Constantinople fell to the Ottomans after two centuries of
retreat and decline. It took two world wars, a global depression
and the onset of the Cold War to lay the British Empire
low.
AP
So it's a safe bet that the era of American dominance will not
be brought to a close by credit default swaps, mark-to-market
accounting or (even) Barney Frank.
Not that there's a shortage of invitations to believe otherwise.
Almost in unison, Germany's finance minister, Russia's prime
minister and Iran's president predict the end of U.S. "hegemony,"
financial and/or otherwise. The New York Times weighs in with
meditations on "A Power That May Not Stay So Super." Der Spiegel
gives us "The End of Hubris." Guardian columnist John Gray sees "A
Shattering Moment in America's Fall From Power."
Much of this is said, or written, with ill-disguised glee. But
when the tide laps at Gulliver's waistline, it usually means the
Lilliputians are already 10 feet under. Before yesterday's surge,
the Dow had dropped 25% in three months. But that only means it had
outperformed nearly every single major foreign stock
exchange, including Germany's XETRADAX (down 28%) China's Shanghai
exchange (down 30%), Japan's NIKK225 (down 37%), Brazil's BOVESPA
(down 41%) and Russia RTSI (down 61%). These contrasts are a useful
demonstration that America's financial woes are nobody else's
gain.
On the other hand, global economic distress doesn't invariably
work at cross-purposes with American interests. Hugo Chávez's
nosedive toward bankruptcy begins when oil dips below $80 a barrel,
the price where it hovers now. An identical logic, if perhaps at a
different price, applies to the petrodictatorships in Moscow and
Tehran, which already are heavily saddled with inflationary and
investor-confidence concerns. Russia will also likely burn through
its $550 billion in foreign-currency reserves faster than
anticipated -- a pleasing if roundabout comeuppance for last
summer's Georgian adventure.
Nor does the U.S. seem all that badly off, comparatively
speaking, when it comes to its ability to finance a bailout. Last
month's $700 billion bailout package seems staggeringly large, but
it amounts to a little more than 5% of U.S. gross domestic product.
Compare that to Germany's $400 billion to $536 billion rescue
package (between 12% and 16% of its GDP), or Britain's $835 billion
plan (30%).
Of course it may require considerably more than $700 billion to
clean out our Augean Stables. But here it helps that the ratio of
government debt to GDP in the U.S. runs to about 62%. For the
eurozone, it's 75%; for Japan, 180%.
It also helps that the U.S. continues to have the world's
largest inflows of foreign direct investment; that it
ranks third in the world (after Singapore and New Zealand) for ease
of doing business, according to the World Bank; and that its
demographic trends aren't headed toward a tall and steep cliff --
as they are in the EU, Russia, Japan and China.
Above all, the U.S. remains biased toward financial
transparency. I am agnostic as to whether mark-to-market accounting
is a good idea; last month's temporary ban on short-selling
financials seemed a bad one.
But a system that demands timely and accurate financial
disclosure and doesn't interfere with price discovery will
invariably prove more resilient over time than a system that does
not make such demands. If Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were financial
time bombs of one kind, then surely China's state-owned enterprises
are time bombs of another. Can anyone determine with even
approximate confidence the extent of their liabilities?
This isn't to say that the abrupt failure of the SOEs would be
in anyone's interests, including the U.S.'s. But one of the
unremarked ironies of the present crisis is that America's
financial vulnerabilities came fully into view months before
Europe's (or the rest of the world's) did. That's one reason the
dollar has rallied in recent months. It's also why the U.S. is
likely to come through the crisis much more quickly than, say,
Japan, which spent the better part of the 1990s hiding its own
banking crisis from itself.
Exactly how -- and how quickly -- the U.S. does come through is
anyone's guess. Recessions are periodic facts of economic life that
tend to last anywhere between six and 16 months. Severe recessions
or depressions are fundamentally political events that can last a
decade or longer -- however long economic policy remains bad.
If the next administration is wise, it will do what it can to
help the markets clear, let the recession take its course, and do
what it can to preserve intact a financial system that has served
us splendidly. If it is unwise, it will embark on several years of
grandiose social experimentation. Either way, the United States
will eventually regain its economic footing and maintain its
place.
Write to bstephens@wsj.com
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