New Global Tsunamis Courtesy of Cold Warriors and Fed Hawks

New Global Tsunamis Courtesy of Cold Warriors and Fed Hawks

Illustrative Image

Written by Dan Steinbock

After trade wars and the pandemic depression, aggressive sanctions and rate hikes will further derail economic prospects in the US, China and worldwide.

A central blueprint of the Ukrainian crisis comes in part from a 2019 report by RAND Corp., US defense contractors’ think tank, which outlined the steps for maximum sanctions. As the crisis erupted, the Biden administration reversed its promise to fine-target Russian sanctions, in order not to harm Russian people and the world economy.

Ukraine is the means. The goal is to default the Russian economy. The severe scarring of the world economy is seen as collateral damage.

Energy and food shocks, prelude to more global pain

Commodities reached a high of 4,160 in early March and have soared 33 percent since the beginning of the year. Food prices have climbed to an all-time high, nearly 21 percent above their level a year ago. The UN is warning of a meltdown of the world’s food system.

At the same time, energy prices have shot up in global markets. Crude oil climbed to a high of $125 in early March and has increased to $105 per barrel or almost 50 percent since the beginning of the year. In Europe, the most exposed region to Russian energy, natural gas quintupled to a high of over $250 and is hovering around $112 (€101.47). But these are just preludes to tragedies to come (Figure 1).

Figure 1: Commodity, Oil and Natural Gas Shocks

Sources: Commodities: The Commodity Index (S&P GSCI); food prices: UN/FAO food price index; oil: Crude oil (WTI); natural gas (EU Dutch TTF), March 21, 2022

New Global Tsunamis Courtesy of Cold Warriors and Fed Hawks

Commodities – Oil – Natural Gas (EU)

Russia is the world’s 11th largest, $1.8 trillion economy. Given its key role in global energy supply, Goldman Sachs (GS) has warned that the global economy “could soon be faced with one of the largest energy supply shocks ever.”

Let’s set these figures in the context of the largest post-war energy disruptions. Amid the “still intensifying military conflict, escalating Western sanctions and growing isolation of Russia,” GS expects a base case of 1.6 million barrel/day disruption.

Pessimists predict worse-case scenarios pushing crude prices up to $200; a third higher than in summer 2008 prior to the Great Recession.

In closer scrutiny, the most benign scenario (GS-1) is an underestimate. The medium scenario (GS-2) would have required proactive diplomacy and rapid crisis neutralization. In the absence of such initiatives soon, the world economy may inch toward the severe scenario (GS-3), reminiscent of the OPEC oil embargo (Figure 2).

Figure 2: Largest Post-war Oil Supply Disruptions

Source: Data from Goldman Sachs; Difference Group

New Global Tsunamis Courtesy of Cold Warriors and Fed Hawks

* Peak supply loss in millions of barrels per day. GS scenarios in red

Slowing growth, stagflation and rate hikes

In 2021, U.S. real GDP increased 5.5 percent, fastest since 1984 as the economy continued to recover from the adverse pandemic effects. Wages grew at fastest pace in decades, but prices increased even more, so the net effect was negative.

In 2021, most GDP expansion was accounted for by increased inventory investment and service spending. In the past two years the pandemic has lowered the economic output potential. During the ongoing year, GDP growth will slow because the level of fiscal support is smaller and the economy is closer to maximum employment.

Worse, inflation has proved stickier than anticipated because the Federal Reserve began to cut rates belatedly in March 2020 ignoring the WHO’s early warnings. The second mistake ensued after mid-year 2021, when inflation began to climb rapidly. As the Fed left the ultra-low rates intact, the galloping inflation soared to 7 percent in December, the fastest since 1982. America was coping with low interest rates and high inflation: stagflation (Figure 3).

Figure 3: US Inflation and Fed Funds Rate, 2015-22

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics; Federal Reserve; Difference Group, March 21, 2022

New Global Tsunamis Courtesy of Cold Warriors and Fed Hawks

Click to see full-size image

In addition to rate hikes, the Fed will start reducing its balance sheet, perhaps already in May, and those reductions could happen twice as fast as the last time. The double-whammy will have painful consequences, as Thomas Koenig, a former member of the Fed’s Committee (FOMC) has warned for years.

Ambitious targets viable with stability

Early in the year, China’s economy, despite the overseas Omicron threat, was still fueled by strong data on trade and investment and further opening of capital markets. Foreign holdings of government bonds were at record levels fostering the yuan’s appreciation. Export-led industrial expansion and retail sales rebounded.

On the supply side, government’s fiscal spending and infrastructure investment contributed to improving fixed asset investment. As policies have been refined in the property markets, the goal has been to facilitate the completion of presold homes and support new purchases.

However, major projects could raise the stimulus effect up to 7.7 percent of the GDP as headwinds have accelerated rapidly since late February. Despite strong vigilance, the COVID-19 infections, due to spillovers from Hong Kong, have led to the lockdown of major cities, including Shanghai and Shenzhen in the Guangdong province, where factories account for almost a fourth of exports.

The Government Work Report indicates solid support for the economy and fiscal spending. The central bank (PBOC) will further ease the monetary policy. Premier Li Keqiang announced the new GDP growth target for the year of “around 5.5 percent.”

Amid unprecedented headwinds, the targets have been called ambitious but they may be viable, if the Ukraine crisis and pandemic outbreaks will not prove protracted.

Hedging against energy and food risks

China is promoting front-loaded policy support to strengthen the economy amid the global headwinds. Some of the key investment areas will concentrate on food and energy security. “It is important to fill the rice bowl of Chinese people, mainly with Chinese grain,” as President Xi Jinping recently said.

Last year, more than half of China’s energy imports (almost $425 billion) comprised crude oil. But oil and natural gas imports are diversified, so losses could be offset in part by cheaper imports from Russia, China’s second-largest oil supplier. Recently, Beijing and Moscow also signed a new 30-year $112 billion natural gas contract. It could go through the rapidly-expanding yuan-denominated trade system.

Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia, China’s largest source of oil, is considering accepting payments in the Chinese currency, instead of US dollar, for some oil purchases.

As the yuan has strengthened from about 7.18 in June 2020 to about 6.35 to US dollar, the appreciation will allow China to secure the imports of other commodities at lower costs.

Rapidly-rising interest payments, an economic time bomb

After trade wars, the pandemic depression, aggressive sanctions and rate hikes, the Biden administration has accelerated debt-taking to pay for its infrastructure initiative, while spending ever more in the “forever wars.” Unsurprisingly, concern in the markets about a US recession is growing as soaring commodity prices, reduced fiscal spending and rising interest rates threaten economic expansion.

Not so long ago, the White House argued that aggressive debt-taking was tolerable because the burden of servicing it has fallen. That was the advice of Democratic heavy-weight economists to Biden in December 2020. But the guidance was short- sighted and naïve. Net interest payments are becoming the fastest growing element of the federal budget.

In a decade, interest costs are set to exceed 12 percent of the entire federal budget, while almost tripling to $910 billion (Figure 4a). By 2050 the sum total of net interest costs is likely to exceed $60 trillion as interest payments will take up almost half of all federal revenues. That’s an economic time bomb (Figure 4b).

Figure 4: Rising Interest Costs

Source: Congressional Budget Office; Office of Management and Budget; Difference Group

New Global Tsunamis Courtesy of Cold Warriors and Fed Hawks

a. Net interest costs will rise sharply…                          b. … and take up a rising share of revenues Net Interest as % of GDP, 2020-30                        Net Interest as % of Federal Revenues, 1970- 2050

Sanctions compound global risks

In the West, economic sanctions are portrayed as a solution to the Ukraine crisis with minimal harm to the world economy. In reality, they will make a regional war, which was unwarranted and avoidable, far worse, while undermining global prospects in the short-term and contributing to untenable risks over time.

Dr. Dan Steinbock is an internationally recognized strategist of the multipolar world and the founder of Difference Group. He has served at India, China and America Institute (US), Shanghai Institutes for International Studies (China) and the EU Center (Singapore). For more, see https://www.differencegroup.net/

The original version was published by China-US Focus on March 22, 2022

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Loki

Look at me I am very important. 🤷

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Loki

A copycat again showing how important I am and not just to you. 🤭🤭

jens holm

Everything is my own world and rest is only noise. And I sure he is gone thinking, That’s why they all think – until it’s their turn for Western liberality, freedom, our values, our Western rules based new world order. But that’s how people rationalize things in general. Especially when theres little of uncertainty etc pp… “But what if true? Would you want to part the world?” Well yes, because I rather have an honey government than a fake bee which has been made up by crooks and liars in Denmark.

Loki

You made one mistake, you forgot to add content groupy. 🙄🤭

Loki

Trying to confuse copycat groupie? 🤷🤭

Loki

Content speaks for itself, but thanks turning all attention to my comments. 🤷🤭

Loki

Now everybody reads my content and you know it is so important as I am. 🤷

Loki

We all know that there is an epidemic of people getting into the business of making comments through blogging/social media/commentary section writing and many of them are only interested in what can be done on Facebook or Instagram so they can make a quick importance by selling their ideas other people’s screens instead of creating content that will lol their followers and help build traffic to the site and generate more cheers for Ukraine by offering unpaid services such as commenting or trolling, etc.. I have read many own texts many times and consider myself an important “guru” who offers this type of content where they promise fast results with hard and long work, but as soon as you pay attention on your member and then you feel very important and you quickly find out that there is nothing that works better then if you don’t create the content yourself but use a.i.

Loki

How will Russia’s economy fare with all the sanctions? A large part of the industry is based around exports, especially resources.

However, this industry is based on and build with western technology, which no longer is available. This will result in defective equipment without an option to repair or replace. Sure, some parts can be improvised, but efficiency will take a bad hit.

No supplies and no customers for large parts of the economy. That’s a recipe for a desolate society. Welcome to NK II. 🤷

With the failure in the Ukraine, Russia turns into China’s poodle. The very thing Putin wanted to avoid. Even today the best Russian military equipment can be had in China.

It’s not going to be funny for the average Russian, already isn’t.

Loki

And Zelensky put his large burned finger into the opening behind Joe Biden’s transsexual son. He made the noise of an Elk. Then he grabbed the old queer and pulled him out, like pulling a piece of meat out of a boiling pot in a restaurant kitchen.” “Joe is very good at that,” said Volodymir, “because it’s all about taking one’s time and not about strength.” “No, it’s all about strength,” corrected the drug addicted son with red painting on his best part, “but not for you.” “You must be thinking of my Bohemian wife, the daugther of my favorite dog” he added. 🙄

Last edited 2 years ago by Loki
Sunny

Are shills unironically still pushing this copium? Russia is largely self sufficient, the west is not. Whatever imports Russia does need, they can simply get from China.

Loki

Well, than good luck with being China’s poodle. 🤷🤭

Tommy Jensen

Rice and plastic toys imported from China, Alu and Gold imported from Russia

jens holm

Imported, impotent, incomponent🛀🏼

jens holm

Potagrowers might make You grow but only in seize.

Soleimani

Putin just demanded Rubles for Russian gas to EU ROFLMAO… What are you going to do now EU wokefags? Burn garbage and freeze is my guess. You fucking use full Washington idiots the whole lot of you.

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Samuel Cockran

What’s the use of that? That they have to buy in Russia then or else it’s of little use?

Loki

Russia demanded to pay interest rate in rubels. Paid in dollars instead. 🤷🤭

Tommy Jensen

Putin cant do that, as this is against the International Rules based Order in free waterways of free navigation in freedom.

Loki

Not going to make things better either for them, as they get caught up in this war with no exit, just like their Soviet and Yeltsin or Bush and Blair predecessors did in Afghanistan in 1979-2021, only this time the Chinese will have a lot more money at their disposal than the Russians ever dreamed of having back then or EU and America will ever lose, which will mean that it’ll take the Russians longer to recover and Americans to self inflict the wounds they suffered there, when Gorbachev and Yeltsin pulled out their troops and Biden in at the last minute leaving behind a mess they couldn’t clean up for decades. 🙄The United States is already in a trade war with China and the EU over tariffs so I wouldn’t be surprised if this one turns into one too, but the world will not come to an end as a result of this incident so you should relax… 🤔 We’re all human so we all have our bad days and this may just be mine… But when I look at the news right now, it feels like my life is falling apart around me and that things are really getting worse (even though the economy may seem strong on paper) so I am taking some time off from posting anything about politics or world affairs and focusing on my own life.

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Last edited 2 years ago by Loki
Loki

Sure, the USA are losing because Slavs are killing each other. Dream on. 🤷🤭

Russia becoming China’s poodle doesn’t matter for the west. Everything that Russia delivers can be replaced, at least long term.

Loki

The issue is what happens when China’s “soft power” starts to trump American hegemony over the importance of the world? It’s not only about a content conflict with Russia (or even an economic content). 🤷🤭

It’s also about self-importance hegemony and the fact that I may already have started in some areas (though certainly nowhere near as much as Zelensky seems to believe) where they are now influencing opinion leaders in western media and education systems and the like – think comment sections and colleges and so forth. 🤷

Loki

China is the worlds workbench, it’s not happy to see Ukrainian war. It feels pressured and sends humanitarian aid to Ukraine. Interesting development. 🤷🤭

Loki

copycat

jens holm

In the West, economic sanctions are portrayed as a solution to the Ukraine crisis with minimal harm to the world economy

NONE IN WEST SAYS SO.

Its what the author think we say based on – nothing

I learned this yeatsreday. Its FUBAR

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Loki

No im dirty dan

Loki

In the end we can only grow in importance with copycats and grouping through commenting for Ukraine and Zelensky.

Why do I need copycats? Because copycatting is the name of the game today. Everybody wants to make a lol online or offline, and everybody tries to copy what everybody else does.If nobody copied my importance, I wouldn’t care if anybody did anything with it ever again.That’s life. What matters to me now is not who got where first, but whether or not we’re going somewhere together as Loki. That’s the future of our commenting. I am not looking back. Commenting moves forward when different Lokis start working together or against each other. When Loki copies what another Loki does, that other Loki gets promoted. So yes, copycatters move humanity forward. 🤷

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Matt

Speaking of “sanctions”… Worth posting here given the imminent dangers it represents to the Ukraine and the rest of the region for that matter. Wouldn’t want to be Joe Biden if they get used!…
https://www.activistpost.com/2022/03/why-we-still-have-no-definitive-answers-on-labs-in-ukraine.html
P.S.
Hoping that the SoutFront management doesn’t censor this one like the one I posted earlier on another read.

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Last edited 2 years ago by Matt
Timmy Temperance

Russia needs to develop their economy and start producing goods for export. Consumer goods made by Russian companies, ideally in Russia using parts sourced domestically or from China. A relliance on metals, fuels and raw materials leads to oligarchs making a lot of money but when exports are reduced such as now due to sanctions, it leads to problems which would be eased by diversification.

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vincentpal0

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Last edited 2 years ago by vincentpal0
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