It is getting harder and harder to see where tomorrow’s global growth will be coming from. Job creation in the U.S. has come to a screeching halt. Growth in the Eurozone has done the same. And a still irradiating Japanese economy continues to stagnate, while an emerging energy crisis has suddenly sparked plans to start off-shoring manufacturing.

You can say all you want about the importance of China, India and Brazil as the new engines of global economic growth but how fast can the global economy be growing if none of the world’s most developed economies are part of the process? Even worse, the noose is tightening around those economies’ necks as their governments run out of policy rope.

In the U.S., it seems everyone other than President Barack Obama realizes that further fiscal stimulus is out of the question. The real policy choice is how aggressively to apply the fiscal brakes and rein in Washington’s record deficit. And even that decision is more likely to be made by America’s foreign creditors such as the People’s Bank of China than by a new Administration or Congress.

Without the wherewithal for further fiscal stimulus, the Federal Reserve Board will prime its printing presses for a third, and quite likely, fourth round of quantitative easing. If nothing else, those measures will push the U.S. dollar to new lows.

Unlike export-based economies such as Canada or Germany, the U.S. export sector is much too small in relation to the size of the economy to single handedly carry the burden for growth. Quantitative easing may not even be able to offset the impact of the fiscal brakes that inevitably have to be applied.

Meanwhile, the European Monetary Union, at least the 17-member version we know, will soon be abandoned as a wrong turn in post-war European history. The tolerance of the German taxpayer these days is running about as low as the liquidity of the Greek government bond market. Germans are even challenging their government’s constitutional right to bail out another country in their court system. Most Germans thought bailing out East Germany was enough for a lifetime.

Meanwhile, Greece, a serial defaulter, will do what it does best, which is, of course, to default. But unlike Greece’s many past defaults, this default will reverberate through the 17-member monetary union, shaking more than a few bad apples off the tree. Interconnected financial markets will see to that in a hurry.

The Germans will lose their obligation to bail out foreign, fiscally wayward states like Greece. But without the PIIGS to plague the Euro, the Germans will also lose their cheap currency. As the world’s second largest exporter behind China, a cheap currency is a lot more important to the German economy than it is to the American economy.

Anyway you cut it, the outlook for the German and U.S. economies is going from bad to worse.

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  • Smokey

    Every roof top in the country should be required to be planted ( but don’t block the chimney ).
    Environmentalists living in caves to be exempted.

    Comrade Smokey

  • Abitibi Doug

    What does the desire to work less have to do with being a greedy capitalist? Nothing, absolutely nothing whatsoever, there is no correlation between the two, in fact more likely a negative correlation. If anything it makes me less greedy and more socialistic, something I make no apology for whatsoever.

  • Smokey

    You’ve got it backwards. It is the desire not to work that classifies you. And the fact that you can get away with it means you are living off the system. You are gaming the capitalist way of life we have here in North America. In any other system you would soon die by not pulling your weight day to day. Its hypocritical. You probaly are getting free medical or are on low premiums, for example. I’m out there full time supporting you (indirectly).

  • Smokey

    Abitbi Doug deserves to collapse first don’t you think. He’s a slacker.

  • Smokey

    Peak oil has now been pushed out to 2050 by some experts. Things are looking much better, methinks,

  • Smokey

    Peak oil has now been pushed out to 2050 by some experts. Things are looking much better, methinks,

  • Abitibi Doug

    If I don’t have the desire to work, then why am I working now and actually enjoying it? I just enjoy having breaks between employment to enjoy other pursuits. That way, when I am back in the work force I am refreshed and eager to go and very productive at that. Am I somehow cheating the system. Let’s analyze the present employment situation. The economy is in a long period of high unemployment in developed countries, and will get worse as these economic stimulus packages wind down. To make matters worse, even China is feeling the pinch with its economy slowing down. Consider that the “official” unemployment rate in the United States is 9%, and about 7% in Canada. That in itself is bad enough, but far worse when you consider the real rate is more like 50 to 100% higher than the “official” rate. Are you even aware of this unemployment problem millions of people have? Do you care? Based on what I’ve seen so far, the answer to both questions is a definite no. When I am not in the paid work force, there is an army of millions of people eagerly waiting to fill the void, so I have no reason whatsoever to feel guilty about it. In fact, I would feel more guilty about hogging a full time job rather than sharing it with others, which is why I suggested the reduction of work hours in the first place. It’s an idea that’s long, long overdue. The biggest  problem is most people are too narrow minded to consider any new ideas to solve nagging problems. It’s called thinking outside the box, an idea that you obviously don’t understand and likely never will.  It’s a good thing everyone isn’t so narrow minded or we would still be cave men totally opposed to the idea of using fire. Do you have a better idea what to do with all those millions of unemployed people?
    As for medical care, I do pay every year into a fund called the Fair Share Health Care Levy. Over the years I’ve paid far more into the system than I have used (because my sensible approach to life keeps stress induced illnesses to a minimum), but don’t mind that one bit. It’s essentially an insurance policy, and it’s also what that wonderful idea of universality is all about.
     In closing I recommend you get outside, away from your computer, get out and meet people, read the paper, and find out what’s really going on in the world and abandon your narrow minded, antiquated views. Get out and have fun, rather than bitching about all that’s wrong with the world!

  • Abitibi Doug

    2050 seems overly optimistic. If those kind of predictions make it into the mainstream media it will be a sure sign to contrarians to buy energy stocks, just like in 1998 when oil was $11 a barrel and some “expert” said: There’s so much excess oil out there that it could go to $5 a barrel. We shall see. Don’t you just love these expert predictions?

  • Smokey

    Milton Friedman once asked the Chinese why they were building a canal using shovels and wheelbarrows instead of a bulldozer? They replied they were creating more employment that way, to which Friedman retorted ” why not give them all spoons”.  Your method of creating employment is about as nonsensical.
    I spend a lot of time riding my bike meeting real people, but work full time to help the economy first. You are more stressed because you have too much idle time, courtesy of the capitalist system whch you are living off unfairly. 

  • Spambox18

    You’re the one that’s stressed, worrying about who is working and who isn’t. Oh, and doesn’t the capitalist system reward those who are intelligent enough to make it work for them? If you don’t like the capitalist system you’re free to move to North Korea any time you like (the sooner the better) and no one here will try to stop you.

  • Smokey

    I don’t like communists living off the capitalist system and complaining while they take time off and have free time to demonstrate at the “take back Wall Street” or equivalent gathering.