Mar29
2008
 

Race to the Bottom

 
Surjit S BhallaMarch 29, 2008
 
   

Deep pessimism about Indian GDP growth (only 7 percent for 2008/9) does not appear to be justified on the basis of evidence available today.


 

Race to the bottom is on. Just yesterday the investment banks (and their economists who never have to put their money where their pen is!) were gleefully overstepping themselves, and each other, trying to forecast rupee/dollar at 33, and Indian GDP growth at 10 %. The same herd mentality is seen today. Someone has 8 % growth, then I must go for 7.5; oops, that is taken, so I will go for 7 percent.

 

This article is written to introduce accountability. After all, us humble money managers are held accountable every minute of every day - by the market. And the market is in part driven by the sophisticated estimates of GDP growth and the stock market of the investment banks. Perhaps the Editor can institute prizes for the Best (and Worst) forecasting record.

 

The table gives the present collection of growth estimates. Three very blue chip investment banks are clustered at 7 % (HSBC, JP Morgan Chase and Morgan Stanley). It takes a brave (and perhaps stupid) soul to go against the collective might of these three, but since there is the possibility of a prize next year, let me step forward! Oxus's estimate of GDP growth for India is 9 percent for 2008/9. If I am wrong, I will have the satisfaction of being largely right regarding the estimate for 2007/8! (8.5 %, BS, The new economics of Indian export growth, July 21, 2007). .

 

Reasons for optimism - several. (It is worthy of investigation whether humans are hard-wired with respect to seeing the glass as half-full or half-empty). Everybody is a big bear these days. Just like Rockefeller knew that there was a crash coming in 1929 because his shoeshine boy asked him for stock tips, so it is likely that the economy has hit bottom when everyone is not only an economist, but an articulate, and accurate, macro-economist! Paul Samuelson famously said, "economists have predicted 10 of the last 2 recessions".

 

There are several reasons cited by the pessimists. The doomsayers have apparently concluded that not only is the US recession a certainty, but that it will be a deep one, lasting much more than six months. There are dire warnings of the Return of the Great Depression, and if that movie is too scary for you, there is a light hearted version: US and Japan: Spot the difference. In reality, the likelihood of a plain vanilla recession is perhaps 60 percent; the chances of doom a Black Swan probability. In addition, there is a better than even chance that Bernanke's imaginative and forceful handling of the crisis will work.

 

But what about growth coupling? Large parts of the world are yet to show any significant deceleration in GDP growth in response to the US slowdown. Whether it is China, or Korea, or Brazil, or Mexico, or even the Euro area, growth slowdown is absent. India has shown a significant slowdown, but that is entirely due to our mis-guided policy on exchange rates and interest rates. Another useful statistic to note is the changing share in world GDP growth, in US dollars, of India and China. Today this share, at 20 percent, is equal to that of the US. This means that the world now has a reverse cushion i.e. far from India catching pneumonia (growth of 7 percent) when America sneezes, it is probable that America does not catch a cold i.e. no US recession.

 

The pessimists perhaps are assuming that 10 percent real interest rates in India will continue indefinitely. Such levels of real interest rates are rare in India, and even rarer in the free world. The last time such heights were reached was during the mid to late 1990s. In contrast, China, and most of Asia, faces real rates in the neighborhood of 1 to 2 percent. This situation cannot continue, must not continue. However, it is well known that interest rates are not made by economists (or journalists!) but by the RBI. What possibility is that the RBI will change course over the next year? Actually, not small. The incumbent governor, Dr. Y V Reddy, is due to retire in Sept. 2008. His policies have been of the ECB variety, strict monetarism. What is the likelihood that we will get another strict monetarist to succeed Reddy? Small, since age restrictions rule out most monetarists. So, interest rates in 2008/9 should be helpful in facilitating growth, and therefore making 7 percent GDP growth too pessimistic.

 

The probability of India seeing 7 percent growth in 2008/9 is just as likely as the rupee being Rs. 37/$ in 2008 - a forecast of most of the investment banks mentioned in the table. The GDP growth forecast is likely to be wrong for the same reason i.e. it is most likely based on the logic of Wall Street cocktail party talk rather than the logic of economics. In the last five years (since 2002), the investment/GDP ratio (a prime determinant of higher GDP growth) has increased by 13.7 percentage points to 39 percent today. How many country-year observations (excluding small and oil countries) are there with an investment rate above 39 percent and a growth rate below 7 percent? Less than 20 or a probability of less than .003 percent.

 

The competition is on - in a year, we will know the winner; next week, an analysis of inflation forecasting.

 

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