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With
figures from the Economist we can quantify just how they will feed global uncertainty
and spur the bull market in gold.
The
importance of these shifts cannot be over-emphasized, because they are
changing the ‘Balance of Power’ in the world significantly and
shaping the global economy and will deeply affect the state of the
global monetary system. So far the $ has managed to hold onto the reins
of power in the world monetary system, despite the catastrophic,
persistent and unhealthy, Trade deficit of the United States, about
which the States is doing absolutely nothing, which has and will be good
for gold, but not for the U.S. Should this state of affairs persist
continuously, there is no doubt that the $ will face an enormous crisis
and in turn create one for the global monetary system.
Last
year the combined output of all emerging economies achieved more than
half of total world G.D.P. (measured at
purchasing-power parity). This means that the rich countries no longer dominate the global economy.
The developing countries also have a far greater influence on the
performance of the rich economies than is generally realized. Emerging
economies are driving global growth and having a big impact on developed
countries' inflation, interest rates, wages and profits. As these
newcomers become more integrated into the global economy this osmotic
influence will change the face of the world economy forever. On the
surface it would seem reasonable to believe their wealth and individual
incomes would catch up with the rest of the world and we all enjoy the
biggest boost to the world economy ever, far outperforming the
industrial revolution. But we feel this is wishful thinking. To date the
effect has been that the developing nations have drawn off wealth from
the developed nations to themselves. It seems likely that as has been
the case with Japan and its development, their products will dominate
the global economy and with the bulk of the world’s population in
these developing countries global wealth and power will shift away from
the developed nations before the global economy leaps in size.
It
is already clear from the state of the U.S. Balance of Payments that the
drain on the U.S. trading power is well along. The poor prospects for
the $ are clear to most observers so there is little reason to believe
that the US and other developed nations will enjoy continued wealth
alongside these nations, except for that they enjoy within their own
close sphere of influence, which is shrinking already.
The
emerging countries we are talking about are not solely China and India,
as is the present impression in many quarters, but nations from all
corners of the earth that can provide products of the same quality at
lower prices. Consequently, due to this all-pervasive process, the
‘ripples’ flowing from this evolution will breed structural monetary
breakdowns because of the capital flows and exchange rate pressures that
are far greater than ever before!
So
many developing countries together with former Soviet block nations have
embraced market-friendly economic reforms, opened their borders to trade
and investment, industrialized and are now a present part of the global
economy, alongside China and India.
Because
of the synthesizing of these nations into developed nation’s economies
within the global economy, their influence changes national developed
economies dramatically. The prime example of this is being seen in the
United States where the record share of profits in national income
[production by U.S. companies of goods in these emerging economies at
prices far lower than they cold previously produce in the States],
sluggish growth in real wages [because U.S. workers are in effect
competing with emerging nations wage levels], high oil prices [as global
demand rises] alongside low inflation [the goods produced in emerging
economies are a fraction of the cost of U.S. and other developed nations
goods], low global interest rates [because developed world economies are
now fragile and cannot withstand much higher interest rates] and from
where the U.S. Trade deficit and other developed nations deficits,
emanate.
Emerging
countries share of world exports has jumped to 43%,
from 20% in 1970. They consume
over half of the world's energy and have accounted for four-fifths of
the growth in oil demand in the past five years. They also hold
70% of the world's foreign-exchange reserves.
So
although measured at purchasing-power parity (which takes account of
lower prices in poorer countries) the
emerging economies now make up over half of world G.D.P.,
at market exchange rates their share is still less than 30%. But even at
market exchange rates, they accounted for well over half of the increase in global output last
year. [China and India
together made up less than 1/4 of the total increase in emerging
economies' G.D.P. last year.]
In
the past five years, their annual growth has averaged almost
7%, its fastest pace in recorded history and well above the 2.3% growth
in rich economies. The
International Monetary Fund forecasts that in the next five years
emerging economies will grow at an average of 6.8% a year,
whereas the developed economies will notch up only 2.7%.
If both groups continued in this way, in 20 years' time
emerging economies would account for two-thirds of global output (at
purchasing-power parity).
Since
2000, world G.D.P. per head has grown by an
average of 3.2% a year, thanks to the acceleration in emerging
economies. That would beat the 2.9% annual growth during the golden age
of 1950-73, when Europe and Japan were rebuilding their economies after
the war.
Because
of lower wages, many developed countries have moved their production
into new factories, trained local workers and boosted productivity in
China. The products had established markets, so to be able to supply
these markets at far lower costs and from high productivity factories
and workers. When America and Britain were industrializing in the 19th
century, they took 50 years to double their real incomes per head; today
China is now doubling its real income per head within nine years!
The
sum of China's total exports and imports amounts to around 70% of its G.D.P.,
against only 25-30% in India or America. In 2007, China is likely to
account for 10% of world trade, up from 4% in 2000. These exports go to
virtually every nation on earth, not just the developed world. The speed
of these developments has been accelerated tremendously through the
Internet, which virtually destroys geography, taking the search for new
products or [the other way] new markets across the globe, to a quick and
personal level, in a moment, a far cry from the painstaking searches of
the past.
As
the incomes of these emerging countries grow, so their demand for wants
as opposed to needs will grow, creating a huge demand for non-essential
items, but once they have learned how to produce them, they will produce
them and export them to the developed world as well. With Japanese cars
taking the first place in automobile popularity in the States, the trail
don this road has been blazed.
Right
now the demand from the developing world for infrastructure goods is
being felt in the developed world as over half of the combined exports
of America, the € area and Japan go to these poorer economies. The
rich economies' trade with developing countries is growing twice as fast
as their trade with one another, but will this continue as these
emerging economies gain the expertise to even outperform the developed
world in items currently only being manufactured in the developed world.
As China, India and the former Soviet Union has embraced market
capitalism, the global labor force has, in effect, doubled, but sad to
say the new labor force can do the same work, with the same quality for
a small part of the price.
Next
part – Denial ahead of crisis impact, with gold soaring!

© 2006 Julian D. W.
Phillips
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