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<text id=90TT1810>
<title>
July 09, 1990: The Last Roundup?
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
July 09, 1990 Abortion's Most Wrenching Questions
The American Economy
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BUSINESS, Page 44
The Last Roundup?
</hdr>
<body>
<p>George Bush has high hopes for a fruitful Houston summit--and
unless it enacts a daring agenda for the '90s, such hoedowns
could become obsolete
</p>
<p>By Robert Hormats and Richard Hornik
</p>
<p>[Robert Hormats is vice chairman of the investment firm Goldman
Sachs International. Richard Hornik is TIME's national
economics correspondent.]
</p>
<p> Is this trip necessary? A handful of world leaders might ask
themselves that question as they converge on Houston this
weekend for the 16th Economic Summit of Industrialized Nations.
Their visit will be attended by Wild West fanfare and reported
by more than 3,000 journalists, but is any real work likely to
get done? Many past summits, in fact, produced results as
barren as the North Texas Panhandle. If the chief executives
of the world's most powerful economies simply spend three days
hammering out a pious communique and frolicking at rodeos and
barbecues, then maybe this form of junket should ride off into
the sunset.
</p>
<p> But that would be a shame. The summit assembles what is
effectively the world's Economic Security Council, comprising
the leaders of the seven major industrial countries--the
U.S., France, Britain, West Germany, Canada, Italy and Japan--plus the President of the European Commission. The end of
the cold war should make this annual event more important than
ever. Millions of people in the industrialized world see
foreign business competitors as a greater threat to their
security than alien armies.
</p>
<p> The growing interdependence of the world economy makes
cooperation in trade and finance vital to everyone's
prosperity. This summit, whose members produce more than half
the globe's economic output, is an ideal vehicle for marshaling
support for common interests. Among them: ensuring the free
flow of commerce, coordinating support for new democracies and
promoting efficient solutions to environmental problems.
</p>
<p> The tasks facing the world's industrial countries today are
so huge that no major Western objective can be achieved without
support from the three centers of economic power: the U.S., the
European Community and Japan. Their combined resources will be
critical to rebuilding the economies of the new democracies,
not just in Eastern Europe but also in Latin America. That
collaboration is especially vital because the U.S. budget and
trade deficits have sharply constrained American largesse, in
both psychological and economic terms.
</p>
<p> Rather than drowning out America's once powerful voice,
these summits could actually reaffirm the U.S. position as a
global superpower. After wielding dominant military and
economic power for the past half-century, the U.S. can no
longer assume a central leadership role by dint of its muscle.
Instead, the U.S. in the 1990s will have to lead by forging
global consensus and coalition.
</p>
<p> The summit leaders can also handle a growing list of
political issues that bilateral alliances no longer adequately
deal with. A top concern for these countries is the structure
of post-cold-war Europe. The U.S. and Japan can use the summits
to keep the E.C. open to the rest of the world as it
consolidates its single market in 1992, creates a unified
monetary system and develops special trade links with its
European neighbors. The E.C. and the U.S., for their part, will
want to keep Japan from forging exclusionary trade and
financial ties with its East Asian neighbors. The summits can
also help bring Japan more fully into the Western political
club, which will be crucial if Tokyo is expected to pick up a
major share of the tab for Western initiatives. A successful
summit would help President Bush and his successors dramatize
at home a new rationale for continued U.S. involvement in the
world: shared management of the global economy to promote
commonly held interests and values.
</p>
<p> How then to put more life into this institution? For
starters, the participants should stop producing communiques
that cover a laundry list of subjects. The time could be better
used for achieving a genuine meeting of minds. The group should
only announce significant agreements. To help ensure adherence
to such commitments, the host country should henceforth report
on how well past summit accords have been implemented.
</p>
<p> More important than the mechanics of the meetings are the
strategic goals they aim to achieve. When Helmut Schmidt of
West Germany and Valery Giscard d'Estaing of France first
arranged an economic summit of the leading industrial nations
in 1975, their primary concerns were global stagflation and a
persistent energy crisis. The industrial world faces a new set
of daunting challenges, and the summits must tackle them
systematically. A proposed agenda for the 1990s:
</p>
<p> FREE TRADE. The biggest danger threatening the world economy
today is the nascent development of restrictive regional
trading zones based on the world's three dominant currencies:
the dollar, the yen and the deutsche mark (or perhaps the
European Currency Unit). If barriers to trade and investment
are dismantled around countries only to be reassembled around
whole regions, the world could be headed for a return to the
protectionist, beggar-thy-neighbor policies that helped create
the global depression of the 1930s.
</p>
<p> That is why an immediate goal in Houston should be to head
off the collapse of current international trade negotiations
called the Uruguay Round. World trade rules are outdated;
one-third of international commerce is not covered by any
global regulations at all. As a result, multinational companies
in the U.S. and other countries are plagued by investment
barriers, piracy of intellectual property and cross-border
restrictions on such services as insurance and data
transmission.
</p>
<p> The summiteers must confront the most divisive issue in the
Uruguay Round: the huge agricultural subsidies doled out by
these supposedly free-market economies. Each year taxpayers and
consumers in the industrialized countries pay roughly $245
billion to support farm prices ($32 billion in the U.S. alone).
The leaders of the U.S. and the E.C. should commit to a
significant reduction of this gross distortion of world trade.
And, just as the European Community is doing internally by
1992, the summit should pledge to eliminate tariffs on
manufactured goods and restrictions on trade in services among
all industrialized countries by the year 2000.
</p>
<p> MONEY FLOWS. The most significant economic development of
the past decade has been the deregulation of financial
movements across borders. This has created a worldwide pool of
capital that enables borrowers in countries with low savings
to tap into the cash of others. But because of this
development, national policies that artificially encourage or
restrict investment have an international impact and could lead
to forms of economic conflict as dangerous as trade wars.
</p>
<p> At the moment, the world's pool of savings has many
claimants. Among them: the stubborn U.S. budget deficit and the
new demands for capital by a unified Germany and an emerging
Eastern Europe. Meanwhile, savings in industrialized nations
have slowed as consumers spend more of their earnings on a
better life. Will a shrinking pool of savings increase interest
rates and stifle worldwide growth? The seven national leaders
in Houston should ask their financial experts to gauge the
impact of that worrisome trend. They should also examine the
effect of high levels of government borrowing on future
generations, who will inherit the bill. The conclusions might
begin to instill a collective recognition of the need to pay
now for government services the public demands.
</p>
<p> Economic growth in the 1990s will be determined largely by
how well countries use the limited savings available. Yet even
in today's deregulated markets the flow of capital in
securities trading and in direct investment is hampered by
inconsistent national rules. The leaders should launch an
effort to harmonize those regulations and consider creating new
agencies to carry out that job, for example an international
Securities and Exchange Commission.
</p>
<p> OPEN ECONOMIES. Bringing Eastern Europe and eventually the
Soviet Union into the world economy must be done carefully but
expeditiously. The summit leaders should remember that the
isolation of Germany after World War I sowed the seeds of its
economic collapse and of World War II. The Houston meeting
should begin to reshape Western economic relations with the
U.S.S.R. and its erstwhile satellites to reduce the potential
for unrest in that region.
</p>
<p> The most unstable economy in the Eastern bloc, the Soviet
Union's, is the largest and most important to its neighbors.
A Soviet economic collapse would devastate Eastern Europe.
Assuming that the U.S.S.R. adopts constructive policies toward
the Baltic republics and German unification, the summit nations
could provide assistance that would also hasten
demilitarization. The West could help the Soviets build housing
to expedite the return and demobilization of soldiers in
Eastern Europe and provide training for non-defense factory
managers.
</p>
<p> At the moment, the myriad aid programs being organized for
Eastern Europe are threatening to overwhelm officials in the
recipient nations. The summit leaders should commit their
governments to coordinate those efforts, as well as open up
Western markets further to East European goods. Another top
priority should be debt relief for Poland, to help that country
through its shock-treatment transition to a free market. Fresh
capital is needed too for rebuilding roads and communications
lines throughout Eastern Europe. That capital should come
primarily from groups like the World Bank and from commercial
loans backed by government guarantees.
</p>
<p> DEVELOPING WORLD. The diminished ability of the Soviets to
exploit Third World instability does not mean the West can be
indifferent to conditions there. Poverty and exploding
populations are a potent formula for increased instability,
religious fundamentalism and violence, which can accelerate the
already heavy flow of economic refugees.
</p>
<p> The Houston summiteers need only cast their eyes south to
Mexico to see the potential for economic improvement when sound
domestic policies are coupled with rational foreign-debt
rescheduling. Now the leaders should focus on such countries
as Peru and Bolivia to press for more ambitious reforms and
find ways to provide relief from heavy debt owed to Western
governments. For the poorest countries, this is the only real
hope. President Bush made a commendable effort last week to
reach out to the nations of Latin America by proposing to
reduce tariffs for their goods, provide debt relief, and set up
an investment fund to encourage free enterprise. This summit
should extend that initiative to other regions, including
Africa.
</p>
<p> The Economic Summit is one of the few international
institutions with real clout because it represents the combined
force of the leaders of the major economies, not just their
Ministers and diplomats. The leaders have a perfect opportunity
to harness the immense potential of the new global economy of
the 1990s. On the evening before the Houston summit, President
Bush has invited his colleagues to attend a rodeo. Perhaps they
can take their cue from the cowboys: either grab the bull by
the horns, or be left to ponder on the flight home why this
group should go on meeting like this.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>