoard uh uh
- 00:31:13savings and they want to save money to
- 00:31:15pay down debt governments can you whine
- 00:31:18about that but it's really is the
- 00:31:19corporate Executives even if they're
- 00:31:21wrong to do so and it will cause a
- 00:31:22recession exacerbate a recession they're
- 00:31:24going to do what they're going to do in
- 00:31:25China there's a perception is a a
- 00:31:28command and control economy that the
- 00:31:29government tells Banks how much to lend
- 00:31:31and to whom to lend so is is it possible
- 00:31:35that uh China Beijing could reverse this
- 00:31:39balance sheet recession by telling Banks
- 00:31:42to lend again okay lend more to real
- 00:31:44estate lend even more to you know
- 00:31:46investing in electric vehicles and uh a
- 00:31:50additive manufacturing and new
- 00:31:51technologies in other words is the
- 00:31:54balance sheet recession that China is
- 00:31:56undergoing right now is it is it a
- 00:31:58man-made phenomenon of the private
- 00:32:01sector b um is is not borrowing because
- 00:32:04the government's telling them not to
- 00:32:05borrow they're telling Banks not to
- 00:32:07extend credit rather than it being a
- 00:32:09psychological phenomenon of of deflation
- 00:32:12and and saving well actually Chinese
- 00:32:14government is trying to tell the banks
- 00:32:17to lend more because they are afraid
- 00:32:20that if the banks don't lend more will
- 00:32:22fall into a balance she
- 00:32:24recession and the banks many of them are
- 00:32:27of course government
- 00:32:28owned uh have to you know come up with
- 00:32:31the numbers indicating that they are
- 00:32:32lending money so what happened
- 00:32:35apparently was that these banks will
- 00:32:38lend money
- 00:32:39to uh state owned Enterprises s soes but
- 00:32:44s soes cannot find attractive investment
- 00:32:47opportunity for those funds though they
- 00:32:49put the money back into the bank to
- 00:32:51collect interest and as a result if you
- 00:32:54look at the uh money supply and Bank
- 00:32:56lending numbers in China both of them
- 00:32:58are growing you know very close to each
- 00:33:01other and that was because of this
- 00:33:03particular Behavior the banks not
- 00:33:06lending money to meet the government's
- 00:33:09Target but the corporations were
- 00:33:11borrowing it were just putting the money
- 00:33:12back into the banks so the banks have
- 00:33:14another more money to lend and very
- 00:33:17little money was actually spent on real
- 00:33:19projects because they all so worried
- 00:33:21that if they did that they might end up
- 00:33:24you know becoming a nonperforming loans
- 00:33:27and only re recently apparently Chinese
- 00:33:30government realized that you know these
- 00:33:32numbers are basically cooked uh by the
- 00:33:35bankers and then s soes so they said
- 00:33:38don't do that anymore and suddenly The
- 00:33:40Lending numbers are beginning to uh turn
- 00:33:43negative because uh the the grow amount
- 00:33:47outstanding is turning negative because
- 00:33:50there's no more reason to you know
- 00:33:52increase both size of the balance sheets
- 00:33:54with no real economic significance
- 00:33:58and so we are beginning to see what is
- 00:34:00really happening in China because this
- 00:34:03this funny game that they played with
- 00:34:05those uh Bank lending numbers are now
- 00:34:08being corrected hello everyone
- 00:34:10permission list 3 is coming to Salt Lake
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- 00:35:04use code fg10 back to the episode and
- 00:35:08then now let's introduce uh a fourth
- 00:35:10element to thei financial Surplus or
- 00:35:13deficit by by sector which is the
- 00:35:16current account uh you sometimes
- 00:35:19referred to as trade deficit plus
- 00:35:21services with the rest of the world so
- 00:35:22as many people know the US runs a very
- 00:35:24large trade deficit with the rest of the
- 00:35:25world China runs and has run a very
- 00:35:28large Trade Surplus with the rest of the
- 00:35:31world can you explain uh how this
- 00:35:34factors
- 00:35:36into your analysis as well as the
- 00:35:39significance of companies not being able
- 00:35:42to find attractive domestic Investments
- 00:35:45and then uh instead directing Capital uh
- 00:35:48abroad and then we'll have a very
- 00:35:50interesting conversation about trade and
- 00:35:52and trade Wars and whether the era of
- 00:35:55free trade is is is coming to an end if
- 00:35:57your economy is in recession and you
- 00:36:00have a very competitive export
- 00:36:03Industries which China does have natural
- 00:36:06tendency for the government is to export
- 00:36:09your way out right and that's uh exactly
- 00:36:14the same situation in Japan in 1990s
- 00:36:17Japan had highly competitive export
- 00:36:19Industries people wanted to buy Japanese
- 00:36:21cars Japanese cameras so Japanese
- 00:36:24government obviously wanted to export
- 00:36:27its way out instead of runting a larger
- 00:36:28budget deficit well we learned that that
- 00:36:33did not work very well and the reason is
- 00:36:37that Japan at that time 30 years ago and
- 00:36:40China today are both the largest country
- 00:36:45the country with largest current account
- 00:36:48Surplus and when you're the the country
- 00:36:51running the largest TR largest current
- 00:36:53account Surplus Trade Surplus and if
- 00:36:56this country tries to increase its
- 00:36:59export to but basically export
- 00:37:02unemployment all the other countries
- 00:37:05will start complain that you already are
- 00:37:08destabilizing the global uh trading
- 00:37:10system now you want to destabilize it
- 00:37:12even more and that's basically was
- 00:37:15behind so-called us Japan trade friction
- 00:37:19back in 19 early 1990s and I was very
- 00:37:22much part of it representing the US
- 00:37:24position in Japan so I know how ugly
- 00:37:27that trade friction got at that time and
- 00:37:29that also taught the Japanese that even
- 00:37:33though exporting its way out is is the
- 00:37:36easy way that option was not available
- 00:37:39to them because it was already the
- 00:37:41largest Trade Surplus country in the
- 00:37:44world now this contrasts with South
- 00:37:47Korea in
- 00:37:491997 South Korea in 1997 was facing this
- 00:37:53Asian currency crisis and asset prices
- 00:37:56in Korea collapsed
- 00:37:58people had to repair their balance
- 00:37:59sheets so Korean economy was falling
- 00:38:01into a balance sheet recession but at
- 00:38:04that time in
- 00:38:051997 Korea was running a huge trade
- 00:38:09deficit and so when Korean one collapsed
- 00:38:14and it lost like 60% of its value during
- 00:38:17the Asian currency crisis Korea could
- 00:38:20use that fall in the currency to export
- 00:38:23its way out and if you if you live that
- 00:38:26period you can go back and look at some
- 00:38:29of the magazine ads during that period
- 00:38:31and the Korean car companies like
- 00:38:33Hyundai was putting two hes on side of
- 00:38:37the page and on one Japanese car on the
- 00:38:40other side of the page and saying hey
- 00:38:43you can buy two Hundai for the price of
- 00:38:44one Toyota you know they were running
- 00:38:46that kind of ads because of what
- 00:38:48happened to the exchange rate and the Us
- 00:38:51and other countries really couldn't
- 00:38:52complain to the Koreans because Korea
- 00:38:55was running a large trade uh deficit
- 00:38:58so if you had a deficit country you have
- 00:39:00the option of using exports to you know
- 00:39:04export your way out of balance sheet
- 00:39:06recession as as the Koreans and other
- 00:39:08Asian countries have done after
- 00:39:101997 but if you're a surplus country and
- 00:39:13not just the Surplus country the biggest
- 00:39:15Surplus country in the world I'm afraid
- 00:39:18that option is not available politically
- 00:39:21and I think Chinese government is also
- 00:39:23aware of that in spite of all the
- 00:39:25problems that China has domestically
- 00:39:27the central bank is trying to keep the
- 00:39:29R&B the Chinese currency from falling
- 00:39:33because if it does Fall and if Chinese
- 00:39:35companies then try to export their way
- 00:39:38out that will cause even bigger problems
- 00:39:41down the road and Chinese government
- 00:39:42apparently is aware of this risk and so
- 00:39:45they're trying to keep the R&B
- 00:39:48which if there was no Central Bank I'm
- 00:39:51sure R&B will be lot lower in value but
- 00:39:53there Central Bank is trying to keep it
- 00:39:56at this our stable level just about uh 7
- 00:40:007.2 or so uh with the US dollar because
- 00:40:04they know that the political
- 00:40:07situation is not allowing China to
- 00:40:11export its way out so China can't export
- 00:40:14its way out of a balance sheet recession
- 00:40:16because it already is the world leader
- 00:40:19in exports in running a trade surplus so
- 00:40:22they can't run even bigger because that
- 00:40:23would have political consequences unlike
- 00:40:25Korea which was a trade deficit country
- 00:40:28and then when their currency weakened
- 00:40:30that uh uh weak currency supports
- 00:40:32exports so then they could export their
- 00:40:33way out but but China cannot when you
- 00:40:36say that China doesn't want to export
- 00:40:38more because it will have political
- 00:40:40consequences are you talking about
- 00:40:41domestically political problems or
- 00:40:44problems between China and Europe and
- 00:40:46China and the United States it's the
- 00:40:48latter okay I mean I'm sure individual
- 00:40:51Japanese companies or individual Chinese
- 00:40:53companies will be desperate to export
- 00:40:55their way out because the domestic
- 00:40:57demand is so weak as a result of
- 00:40:59domestic violence recession but external
- 00:41:02environment was not at all friendly at
- 00:41:05that time I mean I was representing the
- 00:41:08US positions at that time to a Japanese
- 00:41:11television audience at the request of
- 00:41:13the US ambassador to Japan at the time
- 00:41:15Mr walto Mand he asked me that someone
- 00:41:18carrying American passport but was
- 00:41:21appearing frequently in the Japanese
- 00:41:22television so he asked me can you
- 00:41:24represent our position in the Japanese
- 00:41:26TV so that's what I did for a number of
- 00:41:29years every time the Japanese television
- 00:41:32program wanted to do something about us
- 00:41:35Japan trade friction I was asked to go
- 00:41:37to Embassy first get the food briefing
- 00:41:39on all sorts of issues and then uh went
- 00:41:43to the the TV studios and when you enter
- 00:41:45TV studios and all these Japanese are
- 00:41:47waiting with their guns to shoot me down
- 00:41:50it was a horrendous experience but I
- 00:41:53learned a lot about trade uh with in in
- 00:41:56those years
- 00:41:57it was not a very pleasant uh time to be
- 00:42:01doing
- 00:42:03that I got lots of death threats
- 00:42:06telephones
- 00:42:08and it was very intense but of course
- 00:42:12the Japanese bureaucrats Japanese
- 00:42:13government officials realized that Japan
- 00:42:17with the largest Trade Surplus in the
- 00:42:19world cannot export its way out why is
- 00:42:23uh an export leader such as Japan used
- 00:42:26to be or or now is why can't they export
- 00:42:29even more what is so bad economically
- 00:42:32for the rest of the world about running
- 00:42:34very large trade deficits with with the
- 00:42:37rest of the world if you care about your
- 00:42:40GDP and your country is running a large
- 00:42:44deficit a trade deficit that deficit
- 00:42:48number is
- 00:42:50subtracted when you're compiling GDP but
- 00:42:53if you are having Trade Surplus it's
- 00:42:56added to your GDP so trade deficit or
- 00:42:59trade surplus has a direct impact on the
- 00:43:02amount of GDP economic growth and so
- 00:43:04forth so if you are country running
- 00:43:07large deficit year after year that means
- 00:43:10your GDP is not growing as fast or
- 00:43:13actually shrinking in some cases and
- 00:43:16naturally that will not be good for your
- 00:43:18country especially if the deficit is due
- 00:43:21to import of consumer goods right if
- 00:43:24you're importing capital goods you'll be
- 00:43:26adding to your productive capacity later
- 00:43:29and so you might be able you might
- 00:43:31tolerate this uh trade deficit and that
- 00:43:33was basically the case of uh South Korea
- 00:43:36until 1997 South Korea was importing
- 00:43:39huge amounts of capital goods from Japan
- 00:43:41United States and Europe to rebuild its
- 00:43:44or not rebuild to enlarge their uh
- 00:43:47manufacturing capacity but as a result
- 00:43:50the country itself was running a trade
- 00:43:52deficit but if you're running a deficit
- 00:43:55with mostly due to consumer Goods you're
- 00:43:58not really preparing for your future but
- 00:44:01you're just losing the income and
- 00:44:03employment and and so most governments
- 00:44:08under most circumstances will try to
- 00:44:10limit the trade deficit from growing too
- 00:44:12large for too long but the U us as my
- 00:44:15understanding has not and the the US
- 00:44:17trade deficit and and current account
- 00:44:19deficit has widen remarkably over the
- 00:44:22past 45 years and it's been part of the
- 00:44:25US policy that that's
- 00:44:27not only fine but in some instances it's
- 00:44:29a good thing because if if China can
- 00:44:31produce sneakers cheaper than they can
- 00:44:33produce them in Pennsylvania then
- 00:44:35Americans save money and that's a that's
- 00:44:37a that's a good thing right well United
- 00:44:41States is the only exception to the rule
- 00:44:43that I mentioned to you earlier that is
- 00:44:45if the trade is driven by uh if the
- 00:44:48trade deficit is largely consumer goods
- 00:44:51then you want to make sure that you
- 00:44:53don't run deficit for too long while
- 00:44:56United States
- 00:44:57is the only country in the world which
- 00:45:00allowed trade deficit to continue for
- 00:45:04over 40 years the last time us had a
- 00:45:07trade surplus uh trade balance was in
- 00:45:10the late 70s and since then for the the
- 00:45:14previous for the the last 40 years or so
- 00:45:17it was running in huge deficit year
- 00:45:19after year after year what that means is
- 00:45:23that if us had a balanc trade US GDP
- 00:45:29should have been much larger than where
- 00:45:31where we are seeing now and because it
- 00:45:34kept on running deficit for that long
- 00:45:37those people who were directly competing
- 00:45:40with foreign uh producers like
- 00:45:43manufacturers in Midwest Farmers they
- 00:45:46were hit very badly during this
- 00:45:50period uh whereas if you're City
- 00:45:52dwellers in IT industry or service
- 00:45:56industry banking Financial
- 00:45:59stuff you're not directly exposed to
- 00:46:02this uh trade deficit
- 00:46:04issues and so for these for those people
- 00:46:08uh trade deficit was not a big issue but
- 00:46:10for the people who had to compete with
- 00:46:13Imports it's a it was a huge issue you
- 00:46:16write that how uh you know after the the
- 00:46:19Breton Woods agreement there there was
- 00:46:21supposed to be a mechanism of currencies
- 00:46:24uh uh being corrected so in other words
- 00:46:26if one country was was running a giant
- 00:46:28Trade Surplus and it was hurting the
- 00:46:31rest of the world that country would be
- 00:46:33instructed or encouraged to strengthen
- 00:46:35their currencies to make the rest of the
- 00:46:37world more competitive and that country
- 00:46:39slightly less competitive and then uh in
- 00:46:421971 when the world officially went on
- 00:46:46the floating exchange rates and the US
- 00:46:48went went off gold That was supposed to
- 00:46:50be the mechanism but you you write about
- 00:46:52how now when the US is running a deficit
- 00:46:56with China CH China has all of these
- 00:46:58excessive dollars which if if cross
- 00:47:01Capital flows were only based on the
- 00:47:02trade Channel a trade of of goods and
- 00:47:04services then the uh Chinese Yuan The
- 00:47:07Remnant B would strengthen enormously
- 00:47:09against the dollar making US exports
- 00:47:11once again competitive and restoring
- 00:47:13that that balance but you right for how
- 00:47:15about how for 40 years because of
- 00:47:17capital flows Financial flows not tra
- 00:47:19related to to trade that adjustment
- 00:47:21mechanism has been severely impaired
- 00:47:24tell us about that well uh when the
- 00:47:27So-Cal free trade system was put
- 00:47:29together under this notion Gat that was
- 00:47:331948 exchange when some countries start
- 00:47:37running large Surplus and other
- 00:47:40countries suffering from deficit
- 00:47:42originally the adjustment was supposed
- 00:47:44to take place through transfer of gold
- 00:47:46and and if the gold is leaving the
- 00:47:49country the country gets scared so it
- 00:47:52would tighten its uh monetary policy
- 00:47:54tighten its belt and that's how the
- 00:47:57original adjustment was supposed to take
- 00:48:00place but the competitiveness of
- 00:48:03Europeans and
- 00:48:04Japanese who were devastated after World
- 00:48:08War II of course became um much more
- 00:48:11competitive once the industries were
- 00:48:12rebuilt often with the uh us help then
- 00:48:17us began to run large
- 00:48:20deficits and that resulted in us coming
- 00:48:24out of gold and allowing foreign
- 00:48:27exchange to uh move more freely to make
- 00:48:31sure that uh the trade balance doesn't
- 00:48:34go out of whack the way it worked was
- 00:48:37that if Foreign Exchange Market is
- 00:48:40largely dominated by exporters and
- 00:48:43importers and if for example us is
- 00:48:45running large deficit against Japan the
- 00:48:48Toyota who earn all these dollars
- 00:48:50selling cars in United States will have
- 00:48:52to sell those dollars to get Yen and
- 00:48:55American company earning yen in know in
- 00:48:58Japan have to convert them into dollars
- 00:49:01but if the US is running a trade surplus
- 00:49:03I mean us is running deficit and Japan
- 00:49:05is running Surplus the demand for dollar
- 00:49:08will be very much less than the demand
- 00:49:10for Yen from people like Toyota and
- 00:49:12Nissan selling dollars to buy yen to pay
- 00:49:15their workers back in home in Yen and
- 00:49:18that will push dollar lower Yen higher
- 00:49:21and that will keep the trade balance
- 00:49:23from going out of whack that was
- 00:49:25basically the res scheme all the way
- 00:49:27until 19 1980 and in 1980 Advanced
- 00:49:32countries decided that crossb Capital
- 00:49:35flows should also be freed so that
- 00:49:38Japanese can easily buy us equities
- 00:49:41Americans can easily buy Japanese bonds
- 00:49:43and things all things of that kind until
- 00:49:461980 it was actually quite difficult for
- 00:49:49Americans to buy Japanese equities or
- 00:49:51Japanese to buy us our bonds but that
- 00:49:54was all changed around 1980 and then all
- 00:49:57these investors are getting into the
- 00:49:59Foreign Exchange Market because they
- 00:50:01they realize that they want Financial
- 00:50:03assets from other countries and they
- 00:50:05basically dominated the Foreign Exchange
- 00:50:07Market today exporters and importers are
- 00:50:10set to be about about 5% of the trade
- 00:50:13transactions 95% is from all these
- 00:50:16portfolio
- 00:50:17investors and as a as United States is
- 00:50:20having higher interest rates than Japan
- 00:50:22and Europe the dollar remained very
- 00:50:25strong because everybody wanted to have
- 00:50:27this higher interest
- 00:50:28rates uh in United States so dollar
- 00:50:31remained very strong Europeans and uh
- 00:50:34Japanese currencies are stayed
- 00:50:37relatively weak and as a result us
- 00:50:40competitiveness was hurt very badly and
- 00:50:44that's how you end up with all these
- 00:50:45Rust Belt phenomena in uh Midwest and so
- 00:50:50forth but both Republicans and
- 00:50:54Democrats did not take much actions
- 00:50:57against
- 00:50:58this dollar that is too strong relative
- 00:51:01to the industrial competitiveness of the
- 00:51:04US
- 00:51:05Industries and as a result uh deficit
- 00:51:09continued because investors are buying
- 00:51:12dollars dollar remained strong relative
- 00:51:15to its uh competitiveness and as a
- 00:51:19result uh us trade deficit kept on or
- 00:51:22remain at very high levels which was
- 00:51:25hurting a lot of people people in the
- 00:51:27Midwest
- 00:51:29and those those Industries where they
- 00:51:32have to compete with with Imports back
- 00:51:35in the day I think it was the the left
- 00:51:36wi of the democratic party that was in
- 00:51:38the United States that was opposing free
- 00:51:40trade to to protect workers and it was
- 00:51:43the Republican uh party as well as the
- 00:51:46more Centrist Bill Clinton Wing that
- 00:51:48that passed all these free trade
- 00:51:49agreements uh now you know in 2016 it
- 00:51:51was a republican Donald Trump who led
- 00:51:54the charge in saying that uh this system
- 00:51:57where the US runs a very large trade
- 00:51:59deficit or as he said were losing at
- 00:52:01trade it was it was a Republican and uh
- 00:52:05now it appears somewhat bipartisan that
- 00:52:07the the US should do something about
- 00:52:10just how the Chinese exports and and you
- 00:52:12know as as you've written President
- 00:52:14Biden has left a lot of Trump's tariffs
- 00:52:16in place so do you think that it is a
- 00:52:19good thing that the United States is now
- 00:52:20somewhat fighting against the very large
- 00:52:23trade surpluses of the rest of the world
- 00:52:25particularly China it was Donald Trump
- 00:52:29who apparently realized that there are a
- 00:52:31lot of Americans who are unhappy in the
- 00:52:34Rust Belt areas and other areas where
- 00:52:36they had to compete with foreign uh
- 00:52:40exporters and these people really did
- 00:52:43not have much place to express their
- 00:52:46political voices because until Donald
- 00:52:49Trump came along Democratic party even
- 00:52:52the Democratic party was supposedly
- 00:52:54close to the trade unions were not
- 00:52:57making a big issue out of trade deficit
- 00:53:00and allowed the dollar to remain
- 00:53:02relatively strong Republicans of course
- 00:53:05before Donald Trump was very much for
- 00:53:08free trade and so all these people who
- 00:53:12were losing to inputs were kind of left
- 00:53:17without a party to express their
- 00:53:21unhappiness or
- 00:53:23dissatisfaction and apparently Trump
- 00:53:25realized that there's a huge number of
- 00:53:27people out there who are not very happy
- 00:53:29with the situation and basically he
- 00:53:32capitalized on it by saying hey I'm here
- 00:53:35to to help the industries help the jobs
- 00:53:39and suddenly all these people who had no
- 00:53:43place to express their uh dissa
- 00:53:46dissatisfaction ended up uh joining the
- 00:53:49Trump camp and that I think forced a lot
- 00:53:52of uh changes all over the United States
- 00:53:55in the sense that Hillary Clinton you
- 00:53:57know back in 2016 she was also part of
- 00:54:00the uh negotiation team negotiation
- 00:54:03negotiating team for transpacific
- 00:54:06partnership the TPP which is a very
- 00:54:09Advanced Free Trade Agreement well she
- 00:54:11had to distance herself from the TPP
- 00:54:13even though she herself negotiated it
- 00:54:16because she realized that the amount of
- 00:54:20dissatisfaction within United States for
- 00:54:23free trade was so much larger than we
- 00:54:26were taught in universities and if I may
- 00:54:30elaborate on that if what we are taught
- 00:54:33in universities is that free trade
- 00:54:36creates both winners and losers in the
- 00:54:38same country but the gain of the winners
- 00:54:41are much larger than the losses of the
- 00:54:42losers and so if you put them together
- 00:54:45free trade benefits the whole country
- 00:54:48and that's how it was taught in
- 00:54:51universities and so we always assume
- 00:54:55that free trade
- 00:54:57creates more winners than losers but
- 00:55:00these professors never taught us that
- 00:55:03that conclusion that free trade always
- 00:55:06creates more winners and losers is
- 00:55:09predicated on one assumption and that
- 00:55:13assumption is that trade is either
- 00:55:15imbalance or in Surplus if that's not
- 00:55:18the case if that's the case then the
- 00:55:21theory holds but if the country
- 00:55:24continues to run deficit year after
- 00:55:26after year after year as happened in the
- 00:55:28United States for the last 40 years the
- 00:55:30number of people who consider themselves
- 00:55:32Losers of free trade continue to
- 00:55:35increase and by
- 00:55:372016 that group was large enough to put
- 00:55:40uh Donald Trump into the White
- 00:55:42House so that was a shock to the whole
- 00:55:45system so Democratic party and
- 00:55:48Republican party too had to completely
- 00:55:51re readjust their positions on free
- 00:55:54trade and of course Donald TR Trump
- 00:55:57basically you know hijacked the
- 00:55:58Republican party and their first
- 00:56:01priority now is to defend American
- 00:56:04Industries and the Democrats too uh as
- 00:56:08you mentioned earlier you know Joe Biden
- 00:56:10kept most of the uh tariffs that Trump
- 00:56:13put in added some of his
- 00:56:16own
- 00:56:18so we are now paying the kind of price
- 00:56:21for allowing this trade deficit for this
- 00:56:25this 40
- 00:56:27years
- 00:56:28but I am
- 00:56:30not happy with the way we are going
- 00:56:33because the way it is argued in in the
- 00:56:37in the political arena in the sense that
- 00:56:40this is viewed as push back on free
- 00:56:43trade but I don't think this is a push
- 00:56:45back on free trade it's a push back on
- 00:56:48overvalued dollar because if the dollar
- 00:56:51was so strong the number of people who
- 00:56:54consider themselves losers Losers of
- 00:56:56free trade will be much smaller in
- 00:56:59number and it should have been more
- 00:57:01manageable but because the uh dollar
- 00:57:05overvaluation of the dollar was kept in
- 00:57:07place for so long this group kept on
- 00:57:10growing and now they are changing the
- 00:57:14whole uh atmosphere on free trade but if
- 00:57:17we lose free trade and we go back to the
- 00:57:20world with all these tariffs and
- 00:57:22retaliations and so forth we go back to
- 00:57:241930s all over
- 00:57:26and we know how disastrous that was so I
- 00:57:30will much I would much prefer to
- 00:57:33see uh overvaluation of the dollar
- 00:57:36corrected instead of you know just
- 00:57:39arbitrarily putting on tariffs on this
- 00:57:41goods and that Goods which is not good
- 00:57:43for the economic growth of this country
- 00:57:45or for the global economy see so you
- 00:57:48want uh The Chronic trade deficit of the
- 00:57:52United States to be fixed by a weaker
- 00:57:53dollar rather than tariffs
- 00:57:57how successful do you think a trump
- 00:58:00Administration or a president Harris
- 00:58:02Administration would be in reversing
- 00:58:06that and do you think they would they
- 00:58:07would rely upon a weaker dollar or do
- 00:58:09you think they would go through the the
- 00:58:10Tariff route this is a rather
- 00:58:12complicated issue if Miss Harris thinks
- 00:58:15that she can win the next election with
- 00:58:19just the traditional supporters without
- 00:58:21trying to Wing back some of the people
- 00:58:23who left the Democratic party and joined
- 00:58:25the Trump Trump Camp then she probably
- 00:58:28will do nothing or maybe just play with
- 00:58:30tffs a little bit here and there but if
- 00:58:33she felt that those people who used to
- 00:58:38be with Democrats now are with uh Trump
- 00:58:42they have to be won
- 00:58:43back that she has to win back these
- 00:58:46people then she will have to do
- 00:58:48something then one is tariff the other
- 00:58:51was the exchange rate since tariff has
- 00:58:54kind of become acceptable maybe she
- 00:58:56would just go the easy route and play
- 00:58:58with some tariffs but that would be
- 00:59:00hurting economic growth in this country
- 00:59:03as well the rest of the world then we
- 00:59:05might actually end up in a situation
- 00:59:07like what happened in 1930s which should
- 00:59:09be a disaster for everybody but against
- 00:59:11this some people are saying I don't
- 00:59:14trash the dollar if you trash the dollar
- 00:59:17inflation rate will go up and uh the
- 00:59:20fight against inflation will be even
- 00:59:22harder well there's some truth to that
- 00:59:25but
- 00:59:26keeping the dollar strong to fight
- 00:59:28inflation in my view is a very unfair
- 00:59:32way to fight inflation because you
- 00:59:34already the people already hurting which
- 00:59:37is why they supporting these guys are
- 00:59:39supporting
- 00:59:40Trump you're asking them to suffer even
- 00:59:43more just so that inflation rates will
- 00:59:45be little bit less than
- 00:59:48otherwise and you know the Trump Camp
- 00:59:52Trump Camp can use that against
- 00:59:56uh the Harris if Harris went that way by
- 01:00:00saying that uh this is very unfair way
- 01:00:05of fighting
- 01:00:06inflation because you're only squeezing
- 01:00:09already badly squeezed people even
- 01:00:11further just so that some City
- 01:00:14developers City dwellers uh academics
- 01:00:18Financial types service country Service
- 01:00:21uh Industries can enjoy slightly lower
- 01:00:24prices but everybody else suffering so
- 01:00:26this is one of those issues that
- 01:00:29political parties have to decide what is
- 01:00:31the right uh path
- 01:00:33forward but I from a perspective of
- 01:00:36Economist I much prefer to see
- 01:00:39overvaluation of dollar
- 01:00:41adjusted or
- 01:00:43reduced to eliminate this completely or
- 01:00:46to balance the you know bilateral trade
- 01:00:48with all the countries around the world
- 01:00:50I think that's that's not possible I
- 01:00:52mean the genie is already out of the
- 01:00:53bottle and the genie here I mean is this
- 01:00:55Capital flows but I think government can
- 01:00:59still do a lot to bring uh adjust
- 01:01:01exchange rates and on that point I like
- 01:01:06to refer to the the plaza Accord
- 01:01:09September
- 01:01:101985 at that time the the dollar
- 01:01:13strength was so
- 01:01:16overwhelming it was about 240 to the
- 01:01:19dollar and US was completely engulfed in
- 01:01:24protectionism everybody wanted protect
- 01:01:25protectionism because the yellow the
- 01:01:27dollar was so outrageously strong well
- 01:01:31luckily we had a free Trader called
- 01:01:32Ronald Reagan and he implemented what is
- 01:01:36known as the plaza for to bring the
- 01:01:38dollar
- 01:01:39down and even though most people were
- 01:01:42very skeptical at the beginning that
- 01:01:44government can actually move the
- 01:01:45exchange rate when they did it it worked
- 01:01:49beautifully two uh exchange was 240 to
- 01:01:53the dollar at the time the plaza two
- 01:01:55years later it was 120 into the dollar
- 01:01:58and the pickup in inflation was there
- 01:02:01was a little bit but it was
- 01:02:03minimal and after that for a while uh
- 01:02:08because dollar was adjusted protect
- 01:02:11protectionist presses that that was so
- 01:02:14strong by September 1985 came down to a
- 01:02:18much more manageable level uh but that
- 01:02:21turned out to be the very last time the
- 01:02:23US had actually implement a foreign
- 01:02:26exchange policy because after that the
- 01:02:29dollar was kind of left on its own and
- 01:02:32because it was then be start becoming
- 01:02:34overvalued again and that
- 01:02:38basically uh is where we find ourselves
- 01:02:41today now President Joe Biden once
- 01:02:44referred to this strong Dollar by saying
- 01:02:47that well it's our currency but it's
- 01:02:48their problem they problem meaning
- 01:02:51foreigners problem but that kind of
- 01:02:53attitude I'm afraid is not very very
- 01:02:56good for all these people who are
- 01:02:58suffering from strong Dollar in United
- 01:03:01States and if these people then take
- 01:03:04over the country and we ended up with a
- 01:03:07protectionism inflation rate would be
- 01:03:09even even
- 01:03:11worse and so I hope more people
- 01:03:14understand that those people who are
- 01:03:17supporting Trump unhappy with US
- 01:03:20Government not taking action to correct
- 01:03:23the overvaluation of the dollar is
- 01:03:25really the victim of the overvaluation
- 01:03:27of the dollar not the victim of free
- 01:03:30trade and in order to save free trade we
- 01:03:33should bring the adjust exchange of the
- 01:03:36dollar so that the number of people who
- 01:03:38are unhappy will be much reduced thank
- 01:03:42you so China is in balance sheet
- 01:03:44recession and chronic trade deficits are
- 01:03:47not good for that home country but you
- 01:03:49think the US should resolve that issue
- 01:03:51by a weaker dollar and not tariffs uh
- 01:03:53Richard thank you so much you've been
- 01:03:55very generous with your time my question
- 01:03:57my final question for you is about the
- 01:03:58United States now uh the us as you know
- 01:04:01has run a very large fiscal deficit
- 01:04:05since 2020 uh with the the the covid
- 01:04:08stimulus and uh you have sh a chart
- 01:04:11showing how US Bank lending has been
- 01:04:14very high and particularly much higher
- 01:04:17than many countries in in Europe and and
- 01:04:19I believe Japan too so do you think is
- 01:04:22the US in a a balance sheet expansion
- 01:04:25mode where the government and the
- 01:04:27private sector are leveraging and uh
- 01:04:29borrowing at the same time well the
- 01:04:32fiscal stimulus was needed during
- 01:04:34balancing recession because private
- 01:04:35sector was not borrowing money so if the
- 01:04:38private sector is really coming back to
- 01:04:40borrow then those fiscal stimulus are no
- 01:04:43longer needed and they so they should be
- 01:04:46cut down either by higher taxes or
- 01:04:49reduced spending the flaw funds data and
- 01:04:52the bank lending data I'm afraid are not
- 01:04:55assisted yet flow of funds data still
- 01:04:59looks like us private sector is not
- 01:05:01borrowing all that
- 01:05:03much uh but the banking data that you
- 01:05:05refer to and the one I referred to my
- 01:05:07recent uh report from numerous
- 01:05:10Securities uh does indicate that uh
- 01:05:13lending have picked up if the fla funds
- 01:05:16data then agrees with the banking data
- 01:05:18because fla funds data is revised uh a
- 01:05:21few times
- 01:05:23before it becomes final
- 01:05:26then I think this is a time for United
- 01:05:28States to start reducing its deficit
- 01:05:31because the private sector is ready to
- 01:05:33uh take on take on the challenge but if
- 01:05:37you look at Japan or Europe uh for that
- 01:05:40matter that is not happening private
- 01:05:42sector is still uh borrowing very little
- 01:05:45relative to the level of interest rates
- 01:05:47they're still in financial Surplus which
- 01:05:50means the government has to run the
- 01:05:51financial deficit to offset that until
- 01:05:55private sector Source are ready to
- 01:05:58borrow again and we haven't got there
- 01:06:00yet well Mr C thank you so much for
- 01:06:02joining us people can uh find your your
- 01:06:04many uh books and they should check them
- 01:06:06out such as the Holy Grail of
- 01:06:08macroeconomics and most recently uh
- 01:06:10pursued economy this is a fantastic book
- 01:06:13and you we cover uh many of the things
- 01:06:15we we talked about trade uh balance
- 01:06:18sheet recession but also the the concept
- 01:06:20of a Pursuit economy and the three
- 01:06:22stages of a country's economic
- 01:06:23development it is a very very comping
- 01:06:25idea very relevant to everything that's
- 01:06:27going on uh we didn't get a chance to
- 01:06:29talk about it today but uh people should
- 01:06:30check out the book if they want to find
- 01:06:31that out uh Richard thank you so much
- 01:06:33for joining us and thank you everyone
- 01:06:34for watching thank you for having me hi
- 01:06:37everyone as always thanks for listening
- 01:06:40as I said in the beginning this was my
- 01:06:42last episode of forward guidance and
- 01:06:43Felix Javen will be taking over as the
- 01:06:45host of forward guidance from here I can
- 01:06:47honestly say that hosting forward
- 01:06:49guidance has been an honor and a true
- 01:06:51highlight of my life thank you to
- 01:06:53everyone who's been on this wild ride
- 01:06:55with me blockworks my brilliant guests
- 01:06:57Vanek and all the other show sponsors
- 01:06:59and in particular you the audience there
- 01:07:02have been quite a lot of you just on
- 01:07:03podcast apps and YouTube alone you have
- 01:07:05watched forward guidance over 22 million
- 01:07:08times and if you include Twitter over 30
- 01:07:11million times and over 250 million times
- 01:07:13if you include Youtube impressions which
- 01:07:15we don't because they're the Ia of
- 01:07:16podcasting but the stat that I love the
- 01:07:18most is that since the show began nearly
- 01:07:20three years ago you have watched and
- 01:07:22listened to forward guidance for a
- 01:07:23combined 7 million hours all I can say
- 01:07:26is wow thank you so much for your time I
- 01:07:29hope the knowledge and entertainment
- 01:07:30you've gained has been worthy of it I
- 01:07:32started forward guidance right before
- 01:07:34the Federal Reserve raised interest
- 01:07:35rates from zero and I'm leaving right
- 01:07:37before they're about to cut them many of
- 01:07:39you know my successor Felix Javen some
- 01:07:41of you might not but let me tell you
- 01:07:43just how sharp insightful and most of
- 01:07:45all curious he is he is a macro
- 01:07:47autodidact who is well prepared to take
- 01:07:49over as the host of forward guidance he
- 01:07:51couldn't make a Bad episode if you tried
- 01:07:53and I'm excited to see where he takes
- 01:07:55the show and you should be too thanks
- 01:07:57again for the Journey of a lifetime
- balance sheet recession
- China
- Japan
- economy
- government spending
- real estate bubble
- debt
- economic recovery
- fiscal stimulus
- international trade