The picture that emerges is that of fluctuating rates of expansion, but overall a fairly dismal performance. The other point to note is that the employment expansion of the US economy is not all that impressive in comparative perspective, and has been less than 2 per cent per annum over the past five years on average.
 

This is confirmed by the rather rough estimates of employment elasticity of aggregate output (per cent change in employment by per cent change in real output) that are provided in Chart 8. Once again, after the early 1990s, the US economy does not emerge as considerably more dynamic than other OECD countries in terms of generating more employment. (It should be noted, however, that the figure of 1 for the European Union for the period 1990-94 is misleading, for it refers to a period when both output and employment growth were mildly negative.) In fact, in recent years the employment elasticity of output growth in the US economy appears to have been very low.

Chart 8 >> Click to Enlarge
 

This points to a major structural weakness of the past growth pattern, which is likely to have important effects on the prospects for early recovery in the developed world. As long as basic employment conditions do not improve, attempts to generate economic expansion by encouraging private savings and investment – such as in the form of tax cuts and easy money through low interest rates - are likely to falter. This is because those in employment are likely to guard against the possibility of future job loss by saving more rather than spending more. To counter such a tendency, fiscal packages have to be not only very large but also explicitly directed at job creation. This has not been the case so far in either US or Japan, while in Europe the fiscal stimulus has in any case been weak.
 

In addition to this, there are other reasons why it may be futile to expect another US-led boom to bring about a recovery in the world economy once again. After all, the current recession in the US reflects the collapse of a speculative bubble, and it would be strange if the economy could immediately create another such bubble to generate that kind of economic growth.
 

At present, the bursting of the bubble involves the corporate sector cutting back investment because of overcapacity and the household sector reducing its consumption because it is already financed by record levels of private debt. A rapid reversal of these tendencies is not only unlikely, but it would also require additional international financing, with the rest of the world’s savings once again rushing in to maintain high levels of US consumption and economic activity.

An increase in US growth levels sufficient to lift the world economy would lead to a further rapid widening of the US balance of payments deficit, which is already at more than 4.5 percent of GDP. Such a payments gap would in turn require an increased financial inflow from the rest of the world to sustain it. But the rest of the world already provides nearly $2 billion per day in their savings to the US economy. It is difficult to see how this can be increased in a wider international context of lower income growth and stagnant employment generation.
 

The prognosis

If history is any guide, the need for a leader to pull the capitalist system out of this slump is obvious. It is also clear that the IMF  is too misguided in its policy responses and too small in terms of its resources, to play the role of lender of last resort. Indeed, the Bretton Woods institutions have earned such a bad name in the current crisis that even the London Financial Times has referred to them as ''the gruesome twosome''. But in any case, the amount of resources required to prevent international financial debacle is certainly beyond their capacity. 
 

Similarly the world desperately needs a major buyer of last resort. If the vulnerable economies of Asia, the teetering economies of Latin America, the oppressed primary exporters of Africa, and the devastated regions of Eastern Europe are to recover, they must find markets for their goods in the west. Thus the developed capitalist countries must increase their imports from such regions dramatically on order to avoid a more generalised slump. Big trade deficits in the most prosperous nations are an essential part of a resolution of the present crisis.
 

Clearly, the only feasible solution for international capitalism is concerted expansion, directed by a responsible world ''leader'' who would behave in a Kindleberger fashion to organise such an expansion. But the current international political economy suggests that such a solution is not feasible or likely at the moment. Therefore, some sort of major slowdown in world economic activity does indeed seem likely, and the world economy could be condemned to a repetition of the widely read history of an earlier depression.
 

Of course, that particular depression did also mark the first systematic attempts at industrialisation in a range of underdeveloped countries across three continents. In fact a reading of history tells us that periods of instability and confusion in the world economy are precisely those periods which also allow for some autonomous industrialisation in what has been called the Third World. So, while world economic recession is both likely and potentially painful, it may also represent an opportunity for governments in developing countries to activate strategies of autonomous industrialisation. The extent to which this occurs will of course depend in turn on the various political economy forces which determine policy in our own countries as well.

 
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