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- <text>
- <title>
- (1980) Outlook '81:A Stagnant Europe
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1980 Highlights
- </history>
- <link 07357>
- <link 05102>
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- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- January 5, 1981
- ECONOMY & BUSINESS
- Outlook '81: A Stagnant Europe
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Trying to curb prices, governments hit a new oil slick
- </p>
- <p> Another year of economic stagnation. That is the gloomy
- picture that TIME's European Board of Economists sees for 1981.
- As nations struggle to absorb rapid-fire energy price shocks from
- the Middle East, unemployment in Europe will climb and torrid
- inflation cool only slightly. To rein in rising prices,
- governments have resorted to traditional tactics, in particular
- sharply slowing the growth of their money supplies. The result,
- is, however, an international war of high interest rates that
- threatens to deepen and prolong the economic malaise. Says Hans
- Mast, executive vice president of Switzerland's Credit Suisse:
- "There is no mistaking that the world is moving into perhaps
- its most difficult phase since World War II, and governments
- cannot do very much about it. After three decades of
- Keynesianism, old instruments of policy do not work any more."
- </p>
- <p> The most ominous aspect of the current slump is its global
- reach. Even during the severe 1973-75 recession that racked
- industrialized nations, growth in developing countries, such as
- Brazil, South Korea and Singapore, continued to move ahead. The
- thirst of those countries for imports from machine tools to
- tractors helped keep production lines working in the U.S.,
- Europe and Japan. That expansion and the ever higher oil bills,
- though, were paid for by increasing doses of credit from Western
- banks. As a result, the developing countries have piled up a
- staggering $450 billion in debts. Now the banks have grown
- cautious, and the debtor nations face hard times. Warns Jan
- Tumlir, chief economists for the international organization GATT
- (General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade): "I expect that for
- the first time we will have a generalized recession in the sense
- that the imports of the developing countries will increase only
- marginally, if at all."
- </p>
- <p> TIME's economists see a lean period ahead for each Western
- Europe's four major economies:
- </p>
- <p>WEST GERMANY. This mighty economic juggernaut has begun to
- sputter badly. In 1980, West Germany's current account deficit,
- which includes trade of both goods and services, reached a
- record $15.4 billion; inflation was 5.2%, an unacceptable level
- by West German standards. The Bonn government is therefore
- slowing the growth of spending and curbing the money supply.
- Herbert Giersch, director of the University of Kiel's Institute
- for World Economics, expects no growth in his country this year,
- following a 1% decline in 1980. Though inflation should fall to
- 3.5% by the end of 1981, unemployment will rise from its present
- rate of 4.5% to 5.5%.
- </p>
- <p>FRANCE. Because President Valery Giscard d'Estaing faces
- re-election this spring, the French government is unlikely to
- be quite as tightfisted as its Bonn counterpart. Jean-Marie
- Chevalier, professor of economics at the University of Paris
- Nord, predicts that growth, which was 1.6% in 1980, will decline
- slightly to between .5% and 1% in 1981. Unemployment, now at
- 6.9%, could reach 8%. Progress against inflation will be small.
- After rising by 13.5% in 1980, prices this year will surge
- another 11% or more.
- </p>
- <p>BRITAIN. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher shows no signs of
- wavering in her campaign to restore Britain's economic vigor
- through a tough policy of controlling the growth of money.
- Though the British G.N.P. declined by 5.5% in 1980, Economist
- Samuel Brittan of the Financial Times of London expects four
- more quarters of recession and another 1% drop in national
- output in 1981. Unemployment, which is currently 8.7%,
- Britain's highest since the Great Depression, may hit 11.5% by
- year's end. Says Brittan: "We have been carrying millions of
- unemployed on the books of firms up until recently. Now they
- are being transferred to the unemployment rolls." He predicts
- that inflation will begin to ease in 1981, going from 15% in
- 1980 to 9% by the end of this year.
- </p>
- <p>ITALY. With inflation running at a 21% rate in 1980, Italy's
- key exports, such as textiles and shoes, are rapidly becoming
- uncompetitive in world markets. Guido Carli, president of the
- European Community's Union of Industries and former governor of
- the Bank of Italy, foresees no growth in the Italian economy
- this year, after a comparatively robust 4% rise in 1980. The
- slump should slow inflation to about 16% by nest December.
- </p>
- <p> TIME's economists warn that competitive belt-tightening by
- the major industrialized nations may seriously stall economic
- recovery. The oil exporters will drain $120 billion from the
- importing countries next year, and every Western nation seems
- determined to reduce its deficit in order to keep its currency
- strong. As governments slow their economies by escalating
- interest rates, they also choke off the capital investment that
- is vital for renewed growth. An additional danger is that, as
- unemployment rises, workers will demand protection from imports.
- New barriers to world trade would ensure sluggish growth.
- European industrialists have already been lobbying governments
- to limit the imports of American textiles and Japanese cars.
- </p>
- <p> The ultimate key to international financial stability, of
- course, is the price of oil. TIME's economists are cautiously
- optimistic about the near-term energy outlook. France's
- Chevalier, an energy expert, sees no significant increases in
- world oil prices during 1981 beyond those following the OPEC
- meeting in Bali two weeks ago. Though the Persian Gulf war
- knocked out 2.9 million bbl. per day from Iran and Iraq,
- according to Chevalier's figures, other OPEC members, including
- Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates, increased
- output to ease the shortfall. Oil importers are also being
- helped by increased production in Mexico, the North Sea and
- other non-OPEC areas. Moreover, conservation and slow growth
- reduced oil demand by about 2 million bbl. per day over the past
- year.
- </p>
- <p> Chevalier, however, fears that any petroleum price relief may
- well be temporary. He agrees with reports by the CIA and others
- that oil output in the Soviet Union, the world's largest
- producer, is peaking. Until now, the Soviets, who pump more than
- 11 million bbl. per day, have been able to satisfy their own
- needs and those of their Communist allies. But the antiquated
- condition of Soviet drilling equipment, a situation that has
- been made worse by the U.S. embargo on high-technology exports
- to the Soviet Union, has delayed the development of new oil
- deposits. By 1985, the Communist nations may be forced to
- import oil from the Middle East, which would provoke new
- shortages and put intense pressure on prices in the world oil
- market. Toward the end of the decade, new Soviet oilfields and
- Chinese discoveries could bring supply and demand into closer
- balance once again.
- </p>
- <p> The ability of nations to weather economic challenges in 1981
- will depend, in large part, on their political leadership. As
- head of the largest economy and the most powerful country in the
- WEst, the U.S. President will play the central role. TIME's
- economists view the election of Ronald Reagan with both hope and
- a degree of skepticism. They applaud his announced energy
- policy, which includes the decontrol of U.S. crude oil and
- natural gas prices as quickly as possible. This should spur new
- energy production and encourage even greater conservation
- efforts.
- </p>
- <p> TIME's board is less sanguine about Reagan's brand of
- "supply-side" economics, which would use large cuts in personal
- and corporate income taxes to stimulate U.S. business. Says
- Italy's Carli: "Supply-side economics to my ears means
- inflation." They likewise doubt Reagan's ability to deliver on
- campaign promises to cut taxes by 30% over the next three years,
- increase defense spending and balance the federal budget.
- </p>
- <p> The greatest fear of the European economists is that Reagan's
- policies will result in more U.S. inflation, which would mean
- more instability for the dollar. The dollar's wild gyrations
- during the first years of the Carter Administration disrupted
- international trade and made governments uneasy about continuing
- to hold U.S. currency as their chief reserve asset. Some $800
- billion is held overseas, and Europeans are anxious to see the
- value of these funds protected. One of the few bright bits of
- financial news for the U.S. in 1980 was the strength of the
- American currency on international money markets. During the
- year, the dollar increased in value by about 13% against the
- West German mark. Says West Germany's Giersch: "We would like
- to see the dollar again as the leading currency in the world."
- </p>
- <p> TIME's economists believe that Reagan's most crucial task
- will be to restore confidence in U.S. foreign policy. They point
- out that the U.S. in the past decade seems to have lost control
- totally of events in the Middle East, while several African
- nations, including Angola, Mozambique and Ethiopia, have slipped
- under Communist influence. Observes Mast: "There is no doubt
- about it. The European board members, therefore, praise
- Reagan's intention to accelerate defense spending. They argue
- that at stake is the free flow of oil that is ultimately the
- economic lifeblood of rich and poor countries alike.
- </p>
- <p>-- By Charles Alexander
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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