Economic growth is accelerating across most of the world. Yet the world's total gross debt-to-GDP (gross domestic product) ratio has reached nearly 250
To answer this question, one must recall that debt is both a liability and an asset. In a closed economy - and we don't owe anything to non-Earthlings - overall debt and the corresponding assets necessarily cancel each other out. So what really matters is the composition of debts and liabilities - or, to put it simply, who owes what to whom.
High public-sector debt, for example, signals the possible need for tax increases - the opposite of the tax legislation being advanced by Republican legislators in the United States - and/or higher interest rates (real or nominal, depending on monetary policy and inflation). If
For private-sector debt, much depends on its type: the hedging sort, where a debtor's cash flow covers all obligations; the speculative type, where cash flow covers interest only; or the Ponzi kind, where cash flow does not even cover that. As the late American economist Hyman Minsky explained, the higher the share of debt that falls into the speculative or Ponzi categories, the higher the risk that a confidence shock will trigger a sudden wave of deleveraging that quickly morphs into a full-blown financial crisis.
For both public- and private-sector debt, maturities also play an important role. Longer maturities leave more time for adjustment, lowering the risk of a confidence shock.
Yet while it makes little sense to focus on simple aggregate figures, both public institutions and private researchers tend to do precisely that. Consider the coverage of the Greek debt crisis. Headlines tracked the debt-to-GDP ratio's climb from 100
A similar mistake is made in assessing China's debts, about which the world is most concerned. The figures are certainly daunting: China's debt-to-GDP ratio now stands at about 250
For China, the biggest risk probably lies in the shadow banking sector, on which reliable data are not available. On the other hand, a significant share of the growth in private debt ratios in recent years may be a result of the "
And there is more good news for China. Most Chinese debt is held in renminbi; the country possesses massive foreign-exchange reserves of close to $3.0 trillion; and capital controls are still effective, despite having been eased in recent years. The country's leaders thus have a public-policy war chest that they can use to cushion against financial turmoil.
Among the rest of the emerging economies, there are some sources of concern. But, overall, the situation is relatively stable. Though private-sector debt has lately been rising, its levels remain tolerable. And public-sector debt has been growing only moderately, relative to GDP.
As for the advanced economies, there is little reason to believe that a debt crisis is around the corner in Japan. In the US, public debt is set to increase, thanks to the impending tax overhaul; but the blow will be cushioned, at least for the next year or two, by continued growth acceleration. And though low-quality assets held by the banking system are likely to impede Europe's recovery, they are unlikely to spark a financial crisis.
In short, the world does not seem to face
That said, geopolitical risks should not be discounted. While markets tend to shrug off
The Middle East remains another source of serious instability, with tensions in the Gulf
Even barring such a major geopolitical upheaval, which would severely damage the global economy's prospects in the short run, serious medium- and long-term risks loom. Rising income inequality, exacerbated by the mismatch between skills and jobs in the digital age, will impede growth, unless a wide array of difficult structural reforms are implemented, including reforms aimed at constraining climate change.
As long as the geopolitical situation remains manageable, policymakers should have time to implement the needed structural reforms. But the window of opportunity will not stay open forever. If policymakers waste time on trickle-down sophistry, as is happening in the US, the world may be headed for severe economic distress.
Kemal Dervis, former Minister of Economic Affairs of Turkey and former Administrator for the United Nations Development Program
(UNDP), is Senior Fellow at
the Brookings Institution.
Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2017.
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