Davos 2024 faces the stalking dangers of rising debts

The mood at the World Economic Forum’s annual gathering in the Swiss ski resort of Davos will be far more downbeat this year than in the recent past.

As geopolitical problems and conflicts piled up during 2023, the world economy continued to be stalked by a danger that’s shadowed it for some time: debt.

The problems and dangers associated the growth and servicing costs of global debt will be high on the list of talking points for the 530 banking, insurance, investing and other finance executives expected to attend this year’s WEF meeting.

Shamik Dhar, chief economist at BNY Mellon Investment Management, warns that the rising debt has formed a dangerous conjunction with reduced economic performance.

“It’s been a combination of bad luck and some mysterious slowdown in productivity. We don’t really understand what causes productivity to slow down; it’s kind of this mysterious secular change that happens every 20 or 30 years or so, and there’s nothing the policy framework could have done about it,” he said.

Erik Britton, chief executive of Fathom Consulting, points out that the levels of debt are problematic because they undermine long-term growth potential.

“You have to find a way of growing more rapidly to change the [GDP to debt] ratio,” he told The National at a Chatham House event in London on Thursday.

During the Davos week, the discussions over debt will reveal concerns that the amounts owed by governments are just too high. The Institute of International Finance (IIF) said global debt hit a record $307 trillion during the second quarter of 2023 – that’s basically what governments, businesses and individuals owe.

The IIF warned last September that “as higher rates and higher debt levels push government interest expenses higher, domestic debt strains are set to increase”. Those who have been warning of a looming debt crunch now contend that some economies are simply too big to save.

Global debt was $226 trillion in 2020 and then $303 trillion in 2021, the biggest jump since the Second World War, according to the IMF.

davos 2024 faces the stalking dangers of rising debts

The Alpine resort of Davos will host the 54th annual meeting of the World Economic Forum from January 15 to 19. Getty

The Covid pandemic forced the likes of the US, Europe and Japan to borrow more than they had intended. Then rising inflation and the accompanying upward moves in interest rates began to balloon the servicing costs of the debt.

At about $33 trillion the US owes more than the GDPs of China, Japan, Germany, the UK and France put together.

According to the World Bank’s International Debt Report 2023, low and middle income countries paid an unprecedented $443.5 billion just to service their debts in 2022.

That points to the fact that “high interest rates and record debt levels have set many countries on a path to crisis,” said Indermit Gill, the World Bank’s chief economist.

Davos discussions

Some feel the system itself is at fault and is the root cause of runaway debt. The consensus global macroeconomic framework, they say, should be torn up.

“Policy has failed, in my view, even in its own terms,” said Mr Britton said.

“We need to worry less about technical stuff like controlling inflation, stop worrying about using policy to offset the business cycle and worry more about long horizons, the externalities that go with growth – embracing, rather than trying to avoid risk.”

This framework essentially comprises independent central banks pursuing inflation targets, governments following clear rules on the levels of public debts and robust regulators who make sure that everybody follows the rules, so that competition and financial stability are guaranteed.

At the international level, in theory at least, the IMF and the World Bank make sure trade flows freely and responds quickly to any unexpected shocks.

The lower interest rate and quantitative easing polices that central banks adopted in the wake 2008/2009 global financial crisis encouraged the accumulation of debt at an unprecedented rate which, when the era of cheap money ended with a rapid rise in inflation and interest rates to match, led to higher debt serving costs and increased risk of defaults.

Others, like Creon Butler, director of the Global Economy and Finance Programme at Chatham House, contend that while the system has faults and has been tested, especially since the global financial crisis, it’s vital that “we don’t give up on what we have”.

“Where I disagree is that we should blame this framework for what has happened,” he said.

“There are structural reasons why growth has been low and volatility has been high.”

Shifting the focus

The debt issue should be a major theme at in Davos next Wednesday, during the closed-door Financial Services Governors Meeting which, according to Reuters, will be attended by more than 100 chairmen and chief executives from the worlds of banking, financial markets, insurance and asset management.

Barclays chief executive C S Venkatakrishnan and the chief executive of Manulife Roy Gori will co-chair of the meeting, which should cover the debt crisis as part of the conversation on navigating risk during macroeconomic uncertainty.

But while the mounting global debt worries many economists, Mr Britton is not convinced that the discussions in Davos will be broad enough, nor the thinking long-term enough to make a difference.

“What is it that we’re really trying to achieve – ultimately, in the long-run? he asked The National.

“Not today, short-run dynamics, but real long-run in relation to real standards of living.

“That’s where the focus should shift.”

OTHER NEWS

10 minutes ago

NHS Blood and Transplant chief medical officer apologises to infected blood victims

10 minutes ago

OpenAI unveils new AI model

10 minutes ago

'It's like they'd never done a gig like this before': Springsteen fans decry crowd control issues

10 minutes ago

Britain’s inflation problem could be killed off this week

10 minutes ago

Volunteers sleep on the street to help the homeless

10 minutes ago

Google rebuilds search engine around AI and unveils new image and video tools

10 minutes ago

Best out of Origin 1 in more injury blues for NSW

10 minutes ago

New Setback for Russia: Another Warship Lost in Black Sea

10 minutes ago

Bahrain to Host a Global Aviation Conference This Month!

10 minutes ago

Polls after the federal budget and Opposition reply are ‘not great news for Labor’

11 minutes ago

Hong Kong singer Alex To holds concert at Taipei Arena for first time

11 minutes ago

SCDF firefighter Kenneth Tay cremated after making ‘the ultimate sacrifice in service of the nation’

11 minutes ago

Courteney Cox says she still ‘talks’ with Matthew Perry months after his death

11 minutes ago

The Singleton single malt whisky has 40% off – and it’s perfect on the rocks or in summer cocktails

11 minutes ago

Alzheimer’s breakthrough as common hormone could become new dementia drug

11 minutes ago

Emma Hayes remains true to the end: honest, transformative, a champion

11 minutes ago

What happened in the UK's infected blood scandal? Inquiry report will be revealed on Monday

13 minutes ago

Dekker stars as London Lions beat Phoenix to win BBL play-offs

13 minutes ago

Two dead and ten injured in knife attack at Chinese primary school

13 minutes ago

Moises Caicedo Scores From Halfway Line in Chelsea v Bournemouth

13 minutes ago

Bruce Dickinson review – metal’s charismatic star indulges his goofy side

13 minutes ago

NHI resistance driven by anti-working class agendas

13 minutes ago

Andrew Bolt hits out at ABC host over Peter Dutton interview

13 minutes ago

Ph.D. student debunks common misinformation about coal: 'It's one of a number of bogus arguments they use'

13 minutes ago

Everybody may love Raymond, but Ray Romano loves Peter Boyle

13 minutes ago

"He has been crushed for being a bad defender, and he stepped up" - Draymond credits Karl-Anthony Towns for his defense on Nikola Jokic

13 minutes ago

American couple stranded in Brazil facing 'bureaucratic nightmare' after newborn son arrives months early

13 minutes ago

Kevin Costner tears up during 10-minute standing ovation for new film Horizon at Cannes

13 minutes ago

Flying the flag: SA expats around the world proudly cast their vote [watch]

13 minutes ago

Stuart Barnes: Leinster’s ‘focus’ on Jacques Nienaber’s defence could cost them against ‘brilliant’ Toulouse

13 minutes ago

Man City FFP: Premier League expulsion ‘a realistic outcome’ as City face one of ‘four outcomes’

13 minutes ago

Jürgen Klopp's last ever post-match press conference as Liverpool manager

13 minutes ago

Morgan Stanley throws in the towel: S&P 500 price target raised by 20%

13 minutes ago

Vehicles donated by Londoners via Ulez scrappage scheme arrive in Ukraine

13 minutes ago

Megan McKenna shows off her growing bump in a swimsuit on babymoon as her fiancé Oliver Burke kisses her tummy during Dubai holiday

13 minutes ago

Mzansi eats: Five iconic South African snacks you’ll miss

13 minutes ago

Shares in Naspers, Prosus fall after Bloisi is appointed CEO

13 minutes ago

Video: Businessman has £30,000 watch stolen while sitting at traffic lights in his Lamborghini... so smashes up his 'uninsured' £300,000 supercar ramming the thief off his motorcycle as he tries to escape

13 minutes ago

Noomi Rapace to take on the role of Mother Teresa in a new biopic about the legendary Catholic saint

13 minutes ago

Video: Iranians CELEBRATE the death of President Raisi with victims of his torturous regime and their loved ones dancing and drinking a toast to his fatal helicopter crash

Kênh khám phá trải nghiệm của giới trẻ, thế giới du lịch