1 / 40

Global Financial Crisis: A Catalyst for change in Global Economic Paradigm

Global Financial Crisis: A Catalyst for change in Global Economic Paradigm. Professor B. P. Singh Chairman Delhi School of Professional Studies & Research Formerly, Head & Dean Faculty of Commerce & Business Delhi School of Economics University of Delhi Delhi. Agenda For Presentation.

mura
Download Presentation

Global Financial Crisis: A Catalyst for change in Global Economic Paradigm

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Global Financial Crisis: A Catalyst for change in Global Economic Paradigm Professor B. P. Singh Chairman Delhi School of Professional Studies & Research Formerly, Head & Dean Faculty of Commerce & Business Delhi School of Economics University of Delhi Delhi

  2. Agenda For Presentation • Anatomy of the Downturn : Cause and Effect • How it has been managed? • Factors affecting Economic Supremacy of a Country • Position of USA till 2008 and current predictions in the wake of current meltdown • Changing outlook for 2009 – 10

  3. Cont… • Global Financial Crisis: A Catalyst for change in Global Economic Paradigm • Cost of Bankruptcy • Restructuring of the Economy: A Remedy • Dimensions of Restructuring • Acquisitions and Restructuring • Policy Goals: What States Want From Restructuring

  4. Anatomy of the downturn A closer look at the global ‘credit crunch’

  5. Governments in Great Britain, Belgium, the Netherlands & even Iceland have been forced to bail out some of their biggest banks The ‘credit crunch’ may have its roots in the US, but it’s now a global problem The Rudd Government has moved to protect bank deposits for the next 3 years Importantly, the Australian banking system, which is more regulated than that in the US, has held up very well

  6. Anatomy of a downturna closer look at the global ‘credit crunch’ January 2008 March 2007 US Federal Reserve cuts interest rates to 0.75% amid fears the US economy could fall into recession JP Morgan buys US investment bank Bear Stearns in an ‘emergency’ rescue deal US Federal Reserve provides US$200 billion to commercial banks in another bid to free up market liquidity in addition to $700 billion announced by US Govt. to rescue wall street.

  7. Cont... April 2008 International Monetary Fund warns losses related to the ‘credit crunch’ could top US$1 trillion

  8. Cont... September 2008 7 September 2008: US government seizes control of mortgage lenders Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac 15 September 2008: Lehman Brothers files for bankruptcy. Merrill Lynch is bought by Bank of America for US$50 billion 16 September 2008: American International Group (AIG), the US’s biggest insurer, receives an US$85 billion loan from the US Federal Reserve to stave off bankruptcy 28 September 2008: US bank, Washington Mutual, is seized by US regulators in the biggest US bank failure in history

  9. Cont... September 2008 28 September 2008 Britain, Belgium & the Netherlands are forced to bail out several major banks. US govt Announces US$700 billion plan to rescue Wall Street US House of Representatives narrowly rejects the US$700 billion bailout plan by a vote of 228-205, sending global share markets tumbling 29 September 2008 Citigroup bids for US bank Wachovia in a deal backed by US authorities 30 September 2008 $55 billion dollars is wiped off the Australian share market in a single day One day later, the market recovers by more than 4%

  10. Cont... October 2008 3 October 2008: After a second vote, the US House of Representatives passes the US$700 billion bailout plan 6 - 10 October 2008: Concerns that bailout plan won’t prevent a global recession sends global shares sliding: Japan -24.3% Europe -22.2% UK - 21.0% US -18.2% Australia -15.6%

  11. The list of casualties kept growing…. In this way… it has been managed

  12. Economic Supremacy of a Country depends upon its state in terms of Hard and Soft Power

  13. In 2007 2020, 2030

  14. Weight of US Economy on the Skids Since 2000 Source: IMF, World Economic Outlook DB, Oct, 2008

  15. Growth Rate Predictions…. Source: IMF, World Economic Outlook, 2008

  16. Position of USA till 2008 Predictions in the wake of Current Meltdown • Since the early 20th century, the US has been the top economic power in the world. • - World’s largest consumer market • The US’s economic weight has fallen steadily since 2000. • 2000: 32% 2007: around 25% • Global Economy is expected to slow down. • Despite a rise in productivity driven by technical innovation, global economic growth will slow overall due to aging population and shrinkage in economically active population

  17. Position of USA till 2008 (Cont…) Predictions in the wake of Current Meltdown (Cont…) • Emerging economies, including BRICs, are growing rapidly. • - Average growth of 6.9% during 2002-2007 (Global economy grew 3.3%) • - Weight of BRICs: 5.3% in 1992 12.8% in 2007 • Emerging countries will lead the global economic growth. • US: 2-3% growth (inflow of immigrants and productivity improvement) • Euro: 2-3% 1-2% growth (shrinking labor population) • Japan: 1-2% growth (rapidly aging population) • China: 6-7% growth 4-5% growth from 2020 (declining economically active population & slowing productivity growth)

  18. Position of USA till 2008 (Cont…) Predictions in the wake of Current Meltdown (Cont…) • China showed especially fast growth. • - Annual average growth of 10% since entering WTO in 2001 • - IMF predicts China will overtake Japan in 2010 to become the No. 2 economy • - India: 6-7% growth (growing population and productivity improvement) • As early as 2026, China may replace the US as the world’s largest economy. • India is expected to overtake Japan in 2023. • Economic weight of BRICs will continue to rise. • 16.1% in 2010 25.1% in 2020 31.7% in 2030

  19. Position of USA till 2008 (Cont…) Predictions in the wake of Current Meltdown (Cont…) • US holds dominant position in all areas that create financial power; financial hub, center of financial assets & institutions. • US holds 56.1% of the world’s financial assets • 34% of bonds (as of 2006) • Stock market capitalization: 4.5 times that of Japan, the world’s second-largest market • Financial power of Europe and emerging countries will strengthen. • - Significant advancement expected in sovereign wealth funds and emerging countries

  20. Position of USA till 2008 (Cont…) Predictions in the wake of Current Meltdown (Cont…) • Among the world’s ten major banks, three are US banks • New York is the global financial hub • Except for London, most other financial hubs specialize in narrow financial services • Absolute financial power of the US will weaken but its superior status will continue. • - In the wake of the financial crisis, the US financial industry will undergo a temporary contraction

  21. Position of USA till 2008 (Cont…) Predictions in the wake of Current Meltdown (Cont…) • US maintains financial power based on its key currency status and advanced financial acumen. • US Dollar Recycling Mechanism • US’s current account deficit Increasing liquidity in countries with current account surplus Swelling foreign currency reserves of these countries Investment in the US • US will continue to hold competitiveness thanks to large comprehensive financial groups • Commercial banks & investment banks combined

  22. Position of USA till 2008 (Cont…) Predictions in the wake of Current Meltdown (Cont…) • US has quality workforce, core factor of financial industry • Financial crisis caused contraction in US investment banks. • Financial power will be divided between the US and Europe. • Impact of China’s rapidly growing financial power will be limited to Asia

  23. Changing outlook for 2009 * Source : “The Implications of the Global Financial Crisis for Low-Income Countries”, International Monetary Fund, March 2009. LICs = Low Income Countries (WEO: World Economic Outlook)

  24. Cont…. Source : “The Implications of the Global Financial Crisis for Low-Income Countries”, International Monetary Fund, March 2009. LICs = Low Income Countries

  25. An Emerging Polarity in Global Structure by 2030 Economic Power Index Note : The Economic Power Index (EPI) represents scores based on the sum of comparative outlook in seven areas (US=100) – economic scale, key currency, financial power, resource-securing capability, science & technology, regional leadership, and global governance.

  26. Global Financial Crisis: A Catalyst for Change in Global Economic Paradigm • The global financial crisis paved the way for China to shorten by more than two years, from the time necessary to catch up with industrialized countries, including the US. – The US and Europe underwent “two lost years” due to the financial crisis and Japan for 4-5 years.( IMF,2008) • Change in key currency and international monetary system

  27. Cont.… • Emerging Polarity – The US maintains the largest clout in the world : thanks to its defence and technological superiority. – Once becomes politically integrated, Europe will emerge as a key force in international peace and mediation work on the back of its soft power and new values. – Backed by its huge economic scale, China will likely play the role of the epicentre of Asia and emerging markets.

  28. Cont….. • The next 20 years (2010-2030) will be a period of transition in global economic order – The US hegemony will gradually weaken – Key variable in the shift of global economic order will be the emergence of BRIC countries, especially China.

  29. Cont…. • The biggest uncertainty shall lay on how China and India will evolve in terms of their diplomatic relations in the future – The most important variable in this relationship would depend upon how China’s political and economic systems will grow and take shape.

  30. Cost of Bankruptcy….. Bankruptcy – Historical Vignettes • The penalty for declaring bankruptcy in Ancient Rome was slavery or being cut to pieces. The choice was left to the creditor. By the Middle Ages, the treatment of insolvent debtors had softened considerably. • In Northern Italy, bankrupt debtors hit their naked backsides against a rock three times before a jeering crowd and cried out, “I declare bankruptcy.” • In French medieval cities, bankrupts were required to wear a green cap at all times, and anyone could throw stones at them.   - Source: World Bank, Doing Business in 2004

  31. Restructuring of the Economy : A Remedy • To promote recovery in a crisis-affected economy, it is essential to link together a restructuring of the financial and the corporate sectors, a so-called rapid sequencing restructuring of the economy.

  32. Dimensions of restructurings • Asset restructuring • Acquisitions • Divestitures • Spin offs • Corporate downsizing • Outsourcing

  33. Cont…. • Restructuring ownership structure, leverage • Exchange offers • Share repurchases • LBO (Leveraged buyouts) • LCO’s (Leveraged cashouts)

  34. Acquisitions and Restructuring • Corporate Restructuring • Divestitures (sell-offs versus spin-offs) • Spin-off • Spin-off represents a pro-rata distribution of shares of a subsidiary to shareholders. • Occurs within the hierarchy. • Terms and valuation of the assets are set internally • Parent stockholders create new board & TMT. • Parent can maintain ties with spun-off unit.

  35. Cont… Sell-off • Sell-offs: Assets are sold to another firm for cash and/or securities. • Occurs outside the hierarchy. • Value determined by market forces. • Acquiring firm absorbs and governs the sold-off assets as part of its hierarchy.

  36. Which way is the best to Restructure…… is always based on the objectives of Restructuring…..

  37. Policy Goals: What States Want From Restructuring • ENSURE OPPORTUNITY FOR RESIDENTIAL AND SMALL BUSINESS PARTICIPATION • ENCOURAGE GROWTH OF EFFICIENT, COMPETITIVE GENERATION OF MARKET • ACHIEVE BROAD CUSTOMER & NEW ALTERNATIVE SUPPLIER PARTICIPATION

  38. Cont…. • ADDRESS TRANSITIONAL UNECONOMIC “STRANDED COSTS” • RETAIN SYSTEM BENEFITS (RELIABILITY, LOW-INCOME ASSISTANCE, CONSERVATION & RENEWABLES)

  39. Thank You All For the Patient Listening ! For Further Queries Contact us at : drbpsingh1958@gmail.com

More Related