Without question the USA received an
awful shock and is struggling to overcome it.
I see much of the efforts so far as weak and often misguided. I see plenty of optimistic plans but still
little implementation.
Yet the all important energy balance
of payments is swinging back in favor to the USA at an astounding rate. At the same time, US armies are coming home and US dollars are
no longer flooding deserts everywhere.
Technology breakthroughs are also
soon to simply eliminate fossil fuels anyway.
All this sets the stage for even
a muddled and profoundly corrupt financial system to pull itself together and
get back into the business of funding rapid growth.
I think that the USA and Canada is capable of a sustained
growth of in excess of four percent per year over the next decade. That is a certainty if the housing market is
restructured immediately rather than piecemeal in the present muddled fashion. Or perhaps enough time has ground through the
system to revitalize it already.
World power swings back to America
The American phoenix is slowly rising again. Within five years or so,
the US
will be well on its way to self-sufficiency in fuel and energy. Manufacturing
will have closed the labour gap with China in a clutch of key
industries. The current account might even be in surplus.
The making of computers, electrical equipment, machinery, autos and
other goods may shift back to the US
from China . Photo:
AP
By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, International
Business Editor
5:53PM BST 23 Oct 2011
Assumptions that the Great Republic must inevitably spiral into economic and strategic
decline - so like the chatter of the late 1980s, when Japan was in vogue - will seem
wildly off the mark by then.
Telegraph readers already know about the "shale gas
revolution" that has turned America
into the world’s number one producer of natural gas, ahead of Russia .
Less known is that the technology of hydraulic fracturing - breaking
rocks with jets of water - will also bring a quantum leap in shale oil supply,
mostly from the Bakken fields in North Dakota, Eagle Ford in Texas, and other
reserves across the Mid-West.
"The US was the
single largest contributor to global oil supply growth last year, with a net
395,000 barrels per day (b/d)," said Francisco Blanch from Bank of America , comparing the Dakota fields to a new North Sea .
Total US
shale output is "set to expand dramatically" as fresh sources come on
stream, possibly reaching 5.5m b/d by mid-decade. This is a tenfold rise since
2009.
The US
already meets 72pc of its own oil needs, up from around 50pc a decade ago.
"The implications of this shift are very large for geopolitics,
energy security, historical military alliances and economic activity. As US
reliance on the Middle East continues to drop, Europe is turning more dependent
and will likely become more exposed to rent-seeking behaviour from
oligopolistic players," said Mr Blanch.
Meanwhile, the China-US seesaw is about to swing the other way.
Offshoring is out, 're-inshoring' is the new fashion.
"Made in America, Again" - a report this month by Boston
Consulting Group - said Chinese wage inflation running at 16pc a year for a decade
has closed much of the cost gap. China
is no longer the "default location" for cheap plants supplying the US .
A "tipping point" is near in computers, electrical equipment,
machinery, autos and motor parts, plastics and rubber, fabricated metals, and even
furniture.
"A surprising amount of work that rushed to China over the
past decade could soon start to come back," said BCG's Harold Sirkin.
The gap in "productivity-adjusted wages" will narrow from
22pc of US levels in 2005 to 43pc (61pc for the US South) by 2015. Add in shipping
costs, reliability woes, technology piracy, and the advantage shifts back to
the US .
The list of "repatriates" is growing. Farouk Systems is
bringing back assembly of hair dryers to Texas after counterfeiting problems;
ET Water Systems has switched its irrigation products to California; Master
Lock is returning to Milwaukee, and NCR is bringing back its ATM output to
Georgia. NatLabs is coming home to Florida .
Boston Consulting expects up to 800,000 manufacturing jobs to return to
the US by mid-decade, with a multiplier effect creating 3.2m in total. This
would take some sting out of the Long Slump.
As Cleveland Fed chief Sandra Pianalto said last week, US manufacturing
is "very competitive" at the current dollar exchange rate. Whether
intended or not, the Fed's zero rates and $2.3 trillion printing blitz have
brought matters to an abrupt head for China .
Fed actions confronted Beijing with a Morton's Fork of ugly choices:
revalue the yuan, or hang onto the mercantilist dollar peg and import a US
monetary policy that is far too loose for a red-hot economy at the top of the
cycle. Either choice erodes China 's
wage advantage. The Communist Party chose inflation.
Foreign exchange effects are subtle. They take a long to time play out
as old plant slowly runs down, and fresh investment goes elsewhere. Yet you can
see the damage to Europe from an over-strong
euro in foreign direct investment (FDI) data.
Flows into the EU collapsed by 63p from 2007 to 2010 (UNCTAD data), and
fell by 77pc in Italy .
Flows into the US
rose by 5pc.
Volkswagen is investing $4bn in America ,
led by its Chattanooga
Passat plant. Korea 's
Samsung has begun a $20bn US investment blitz. Meanwhile, Intel, GM, and
Caterpillar and other US
firms are opting to stay at home rather than invest abroad.
The European Central Bank has since made matters worse (for Italy,
Spain, Portugal, and France) by keeping rates above those of the US, UK, and
Japan. That has been a deliberate policy choice. It let real M1 deposits in Italy contract
at a 7pc annual rate over the summer. May it live with the consequences.
The trade-weighted dollar has been sliding for a decade, falling 37pc
since 2001. This roughly replicates the post-Plaza slide in the late 1980s,
which was followed - with a lag - by 3pc of GDP shrinkage in the current
account deficit. The US
had a surplus by 1991.
Charles Dumas and Diana Choyleva from Lombard Street Research argue that this
may happen again in their new book "The American Phoenix ".
The switch in advantage to the US is relative. It does not imply a
healthy US
recovery. The global depression will grind on as much of the Western world
tightens fiscal policy and slowly purges debt, and as China deflates its credit bubble.
Yet America
retains a pack of trump cards, and not just in sixteen of the world’s top
twenty universities.
It is almost the only economic power with a fertility rate above 2.0 -
and therefore the ability to outgrow debt - in sharp contrast to the
demographic decay awaiting Japan ,
China , Korea , Germany ,
Italy , and Russia .
Europe's EMU soap opera has shown why it matters that America is a
genuine nation, forged by shared language and the ancestral chords of memory
over two centuries, with institutions that ultimately work and a real central
bank able to back-stop the system.
The 21st Century may be American after all, just like the last.