Coming financial crisis:
A harbinger of world renewal?
As the prospect
of global financial crisis beckons once again, will our elected leaders
finally accept the need for an entirely new economic approach that
breaks away from the primacy of growth and profit - or will their hand
be forced by a resurgence of mass public protest?
By Rajesh Makwana

Economic concerns must take into account the financial impact of
the cost of climate change
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A full six years after the global financial crisis, not only have
governments failed to rethink the way we organise our economic systems,
but politicians across the world have pressed forward with an obsolete
political agenda that has paved the way for yet more financial chaos.
The failure of our elected representatives to adopt a just and
sustainable alternative to neoliberal capitalism has also set the scene
for years of increased hardship and popular unrest that will inevitably
follow any future economic crash.
The very real prospect of a repeat of the 2008 meltdown is now widely
accepted in the mainstream media, and the many possible factors that
could trigger it are readily discussed in policy circles. As the
International Monetary Fund makes plain in its latest World Economic
Outlook report, for example, the risk of a worldwide recession is of
particular concern - especially as the Holy Grail of achieving
respectable levels of economic growth is becoming ever more elusive.
Of particular concern is the Eurozone where five countries, including
Spain and Italy, are already experiencing economic deflation. All eyes
are currently on Germany, which is teetering on the brink of recession
as its economic activity continues to contract over consecutive months.
The implications for the Eurozone as a whole if Germany enters a
contractionary cycle will be far-reaching, since Germany is widely
regarded as the main engine for growth in Europe and often props-up
neighbouring states when they experience financial hardship. The
overarching concern is that this entire currency block could soon
succumb to a deflationary spiral, which would plunge it back into a full
blown Euro crisis.
The expansion of the shadow banking industry, especially in Europe,
has also been flagged by senior officials within the banking industry
and the IMF as a threat to global financial stability. This shrouded
sector of finance is far less regulated than mainstream banking, partly
because they make use of tax havens and complex speculative instruments.
Assets managed by investment funds operating within this sector, which
include hedge funds, have risen by 30% in the past two years alone.
Mounting levels of debt, largely fuelled by historically low interest
rates that encourage excessive borrowing, are another potential cause of
future crisis. According to the latest Geneva Report, global debt has
reached a staggering $158.8 trillion, which sets a new debt-to-GDP
record. China has been the real engine driving this indebtedness - their
external debt has risen by 50% in the last year alone, making them
particularly vulnerable to financial crisis at a time when their
economic growth rate is also stagnating.
The impact of debt will, of course, be most keenly felt in developing
countries. According to the Jubilee Debt Campaign, reckless lending to a
set of 43 developing countries has surged by 60% since 2009 - raising
the prospect of a new debt crisis in the developing world. Undoubtedly,
this will leave many governments with crippling debt repayments over the
next decade, which will further thwart government efforts to reduce
poverty and provide essential public services.
As James Medway of the New Economic Foundation explains, the real
problem arises when high levels of debt (as are currently evident across
the globe) combine with low rates of growth, which will almost certainly
decline further in the period ahead. If there is not enough economic
growth to repay these debts with interest, then the entire system will
inevitably come to a grinding halt.
On top of this already lethal cocktail of stagnant growth, excessive
debt and burgeoning speculative activity, we can also add the recent
drop in oil prices, which will have dramatic implications for oil
exporting countries. Venezuela, Iran and Russia, for example, are all
heavily dependent on their income from this commodity to finance
government spending or maintain the strength of their currency. And
these economic concerns do not even take into account the financial
impact of Ebola, the economic consequences of ISIS in Iraq and Syria, or
the cost of climate change if we fail to reverse our current trajectory
of inaction.
From any angle, the world financial outlook can only be regarded as
rapidly deteriorating, and this starkly reflects how little policymakers
have done to address the root causes of the 2008 crisis. Instead of
dramatically overhauling the global economy and safeguarding the needs
of the majority, governments have chosen to resuscitate a discredited
economic ideology that preaches more of the same deregulatory,
consumption-driven, austerity-backed neoliberalism. As the social and
environmental impacts of the ongoing economic crisis become ever more
apparent, how long will concerned citizens be willing to tolerate a
political elite that is largely self-serving and neglects the needs of
ordinary people?
Despite the palpable frustration being expressed everywhere since the
current cycle of public protest began, our leaders have failed to listen
to the voice of the people, preferring instead to continue pandering to
the same corporate interests they are so closely allied with.
Consequently, the top 1% of the world's population are richer now than
they were before the financial crisis and this tiny minority own almost
half of all available wealth. Meanwhile, half the world's population now
share a mere 1% of the world's combined wealth, a staggering 2 billion
people remain undernourished, and global income inequality has returned
to 1820 levels.
There can be little doubt that we are entering a prolonged period of
economic hardship, which will be accompanied by a steady escalation in
public protest as large swathes of ordinary people join activists and
civil society organisations in calling for social justice, environmental
stewardship and true democracy. As is happening right now in Hong Kong
and London's Parliament Square, it will be in iconic public spaces that
these citizens will make their demands and thereby gain mainstream media
attention and support from within the wider populace.
If governments across the world intend to avoid the inevitability of
economic upheaval, social unrest and public protest, they need to
finally accept that the existing economic model is wholly responsible
for the current crisis. At the very least, any solution will require a
decisive break away from the myopic pursuit of economic growth, the
maximisation of corporate profit, and the relentless promotion of
consumerist values. As campaigners have long been demanding in response
to the convergence of crises we face, we urgently need a new economic
paradigm - one in which wealth, power and resources are shared more
equitably and sustainably within nations and internationally.
Will politicians make these changes willingly and in accordance with
the many sane alternatives that are widely discussed among progressives?
A transformative shift in public policy is certainly not on the cards
any time soon. But with prolonged financial crises on the horizon and
public protest intensifying across the globe, it will remain impossible
for governments to ignore the voice of the people indefinitely.
- Third World Network Features. |