External debt consolidation. International reserves rise. Currencies stable. But... Fiscal policy is a tool of debt management not demand management ...
Broad-based strong growth of private consumption investment and exports
Disinflation
Improved external sector performance
Trade and current-account surpluses
External debt consolidation
International reserves rise
Currencies stable
But
Recovery from recession (DR) / underperformance
Poverty still high income and wealth inequalities
Structural and institutional weaknesses remain
3 The Global Context 4 Key points for 2005-06
Exceptional times dont last
2004 the best year for quarter of a century
but will not be repeated
Struggle between stocks and flows
liquidity only slowly being drained
balance sheet problems
Global imbalances remain significant
US current-account deficit
dollar weakness
OECD debt levels
5 Momentum has waned OECD growth Y-on-Y 6 Global pressure points
The US dollar
America choking on its own debt
Liquidity withdrawal
risk assets vulnerable
China slowdown
slowing slowing gone
Oil prices
any relief
Physical security
7 United States 8 United States
Roaring ahead in 2004
Cheap money
Fiscal frenzy
But challenges on the horizon
trashed balance sheets
end of policy stimulus
Sector divergence
Business caution vs household hedonism
Has the Fed lost control
9 Personal debt 10 Real estate vulnerability 11 Corporate profits of GDP 12 US net saving of gross national income 13 US foreign asset position USbn 14 US outlook
Problems are in the personal sector
corporate sector in reasonable shape
What will stop the consumer
liquidity
debt service payments
balance sheets
wealth - housing equity valuations
Debt accumulation unsustainable
saving will stabilise (or rise)
Gradual softening of GDP growth
15 US and the World 16 US current account deficit 17 Fed loosing control 18 Latin America and the external environment no escape 19 L America and Dom Rep no escape