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Losing Control: The Emerging Threats to Western Prosperity [Hardcover]

Stephen D. King (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

June 15, 2010

As the economic giants of Asia and elsewhere have awakened, Western leaders have increasingly struggled to maintain economic stability. The international financial crisis that began in 2007 is but one result of the emerging nations’ increased gravitational pull. In this vividly written and compellingly argued book, Stephen D. King, the global chief economist at HSBC, one of the largest banking groups in the world, suggests that the decades ahead will see a major redistribution of wealth and power across the globe that will force consumers in the United States and Europe to stop living beyond their means.

The tide of money washing in from emerging nations has already fuelled the recent property bubble in the West, while new patterns of trade have left the West increasingly dependent on risky financial services. Unless things change drastically, King argues, the increasing power of emerging markets, when coupled with poor internal regulation and an increasingly anachronistic system of global governance, will result in greater instability and income inequality, accompanied by the risk of a major dollar decline. And as Western populations age and emerging economies develop further, the social and political consequences may be alarming to citizens who have grown accustomed to living in prosperity. (20100401)


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Editorial Reviews

Review

"I’ve not come across another book which so forcefully gives the European or American reader a China-centred view rather than a western-centric one…A disorientating and thought-provoking perspective."— Diane Coyle, The Enlightened Economist



(Diane C The Enlightened Economist )

“Mr. King lays out his arguments in accessible and engaging prose. He is a lively writer with a deft eye for catchy historical analogies.” — The Economist

 

(The Economist )

"This book raises issues of wide significance for the future of the global political economy."—C. J. Talele, Choice
(C. J. Talele Choice )

About the Author

Stephen D. King is HSBC's group chief economist and the bank's global head of economics and asset allocation research. He writes a weekly column for the London Independent and is a member of the European Central Bank Shadow Council and the Financial Times Economists' Forum. He lives in London.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Yale University Press (June 15, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0300154321
  • ISBN-13: 978-0300154320
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.5 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #833,326 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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25 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Interesting but Incomplete -, June 17, 2010
This review is from: Losing Control: The Emerging Threats to Western Prosperity (Hardcover)
Stephen King, author of "Losing Control," is global bank HSBC's Chief Economist and a member of the "Financial Times" Economist's Forum, not the Stephen King of scary stories. Nonetheless, "Losing Control" is still somewhat scary, telling a tale of how Western post-millennium economies are becoming less controllable, and cannot be relied on for continued economic growth. The intent of his book is to demonstrate why the years ahead will continue to shift economic activity from the West to the other side of the world, while the economic successes of nations elsewhere will impose growing constraints on already developed nations.

King's first significant point is that market forces were not the sole source of the West's earlier successes - state capitalism began long before China and Saudi Arabia forays in this direction. The East India Company's (formed in 1600) successes in India and then China were largely courtesy of England's Navy. Similarly, Europe's earlier development of sailing skills enabled the Continent to cut the Middle East out of profitable trade business with the Orient; the development of alternative sources of coffee and sugar in the Americas also helped. Meanwhile, Islamic leaders acerbated the relative decline of their nations by refusing to separate sacred issues from the secular, and thus hampered opportunities for technical progress. Another leadership blunder was China's worrying over corrupting outside forces leading them to close off their nation until after Mao's death. (In 1000 A.D., Chinese per capita income slightly exceeded that in Europe; by Mao's death it was about 8% that of Europe.) King also points out that new industries in the Americas benefited from strong protectionist measures. Those contending that today's government has no role in the economy would do well to reflect on these lessons from history.

"Losing Control" also contends that Japan-China trade helps explain Japan's economic stagnation, pointing out that since the early 1990s, Japan's exports to China have been dominated by capital goods and machinery, allowing China to better compete in manufacturing and lowering wage and economic growth in Japan.

China and others buying U.S. Treasuries lowered interest rate in the U.S. and made other, riskier investments more attractive.

King contends that prices in the West are increasingly determined by the developing world, and that pursuit of price stability in the West has contributed to mounting economic instability. If, for example, prices fall in relation to Western wages, perhaps due to reduced Asian demand for commodities, it makes no sense to encourage even more added spending by keeping interest rates low. Greenspan's Federal Reserve misread this late 1990s environment as a sign of a 'new economy' with rising productivity. Raising interest rates, such as the Bank of England did 2003-2007) may trigger capital inflows that lower interest rates and create a real-estate boom. With China boosting commodity demand and their prices, central bank policies to keep prices stable will create falling wages. Lower interest rates also encourage investing in nations paying higher interest rates. King's point in all this - capital markets are increasingly distorted by the decisions of various other nations, and being a central banker is more of an art than a science.

Another major "Losing Control" point is that globalization works to increase inequality within nations, while decreasing it between nations. Chinese industrial workers' income rises and allows them to buy better food, raising the prices for those foods and lowering the 'real income' for its other workers. At the same time, U.S. industrial workers lose 'real income' vs. Americans with capital; in addition, they also lose ground to the Chinese. Income inequality in both China and the U.S. has increased in recent years. We have tried to mask this problem with easier access to debt (as well as increasing the proportion of two-income families), but those actions create new problems. Increasing the proportion with a tertiary education is another strategy - however, King does not see this as successful in the long run because the Chinese are doing likewise (6% in 1999 to 22% in 2006), and the cost of U.S. education is rising too rapidly. Citigroup and Pepsi-Cola are already run by Indian-born executives.

King sees the West in danger of following in Japan's deflationary footsteps, or resorting to the printing press to resolve their debt problems.

Summarizing, "Losing Control" presents some moderately scary examples about how Western governments are losing control of their economies, confirms that income inequality is rising sharply, and illustrates why "A rising tide lifts all boats" is no longer true. However, "Losing Control" does not fully cover all the ways we are losing control of our economies, nor begin to explore how low Western economies could descend if unregulated capitalists continue pursuing the 'race to the bottom.' Neither does he cover the likely economic impact of ever-increasing trillion-dollar U.S. deficits and unfunded liabilities accumulated from excess health care, defense, education, and public pension costs, or businesses' growing ability to collect bailouts, evade taxes, financial, and fuel economy regulation, and community, environmental, and safety safeguards, while also proposing to privatize government services such as road-building and maintenance, Social Security, education, and utilities service. (The latter, ironically, is bolstered by their continually weakening the economy through self-serving, ever-increasing offshoring of jobs.) In addition, King does not address the likely escalation of Western job losses as Asian economies move up the ladder into R&D, engineering and design, and a wide range of other service jobs. Finally, "Losing Control" also fails to communicate the range of high-paying skills and vital capabilities already been lost to globalization, explain how misleading GDP statistics (artificially boosted by population growth, illegal immigration, increasing foreign-held debt and current-account deficits) are used to mollify the masses, or depict the likelihood of future civil disorders motivated by rising income inequality.

Bottom-Line: "Losing Control" is an apt title that summarizes current trends in Western economies. However, the author's conclusions would greatly benefit from broader thinking, and possibly even emulating the writing style of that other Stephen King. We do need to stop living beyond our means, but we don't need to cede control over our economic future.
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24 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Strong, smug biases mar an otherwise thoughtful book., June 25, 2010
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This review is from: Losing Control: The Emerging Threats to Western Prosperity (Hardcover)
Let me name the biases. Pro-integration, pro income redistribution, naive belief in the ability of all people to benefit from education, constantly thumping the West for its contribution to global warming. Several times he equates Halliburton with the East India Company. Wish he had more examples, and I wish he were right! I was a Halliburton shareholder, and we didn't get rich through their support of the Iraq war. A personal aside - Halliburton owns RMK-BRJ (formerly Raymond-Morrison Knudson - Brown Root Jamison) which did extensive, and reasonably competent, logistics support in Vietnam. Halliburton is one bogeyman which everyone who wishes to discredit Bush's motives pulls out of the closet. The Iraq war is stupid, but involving Halliburton wasn't done in the interests of "state capitalism." They were simply the only company clearly qualified for the job, in a situation in which a contract had to be let quickly. The bottom line is that King didn't need to use this soapbox to flog all of his politically correct notions.

He correctly identifies the demographic disaster facing the wealthy nations - simply no kids. He naively assumes, no, argues that immigrants can fit into society and take roles interchangeably with the native born. This has certainly been true of examples he cites, such as Ukrainian Jews, Chinese and Southern Europeans as a group. It is worth noting that, freed of governmental constraints, these peoples are doing quite well in their lands of origin. The situation is not true of the countries now contributing immigrants. Africa, north and south, and Latin America have remained poor throughout their histories, with the exception of the southern cone areas established by Europeans and Japanese, however benign their governments. Unbounded immigration is an irreversible experiment, currently underway. One hopes that King's optimism about the outcome is well placed, but the evidence doesn't go that way. Encouraging it hardly seems like the prudent path. For all his hand-wringing, Japan seems to be surviving without immigration. My personal bet is that Japan will look golden in 50 years. They will have retained their identity in exchange for a bit of austerity.

All this out of the way, he does a good job of describing the limitations of central bankers and the difficulties governments, especially democratic, face in maintaining financial discipline. Also the many ways in which markets are not and have not been free, but are rather dominated by state interests, even in supposedly free societies. The alarum he sounds regarding corpulent westerners' comfortable retirements rings true. Also the notion that the US must in essence devalue its currency, discounting China's and other countries' vast holdings of US debt, because the US taxpayer will simply not honor them at par value.

One would hope for a bit of investment advice. If all transpires according to King's crystal ball, which seems to me to be clearer than most, there will be winners and losers. Where should one put one's money? He suggests dollar denominated assets which will nonetheless track real value, not the dollar, such as commodities. The emerging markets' demands, especially those of China, will put upward pressure on metals, oil, and other raw materials.

I'm glad I read it. For all its flaws I got quite a bit out of it.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Emerging Markets Are Winning The Economic War, August 18, 2010
This review is from: Losing Control: The Emerging Threats to Western Prosperity (Hardcover)
I am sure I'm not the only one whom wondered if the scary novel writer was taking a stab at economics. This King writes a scary story if you are an investor with all your long term savings in the USA or other "rich countries". He makes a clear case that China, Russia, India and Brazil are the new global economic leaders and it is they who are beginning to control the largest share of the world's resources and create most of the profits from growing businesses. It's time to question the assumption that rich countries are just going to get richer and poor countries will always stay poor. The pendulum is swinging. I liked this book and recommend it for sober reading, especially for investors.
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