Bloomberg's Simon Jonson writes: “A modest man,” Winston Churchill supposedly quipped about Clement Attlee, his successor as prime minister, “but then he has so much to be modest about.” We should say the same about economists, particularly their ability to forecast anything in a useful and timely manner. Those predicting an imminent American economic decline have usually been no exception. This time, though, they may be on to something.
Prevailing arguments about when the era of U.S. dominance would
end, and which country would supplant it, have been wildly and consistently
wrong for half a century. In the 1950s, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev was
taken seriously when he told Western ambassadors “We will bury you.” Today, his
country no longer exists. In the 1980s, Japan was supposedly going to be No. 1;
now the question is whether the precipitous decline in its working-age
population will generate a fiscal crisis.
The Germans -- or Europeans more broadly -- were thought to
be on the brink of elbowing aside the U.S. several times, including in the
run-up to the global financial crisis in 2008, when the euro seemed to threaten
the dollar’s role as the pre- eminent reserve currency. Remember when Brazilian
model Gisele Bundchen was quoted as saying she preferred to be paid in euros?
Now the euro-area economy looks very sick indeed, and Ms. Bundchen is
apparently long American icons……
No comments:
Post a Comment