Future of Trade

What is the future of global trade, and what does it mean for Singapore?

Posts Tagged ‘new world order

Pulses: Singapore and the next ten/twenty years

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I put up Pulses article on the futuresgroup wordpress blog here. Some takeaways are …

Competition from other ports rising on intra-Asia trade – 8 of top 10 container ports inAsia. E.g Guangzhou and Shenzhen overtaking HK. Shift in trade patterns with sharp-rise in intra-Asian trade. This should benefit SGP due to strong feeder network, but due to low demand and oversupply of port facilities, this will lead to cost competition/price war which SGP would come out poorly.

New ports from new trade patterns – India and ME trade patterns rising, Sri Lanka’s Colombo port is a more natural transshipment hub than SGP. Increased China-US could see more mainline services going directly on transpacific trade, reducing transshipment through SGP.

Too much trade volume – Rising intra-Asia trade may be so high that container lines choose to serve ports with mainline services going directly from point to point in Asia, rather than through feeders as now. Long running hub-spoke vs distributed angst here. But add in China Shipping Lines hmmm…

Help regional neighbors to improve – this boosts volumes which in turn could feed into SGP. PSA has done this with terminals in Kolakata etc in India, Tianjin etc in China. But this is different from regional challengers BKK (air logistics), HK/Southern China (China hub). Recently Fedex has moved its hub from Subic in Philippines to Guangzhou, DHL is entrenched in HK. How do you balance the rise of challengers in giant markets China, Indochina with the stability/security etc SGP offers?

Written by chorpharn

July 9, 2009 at 5:08 pm

Does Economic Growth Have a Future?

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MILAN – What can we expect as the world’s economy emerges from its most serious downturn in almost a century? The short answer is a “new normal,” with slower growth, a de-risked and more stable core financial system, and a set of additional challenges (energy, climate, and demographic imbalances, to name a few) with varying time horizons that will test our collective capacity to improve management and oversight of the global economy.

Lower growth is the best guess for the medium term. It seems most likely, but no one really knows. The financial crisis, morphing quickly into a global economic downturn, resulted not just from a failure to react to growing instability, risk, and imbalance, but also from a widespread pre-crisis inability to ”see” the rising systemic risk.

These defining characteristics will condition the responses and the results in coming years. There are countervailing forces. The high-growth countries (China and India) are large and getting larger relative to the rest. That alone will tend to elevate global growth compared to the world where industrial countries, and the US in particular, were in the growth driving seat.

The current crisis has come to be called a “balance-sheet recession” of global scope and tremendous depth and destructive power because of its origins in the balance sheets of the financial and household sectors. Extreme balance-sheet destruction is what made it distinctive.  In the future, central banks and regulators will not be able to afford a narrow focus on (goods and services) inflation, growth, and employment (the real economy) while letting the balance-sheet side fend for itself. Somewhere in the system, accountability for stability and sustainability in terms of asset valuation, leverage, and balance sheets will need to be assigned and taken seriously.

Financial re-regulation should and will emphasize capital, reserve, and margin requirements; limiting systemic risk buildup by constraining leverage; eliminating fragmented and incomplete regulatory coverage and regulatory arbitrage (a huge challenge internationally); and a focus on transparency. Isolating and further constraining a portion of the banking system, so that the channels of credit intermediation are less prone to complete and simultaneous breakdown, also seems likely.

Relative to the recent past, the cost of capital will increase, debt will be more expensive and less ubiquitous, and risk spreads will not return to pre-crisis compressed levels. Assets bubbles will not disappear, but they will be less likely to be turbocharged by leverage.

American consumers will save more and spend less, abandoning the pattern of the last few years. The large hole (on the order of $700 billion or more) in global aggregate demand will have to be filled over time by a compensating increase in consumption in surplus economies, such as China and Japan. The longer this takes, the greater the incentives at the national level to capture a share of global demand via protectionist measures.

The recent increase in protectionist measures is an understandable political price for a range of stimulus packages in advanced and developing countries. But such measures may increase – and will be harder to phase out over time – in the context of a shortfall in aggregate demand.

This is the forward-looking version of the global imbalance issue. Its resolution via coordinated policy action (or a failure to resolve it through such action) will have a huge impact (for good or ill) on the multinational incentive structure surrounding the global economy – and hence on its likely growth.

Responsibility for overseeing the global economy is passing rapidly from the G-7/8 to the G-20, as it should. The latter accounts for 90% of global GDP and two-thirds of the world’s population, so this shift is highly desirable – indeed, essential.

But there is a risk that the interests of the remaining one-third of the world’s people (and the majority of the small countries) will not be adequately represented as the international architecture for managing the global economy evolves.

In the current crisis, a substantial fraction of countries outside the G-20 are essentially defenseless: small relatively poor economies, no fiscal capacity for stimulus, and inadequate reserves to offset the capital outflows that occurred to shore up damaged balance sheets in advanced markets. Within the G-20 countries, there are mechanisms that attend to the interests of the most vulnerable citizens. In the global economy, the most vulnerable are whole countries. Inattention to their interests is not just a moral issue, but a potentially explosive social and economic one.

As a result, the world’s international economic institutions will need to be strengthened in terms of governance and resources so that they can act as circuit-breakers in the event of future financial and economic turbulence. Entering the crisis, the International Monetary Fund was underfunded, and it continues to lack credibility and trust in certain systemically important parts of the world. It is now in the process of being better funded, but we are eight months into a crisis in which international capital flows became volatile and were driven largely by emergency responses rather than underlying economic fundamentals.

Thus, there remains the central question of trust and confidence in the system, which have been badly damaged and will take time to rebuild. At the moment, the majority view in most countries is that the financial system failed badly, but that the incentives and dynamics of the broader market-based system in a relatively open global architecture remain the best avenues for wealth creation, poverty reduction, and the expansion of opportunity. There are, of course, dissidents, and the balance could shift quickly. It is not inconceivable that the baby will be thrown out with the bath water.

There is no magic bullet for today’s crisis. Pragmatic, steady progress at the national and international levels in improving the regulatory architecture and increasing our collective ability to avoid non-cooperative behavior and suboptimal equilibria, is the best course to follow. It is the course we are on. But for now, it is a journey without a clearly defined, widely accepted endpoint.

URL Source: http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/mspence2

Written by barngan

July 7, 2009 at 12:29 pm

SPO’s Ethos Perspectives Article on Possible Discontinuities in the Post-Crisis World

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Hi all,

SPO just published an article (see link below) about possible discontinuities (and implications for Singapore) under the auspices of Ethos Perspectives. 

There’s stuff ranging from a shift away from US-China driven growth, a new international financial architecture, the rise of state capitalism as the new dominant economic paradigm and the move from US unilateralism to global multilateralism. 

Comments, however brutal, so long as they are honest, are most welcomed.

EP Article_Final_v2

Written by godwintang

July 1, 2009 at 7:27 pm

Another article: Future of Global Trade to 2030 by Outsights

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The global economy is at a juncture of great uncertainty and change. To explore a broader understanding of what the future of the global economy may hold, Outsights gathered experts from different disciplines – Government, the City, Business and NGOs – to consider what is shaping the future to 2030. This report builds on the output of the workshop with further research and scenario development by Outsights.

The aim was to build scenarios – alternative and plausible stories of how the future might unfold – for the global economy to 2030. Rather than creating a conventional economic forecast – the inherent weaknesses of which are the unforeseen disruptions in the model – the group focused on the major uncertainties of today’s world, especially the non-economic issues, to challenge current assumptions.

URL Source: http://www.outsights.co.uk/library/3/TheFutureoftheGlobalEconomyto2030

Written by barngan

July 1, 2009 at 10:43 am

Let’s start posting and sharing

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Hi everyone, it was nice meeting up today and let’s just kickstart it with posting and sharing articles, videos etc related to future of trade. I love Zhi Jia saying “It must make us uncomfortable!” and that’s the spirit of enquiry that’s very beneficial in pushing the boundaries beyond the known unknowns to the unknown unknowns for this topic. Gambatte! :)

There is a tag cloud that appears on the right. I’m tentatively just adding some starting tags, you can choose to use them to tag your post or just add your own if you find tags that are missing, or better. You can add as many tags for each post as you like.

When you are posting and you want to add a link to another article, just highlight and click on the ‘link’ icon. If you like to upload pictures/videos etc, just click on the icons next to the upload/insert above the ruler. These last two will make more sense when you start posting.

Happy posting!

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