‘Dr. Doom’ Warns Of The Gathering Global Stagflationary Storm

Authored by Nouriel Roubini via Project Syndicate,

While recent shocks have made the current inflationary surge and growth slowdown more acute, they are hardly the global economy’s only problems. Even without them, the medium-term outlook would be darkening, owing to a broad range of economic, political, environmental, and demographic trends.

The new reality with which many advanced economies and emerging markets must reckon is higher inflation and slowing economic growth. And a big reason for the current bout of stagflation is a series of negative aggregate supply shocks that have curtailed production and increased costs.

This should come as no surprise. The COVID-19 pandemic forced many sectors to lock down, disrupted global supply chains, and produced an apparently persistent reduction in labor supply, especially in the United States. Then came Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which has driven up the price of energy, industrial metals, food, and fertilizers. And now, China has ordered draconian COVID-19 lockdowns in major economic hubs such as Shanghai, causing additional supply-chain disruptions and transport bottlenecks.

But even without these important short-term factors, the medium-term outlook would be darkening.

There are many reasons to worry that today’s stagflationary conditions will continue to characterize the global economy, producing higher inflation, lower growth, and possibly recessions in many economies.

For starters, since the global financial crisis, there has been a retreat from globalization and a return to various forms of protectionism. This reflects geopolitical factors and domestic political motivations in countries where large cohorts of the population feel “left behind.” Rising geopolitical tensions and the supply-chain trauma left by the pandemic are likely to lead to more reshoring of manufacturing from China and emerging markets to advanced economies – or at least near-shoring (or “friend-shoring”) to clusters of politically allied countries. Either way, production will be misallocated to higher-cost regions and countries.

Moreover, demographic aging in advanced economies and some key emerging markets (such as China, Russia, and South Korea) will continue to reduce the supply of labor, causing wage inflation. And because the elderly tend to spend savings without working, the growth of this cohort will add to inflationary pressures while reducing the economy’s growth potential.

The sustained political and economic backlash against immigration in advanced economies will likewise reduce labor supply and apply upward pressure on wages. For decades, large-scale immigration kept a lid on wage growth in advanced economies. But those days appear to be over.

Similarly, the new cold war between the US and China will produce wide-ranging stagflationary effects. Sino-American decoupling implies fragmentation of the global economy, balkanization of supply chains, and tighter restrictions on trade in technology, data, and information – key elements of future trade patterns.

Climate change, too, will be stagflationary. After all, droughts damage crops, ruin harvests, and drive up food prices, just as hurricanes, floods, and rising sea levels destroy capital stocks and disrupt economic activity. Making matters worse, the politics of bashing fossil fuels and demanding aggressive decarbonization has led to underinvestment in carbon-based capacity before renewable energy sources have reached a scale sufficient to compensate for a reduced supply of hydrocarbons. Under these conditions, sharp energy-price spikes are inevitable. And as the price of energy rises, “greenflation” will hit prices for the raw materials used in solar panels, batteries, electric vehicles, and other clean technologies.

Public health is likely to be another factor. Little has been done to avert the next contagious-disease outbreak, and we already know that pandemics disrupt global supply chains and incite protectionist policies as countries rush to hoard critical supplies such as food, pharmaceutical products, and personal protective equipment.

We must also worry about cyberwarfare, which can cause severe disruptions in production, as recent attacks on pipelines and meat processors have shown. Such incidents are expected to become more frequent and severe over time. If firms and governments want to protect themselves, they will need to spend hundreds of billions of dollars on cybersecurity, adding to the costs that will be passed on to consumers.

These factors will add fuel to the political backlash against stark income and wealth inequalities, leading to more fiscal spending to support workers, the unemployed, vulnerable minorities, and the “left behind.” Efforts to boost labor’s income share relative to capital, however well-intentioned, imply more labor strife and a spiral of wage-price inflation.

Then there is Russia’s war on Ukraine, which signals the return of zero-sum great-power politics. For the first time in many decades, we must account for the risk of large-scale military conflicts disrupting global trade and production. Moreover, the sanctions used to deter and punish state aggression are themselves stagflationary. Today, it is Russia against Ukraine and the West. Tomorrow, it could be Iran going nuclear, North Korea engaging in more nuclear brinkmanship, or China attempting to seize Taiwan. Any one of these scenarios could lead to a hot war with the US.

Finally, the weaponization of the US dollar – a central instrument in the enforcement of sanctions – is also stagflationary. Not only does it create severe friction in international trade in goods, services, commodities, and capital; it encourages US rivals to diversify their foreign-exchange reserves away from dollar-denominated assets. Over time, that process could sharply weaken the dollar (thus making US imports more costly and feeding inflation) and lead to the creation of regional monetary systems, further balkanizing global trade and finance.

Optimists may argue that we can still rely on technological innovation to exert disinflationary pressures over time. That may be true, but the technology factor is far outnumbered by the 11 stagflationary factors listed above. Moreover, the impact of technological change on aggregate productivity growth remains unclear in the data, and the Sino-Western decoupling will restrict the adoption of better or cheaper technologies globally, thereby increasing costs. (For example, a Western 5G system is currently much more expensive than one from Huawei.)

In any case, artificial intelligence, automation, and robotics are not an unalloyed good. If they improve to the point where they can create meaningful disinflation, they also would probably disrupt entire occupations and industries, widening already large wealth and income disparities. That would invite an even more powerful political backlash than the one we have already seen – with all the stagflationary policy consequences that are likely to result.

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16 Comments
Anonymous
Anonymous
April 26, 2022 8:27 am

We are fucked.

WillyB
WillyB
  Anonymous
April 26, 2022 11:02 am

Maybe WW3 is the only possible future? The U.S. being overrun with low education unskilled illegal immigrants whose only functions can be manual labor, crime, or as Chinese style attacking hordes in war. Could Biden be a genius allowing our new expendable army to come in now, only to be sacrificed in the upcoming war? Biden and genius in the same sentence? Nah, unless you’re talking about the Biden organized crime family.

ran t 7
ran t 7
  WillyB
April 26, 2022 12:24 pm

“Could Biden be a genius allowing our new expendable army to come in now, only to be sacrificed in the upcoming war?”

on 06dec1941 california had a huge illegal alien problem. on 07dec1941 the japanese attacked. on 08dec1941 the mexicans in california all ran for the border, then turned around and proclaimed that there were not citizens of the united states and demanded a guest worker program. they did this in order to avoid any draft.

mexicans call themselves “la raza” for a reason. they are not americans and are not interested in making any contribution to this nation, rather they seek to take whatever they can for their own.

messianicdruid
messianicdruid
  Anonymous
April 26, 2022 9:23 pm

I was hopin some bodi’ed simplify it down fer us.

VOWG
VOWG
April 26, 2022 8:50 am

Nothing had to be done about “covid”, nothing has to be done about the climate. Government spending and the digital creation of money and unpayable debt has to stopped before they really finish us off.

Capn Mike
Capn Mike
  VOWG
April 26, 2022 10:38 am

Right You Are!

Anonymous
Anonymous
  VOWG
April 26, 2022 11:00 am

Too late……

WillyB
WillyB
  VOWG
April 26, 2022 11:07 am

The more frugal of us among the Boomer generation were supposed to be a solution later when retired: not competing for jobs, but we’d have our savings to live off of. Now you say us spending money is part of the problem. OK. I won’t buy another car, major appliance, or furniture. Just save our money and help stop inflation. Still buying ammo, though, as a hedge against inflation and crime.

TPW
TPW
  Administrator
April 26, 2022 3:56 pm

Once again it’s all our fault. Accepting that RONA money because they stopped our income caused the problem. BS ….BS…..never mind the big bailout of the banks 2008 with the reoccurring 800 billion every year after that. Never mind the billions given to Stock market every month to prop it up. Never mind the billions given in aid to other countries. Nor billions given to the healthcare Obamacare insurance rip offs every month. They keep stealing and stealing our tax money and telling us it’s our fault.

ran t 7
ran t 7
  TPW
April 26, 2022 5:43 pm

“Accepting that RONA money because they stopped our income caused the problem.”

more accurately, accepting the fiat debt “federal” “reserve” dollar caused the problem. no matter what we do – work, accept free money, whatever – they get first cut of it all.

TPW
TPW
April 26, 2022 3:47 pm

Can anyone explain the overall benefit to humanity that AI and Robotics will bring? Who will benefit if the vast majority losses their job, their self worth? What is the trade off? Cheaper, faster production? Who will purchase their cheaper more advanced products? Sell me on why we must accept AI and Robotics as inevitable. Just like they told us we had to accept globalization they again are selling a load of crap.

ran t 7
ran t 7
  TPW
April 26, 2022 3:55 pm

the ones who own and control the ai/robotics/algorithms will be able to enjoy the world’s wealth without having to rely on the non-human cattle to bring it to them. that’s how.

ran t 7
ran t 7
April 26, 2022 3:56 pm

i predict deflation. the dollar is a pyramid scheme – raising interest rates and reducing printing will cause dollar volume to decrease.

Ken31
Ken31
  ran t 7
April 26, 2022 6:12 pm

It has nothing to do with the dollar and everything to do with digital credit denominated in dollars, that make deflation unavoidable at some point.