April 29, 2011

Oil prices shape the present and the future of the economy

Modern economies are oil-junkies, and they will still be for a long time. Every movement in the price of oil, no matter how small, reaches the furthermost endpoint of the economy. Without hesitation I can say that oil price is the key factor shaping (and limiting) the behavior of our day-to-day economy. An even more important factor than interest rates or currency exchange rates, which are predominant in the long term.


Actual oil prices are the result of a deadly combination of circumstances: political instabilities in oil producer countries, a low exchange rate of the US dollar (still the preferred currency when trading oil), rise on total demand due to developing economies and last but not least speculation. The extended duration of this situation is very worrying for both oil consumers and oil producers. Consumers, meaning developed and developing economies as a whole, have their GDP growths strongly linked to oil prices, as it has the power to increase the cost of production and distribution processes and also personal transport expenses; all of them key drivers for a healthy economy.

On the other side, oil producers fear that high oil prices can harm demand. Even though oil demand has historically been highly inflexible, as energy is a primary need, it also has its breaking point. This breaking point is that where more expensive energy sources (think alternative energies) become affordable when compared with oil.
Oil producers are aware of this breaking point and on the last days we have seen reactions from Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, biggest and 7h biggest oil exporters worldwide respectively, saying they do not endorse such insanely high oil prices. They are profiting largely from these high prices, but at the same time they show some much needed common sense by acknowledging high oil prices can brake or break economic growth. They need their clients' economies to grow, to need more and more of their precious oil.

April 25, 2011

The government, that drag on the economy.

In the previous post, on why economic recovery was being compromised by excessive and useless government spending I quickly illustrated my point with a table showcasing government expenditure in percentage of GDP and also average tax burden on percentage of GDP. I did not analyze the data from the table though, it deserved its own post. So let us have a look at how much money the governments need in some countries:
2011 data from The Heritage Foundation , The Wall Street Journal via Wikipedia

The highest percentages on government spending are found scattered across developed countries, specially in Europe. On Baltic countries (Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden) we can see the percentage even goes over 50% of GDP . No surprises here, blame it on their splendid welfare systems everybody loves... The real problem is not welfare systems themselves, but the progression of the government spending in the latest years. People would agree with me than welfare systems and social measures have not increased during the last 5 years, in any case they have been reduced, but government expenditure on the other side has kept growing, as plotted in the following chart for the biggest economies in Europe.

Credit: Eurostat


The corrections on the growing trend seen in the 2010 data, as you may expect, are related to the austerity packages endorsed by the European Union to fight the financial and debt crisis. But these corrections have been too soft to correct the situation. Economists and traders everywhere (The Economist devoted an issue to this matter) see the situation as unbearable, which explains the rising concerns on sovereign solvency that has plagued the markets and has already blasted through Greece, Ireland and Portugal.
But if this has been this way for a long time, what can possibly have changed to make the situation so worrying for developed countries?

April 21, 2011

Losing ballast for a faster recovery: Slashing the government

Almost every developed country worldwide is nowadays fully immersed on its own fight for economic recovery. But this fight is made tougher by high unemployment rates, sovereign solvency doubts, inflation and financial speculation. The resultant situation is hard to tackle for governments: they need their economies to grow but they must ensure they are solvent and responsible, thus being a stable soil for said recovery to grow on. 

I am not going to discuss the measures for economic growth here, but the ones used to keep the state under control. These measures to try to lower government spending range from budget cuts, the end of some subsidies, establishment of debt ceilings, social services restrictions... to issuing (more) debt to be able to keep public spending at actual levels. Some of these moves are smart, some of them are insane, specially the debt issuing one... But all of them are late, very late.

2011 data from The Heritage Foundation , The Wall Street Journal via Wikipedia 
 
In the last decades we have grown accustomed to bigger and bigger states, with a never-ending growth in civil servants, entities, organizations, committees... Just have a look at the table above on the column for Government expenditure in percentage of GDP and you will see some unbearably high numbers (I will come back to analyze this table in a future post). This growth in size and cost was associated with the growing complexity of running a state in modern times, the never-ending appearance of new social measures and so on. Everybody let the parasite grow deep inside us, and when the ride was smooth nobody seemed to care about the extra weight that was being placed on the shoulders of the economy. But what now that we are on one of the bumpiest sections of this one-way road that is history? No matter how much horsepower your car has, if you start putting rocks in the trunk its performance will fall to the ground.

Stopping the government growth and its crazy spending is not enough, we must shrink its size and cost to reasonable levels. But how do you shrink a government without stopping its functions?

April 18, 2011

Get used to China's trade deficit

When the balance of trade for February 2011 was published a lot of people were genuinely shocked to see that China had a 7.3$ billion trade deficit, the first since March 2010. When those same people think of China, they think on an enormous factory and lots of container full of goods ready to be transported to the West. While this image is right to some extent, they seem to disregard China's soaring internal demand for non-Chinese goods (mostly luxury items) and the uncomfortable neighbor that rising commodity prices are.


China's main clients are Europe and the USA, and with both of them growing slowly in the first quarter of 2011, exports have obviously slowed down too. China knew this, and expected to offset this slowdown with increasing internal demand. However this internal demand had another idea, it has focused mostly on non-Chinese goods... China is starting to have an incipient middle-upper class, but more importantly it is creating lots of new millionaires every month. And this newly created wealth is mostly being used to buy western goods, specially luxury cars, high-end clothes and fine jewelery. Take as an example BMW and Mercedes, whose sales in China grew 76% last year. This can be the biggest example, but it is only one of many; luxury clothing brands keep opening flagship stores (mainly in Shanghai) to fill the never-ending Chinese appetite for foreign luxury.
How many containers full of light bulbs, ipod accesories or handkerchiefs do you need to compensate for a Chinese entrepreneur buying a fully-equipped BMW 7-series? There you have your trade deficit...

April 12, 2011

Germany's biggest enemy: a strong euro.

Neither the (now certified) fall of Portugal nor increased debt pressures on other european peripheric countries have been enough to tumble down the never-ending rise of the euro exchange rate against other significant currencies. This should be very worrying for the heart and engine of the eurozone, Germany. I am sure Germany is already worried about that, what I mean is they should be worried enough to do something about it. 

A net exporter like Germany should not allow its currency to be its Achilles heel. Ok, the currency is not really German, but they are its founding fathers and the main reason why it exists... With this in mind, it becomes very difficult to understand why they allow 'their idea' to make their international trades more expensive and complicated. In the actual economic situation, competitiveness and efficiency are key to keep selling and Germany can lose their edge because of this. It is survival of the fittest.
The competitiveness indicators based on consumer prices published by the ECB show this trend clearly, see charts below (where 100% equals the index value in 1999 ) with an obviously sharp decline coincidental with the rise of the euro.
Harmonised competitiveness indicator for Germany. Credit: Deutsche Bundesbank

A strong euro is obviously good for debt issuing, for general borrowing and for imports but it can really hurt the muscle of Europe. Maybe you could think of it as eating everyday at McDonalds (no bashing here, just an example): it is cheap, it is easy and convenient as you can find one almost everywhere and it gets you through the day. But in the long-term fats are bad for your figure and, more importantly, bad for your most important muscle, the heart. The European Central Bank (ECB) is damaging the heart of Europe.

April 6, 2011

Reasons for an oil producer to go nuclear.

This same week I read at Bloomberg's Businessweek that Abu Dhabi, the 7th country in the world by estimated oil reserves, is building a civilian nuclear reactor to go-live on 2017. The article mainly focused on the assertiveness of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) going forward with their plans despite the ongoing events at Fukushima. Nothing exceptional here from my point of view, as there is nothing in common between the Fukushima plant and and what  the UAE is building in Braka together with Korea Electric Power Corporation (KEPCO).  What I am most interested about is the fact that one of the oil-richest countries in the world is going nuclear.
Illustration of the future, 4-reactor nuclear plant.


Internal energy demand is growing fast in Abu Dhabi, but it is still marginal compared with all the oil the UAE is exporting worldwide. We know Abu Dhabi, as every other producer, can have oil for cheap, so its domestic oil consumption would not justify the huge investment a nuclear energy facility demands. We could also consider Abu Dhabi not a front runner in climate preservation, and because of their small population density they do not have to be much worried about their fossil fuel emissions neither. 

So what could be the reasoning behind this ambitious nuclear plan started in 2008. Are their oil reserve estimates too optimistic? Do they prepare for a sooner-than-expected post-oil era? Or are they simply trying to keep their energy independence? Not being suspicious here, just trying to make some sense of such an expensive and (unfortunately) controversial decision.

April 3, 2011

Crazy or genius ideas: Individual Carbon Emissions Cap (II)

On the previous post I put on the table an idea to help control carbon emissions at an individual level while at the same time creating a way for citizens to monetize from their energy efficiency. I named it the Individual Carbon Emissions Cap (ICEC for short). After explaining its inner workings on the first post, now is the turn to explain why I think it could be highly beneficial for the economy.

Motivation
I am fed up of seeing the utility companies promoting energy saving and efficiency (even though one could think, on first instance, it goes against their business) but governments doing nothing but subsidize renewable energies producers. Renewable energies, as of today, are not capable of covering our whole energy consumption and they will not in the short term either, at least if we follow our historical trend of growing consumption. For renewable energies to really become alternative energies, efficiency measures must be applied to our daily life.

That is where ICEC kicks in, by setting a comprehensible limit on individual carbon emissions it promotes energy efficiency while at the same time boosting non fossil-based energies as they do not emit any CO2.

Prize efficient people, punish wasteful spenders = Prize the economy
I do not want anybody to think about the ICEC as a tax, because it is not. It could only become a tax for someone who is not capable of living without wasting a lot of energy by doing so. If that was the case, then tax him like you would with a normal business... The ICEC limit is high enough to not disrupt you usual life habits, but at the same time giving you an incentive to be efficient. For those who find the way to be efficient, the prize could not be more obvious: cash. Well, apart from the peace of mind of helping the environment and such... This cash could be forced to be for consumption only (if needed), then it would give a much needed boost to our weak economic recovery by increasing goods consumption. The best part? it would come at zero cost for the government, no need to raise taxes to the already tax-massacred citizens and, collaterally, it would mean increased earnings from VAT and other already existant taxes on consumption.