SUBSCRIBE NOW WELCOME BACK. Do you want to continue reading where you left off? New Republic subscribers can pick up where they left off no matter which device they were previously using. SUBSCRIBE NOW

Go Home G20: "In The Medium Run We're All Retired"

THE PLANK SEPTEMBER 22, 2009

G20: "In The Medium Run We're All Retired"

It looks like the G20 on Friday will emphasize its new “framework” for curing macroeconomic imbalances, rather than any substantive measures to regulate banks, derivatives, or any other primary cause of the 2008-2009 financial crisis.

This is appealing to the G20 leaders because their call to “rebalance” global growth will involve no immediate action and no changes in policy--other than in the “medium run” (watch for this phrase in the communiqué).

When exactly is the medium run?

That’s an easy one: It’s always just around the corner. Not today, of course; that would be short run. And not in 20 years; that’s the long run.

The medium run is perhaps in 3 years or perhaps in 5 years. It feels close enough not to be meaningless at the press conference, but it’s not close enough to be meaningful.

And--here’s the key--whatever you agree on for the medium-term, you know that the world will change, quite dramatically, 2 or 3 times before you get there. At that point you can say, quite reasonably: But the conditions today are quite different from what they were when we made this medium-term commitment, so we really need to rethink it.

Of course, having the IMF report back every year on progress towards these medium-term goals is equally pointless. This is what the IMF has been doing since 2006 and what it was preparing diligently to do just as the global crisis broke out.

Expectations for the G20 summit are low. But unless and until the leaders take any steps to address our pressing financial sector vulnerabilities, the summit is not worth its carbon footprint.

Remember what the financial experts said at the previous summit (April) and the one before that (November): We can’t fix the financial system in the height of the crisis. True enough, although the opportunity to break the power of the largest players was squandered in both the U.S. and Europe.

So, now the crisis is over--as the G20 heads of government will affirm--where are their efforts to fix the financial system? Please don’t tell me, “that’s what we’re doing, in the medium-term.”

[Cross-posted at The Baseline Scenario.]

SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS

Show 1 comment

You must be a subscriber to post comments. Subscribe today.

1 comments

Medium run: Far enough into the future to make minds fuzzy about the past but not too far into the future to nudge them into noting the precursors of the next bubble. By the way is Bilderberg hosting G20 again this year...or is Henry Kissinger finally rich enough to foot the whole bill himself? Oh, and in their conference on inflection points how did The Editors at TNR factor in G20? Anything [snicker, snicker] new? gw

- iambiguous

September 22, 2009 at 4:11pm

You must be a subscriber to post comments. Subscribe today.

SHARE HIGHLIGHT

0 CHARACTERS SELECTED

TWEET THIS

POST TO TUMBLR

SHARE ON FACEBOOK

Close