Wednesday, February 26, 2003
Global growth forecast slashed
WASHINGTON - US investment bank Morgan Stanley has lowered its global growth forecasts, warning that geopolitical tensions had pushed the world back to the brink of recession.
"In response to mounting geopolitical tensions, we have cut our 2003-04 global economic forecast," the Wall Street titan's chief economist, Stephen Roach, said.
The global growth forecast for 2003 gross domestic product (GDP) fell to 2.5% from 2.9%. The forecast for 2004 dropped to 3.8% from 4.0%.
"The downward revision for 2003 has the effect of transforming an anemic recovery in the global economy into a world that is right back on the brink of its recession threshold — 2.5%," Roach said.
The new world growth forecast was at the upper bound of a 2.0-2.5% possible outcome, Roach said.
Disrupted Iraqi output, low oil stocks and a production shortfall in Venezuela would send Brent crude oil spiralling to 40 dollars a barrel next month from about 32.50 dollars now, with only a modest retreat in April, he said.
Even after accounting for a decline in oil prices after a successful military action in Iraq, oil prices would rise 15.6 percent over 2003, Roach said.
"There is more to this shock than oil," he said.
"Saddam Hussein's possible use of weapons of mass destruction cannot be ruled out, nor can collateral damage to Iraqi civilians, spillover effects to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and heightened global terrorist activity," Roach added.
"Destabilizing conditions in Korea add to the problem. The split between America and her allies only heightens the geopolitical instability factor. Nor is there any certainty about the stability of post-Saddam Iraq."
The world had built up a cumulative gap of 3.5 percentage points between long-term potential growth and actual growth over 2001-2003, the economist said.
The forecast for 2003 economic growth would not make much of a dent in that output gap, he said, raising the risk of deflation.
"I think it makes sense to remain in the deflation camp even in the face of higher oil and other commodity prices," Roach said.
Among the major economies, Morgan Stanley forecast:
- The US economy would grow 2.1% this year, rising to 4.1% next year.
- Europe would grow 0.8% this year and 2.3% next year, with the 12-country euro zone expanding 0.6% this year and 2.3% next year.
- Japan would grow 0.6% this year and 0.5% next year.
"As the world gears up for war, it is far more vulnerable than it was in 1990-91," Roach said.
"In large part, that is because today's US-centric global economy lacks the broadly-based support that a more balanced global economy had a dozen years ago."
Over the seven years from 1995 to 2002, the United States accounted for 64% of the cumulative increase in world GDP, he said.
"Japan has been mired in a post-bubble malaise and the euro-zone growth dynamic has taken on a new sluggishness. Growth in Asia ex-Japan has remained brisk but well below the heady gains of the late 1980s. Meanwhile, Latin America has fallen victim to yet another in a long string of crises," Roach said.
Wells Fargo and Co. economist Scott Anderson said another economic shock such as higher oil prices or declining consumer confidence might hold back a US recovery.
"We suspect the US economy will continue to muddle through, like last year, for much of 2003," he said in a report.
"Looking past a war in Iraq, it is clear that even a quick and decisive victory will not solve some of our major economic problems. Global growth is stalling, particularly in Europe and Japan."
Sapa-AFP
Ballplayer watches a country in turmoil
www.bayarea.com
Posted on Tue, Feb. 25, 2003
By RICK HURD
Contra Costa Times (Walnut Creek, Calif.)
PHOENIX - Ramon Hernandez had only one thing on his mind when he hopped on a plane and headed home to Venezuela this winter. He said he wanted to wipe away the memory of a disappointing 2002 season.
"I just wanted to forget it," he said. "Sometimes, that's just the best thing you can do."
He had no idea how easy that would be. Hernandez's winter was marked by snapshots of fights in the streets, protests in the capital, long lines for gas and food, military marches and general unrest.
Turned out the only thing on his mind was keeping his family safe.
"It was sad, very sad," he said. "I've never seen anything like it before. I hope I never see it again."
What Hernandez witnessed was a crippling nationwide strike that nearly tore apart his country. Workers throughout Venezuela went on strike to protest the policies of president Hugo Chavez, and the fallout was tumultuous.
Violence erupted in Venezuela in December, shortly after the strike began. The importing and distribution of gasoline and oil is a huge industry in Venezuela, Hernandez said, and the strike left the country with a huge shortage.
Thus, he said, workers in other industries who relied on gas were unable to earn money.
"You'd see hundreds and hundreds of people lined up for gas. It might take two or three days to get some," Hernandez said. "But if you drove a taxi, then you can't work. So people like that would go hungry. There were lots of people in my country who couldn't get food."
Hernandez wasn't one of them. He said the country's baseball players are considered among the elite citizens of Venezuela and that he "had ways around" the mess that was causing so much misery. But the violence that resulted wasn't lost on him.
"I'd turn on the TV, and you'd see the army marching in the capital city (of Caracas), and you'd see fights between (Chavez's) supporters and opponents breaking out all over the place," he said. "It was very scary."
So scary, Hernandez said, that his family rarely left its home. Hernandez said his home was several miles on the outskirts of any big city, and that his neighborhood was relatively safe.
"But you couldn't take any chances," he said. "You never knew where it might be dangerous."
That point hit home early in December, when a fellow major league became a victim. Houston Astros outfielder Richard Hidalgo was shot in the left arm during a carjacking attempt in early December.
"It's a scary thing, what happened to him," Hernandez said. "It could've happened to anyone."
The turmoil also wrecked something else that was so close to Hernandez's heart. The Venezuelan winter league was canceled after only two weeks, because adequate security to protect the players couldn't be found. Hernandez had been named the league's MVP in 2001.
Thus, he said, the dawn of spring training was more welcome than ever. He reported to Arizona with his wife, Bellatrix, and son, Randy, but the rest of his extended family remains in Venezuela.
"I was glad to get started," he said. "I talked to family, and they say things are getting much better down there. It was getting better before I left, so hopefully it keeps going in that direction."
As for baseball, Hernandez said he hopes his offense moves in a better direction this season, too. He hit only .233 after signing a four-year, $9.5 million contract in March. He hit just seven home runs after totaling 29 over the previous two seasons.
"Hey, guys have bad years sometimes," manager Ken Macha said. "Hopefully, that was one of his. But that still doesn't take away from the work he did for us handling our pitching staff. He's as big a reason for our pitchers' success as any. As long as he keeps doing that, we'll be happy."
Hernandez seems happy already. He said he has put the memory of 2002 out of his mind. And he said the memory of his 2002 winter will be a nice reminder that some things are more important than batting averages.
Explosions outside Spanish embassy, Colombian consulate in Caracas injure 4
www.canada.com
Canadian Press
Tuesday, February 25, 2003
CARACAS (AP) - Two powerful explosions minutes apart damaged the Spanish embassy and the Colombian consulate in the Venezuelan capital early Tuesday, injuring four people and raising tensions in a city still recovering from a bitter anti-government strike.
Broken glass covered the street outside both buildings while windows in residences almost a block away were shattered by the force of the explosion. Steel gates at the buildings were twisted. Leaflets supporting President Hugo Chavez's so-called "Bolivarian Revolution," a political movement loosely based on the writings of 19th century independence hero Simon Bolivar, were found outside the Spanish Embassy.
"We believe these were very potent bombs judging by the damage done," said the mayor of Caracas' Chacao district, Leopoldo Lopez.
The first blast was outside the Spanish embassy in eastern Caracas at about 2 a.m. The second explosion, 15 minutes later, rocked the Colombian consulate. The blasts lightly injured four people, including a night watchmen, Lopez said.
The explosions came a two days after Chavez warned Colombia and Spain, among other countries, not to meddle in Venezuela's domestic affairs.
Both countries had expressed concern over the arrest of opposition leader Carlos Fernandez, who was arrested last week for his role in leading a two-month general strike against Chavez.
Federal agents are trying to hunt down another opposition leader, labour boss Carlos Ortega, who is also wanted for alleged crimes linked to the work stoppage.
Authorities said no arrests had been made in connection with the two explosions early Tuesday morning.
Chavez responded angrily Sunday to foreign critics of the charges against the two strike leaders. He directed warnings at some members of a "Group of Friends" initiative created to bolster the negotiating process.
"Don't mess with our affairs!" Chavez said, singling out Cesar Gaviria, secretary general of the Organization of American States, the United States, Spain and Colombia.
On Monday, opposition representatives sent a letter to Brazilian Foreign Minister Celso Amorim, co-ordinator of the "Friends" group, calling for an urgent to discuss "the worsening of the Venezuelan situation."
OAS-mediated negotiations, which were suspended last week because Gaviria had other commitments abroad, are slated to resume on Wednesday.
Rising diesel costs may drive up school budget - $100,000 to $200,000 more may be needed in 2003-2004 year
Posted by click at 1:30 AM
in
oil us
www.theleafchronicle.com
By CAMERON COLLINS, JILL NOELLE CECIL
The Leaf-Chronicle
Alicia Archuleta/The Leaf-Chronicle
Jay Buck fills one of the county's school buses at the Operations Complex on U.S. Highway 41A, Monday. In August, the district paid 64 cents per gallon of diesel and the current bid price is $1.18 per gallon.
A possible military conflict in the Mideast and oil worker strikes in Venezuela and Nigeria mean rising diesel prices -- translating into higher costs to transport Clarksville-Montgomery County's students.
School officials think their current budget can cover the higher costs this school year, but for 2003-2004 an additional $100,000 to $200,000 may be needed to buy fuel.
Two other Montgomery County entities also use diesel fuel -- the Highway Department and Bi-County Solid Waste. But County Executive Doug Weiland said it is premature to speculate about how the higher costs would affect their 2003-04 budgets.
"I buy fuel myself and have seen the rising costs," Weiland said. "I wonder, as I'm sure others are, if there is any end in sight."
Weiland said several negative factors such as a 40 percent rise in health-care insurance premiums, loss of state-shared revenue and other aspects are making the county's budget outlook bleak.
Individual department heads and elected officials are compiling preliminary budget requests, and Weiland said those should be submitted next week.
"Until we get hard numbers it's real premature to talk about how it will affect us," he said. "Obviously, all those things will impact us. This has all the prospects of being one of the worst budget years we've ever faced."
The 226 regular education and special needs buses in the public school fleet transport an average of 18,355 students each morning and afternoon. Typically, the buses travel 18,000 to 19,000 miles per day or about 3.4 million miles each year, said Joe Haley, Clarksville-Montgomery County Schools' chief operations officer.
The system annually uses about 365,000 to 370,000 gallons of diesel fuel.
In August, the district paid 64 cents per gallon of diesel and the current bid price is $1.18 a gallon.
Since Haley and other local school officials expected to spend an average of $1.05 per gallon, more money won't be needed for this year's budget. So far, Haley estimated, the system will pay about an average of 95 cents a gallon for diesel over the course of the 2002-03 school year.
School officials had planned to spend between $275,000 and $280,000 on diesel fuel for transportation this year. But next year, Haley predicted, the overall cost could be between $375,000 and $475,000.
"There's not much we can do about it," Haley said. "It depends on where (the price) falls. The oil distributors are telling us they don't think it'll rise much higher than it is right now unless there's a war and the oil fields are set on fire. They think it'll stay somewhere between $1.15 and $1.30, but they don't think it'll go any lower than that either."
The school district has tanks at four different locations for bus drivers to use as filling stations -- the Operations Complex on U.S. Highway 41A, Byrns Darden Elementary on Peachers Mill Road, the Montgomery Central complex in Cunningham and Liberty Elementary on Dover Road. The tanks can store a total of about 70,000 gallons.
Haley said he recalls only one other time when diesel costs rose so much, and they've never really recovered. There was a spike during the Persian Gulf War, but the situation wasn't complicated by the strikes in Venezuela and Nigeria, two of the top seven crude-oil producers in the world.
"I think we can expect to see a 30 to 40 percent increase on average but the market is so volatile that's really a guess," Haley said.
Another factor is a harsh winter across the northern portion of the country where homes and businesses used fuel oil for heating, causing the demand and price to rise, said Haley, who has 23 years experience in school transportation with the local district.
Cameron Collins covers education and can be reached at 245-0716 or by e-mail at cameroncollins@theleafchronicle.com.
Originally published Tuesday, February 25, 2003
War and Iraq - The economic risks
Posted by click at 1:23 AM
in
iraq
www.economist.com
Feb 20th 2003
From The Economist print edition
Getty
Last weekend, American shop shelves were cleared of drinking water and duct tape. What next?
“IRAQNOPHOBIA”—fear of the consequences of a probable war with Iraq—is being blamed for the sick state of the world economy and for the fall this year in the dollar and in most big stockmarkets. If fear is to blame, then a short, successful war should remove the uncertainty that is holding back consumer and corporate spending, allowing economic activity and share prices to bounce back again. Alan Greenspan, the chairman of America's Federal Reserve, appeared to suggest as much last week. But Iraq is only one of the problems facing the global economy. Others will continue to weigh it down even after the tanks and bombers have gone home.
An American-led attack on Iraq looks highly likely. But trying to assess the economic consequences of such an attack is tricky because of the vast number of unknowns and contingencies. For instance, how long will the conflict last? Will it escalate outside Iraq? Will there be any damage to oilfields, as there was in the Gulf war in 1991? Will other OPEC countries increase their oil production to compensate? And how badly will business and consumer confidence be hit? These are not questions that can be answered by plugging numbers into a computer model. Yet several investment banks and think-tanks have made a stab at it.
Most of them maintain that the likeliest scenario is a short, successful war. Oil prices would spike briefly at around $40 a barrel, but then plunge as the war ends. In turn, share prices and the dollar will rally, and confidence will revive, spurring a strong economic recovery. Several economists reckon that a war might actually be good for the world economy: it will eliminate today's mood of uncertainty, boost government spending, and push oil prices lower in the medium term as new Iraqi production comes on stream.
John Llewellyn, chief economist at Lehman Brothers, is much less sanguine. He argues that the risks to the global economy, taken together, are now greater than at any time since the 1973-74 oil crisis. Even if the war goes well, he argues, it will probably not be the panacea that investors are hoping for. The aftermath of war will be uncertain; the risk of terrorist acts will remain; and there are plenty of other worries too, not least over North Korea.
The cost of fighting
The economic costs of a war can be broken into three types. First, there are the direct military costs. The six-week Gulf war in 1991 cost $80 billion in today's prices (most of it paid for by America's allies). Assuming a similarly short war, America's Congressional Budget Office and the House Budget Committee have both estimated a total military cost of around $50 billion, or 0.5% of America's GDP. Others reckon that a more protracted war could cost America as much as $150 billion.
Second, there are the potentially far larger indirect costs of peacekeeping, humanitarian assistance and reconstruction. William Nordhaus, an economist at Yale University, thinks that these could cost America between $100 billion and $600 billion over the next decade*.
Last but not least, there are the macroeconomic costs of lost output. Especially if the war goes badly, these could be far bigger than the others, which are really just efficiency losses from the diversion of resources. Mr Nordhaus estimates that the total cost of a war to America could range between $100 billion and $1.9 trillion, spread over a ten-year period. That could be as much as 2% of American GDP for every year of the decade.
The hardest of the three to pin down is the macroeconomic cost—to the world economy, not just America's. Broadly speaking, a war in Iraq could affect economies through four main channels: oil prices; stockmarkets; the dollar; and business and consumer confidence.
Oil prices have already reached their highest level for two years. West Texas Intermediate has risen above $36 a barrel, up almost 50% from last June. So far, though, this is a much smaller rise than in the run-up to the 1991 war. In real terms, oil prices today are less than half their 1980 peak. The conventional wisdom is that prices will fall sharply once a war is over, just as they did in 1991. Then they fell from over $40 to below pre-war levels after the ground war had begun. Optimists today argue that a victory will liberate Iraqi oil as well as its people. (This assumes that the Iraqis do not sabotage their own oilfields or those of their neighbours.)
So it is widely hoped that oil prices might this time also fall towards $20 a barrel once war is under way. But is 1990-91 the appropriate model? Even if the war is as short, oil prices may not fall as much this time because the background environment is different. Economists at Goldman Sachs argue that the recent rise in oil prices has had more to do with the disruptions in Venezuela than with worries about Iraq.
Venezuela's oil-industry strike may be over, but the country is unlikely to restore more than two-thirds of its output this year. Goldman Sachs reckons that the combined impact of Venezuelan and Iraqi disruption has the potential to be the biggest shock in oil-market history, even after allowing for some offsetting increases in supply from other producers.
Another reason why oil prices may not fall as sharply as in 1991 is that the oil market is much tighter. An exceptionally cold winter right across the northern hemisphere has boosted demand at a time when American oil stocks are at their lowest level since 1975. In 1991, oil stocks were well above normal.
OPEC also has less spare oil-production capacity this time to fill the gap. The cartel had spare capacity of 6m barrels a day when Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990, compared with only 2m today. The continuing shortfall in Venezuela, plus even a small loss of output from Iraq, could rapidly exhaust that. In any case, Iraq will not be able to turn its oil taps on fully the moment that war ends. Goldman Sachs estimates, therefore, that oil prices may average no lower than $27 over the next 12 months.
Although the rich world uses half as much oil per dollar of GDP as it did in the 1970s, higher oil prices still have the power to hurt its economy. According to the IMF's ready reckoner,a $10 increase in oil prices, if sustained for a year, reduces global GDP by 0.6% after one year. That impact sounds fairly modest, but the snag with all such calculations is that they consider only first-round effects. They ignore the potentially much bigger impact on confidence and stockmarkets, and they ignore the effects that follow from changes in monetary and fiscal policy.
Consistent underestimation
Even taking account of such factors, however, most forecasters still reckon that the American economy will slip into a new recession only if there is a more prolonged war, a much sharper rise in oil prices than now expected, and a stockmarket slump of at least 20%. Yet in the past, economists have consistently underestimated the economic impact of oil shocks.
Over the past three decades, oil prices have jumped sharply on four occasions: in 1973, after the first OPEC embargo; in 1979, after the Iranian revolution; in 1990, after Iraq's invasion of Kuwait; and in 1999-2000 as the world economy boomed and OPEC cut its production. Each time the price more than tripled, contributing to a global recession.
Higher oil prices hurt the economy in two ways. In the first place, the increase acts like a tax, raising firms' costs for any given output price. So if demand is unchanged, prices rise and firms produce less. Secondly, higher oil prices transfer income from oil-importing countries to oil producers, squeezing spending in the oil importers. In the economic jargon, both the aggregate demand and aggregate supply curves shift backwards. Output falls, but the impact on underlying inflation, and hence the appropriate policy response from central banks, is uncertain.
Whether central banks should raise interest rates to curb inflation, or cut rates to cushion output, depends on the cyclical position of the economy. The four previous oil shocks all took place during booms, when economies were already overheating and inflation was rising. This forced central banks to raise interest rates.
Today, the rise in oil prices is occurring in an environment of excess capacity and falling inflation. Firms have little pricing power, so it is harder for them to pass on higher costs. Rising oil prices are therefore more likely to erode profits than to push up inflation. That, in turn, would further delay a recovery in corporate investment and hiring. The correct response at such a time is to reduce interest rates, not raise them.
The Fed seems to understand this better than the European Central Bank, which frets more about its inflation target. But with interest rates at 1.25%, the Fed has little room to cut further. Euro-area rates (at 2.75%) leave more room to cut, but the ECB is likely to be slow to act. At its most recent press conference (earlier this month) its president, Wim Duisenberg, declared that “a rate cut now would be a mere drop that would drown in the sea of uncertainties”, referring to oil prices and geopolitical risks. Yet Germany, the euro area's biggest economy, may be back in recession again. The Bundesbank confirmed this week that German GDP fell slightly in the fourth quarter of 2002. And many private-sector economists reckon that output will shrink again in the current quarter.
Bubble trouble
America has more room to ease fiscal policy. Indeed, a successful war will help George Bush to get congressional approval for his tax cuts. On the other hand, Japan (thanks to its already hefty public debts) and the euro area (thanks to its stability pact) have little room to ease policy, even in the event of a further downturn.
Underpinning the hope of a strong economic rebound after a war is the unstated assumption that America's economic fundamentals are sound. However, America has yet to complete its post-bubble adjustment. Record consumer debt leaves the economy vulnerable to shocks. American consumer confidence is at a nine-year low. Some blame this on the threat of war (in which case confidence could later rebound). But, in fact, more of it may be due to consumers' heavy debts, poor underlying job prospects, and falling stockmarkets.
Economists are using war fears as a convenient explanation for slower than expected growth—just as they (wrongly) blamed America's recession in 2001 on the September 11th attacks. Bill Dudley, an economist at Goldman Sachs, argues that war fears are not the biggest reason why the economy is soft. Instead, the problems lie deeper: in the excesses built up during the bubble years, such as huge private-sector debts, excess capacity, low saving, and a massive current-account deficit.
America's over-indebted households, Japan's deflation and its crippled banks, Europe's structural rigidities and its overly tight fiscal and monetary policies: all these mean that the world economy is horribly vulnerable to shocks of any kind. Moreover, after the Gulf war America's initial recovery was sluggish, due to the need for firms to reduce their debts from the excesses of the 1980s. Yet the excesses of the 1990s were much larger. America's fragile economy is, in a manner of speaking, being held together by duct tape. The 1.3% jump in retail sales (excluding cars and petrol) in January may partly reflect precautionary stockpiling of canned foods, bottled water and other goods.
Trading blows
Most stockmarkets have fallen in each of the past three years, and many investors are hoping that getting the war out of the way will stop the rot. Between the start and finish of the Korean war, American share prices rose by 28%. In 1991, the S&P 500 rose by more than 20% within four months of the start of the air attack.
But America's stockmarkets looked cheaper in 1991 than they do today. A market with a p/e ratio of 28 on historic profits, and an average forecast of double-digit profit growth despite slow nominal GDP growth, is not exactly discounting bad news. Another big difference from 1991 is that analysts have already assumed a quick and painless war. Before the Gulf war they were much less confident. So the downside risk today is much greater. A prolonged war could drive property and share prices sharply lower.
How might exchange rates react? The sharp fall in the dollar in recent months may in part be related to war worries. So a quick victory, it is argued, would help the dollar to rally. The dollar bounced by 10% in trade-weighted terms within two months of the end of the Gulf war.
However, there is a big difference this time. In 1990-91 the net cost of the war to America was reduced from $80 billion, at today's prices, to only $4 billion after contributions from friendly Arab countries and Japan. These transfer payments flattered America's current-account balance in 1991 and so helped to lift the dollar. This time, America will have to foot most of the bill itself. In 1991, it had a small current-account surplus. Today, with its deficit running at more than 5% of GDP, any dollar recovery is likely to be short-lived.
Beyond the macroeconomic fall-out from war, there is one other big concern: that diplomatic tensions between America and Europe over Iraq could spread beyond war to trade. The two sides already have a string of bilateral trade disputes: over America's steel tariffs and its tax breaks for foreign sales by big multinationals; and over the EU's ban on imports of hormone-treated beef and genetically-modified foods, for instance.
German firms are particularly worried about a loss of business in America. Last week, the American Chamber of Commerce in Germany celebrated its 100th anniversary. In between the champagne and canapés there was much talk that the political rift between the two countries could harm commercial links. A few American congressmen have already called for restrictions to be imposed on the import of European wine, cheese and military equipment.
There is also talk that American firms might shift their future investments from “old Europe”—France and Germany—into “new European” countries—such as Britain. More realistically, however, Germany and France are already seen as hostile business environments because of their high labour costs and taxes, and their rigid markets. To some extent, the political rift is just another excuse.
What is clear, however, is that the spat over Iraq will not help to speed up trade negotiations in the Doha round, which already seem to be heading for gridlock. Last weekend, trade ministers meeting in Tokyo made almost no progress towards liberalising farm trade. Yet agriculture is the central issue for the Doha round. Failure to liberalise farm trade would be a big blow to the poor world. Even worse would be an associated tit-for-tat trade battle between the rich.
- “The Economic Consequences of a War with Iraq”. American Academy of Arts and Sciences, December 2002. Available at www.amacad.org/publications /monographs/War_with_Iraq.pdf (see chapter three)