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March 24, 2009

Obama's global oped - its prospects and its European limits
Posted by Max Bergmann

G20_Melbourne_meeting_room

In what is sure to make all oped writers blush with envy, Obama today had an oped on the global economy published in 30 papers around the world. I believe that maybe the first time that has ever happened.

The oped was a preview of what the U.S. will call for at the G-20 summit next week. Obama argues for a concerted effort on the part of G-20 countries to stimulate their economies and stabilize financial systems. He called for boosting the resources at of the IMF so it can continue to help rescue emerging market countries. Perhaps more noteworthy Obama publicly disavowed protectionism and said other countries should avoid going down that path (I bet Mexico's truckers were amused by that). Only toward the end of the oped Obama pledges to take "coordinated international action" to form a new international framework to regulate financial markets.

It's a good oped and lays out the right points that need to be talked about at the G-20. With Obama's global and European popularity, this oped and its global scope is an aggressive attempt to rally global - and especially European opinion - to sign on to his global economic agenda - most notably the stimulus effort. But the order of priority laid out by Obama in the oped highlights the challenge he is going to face in the summit meeting. With a week to go before the meeting Europe and the U.S. do not see eye-to eye. Mark Mardell of the BBC writes:

If the European Union gets its way the London G20 summit will concentrate on new rules and regulations, not discussing how to further stimulate the world economy.


It is going to be hard for significant coordinated action to occur on the G-20 when Europe is intent on opposing a stimulus. This lack of urgency led to Paul Krugman's exasperation last week, writing that:

to hear anything in America comparable to the know-nothing diatribes of Germany’s finance minister you have to listen to, well, Republicans.

The problem then is that Europe is at the point where it has become integrated to the point where national governments lack the tools to address their economic problems, but Europe is not politically consolidated enough to tackle its problems at the Union level. Combine this structural problem, with a general sense of disillusionment with the European project on the part of the Germans, a wide-spread sapping of popular support for the European project, and a rise in anti-immigrant feelings (ie the French fear of the "polish plumber") and  protectionist outcries ("British jobs for British workers") - sentiments that challenge the openness which is at the heart of the EU - and you have a real problem. This is a crisis both of political will and political mechanisms.

It is therefore probably unrealistic for the Obama administration to expect to go to the G-20 and simply work it out with Europe, since all Europe can agree on right now is that the economic crisis is our fault and that global finance must be regulated. The one area where progress is most possible - unfortunately this is also the least important in the immediate term - is in laying the foundation for an international regulatory framework - which would be quite an accomplishment.

This does not mean that the Administration should simply through up their hands on the stimulus, but the U.S. should perhaps try to view the G-20 as the start of the conversation (particularly with Europe) rather than the end. And over the next few months the U.S.-European diplomatic engagement (particularly between U.S. and Germany) should be ramped up. Making the case for stimulus in Europe is as much about making the case for the European Union, as it is about economics right now.

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Comments

It is an interesting message, though not easy to decode. It is especially interesting that a message directed at a global audience is so focused on American jobs. But that seems to be the basic thrust: The world's economic health depends on the economic health of the American worker.

If people in other countries cannot spend, markets dry up—already we've seen the biggest drop in American exports in nearly four decades, which has led directly to American job losses.

We must restore the credit that businesses and consumers depend upon. We are working aggressively to stabilize our financial system. This includes an honest assessment of the balance sheets of major banks, and will lead directly to lending that can help Americans purchase goods, stay in their homes and grow businesses.

Third, we have an economic, security and moral obligation to extend a hand to countries and people who face the greatest risk. If we turn our backs on them, the suffering caused by this crisis will be enlarged, and our recovery will be delayed because markets for our goods will shrink further and more American jobs will be lost.

I read the implicit warning thusly: "If you guys in the rest of the world don't do more to stimulate spending, Americans are going to continue to lose their jobs. And as they lose their jobs, or fear losing their jobs, these engines of consumption are going to be shutting down and buying a lot less of your stuff. Even worse, mortgage defaults will continue to climb in the US, financial toxicity will rise, and and the tottering finance system may go critical.

If that's the message, it's ballsy. But very possibly true.

Comments
It is an interesting message, though not easy to decode. It is especially interesting that a message directed at a global audience is so focused on American jobs. But that seems to be the basic thrust: The world's economic health depends on the economic health of the American worker.

If people in other countries cannot spend, markets dry up—already we've seen the biggest drop in American exports in nearly four decades, which has led directly to American job losses.

We must restore the credit that businesses and consumers depend upon. We are working aggressively to stabilize our financial system. This includes an honest assessment of the balance sheets of major banks, and will lead directly to lending that can help Americans purchase goods, stay in their homes and grow businesses.

Third, we have an economic, security and moral obligation to extend a hand to countries and people who face the greatest risk. If we turn our backs on them, the suffering caused by this crisis will be enlarged, and our recovery will be delayed because markets for our goods will shrink further and more American jobs will be lost.

I read the implicit warning thusly: "If you guys in the rest of the world don't do more to stimulate spending, Americans are going to continue to lose their jobs. And as they lose their jobs, or fear losing their jobs, these engines of consumption are going to be shutting down and buying a lot less of your stuff. Even worse, mortgage defaults will continue to climb in the US, financial toxicity will rise, and and the tottering finance system may go critical.

If that's the message, it's ballsy. But very

Comments
It is an interesting message, though not easy to decode. It is especially interesting that a message directed at a global audience is so focused on American jobs. But that seems to be the basic thrust: The world's economic health depends on the economic health of the American worker.

If people in other countries cannot spend, markets dry up—already we've seen the biggest drop in American exports in nearly four decades, which has led directly to American job losses.

We must restore the credit that businesses and consumers depend upon. We are working aggressively to stabilize our financial system. This includes an honest assessment of the balance sheets of major banks, and will lead directly to lending that can help Americans purchase goods, stay in their homes and grow businesses.

Third, we have an economic, security and moral obligation to extend a hand to countries and people who face the greatest risk. If we turn our backs on them, the suffering caused by this crisis will be enlarged, and our recovery will be delayed because markets for our goods will shrink further and more American jobs will be lost.

I read the implicit warning thusly: "If you guys in the rest of the world don't do more to stimulate spending, Americans are going to continue to lose their jobs. And as they lose their jobs, or fear losing their jobs, these engines of consumption are going to be shutting down and buying a lot less of your stuff. Even worse, mortgage defaults will continue to climb in the US, financial toxicity will rise, and and the tottering finance system may go critical.

If that's the message, it's ballsy. But very

If that's the message, it's ballsy. But very


Thank you for your sharing! I like i very much!

Great comments! You are so nice, man! You never know how much i like'em!

This op-ed on the global economy has only proved that Obama is the wrong person at the wrong time...

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The fundamental defect of fathers is that they want their children to be a credit to them. (Bretrand Rrssell, British philosopher)

Don’t ride the high horse.

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