In perusing various
financial websites, I stumbled on this one graphic that perfectly captures the
current state of the global economy and how it has entered the sovereign debt
danger zone:
If you are having difficulty understanding the graphic, it looks at the level of public debt as a percentage
of GDP versus nominal (i.e. not corrected for inflation) GDP growth levels for
many of the world's advanced economies. The graphic compares the average
pre-Great Recession (aka "crisis") sovereign debt as a percentage of
GDP for the years between 1995 and 2006 plotted against nominal year-over-year
growth in GDP and then compares that the same data over the last two quarters.
In all cases with the exception of Japan which has a very small increase in nominal
economic growth, you can see that nominal GDP growth
has decelerated and debt levels have risen. This pushes all but one of
the data points upwards and to the left, in the direction of debt danger.
What this tells us is
that central bank policies since the Great Recession have had two key results:
1.) the monetary policies
have led to a very worrying increase in the level of sovereign debt as
governments lined up at the trough to avail themselves of ultra-cheap credit.
In some cases, this increase was very significant; pushing debt-to-GDP levels above the 100 percent mark.
2.) the monetary
policies have been quite ineffective at prodding the economy back to the growth
levels experienced in the decade prior to the Great Recession.
What is particularly concerning is
that, as sovereign debt levels rise, it becomes increasingly difficult for
governments to stimulate their economies during an economic contraction.
Given that we are mathematically overdue for a recession, this graphic
shows us that the world's central bankers will have to become even more
creative if they hope to lift the global economy out of another downturn, creativity that will surely result in even more unintended and negative consequences.
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