Palestinian health authorities said 44 people killed over the past 24 hours
mena9 hours ago
Conversations here at the World Economic Forum might begin with the global economy, but sooner or later they turn to Donald Trump. The Republican primary contest has gotten everyone's attention. Some remain entertained, but many of the people I've spoken with are worried. As one European CEO said to me, "We're moving into a very difficult world. We need grown-ups in charge."
That sense of a "difficult world" is palpable. There is more anxiety in the air than any time since the global financial crisis.
The worry is reflected in the world's stock markets, which have collectively lost trillions of dollars since the start of the year. People still believe that the worst will not come to pass. China will not crash; America will not fall into a recession; Europe will not come apart. But in recent years, the conventional wisdom has been wrong on so many issues.
Roger Altman, former deputy treasury secretary, pointed out to me that few experts predicted oil and commodity prices would collapse or that growth would slump in China and crater in Brazil, South Africa and many other emerging markets. No one saw that, even as America achieved full employment, wages would not rise, inflation would stay stubbornly muted, and interest rates would remain low. And no one predicted the rise of Daesh or its ability to inspire terror attacks in countries far outside the Middle East.
Altman wonders whether we have finally arrived at the moment predicted in Alvin Toffler's 1970 book "Future Shock" when the global system is so complex and changing so fast that it outpaces any ability to analyze and understand it.
Many of the trends now afoot, interacting with each other, could move faster and further than people realize. As the stock market falls, businesses and consumers get worried and pull back, spending less and saving more. A fall in oil prices is generally good for all countries except the major producers of petroleum. But a fall this far, this fast could produce a credit crisis and a deflationary spiral.
And technological innovation is not quite a silver bullet to achieve broad-based prosperity. It is clear that dramatic improvements in technology, especially software, do not translate easily into wage increases for the average worker. We're even seeing high-tech products cannibalize each other.
The digital camera was the way of the future, destroying old-fashioned film. But now camera sales are collapsing as phones have more than enough camera power for most people.
I don't know where it all goes. But in periods like this, open systems like America's will do better than closed ones. The United States often looks like a dysfunctional country because all its problems are on display and debated daily. Everything - economic strategy, monetary policy, homeland security, police practices, infrastructure - is out there and open for constant criticism.
But this transparency means that people have information, and it forces the country to look at its problems, grapple with them and react. While it's a messy, sometimes ugly process, the American system takes in a lot of diverse, contradictory information and responds. It seems dysfunctional but it is actually highly adaptive.
Closed systems often look much better.
A country like China, with its tightly centralized decision-making, has been the envy of the world. People across the globe have marveled at the government's ability to make decisions, plan for the future and build gleaming infrastructure.
And when China was growing, we all were amazed by the efficiency of the system. But now that growth has stalled, no one is sure why, what went wrong, who's to blame, or whether it is being fixed. A black box produces awe when things go well. But when they don't, that same opacity causes anxiety and fear.
The biggest question about the world economy right now is: What is going on inside China's black box? The country is, after all, the second-largest economy on the planet, and the engine powering global growth in recent years. Its remarkable opacity is not simply about economics but rather about politics and governance in general.
These days American politics is showcasing turmoil, rage and rebellion. But that's ultimately a strength in these fast-changing times. People are angry. The economy, the society and the country are being transformed. The fact that politics reflects these changes is a strength, not a weakness. It allows the nation to absorb, react, adapt - and then move on.
At least that's what I tell foreigners and myself - with fingers firmly crossed - as I watch the craziness on the campaign trail.
The author is the host of the CNN show Fareed Zakaria GPS
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