Globalization : Is The Party Over
Globalization : Is The Party Over ?
Few years ago the leading economic and political weekly The Economist used a term “Slowbalisation” to describe the fragile state of international trade and commerce.
After the decades 1990s - 2000s the pace of economic integration stalled in the 2010s, as firms grappled with the aftershocks of a financial crisis, a populist revolt against open borders and the past US President Donald Trump’s trade war. The flow of goods and capital stagnated. Many bosses postponed big decisions on investing abroad: justintime gave way to wait and see. No one knew if Globalization faced a blip or extinction. So my question - Is the party is over ?
Now the waiting is over, as the pandemic and war in Ukraine have triggered a once in a generation reimagining of global capitalism in boardrooms and governments Everywhere you look, supply chains are being transformed, from the $9trn in inventories, stockpiled as insurance against shortages and inflation, to the fight for workers as global firms shift from China into Vietnam. This new kind of Globalization is about security, not efficiency: it prioritises doing business with people you can rely on, in countries your government is friendly with. It could descend into protectionism, big government and worsening inflation. Alternatively, if firms and politicians show restraint, it could change the world economy for the better, keeping the benefits of openness while improving resilience.
After the Berlin Wall fell in 1989, the lodestar of Globalization was efficiency. Companies located production where costs were lowest, while investors deployed capital where returns were highest. ernments aspired to treat firms equally, regardless of their nationality, and to strike trade deals with democracies and autocracies alike. Over two decades this gave rise to dazzlingly sophisticated value chains that account for half of all trade: your car and phone contain components that are better travelled than Phileas Fogg. Alllow for consumers and helped lift 1bn people out of extreme poverty as the emerging world, including China, industrialised.
But hyperefficient globalisation also had problems. Volatile capital flows destabilised financial markets. Many bluecollar workers in rich countries lost out. Recently, two other worries have loomed large. First, some lean supply chains are not as good value as they appear: mostly they keep costs low, but when they break, the bill can be crippling. Today’s bottlenecks have reduced global GDP by at least 1%. Shareholders have been hit as well as consumers: as chip shortages have stalled car produc tion, carmakers’ cashflows have dropped by 80% year on year. Tim Cook, the supplychain guru , who runs Apple, reckons such snafus could reduce sales by up to $8bn, or 10%, in this quarter alone. Covid19 was a shock, but wars, extreme weather or another virus could easily disrupt supply chains in the next decade.
The second problem is that the singleminded pursuit of cost advantage has led to a dependency on autocracies that abuse human rights and use trade as a means of coercion. Hopes that economic integration would lead to reform—what the Germans call “change through trade”—have been dashed: autocracies account for a third of world GDP. Russian invasion of Ukraine has painfully exposed Europe’s reliance on Russian energy. This week McDonald’s in Moscow, which opened in 1990, restarted under local control. Big Macs are no longer on the menu. Meanwhile, unpredictable China has a trade footprint seven times as big as Russia’s—and the world relies on it for a variety of goods from active pharmaceutical ingredients to the processed lithium used in batteries.
One indication that companies are shifting from efficiency to resilience is the vast buildup in precautionary inventories: for the biggest 3,000 firms globally these have risen from 6% to 9% of world GDP since 2016. Many firms are adopting dual sourcing and longerterm contracts. The pattern of multinational investment has been inverted: 69% is from local subsidiaries reinvest ing locally, rather than parent firms sending capital across borders. This echoes the 1930s, when global firms responded to nationalism by making subsidiaries abroad more selfsufficient.
The industries under most pressure are already reinventing their business models, encouraged by governments that from Europe to India are keen on “strategic autonomy”. The car industry is copying Elon Musk’s Tesla by moving towards vertical integration, in which you control everything from nickel mining to chip design . Taiwan’s electronics assemblers have cut their share of assets in China from 50% to 35% since 2017 as clients such as Apple demand diversification. In energy, the West is seeking longterm supply deals from allies rather than relying on spot markets dominated by rivals—one reason it has been cosying up to gas rich Qatar. Renewables will also make energy markets more regional.
The danger is that a reasonable pursuit of security will morph into rampant protectionism, jobs schemes and hundreds of billions of dollars of industrial subsidies. The short term effect of this would be more volatility and fragmentation that would push prices yet higher: witness USA’s consideration of new tariffs on solar panels, which he paused this month in the face of shortages. The longrun inefficiency from indiscriminately replicating supply chains would be enormous. Were you to duplicate a quarter of all multinational activity, the extra annual operating and financial costs involved could exceeds 2% of world GDP.
So what is the way out ? We will try to understand : the restraint will be crucial in the coming time. Governments and firms must remember that resilience comes from diversification, not concentration at home. The chokepoints autocracies control amount to only about a tenth of global trade, based on their exports of goods in which they have a leading market share of over 10% and for which it is hard to find substitutes. The answer is to require firms to diversify their suppliers in these areas, and let the market adapt. What do you think , governments across the globe are ready for this challenge? Myopia and insularity abound. But if you are a consumer of global goods and ideas—that is to say, a citizen of the world—you should hope globalisation’s next phase involves the maximum possible degree of openness. A new balance between efficiency and security is a reasonable goal. Living in a subsidised bunker is not.
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