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Business
in a Hostile Environment: Confronting Global Volatility
Claude Smadja
Smadja & Associates Strategic Advisory
Hong Kong, July 25, 2003
We have entered an era of structural volatility:
- Convergence between tremendous instability factors in
the geopolitical domain and unprecedented uncertainties
and vulnerabilities in the macroeconomic domain.
- The corporate scandals in the US as well as Europe, the
enduring controversy over executives’ pay, corporate
governance practices, have created a crisis of confidence
in business – and within the business community -
affecting the very legitimacy of the system of global financial
capitalism.
- The backlash against globalization is proving to be an
enduring phenomenon, forcing corporations to revisit the
ways they operate at a global level and they position themselves
in a context of ever increasing public scrutiny and demands
from the public.
- As much as the 90’s were a decade propitious to
business, business has today to operate in a difficult –
if not hostile – environment.
The Economic Outlook
The main element is the marked deterioration of the global
economic outlook. What started in March 2000 in the US as
– supposedly – one of the mildest and shortest
recession in modern economic history has been accentuated
and aggravated by the crisis of confidence in the business
community, the geopolitical uncertainty with respect to Iraq.
It spread to Europe, hitting it even harder than the US, highlighting
structural fiscal imbalances in the US and the deficiencies
in the euro-zone economic, social structures. The euro zone
that, last November, was forecast to grow by 1.6% in 2003
will be very lucky if it achieves the 0.8 growth that is now
forecast.
All the forecasts for 2004 have been revised downward. Japan,
struggling with deflation is expected to grow by 0.5% at best.
For the first time since 1930, there are talks of a potential
danger global deflation. Although this is a little bit exaggerated,
deflecting such potential threat will be the key priority
for the months to come. But never before the prospects for
global economic policy coordination have been so grim, in
a context of geopolitical tensions and conflicting national
interests.
The US
Once again, if one wants to hope for any potential for improvement,
one has to look in the direction of the US, which is expected
to grow by about 2.5% this year. Some economists now even
expect that the US should be able to achieve its growth trend
rate of 3.5% in 2004. A number of elements point at a strengthening
of economic activity in the second part of 2003:
- Sustained by incredibly low rates, the housing market
remains quite dynamic
- Oil prices are coming down significantly, contributing
to reduced costs
- The process of reduction of excess production capacity
keeps moving ahead, restoring balance in the economy
- The first indications of a timid revival in corporate
investment are beginning to happen. Investment in IT equipment,
for instance increased by 10.8% at an annual rate in the
first quarter of 2003 compared to 3.2% a year ago.
- The gains in stock markets over the last six weeks are
helping to restore a minimal level of confidence
- The US 350 billion tax cut program enacted by Congress
should act as an additional boost to investment, consumption
and economic activity
- Last but not least, the declining US dollar is significantly
improving the competitiveness of US corporations in the
US domestic market as well as in export markets..
But the picture in the US remains vulnerable.
- The Fed is definitely showing an awareness of the risk
of deflation taking hold of the US economy. But this risk
remains quite manageable and limited for the moment as the
Fed has lowered again interest rates and is ready to use
non-classical measures at the first sign of aggravation.
- In addition, the weak dollar policy is also a very significant
firewall against this danger – as long as the slide
in the value of the greenback against the euro, and to a
much lesser extent the yen, does not become an uncontrollable
rout.
The sea change that we are witnessing today and which is
radically altering the global economic landscape is the fact
that by its decision to let the dollar weaken (and even accentuate
the trend by timely official pronouncements) the US
has for all practical purposes decided to stop being the market
of last resort for the rest of the world.
In previous circumstances, it was the US economy which, humming
and running, was the engine that pulled the rest of the world
along towards global growth. The productivity gains which
were engineered in the US raised the trend growth rate from
the level it was between, 1975 and the beginning of the 90s,
at 2.5% per year, to 3.5% per year the mid-90s, providing
a tremendous opportunity for the rest of the world to use
US economic vitality as an additional and sometimes crucial
sustaining element for their own growth. This is what widened
the US trade deficit and led to a US current account deficit
now at 5% of GDP, which is considered unsustainable.
The change of the dollar policy means in fact
that we have entered a period that might be called “low
intensity economic and trade warfare” with Europe and,
to a lesser extent, with Asia, especially with China..
The fiscal, trade and current account deficits would anyway
normally lead to a weaker dollar. But the US administration
has obviously decided that what was a necessary monetary adjustment
will be accentuated for political reasons. It needs to accelerate
economic activity in order to start the presidential race
in a strong position. The weak dollar will obviously not only
help US exports but also improve the balance sheets of US
global corporations as their European earnings will be valued
more in US dollars; Washington needs also to ensure that the
pains of reducing the fiscal imbalances be reduced by exporting
part of the burden to the other economies.
Europe
Europe is at the present moment an unmitigated disaster area.
All the growth forecasts for 2003 and 2004 have regularly
been revised downwards. One has only to look at the growth
forecasts for Europe made as recently as in the first quarter
of 2003, to realize that official institutions in Europe -
governments, the Commission, and the ECB - have all been living
in an Alice in Wonderland world. Germany, the Netherlands,
and Italy have been in negative growth for the first quarter
of 2003, and technically speaking Germany is in a recession.
If France is not technically in recession with 0.2% growth
in the first quarter of 2003, such technical nuance goes unnoticed
by the man in the street or by the business community. All
in all, it will be something close to a miracle if the Euro
Zone manages to achieve the 0.8%, which is the latest forecast
for 2003. The prospects for 2004 are no better than 1.5%,
a far cry from the 2.5% which was forecasted just a few months
ago – and this providing that Germany does not fully
sink into deflation.
There is in fact no surprise in all of this. Three basic
issues are today condemning Europe to be a slow growth, high
unemployment area for the period to come.
– It has now become common to stress Europe’s
inability – at least with respect to key countries in
the Continent – to adjust the European social model
to the requirements of globalization and global financial
capitalism. The culture of entitlement in Europe makes it
a Herculean task to get the public to admit that the rigidities
of the labour market, the structure and philosophy of present
retirement systems, the perception of the role of the state
in the economy and as a provider of welfare services, should
be changed. Yet these have become almost insurmountable obstacles
to sustained growth.
Chancellor Schroeder and President Chirac know that there
has to be some radical change and they are more ready to take
the bull by the horns and, at long last, start addressing
some basic, although very sensitive, reforms in retirement
systems and in labour market policies. The fact is that Europe
has not been able to muster or to engineer the productivity
gains that the US has achieved over the last ten years. At
the height of economic growth at the end of the 90s, structural
unemployment in Germany and France stood at around 8% when
it was only 4% in the United States.
– There is today a total disfunctionality with respect
to the tools of monetary and fiscal policy normally at the
disposal of governments to steer economic policy. The Maastricht
Agreement and the Growth and Stability Pact have set criteria
and a mandate for the ECB which are not only a reflection
of a past economic era that is today obsolete; they were only
ever valid only in fair weather conditions. The requirement
for the ECB to take as the only criterion for its action a
ceiling of 2% inflation in the Euro zone, and the requirements
for member governments to hold budget deficits at a maximum
of 3% of GDP, do not correspond to any proven economic rationale.
They were just a kind of psychological and political sop to
get the Germans to agree to relinquish the Deutschmark for
the Euro. What made the Euro politically feasible
is precisely what makes monetary policy unmanageable in times
of crisis or slowdown. Although a number of European
leaders fully admit this reality, nobody is ready to draw
the appropriate conclusions from this. The ECB is adamantly
opposed to touching the Maastricht rules, and in fact one
has to admit that doing that would open an enormous can of
worms. But very soon, the only alternative to doing that will
be fiscal and monetary chaos.
Germany, which accounts for one third of the euro-zone GDP,
is the very sick man of Europe. Whereas in France there is
still some life left in domestic consumption, in the case
of Germany the picture is flat for domestic consumption as
well as for exports. The 22% increase of the Euro over the
dollar over the last year has all but eliminated the competitiveness
of Germany – and European – products and services
in the world market. With one hand tied behind their back
because of the rigid monetary context, German (and European)
corporations have no other alternative for staying alive than
to continue to slash costs, adding to unemployment pressures,
and to continue to delocalize. This reinforces economic anaemia.
It has already been four years in a row that outflows of capital
from Germany have exceeded inflows. Whatever the resurgence
of efforts by Chancellor Schroeder to re-launch structural
reforms, the hardliner opposition inside his own party makes
it predictable that reforms will not go as far and as fast
as they should. The business community is aware of that.
But the new, clear and present, danger is that with the very
rigid ECB policy, and the fact the Bank is always one rate
cut behind, we won’t have only recession in Europe,
we have now deflation looming increasingly over the third
largest economy in the world. With interest rates
in the US at 1%, when they are still at 2% in Europe, the
implication is that, through the weak dollar policy, the US
is unloading the danger of deflation onto its partners.
Germany’s inflation is already at just below 1%, whereas
the Euro Zone average is today around 1.8%. For an economy
the size of Germany’s, being just below 1% inflation
means in fact being one step into deflation.
What makes the ECB’s obsession with inflation completely
misplaced if not obsolete is that the risk of deflation is
not only linked to passing economic circumstances: The new
global economy has a built-in structural bias towards deflation:
On the one hand, the growing integration of IT and telecom
in every single aspect, level and stage of economic activity
is generating productivity gains, which tend to reduce costs.
On the other hand, by eliminating time and distance with respect
to access to markets for customers by improving the conditions
for customers to make comparisons on price and quality, the
new global economy is structurally creating a buyer’s
rather than a seller’s market.
The third factor is that despite all the rhetoric about building
Europe’s institutions and reducing its democratic deficit,
and all the sound and fury about the Constitutional Convention,
nothing is yet truly settled with respect to where the power
will lie and how decisions on important issues will be made
in an EU soon to go from 15 to 25 members. The two intractable
issues are:
- 1) What is the power and influence that the big members,
Germany, France, the UK, and Italy, expect to have in shaping
the future of the Union vis à vis the smaller countries.
This is what is truly at stake with respect to creating
the job of a President of the EU with a two and a half year
term
- 2) In what areas should the power of the Union prevail,
and what are the areas that member countries – and
especially the big members – want to keep off limits
as an element of their sovereignty that they are not ready
to relinquish to anybody? In this regard, for all of the
talk of creating a foreign minister for the EU, the hard
fact is that even if such a minister had existed at the
time of the Iraq War, Mr. Chirac or Mr. Schroeder or Mr.
Blair would not have acted any bit differently.
Asia
The picture with regard to Asia is quite different. Of course,
the SARS syndrome has taken a heavy toll on what still remains
the most dynamic economy in the world: China, and on the other
economies in the region. The first quarter of 2003 brought
an 8.5% GDP growth in China, and confirmed what was already
seen in the course of 2002, i.e., that China was increasingly
becoming an engine of growth and economic dynamism for the
whole of East Asia despite the tremendous competitive pressures
that China’s admission into the WTO are creating for
these countries. But the SARS outbreak, which might take away
up to 1.5 to 2 GDP growth points from China (and from Hong
Kong and Taiwan), and the new conditions created by the weak
dollar, are generating extremely strong adjustment pressures
in terms of monetary and fiscal policies.
Contrary to Europe, Asian countries – starting with
China – are in a much better situation to react to a
weak dollar policy. China and Hong Kong have their currency
de facto pegged to the dollar. So does the Malaysian economy.
This means that the competitiveness of these economies would
not much suffer in the US markets, and would in fact increase
in Europe, given the rigidity of Europe’s monetary policy.
For the other countries in Asia that have a flexible exchange
rate policy, they are free of the constraints that exist in
Europe with the ECB. Japan has been able to limit the appreciation
of the yen vis-à-vis the dollar to about only 8%, and
the Japanese Central Bank has huge reserves to continue to
buy dollars to limit the appreciation of the yen. The Koreans
will do the same. Countries such as Thailand and Singapore
will use guided depreciation policies to maintain their competitiveness.
As the SARS outbreak appears now contained the growth perspective
in Asia should improve in the second part of the year. China
could even still achieve the 7.5% growth that was set as a
target last March by Wen JiaBao, the new Premier, and a 4%
to 5% growth in Korea, Taiwan, and even Malaysia seems achievable.
In the East Asian landscape, Japan of course remains the
odd man out, stuck in structural anaemia and mired in deflation.
The episode of the bail out of Resona Bank, the fifth largest
bank in the country, illustrates the extremely tight margin
of manoeuvre of the government, despite all its reformist
rhetoric. Classic economics and free market orthodoxy would
have it that Resona should have been allowed to go down the
drain. But the government knew that following that course
would have put in additional difficulties a number of insurance
companies that are big shareholders of the Bank, and could
have triggered panic among the depositors. Once this kind
of chain reaction is set into motion, nobody knows if it can
be kept under control. It could have triggered, through a
domino effect, the financial meltdown that everybody has been
so afraid to see happen in Japan since quite a few years.
This illustrates the quandary in which Japan finds itself,
and in which a country like Germany might also find itself
in the coming period: as the deterioration of the economic
situation is made more or less bearable for the largest segment
of the population through a number of institutional safety
nets, the appetite for structural reform and the will to accept
the pain that comes with reforms, remain very weak. And so
the economy keeps running below potential, deflation sets
in, and (as we have now learned) it is much more difficult
to come out from deflation than to come out from inflation.
One positive element with respect to the present situation
in Japan is that the new leadership at the Bank of Japan (the
central bank) seems intent to have a much more cooperative
attitude towards the ministry of finance. There is a new will
to use much more non classic tools for market intervention
purchasing foreign currency debt, in order to ease more monetary
policy despite the fact that interest rates are at a bottom
level.
Two other interesting elements regarding Japan are that,
first, the big corporations in Japan have already drawn their
conclusions about this situation and have already made all
the necessary moves to relocate their activities – even,
as in the case of Toshiba, moving a significant part of their
R&D activity to China. So the revamping of Japan’s
big business is already well underway. Second, Japan’s
problems are not any more a significant obstacle for East
Asia's growth, since Japanese relocation has been to many
countries in the region, and since China is more and more
taking the relay as an engine of growth.
So it is Europe that most likely will bear the
brunt of the weakening of the dollar. The structural rigidity
of monetary policy-making at the ECB and the growing dysfunction
between fiscal and monetary policy in Europe mean that the
Euro Zone has almost no efficient tool of economic and monetary
policy at its disposal, except if Europe were
to admit publicly that the Growth and Stability Pact is officially
dead and draw the necessary conclusions for that. But, in
the present context where every country is fighting to stop
the decline of its economy, and with real unemployment levels
getting to a near record high in Germany and France, this
would open a Pandora box since there does not seem to be any
agreement at hands on how new rules for operations at the
ECB and new criteria fore monetary policy making should be
set or what they should be.
The Impact of Geopolitics
This context of macroeconomic volatility and uncertainty
is aggravated by the fact that, contrary to what we had seen
in the 90s, geopolitics is now looming large on macroeconomics
management. Geopolitical considerations and constraints bear
heavily – and will continue to do so in the foreseeable
future – on business and economic decisions. Of course,
the first element that comes to mind in this regard is the
priority preoccupation with the security and terrorist risks.
These are becoming a key factor weighting on every single
investment decision, on the elaboration of corporate regional
strategies, and on the ability of multinationals to operate
on a global scale without much hindrance, as they became accustomed
to in the 90s.
The key issue of the ability to sustain business activities
in the face of possible disruptions of various natures - whether
terrorist threats, anti-American activities – peaceful
or not - anywhere, or SARS-like episodes - is confronting
corporations today with the challenge of devising modus operandi
and organization structures that would allow them to mitigate
the disruptive impact of real or possible threats that they
are just beginning to be aware of.
The successful completion of the war in Iraq has not eliminated
geopolitical uncertainty and volatility. The US has obviously
quite underestimated the difficulties it would be facing in
Iraq in the post war period.
Although any comparison with Vietnam would be quite far fetched,
it is now obvious that the Bush administration is confronting
a dilemma of major magnitude: Either stay in Iraq in the present
configuration of a limited coalition and then continue to
bear the brunt of military casualties which are making the
US public increasingly worried and assume costs which are
weighting heavily on the budget deficit; or make a dramatic
reversal of policy in engineering a UN resolution which would
provide the cover for other countries to join US efforts in
Iraq and then share the risks and costs. But this would seen
as a public recognition that the strategy of ignoring the
UN in going to war led to a deadlock in the post war period.
Despite the successes achieved in dismantling elements of
the Al Qaeda international network, the organization has proved
its ability to inflict very damaging blows by going after
“soft” targets in Arab countries allied to the
US. The fight against Al Qaeda will definitely be raging for
quite some time to come and the unpredictability of terrorist
actions will continue to maintain a climate of uncertainty
and anxiety worldwide. Especially, as we approach the second
anniversary of 9/11 the question looming large on many policy
makers mind is whether or not Al Qaeda will be able to mark
this date but another significant blow against the US. Absent
such a blow, one could possibly conclude that the operational
capabilities of Al Qaeda have now been significantly affected
and that the war on terrorism is truly making significant
inroads.
In a different area, the nuclear potential achieved by North
Korea has accentuated the element of volatility in North East
Asia; it appears increasingly clear that the US does not have
a military option in that case – given the regional
context. But the diplomatic solution to reduce tensions and
“contain” the bluster and nuclear blackmail of
the faltering regime Pyongyang is proving very difficult to
achieve.
We are now beginning to realize that the post,
post cold war era marked by the US monopoly on super-power
status is in fact an era of quasi built-in volatility.
The cold war years were a period where, because of the threat
of mutually assured destruction, the USSR and the US would
challenge each other only at the periphery an not on their
respective central positions or interests. Then, in the post
cold war period of the 90s, the US as the sole super power
could enjoy dominant position on the cheap. No power seemed
able to or intent of challenging its position.
One of the major change brought by 9/11 ids that it has marked
the end of the period of absolute prominence on the cheap
for the US. The Americans are waking up to the fact that their
position of sole super power, with all the benefits it brings
to them will have a serious cost to be paid. It is not sure
that they would accept to assume such a cost in a long-term
perspective. In that respect the sustainability of US position
in Iraq is a crucial test of US credibility and staying power.
9/11 has highlighted the fact that in the post post cold
war challenges and threats ared assuming new forms: They do
not come from any specific country, and so the lines of conflict
are not any more easily identifiable. They come today from
the likes of Al Qaeda and its nebulous web of followers and
imitators around the Islamic worldwide community. If and when
Al Qaeda is obliterated, these challenges and threats will
tomorrow take a new form unknown to us at the present moment.
The geopolitical context is dominated by one key factor of
tremendous implications: Never before in history has a country
achieved the kind of dominant position in every domain that
the US enjoys today. But, at the same time, never before in
its history has the US felt so vulnerable to threats that
it is not always able to spot and to neutralize. Never before
have US citizens and corporations around the world felt like
being like potential targets of unknown enemies. The
combination of unprecedented power and unprecedented vulnerability
creates a very volatile mix where reactions to threats –
real or potential – can be very extreme,
and where the security imperative becomes the dominant factor
conditioning perceptions and actions vis à vis allies
as well as adversaries.
The fact of the matter is that while all of us were celebrating
the end of the cold war, and some of us were already seeing
“the End of History”, we have underestimated
the implications and consequences of the US becoming the sole
superpower or hyper-power in existence, the intensity of the
resentment and frustrations that this situation will focus
on it. This is bound to be a permanent feature of the coming
period – feeding, as a consequence, an enduring and
structural anti-Americanism trend not only in the Arab world
but also in Europe and in many parts of Asia. This pervasive
anti-Americanism is not linked anymore – as was the
case in the past – to what America do or does not do
but what it is and what it has come to symbolize.
This has of course tremendous impact and implications for
business, whether you are or not a US corporation operating
on a global scale; whether you are or not seen as being associated
with the US; whether your services or products are seen as
emblematic of US lifestyle and values.
Beyond that, a new area where geopolitics are likely to impact
more than ever on macroeconomic and business realities is
the deterioration of the transatlantic relationship. Of course,
the bitter divisions about Iraq have been illustrating this
deterioration. But the causes for this situation go much deeper
than the divergences between Europe and the Bush administration
on how to deal with Saddam Hussein.
There are, in fact, basic fundamental philosophical and political
differences between continental Europeans and Americans on
the five key issues shaping the geopolitical environment:
- How to solve, at long last, the Arab-Israeli conflict
so that this issue stop being a permanent factor of geopolitical
risk and destabilization?
- How to deal with an Arab world which – as things
stand now - has no place in the global world of the 21st
century, is extremely young, tremendously frustrated…and
which will grow from about 280 million people now to 400
million by 2020. More generally, how to deal with the Islamic
world with its 1.3 billion people – the fastest growing
segment of population on earth – in a way that will
avoid being definitely trapped in a clash of civilizations,
as we are very close to be at the present moment?
- How to fully integrate China in the global systems and
deal with a country becoming the world’s manufacturing
base and which, in many ways, represent another kind of
superpower in the making over the next 20 years?
- To what extent will Europe ever be capable of translating
its economic and trade weight into geopolitical clout? And
for what purpose?
- How will the US use its unprecedented power and dominant
position in the world?
In the new geopolitical context where the threat does not
come anymore from one antagonist block, the transatlantic
relationship has lost its centrality, from a strategic and
diplomatic perspective, for Washington.This a the result of
trends which were already at work before the Bush administration
came to power and which have been highlighted and accentuated
by its style and rhetoric. Iraq provided a catalyst for the
divergences to come fully in the open, adding an element of
bitterness on both sides, which will leave long-lasting scares,
especially with respect to the US-French and US-German relationship.
This is already having an impact on the way macroeconomic,
business and trade issues are addressed. The geopolitical
climate is making a compromise between US and European positions
difficult to reach with respect to the next WTO ministerial
meeting in Cancun which is a crucial milestone if the Doha
round of trade liberalization is to stand any chance to meet
the deadline of December 2005 for its completion. Some observers
are already forecasting that in the present circumstances,
the best than can be expected is a kind of very general agreement
in Cancun to try to keep the ball rolling and avert the disastrous
impact of an open failure. It remains to be seen if Congress
will be willing and able to change by the Fall the law on
tax exemptions for exports that the WTO has labelled as a
hidden subsidy. In the absence of such change, the EU will
be entitled to issue additional duties on up to US$ 4 billion
of US exports, pricing many of these exports out of the European
markets.
Washington seems already preparing alternative strategies
in case the multilateral trading system comes to a standstill
with a deadlock in Doha Round by engaging in a number of bilateral
free trade agreements with countries as diverse as Chile,
Singapore, Australia, South Africa or Morocco.
There is no underestimating how much the geopolitical disputes
are creating an atmosphere where trade and business disputes
are now assuming a new intensity and bitterness. One can expect
that many US corporations operating in Europe and many European
corporations operating in the US will be facing additional
obstacles in areas where business decisions are under the
control or at least the influence of government authorities.
In the coming period, political considerations are definitely
going to interfere with business decisions in a much more
pronounced way than was the case in the nineties .
Similarly, the decision in Washington to let the dollar go
down will not be mitigated by any concern about the additional
difficulties this is increasingly creating for the already
depressed euro zone economies. “Why should we do any
favour to the Europeans?” would be the kind of response
that the mention of this element would elicit in Washington.
Some circles would even question, in view of the trends reshaping
the transatlantic relationship – whether the 50 years
old US policy of supporting European integration still remains
valid today.
Of course, at the same time that the transatlantic relationship
is losing its centrality from a strategic and political perspective,
one can see the growing convergence and interdependence that
is occurring in the business domain. This factor should theoretically
help keep the spill over of geopolitical tensions from going
beyond a certain point. A number of business leaders on both
sides of the Atlantic have expressed their concerns on the
dangers and economic cost of letting the present disputes
get out of control. The question is to what extent each party
will head their repeated warnings in a context of growing
mutual recriminations and suspicion of hidden motives.
.The third factor where geopolitics is definitely impacting
negatively on the global economy is the backlash against globalization
– or the new obstacles to this process - that we have
been witnessing over the last few years. Contrary to some
euphoric assumptions in the 90s, where the sweeping wave of
liberalization created a very propitious global environment
for business, the anti-globalization phenomenon has proved
to be an enduring factor. It is in fact increasingly institutionalizing
itself.
One can see now two trends shaping up. There is a hard core
that is still purely anti-globalization. For this hard core,
the fight against globalization is becoming a new version
of the Left vs. Right confrontation. This group will not recoil
against violent means to make its points and it has proved
quite apt at using modern technologies to create global mobilization.
They will not disappear anytime soon. But there is a larger
and growing segment of the original anti-globalization movement
that has realized that there was no point fighting against
globalization per se, as it is an irreversible process, and
which is now increasingly trying to propose an alternative
version of globalization.
This second trend is not only gaining ground but it is also
achieving quite a significant legitimacy. It does not have
only popular appeal with respect to all the segments of the
public waiting in vain from governments that they provide
credible answers to the anguish and pains created by the negative
side-effects of globalization and the social destabilization
its creates. It has also been endorsed by a number of legitimate
NGOs and respectable public personalities.
This trend for an alternative version of globalization is
now representing – and will more and more represent
– a source of challenge and of debate that business
and government will be very much at pains to ignore or dismiss
as just a bunch of hardheaded ideologues.
But the slowdown in the globalization process is also characterized
by the fact that there does not seem today any more appetite
for structural reforms. The entrenched resistance in countries
such as Germany or France for urgently needed reforms of the
pension system, of the labour market of the social system
is not an isolated phenomenon. Everywhere in the world governments
have become much more reluctant and cautious in their approach
to reforms, whether it is in Brazil or in Korea and Japan
or even in China where the latest directives from the new
leadership tend to indicate that the wave of lay-offs in the
State Owned Enterprises will be significantly slowed or even
stopped for the time being.
And then, of course, we have to deal today with the new and
unforeseen obstacles to globalization that the volatile geopolitical
and security environment is generating. Globalization means
openness, it implies the free flow of goods and people. Security
concerns are unavoidably today restricting that trend.
It would be an exaggeration to say that the wave of liberalization
is being reversed, but it is definitely not evolving at the
same pace and in the same way than in the previous decade.
As a background to that element, the generally more sceptical
perception of globalization creates a much more reluctant
environment which is definitely not favourable to the activities
of global corporations.
In a way, each economic system needs to establish its legitimacy.
Industrial capitalism had to that – especially after
the crisis of the 30s – by creating a number of rules
and safeguards that were designed to show that the system
was operating within specific rules and boundaries and that
the benefits of economic activity could be and would be spread
beyond a minority. This is now happening with the passage,
in the 90s, from industrial to global financial capitalism.
Business - which had been used in the 90s to a much more receptive
environment as global financial capitalism emerged - has now
to prove that it is in favor of the appropriate rules and
safeguards that will make the system work in a manageable
way and with a broad social consensus.
This is why the corporate scandals of the last two years
cannot be taken as just a passing aberration but as a clear
indication that a new system needed some key corrections in
its modus operandi and philosophy – such as taking into
consideration other elements and criteria than the exclusive
obsession with share price value. This is also why the enforcement
of strict corporate governance rules, the trend towards a
greater observance of good corporate citizenship (or corporate
social responsibility) behaviour are more than passing fads
or PR tricks. In the same way, the burning issue of executives
pay and the revolt of shareholders on that issue is another
illustration of the urgency to establish the rules and practices
which will reinforce the social legitimacy of the global financial
capitalism system in which we operate.
There is no underestimating the extent to which the coming
period will be a testing and demanding one. The first priority
is to make sure that the global economy avoids the deflation
trap and in that respect Germany is the key concern. It is
only if and when the US succeeds its recovery – and
the test period will be the end of this year/ first quarter
of 04 – that then Europe may expect to see the first
signs of a rebound, if the political leadership in Germany
and France can hold on to a minimum set of social and labour
market reforms.
In this very volatile and uncertain environment, corporations
in each sector and each area are of course confronted to their
own specific challenges and there is no magic formula. Of
course, for instance, the unrelenting search for greater cost
efficiency and higher productivity is part of each corporation’s
objectives. But there are definitely three requirements or
qualities which are much needed:
Corporations have today to add to their usual risk assessment
process the ability to measure the new dimensions of risks.
They have to create advance-warning systems where the non-business
factors now loom as large as the business or financial ones.
They have to develop the ability to respond fast to rapidly
evolving situations and to develop their capacity to sustain
global operation with a minimum of disruptions in a context
where these disruptions will come from much unexpected causes.
Corporations need to develop sensitivity for the local context,
to different cultures and mentalities, in order to protect
themselves against the more and more diverse manifestations
of the “globalization malaise”. Never before the
concept of “thinking globally, acting locally”
would assume such a crucial importance.
Corporations need to assign a new meaning and give a new
emphasis to the notion of trust.
This notion is taking a multifaceted dimension as it entails
not only the restoration of trust between the corporation
and its shareholders, but also with the public at large, the
trust between employees and management, the trust in the ability
of the system to function in a fair way taking into account
the diversity of interests and sensitivities.
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