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    An Imaginary Retrospective of 
      2009 London, UK - 29th December 2008, 10:55 GMT  Dear ATCA Open & Philanthropia Friends [Please note that the views presented by individual contributors 
      are not necessarily representative of the views of ATCA, which is neutral. 
      ATCA conducts collective Socratic dialogue on global opportunities and threats.] We are grateful to Prof Niall Ferguson, a distinguished ATCA 
      Contributor; Professor of History at Harvard University; Professor of Business 
      Administration at Harvard Business School; Senior Research Fellow at Jesus 
      College, Oxford University; and Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, 
      Stanford University. His latest book is The Ascent of Money: A Financial 
      History of the World (2008), which has formed the basis of a television 
      documentary series. Niall Ferguson is also a contributing editor of the 
      Financial Times. He writes:
 Dear DK and Colleagues
 
 It was the year when people finally gave up trying to predict the year ahead. 
      It was the year when every forecast had to be revised - usually downwards 
      - at least three times. It was the year when the paradox of globalisation 
      was laid bare for all to see, if their eyes weren't tightly shut.
 
 On the one hand, the increasing integration of markets for 
      commodities, manufactures, labour and capital had led to great gains. As 
      Adam Smith had foreseen in The Wealth of Nations, economic liberalisation 
      had allowed the division of labour and comparative advantage to operate 
      on a global scale. From the 1980s until 2007, the world economy had enjoyed 
      higher, more widespread growth and fewer, less severe crises - hence Federal 
      Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke's hubristic celebration of a "great moderation" 
      in 2004. 
 On the other hand, the more the world came to resemble an intricate, multi-nodal 
      network operating at maximum efficiency - with minimal inventories and just-in-time 
      delivery - the more vulnerable it became to a massive systemic crash.
 
 That was the true significance of the Great Repression which began in August 
      2007 and reached its nadir in 2009. It was clearly not a Great Depression 
      on the scale of the 1930s, when output in the US declined by as much as 
      a third and unemployment reached 25 per cent. Nor was it merely a Big Recession. 
      As output in the developed world continued to decline throughout 2009 - 
      despite the best efforts of central banks and finance ministries - the tag 
      "Great Repression" seemed more and more apt: although this was 
      the worst economic crisis in 70 years, many people remained in deep denial 
      about it.
 
 "We assumed that we economists had learned how to combat this kind 
      of crisis," admitted one of President Barack Obama's "dream team" 
      of economic advisers, shortly after his return to academic life in September 
      2009. "We thought that if the Fed injected enough liquidity into the 
      financial system, we could avoid deflation. We thought if the government 
      ran a big enough deficit, we could end a recession. It turned out we were 
      wrong. So much for [John Maynard] Keynes. So much for [Milton] Friedman."
 The root of the problem remained the US's property bubble, which continued 
      to deflate throughout the year. Many people had assumed that by the end 
      of 2008 the worst must be over. It was not. Economist Robert Shiller's real 
      home price index in 2006 had stood at just under 206, nearly double its 
      level just six years earlier. To return to its pre-bubble level, it therefore 
      had to fall by 50 per cent. Barely half that decline had taken place by 
      the end of 2008. So house prices continued to slide in the US. As they did, 
      more and more families found themselves in negative equity, with debts exceeding 
      the value of their homes. In turn, rising foreclosures translated into bigger 
      losses on mortgage-backed securities and yet more red ink on banks' balance 
      sheets.
 
 With total debt above 350 per cent of US gross domestic product, the excesses 
      of the age of leverage proved difficult to purge. Households reined in their 
      consumption. Banks sought to restrict new lending. The recession deepened. 
      Unemployment rose towards 10 per cent, and then higher. The economic downward 
      spiral seemed unstoppable. No matter how hard they saved, Americans simply 
      could not stabilise the ratio of their debts to their disposable incomes. 
      The paradox of thrift meant that rising savings translated into falling 
      consumer demand, which led to rising unemployment, falling incomes and so 
      on, ever downwards.
 
 "Necessity will be the mother of invention," Obama declared in 
      his inaugural address on January 20. "By investing in innovation, we 
      can restore our faith in American creativity. We need to build new schools, 
      not new shopping malls. We need to produce clean energy, not dirty derivatives." 
      Commentators agreed that the speech was on a par with Franklin Roosevelt's 
      on his inauguration in 1933. Yet Roosevelt had spoken after the worst of 
      the Depression was over, Obama in mid-tailspin. The rhetoric flew high. 
      But the markets sank lower. The contagion spread inexorably from subprime 
      to prime mortgages, to commercial real estate, to corporate bonds and back 
      to the financial sector. By the end of June, Standard & Poor's 500 Index 
      had sunk to 624, its lowest monthly close since January 1996, and about 
      60 per cent below its October 2007 peak.
 
 The crux of the problem was the fundamental insolvency of the major banks, 
      another reality that policymakers sought to repress. In 2008, the Bank of 
      England had estimated total losses on toxic assets at about USD 2.8 trillion. 
      Yet total bank writedowns by the end of 2008 were little more than USD 583bn, 
      while total capital raised was just USD 435bn. Losses, in other words, were 
      either being massively understated, or they had been incurred outside the 
      banking system. Either way, the system of credit creation had broken down. 
      The banks could not contract their balance sheets because of a host of pre-arranged 
      credit lines, which their clients were now desperately drawing on, while 
      their only source of new capital was the US Treasury, which had to contend 
      with an increasingly sceptical Congress. The other credit-creating institutions 
      - especially the markets for asset-backed securities - were all but paralysed.
 
 There was uproar when Timothy Geithner, US Treasury secretary, requested 
      an additional USD 300bn to provide further equity injections for Citigroup, 
      Bank of America and the seven other big banks, just a week after imposing 
      an agonising "mega-merger" on the automobile industry. In Detroit, 
      the Big Three had become just a Big One, on the formation of CGF (Chrysler-General 
      Motors-Ford; inevitably, the press soon re-christened it "Can't Get 
      Funding"). The banks, by contrast, seemed to enjoy an infinite claim 
      on public funds. Yet no amount of money seemed enough to persuade them to 
      make new loans at lower rates. As one indignant Michigan law-maker put it: 
      "Nobody wants to face the fact that these institutions [the banks] 
      are bust. Not only have they lost all of their capital. If we genuinely 
      marked their assets to market, they would have lost it twice over. The Big 
      Three were never so badly managed as these bankrupt banks."
 
 In the first quarter, the Fed continued to do everything in its power to 
      avert the slide into deflation. The effective federal funds rate had already 
      hit zero by the end of 2008. In all but name, quantitative easing had begun 
      in November 2008, with large-scale purchases of the debt and mortgage-backed 
      securities of government-sponsored agencies (the renationalised mortgage 
      giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac) and the promise of future purchases of 
      government bonds. Yet the expansion of the monetary base was negated by 
      the contraction of broader monetary measures such as M2 (the measurement 
      of money and its "close substitutes", such as savings deposits, 
      that is a key indicator of inflation). The ailing banks were eating liquidity 
      almost as fast as the Fed could create it. The Fed increasingly resembled 
      a government-owned hedge fund, leveraged at more than 75 to 1, its balance 
      sheet composed of assets everyone else wanted to be rid of.
 
 . . .
 
 The position of the US federal government was scarcely better. By the end 
      of 2008, the total value of loans, investments and guarantees given by the 
      Fed and the Treasury since the beginning of the financial crisis had already 
      reached USD 7.8 trillion. In the year to November 30 2008, the total federal 
      debt had increased by more than USD 1.5 trillion. Morgan Stanley estimated 
      that the total federal deficit for the fiscal year 2009 could equal 12.5 
      per cent of GDP. The figure would have been even higher had President Obama 
      not been persuaded by his chief economic adviser, Lawrence Summers, to postpone 
      his planned healthcare reform and promised spending increases in education, 
      research and foreign aid.
 
 Obama had set out to construct an administration in which his rivals and 
      allies were equally represented. But his rivals were a good deal more experienced 
      than his allies. The result was an administration that talked like Barack 
      Obama but thought like Bill Clinton. The Clinton-era veterans, not least 
      Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, had vivid memories of the bond-market 
      volatility that had plagued them in 1993 (prompting campaign manager James 
      Carville to say that, if there was such a thing as reincarnation, he wanted 
      to come back as the bond market). Terrified at the swelling size of the 
      deficit, they urged Obama to defer any expenditure that was not specifically 
      targeted on ending the financial crisis.
 
 Yet the world had changed since the early 1990s. Despite the fears of the 
      still-influential former Treasury secretary Robert Rubin, investors around 
      the world were more than happy to buy new issues of US Treasuries, no matter 
      how voluminous. Contrary to conventional wisdom, the quadrupling of the 
      deficit did not lead to falling bond prices and rising yields. Instead, 
      the flight to quality and the deflationary pressures unleashed by the crisis 
      around the world drove long-term yields downwards. They remained at close 
      to 3 per cent all year.
 
 Nor was there a dollar rout, as many had feared. The foreign appetite for 
      the US currency withstood the Fed's money-printing antics, and the trade 
      weighted exchange rate actually appreciated during 2009.
 
 Here was the irony at the heart of the crisis. In all kinds of ways, the 
      Great Repression had "Made in America" stamped all over it. Yet 
      its effects were more severe in the rest of the world than in the US. And, 
      as a consequence, the US managed to retain its "safe haven" status. 
      The worse things got in Europe, in Japan and in emerging markets, the more 
      readily investors bought Treasuries and held dollars.
 
 . . .
 
 For the rest of the world, 2009 proved to be an annus horribilis. Japan 
      was plunged back into the deflationary nightmare of the 1990s by yen appreciation 
      and a collapse of consumer confidence. Things were little better in Europe. 
      There had been much anti-American finger-pointing by European leaders in 
      2008. The French president Nicolas Sarkozy had talked at the G-20 summit 
      in Washington as if he alone could save the world economy. The British prime 
      minister Gordon Brown had sought to give a similar impression, claiming 
      authorship of the policy of bank recapitalisation. The German chancellor 
      Angela Merkel, meanwhile, voiced stern disapproval of the excessively large 
      American deficit.
 
 By the first quarter of 2009, however, the mood in Europe had darkened. 
      It became apparent that the problems of the European banks were just as 
      serious as those of their American counterparts. Indeed, the short-term 
      liabilities of the Belgian, Swiss, British and Italian banks were far larger 
      in relation to those countries' economies, while the German, French and 
      Danish banks were much more dangerously leveraged. Moreover, in the absence 
      of a European-wide finance ministry, all talk of a European stimulus package 
      was just that - mere talk. In practice, fiscal policy became a matter of 
      sauve qui peut, with each European country improvising its own bailout and 
      its own stimulus package. The result was a mess. Currencies outside the 
      Euro area were afflicted by severe volatility. Inside the Euro area, the 
      volatility was in the bond market, with spreads on Greek and Italian bonds 
      exploding relative to German bunds.
 
 The picture was even worse in most emerging markets. Especially hard hit 
      in eastern Europe were Bulgaria, Romania, Ukraine and Hungary. Of the BRICs 
      (Brazil, Russia, India and China), Brazil had the best year, Russia the 
      worst. It was a terrible year for oil and gas exporters, as prices plunged, 
      taking currencies such as the rouble down with them. The Indian stock market, 
      meanwhile, was battered by escalating tensions between New Delhi and Islamabad 
      in the wake of the Mumbai terrorist attacks.
 Political instability also struck China, where riots by newly redundant 
      workers in Shenzhen and other export centres provoked a heavy-handed clampdown 
      by the government, but also a renewed effort by the People's Bank of China 
      to prevent the appreciation of the yuan by buying up yet more hundreds of 
      billions of dollars of US Treasuries. "Chimerica" - the symbiotic 
      relationship between China and America - not only survived the crisis, but 
      gained from it. Although Obama's decision to attend the first G-2 summit 
      in Beijing in April dismayed some liberals, most recognised that trade trumped 
      Tibet at such a time of economic crisis.
 
 This asymmetric character of the global crisis - the fact that the shocks 
      were even bigger on the periphery than at the epicentre - had its disadvantages 
      for the US, to be sure. Any hope that America could depreciate its way out 
      from under its external debt burden faded as 10-year yields and the dollar 
      held firm. Nor did American manufacturers get a second wind from reviving 
      exports, as they would have done had the dollar sagged. The Fed's achievement 
      was to keep inflation in positive territory - just. Those who had feared 
      galloping inflation and the end of the dollar as a reserve currency were 
      confounded.
 
 On the other hand, the troubles of the rest of the world meant that in relative 
      terms the US gained, politically as well as economically. Many commentators 
      had warned in 2008 that the financial crisis would be the final nail in 
      the coffin of American credibility around the world. First, neo-conservatism 
      had been discredited in Iraq. Now the "Washington consensus" on 
      free markets had collapsed. Yet this was to overlook two things. The first 
      was that most other economic systems fared even worse than America's when 
      the crisis struck: the country's fiercest critics - Russia, Venezuela - 
      fell flattest. The second was the enormous boost to America's international 
      reputation that followed Obama's inauguration.
 
 . . .
 
 If proof were needed that the US constitution still worked, here it was. 
      If proof were needed that America had expunged its original sin of racial 
      discrimination, here it was. And if proof were needed that Americans were 
      pragmatists, not ideologues, here it was. It was not that Obama's New New 
      Deal - announced after the Labour Day purge of the Clintonites - produced 
      an economic miracle. Nobody had expected it to do so. It was more that the 
      federal takeover of the big banks and the conversion of all private mortgage 
      debt into new 50-year Obamabonds signalled an impressive boldness on the 
      part of the new president.
 
 The same was true of Obama's decision to fly to Tehran in June - a decision 
      that did more than anything else to sour relations with Hillary Clinton, 
      whose supporters never quite recovered from the sight of the former presidential 
      candidate shrouded in a veil. Not that the so-called "opening to Iran" 
      produced a dramatic improvement in the Middle East region. Nobody had expected 
      that either. It was more that, like Richard Nixon's visit to China in 1972, 
      it symbolised a readiness on Obama's part to rethink the very fundamentals 
      of American grand strategy. And the downfall of the Iranian president Mahmoud 
      Ahmedinejad - followed soon after by the abandonment of the country's nuclear 
      weapons programme - was a significant prize in its own right. With their 
      economy prostrate, the pragmatists in Tehran were finally ready to make 
      their peace with "the Great Satan", in return for desperately 
      needed investment.
 
 Meanwhile, Al-Qaeda's bungled attempt to assassinate Obama - on the eve 
      of Thanksgiving - only served to discredit radical Islamism and to reinforce 
      Obama's public image as "The One". Another of the many ironies 
      of 2009 was that the mood of religious reawakening triggered by the economic 
      crisis benefited the Democrats rather than the deeply divided Republicans.
 
 By year end, it was possible for the first time to detect - rather than 
      just to hope for - the beginning of the end of the Great Repression. The 
      downward spiral in America's real estate market and the banking system had 
      finally been halted by radical steps that the administration had initially 
      hesitated to take. At the same time, the far larger economic problems in 
      the rest of the world had given Obama a unique opportunity to reassert American 
      leadership, particularly in Asia and the Middle East.
 
 The "unipolar moment" was over, no question. But power is a relative 
      concept, as the president pointed out in his last press conference of the 
      year: "They warned us that America was doomed to decline. And we certainly 
      all got poorer this year. But they forgot that if everyone else declined 
      even further, then America would still be out in front. After all, in the 
      land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king."
 
 And, with a wink, President Barack Obama wished the world a happy new year!
 
 Best wishes
 Niall Ferguson
 
 [ENDS]
 
 Prof Niall Ferguson is Laurence A Tisch Professor of History at Harvard 
      University and William Ziegler Professor of Business Administration at Harvard 
      Business School. He is also a Senior Research Fellow at Jesus College, Oxford 
      University, and a Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University.
 
 His first book, Paper and Iron (1995), was short-listed for the History 
      Today Book of the Year award, while the collection of essays he edited, 
      Virtual History (1997), was a UK bestseller. In 1998 he published to international 
      critical acclaim The Pity of War and The House of Rothschild, the latter 
      of which won the Wadsworth Prize for Business History. In 2001, after a 
      stint at the Bank of England as a Houblon-Norman Fellow, he published The 
      Cash Nexus.
 
 Since moving to the US, he has published Empire (2004); Colossus (2004) 
      and The War of the World (2006). His latest book is The Ascent of Money: 
      A Financial History of the World (2008). All these books have formed the 
      basis for television documentaries, notably The War of the World, which 
      aired on PBS in the summer of 2008. Niall Ferguson is also a contributing 
      editor of the Financial Times.
 
 ATCA Open maintains a presence for Socratic Dialogue and feedback on Facebook, 
      LinkedIn 
      and IntentBlog.
 
  
       
         
           
            We welcome your thoughts, observations and views. Thank you. Best wishes  
     
       
         
           
             
              
              
              
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