After the crisis, opportunity

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Avatar for Ibian084
3 years ago

SOME YEARS loom large in history. Usually it is the end of a war or the onset of a

revolution that punctuates the shift from one chapter to another. 2020 will be an

exception. The defeat of Donald Trump marked the end of one of the most divisive and

damaging presidencies in American history. A once-in-a-century pandemic has created

the opportunity for an economic and social reset as dramatic as that of the Progressive

era. The big question for 2021 is whether politicians are bold enough to grasp it.

Covid-19 has not just pummelled the global economy. It has changed the trajectory of

the three big forces that are shaping the modern world. Globalisation has beentruncated. The digital revolution has been radically accelerated. And the geopolitical

rivalry between America and China has intensified. At the same time, the pandemic has

worsened one of today’s great scourges: inequality. And by showing the toll of being

unprepared for a low-probability, high-impact disaster, it has focused more minds on

the coming century’s inevitable and even higher-impact disaster, that of climate change.

All this means there is no going back to the pre-covid world.

That will not be obvious at the start of the year. Amidst the misery of a resurgent second

wave, attention in many countries will still be focused on controlling the virus. As the

New Year begins a vaccine will be on the horizon, though not yet widely available. Only

as 2021 progresses, and vaccines are rolled out, will it become clear how much has

permanently changed.

And that will turn out to be a lot, particularly in the West. The post-covid world will be

far more digital. From remote working to online retail, the pandemic has compressed

years’ worth of transformation into months, bringing with it a dramatic shake-up in

how people live, what they buy and where they work. Winners from this bout of

creative destruction include the tech giants (whose profits and share prices have surged)

and large companies more broadly (which have the biggest troves of data and the

deepest pockets to invest in digital transformation). Big cities will have to reinvent

themselves. Expect a flood of closures, especially among small businesses and in the

retail, travel and hospitality industries.

Although globalisation will still be about goods and capital crossing borders, people will

travel less. The Asian countries that controlled the virus most effectively were also

those that shut their borders most strictly. Their experience will shape others’ policies.

Border restrictions and quarantines will stay in place long after covid-19 caseloads fall.

And even after tourism restarts, migration will remain much harder. That will dent the

prospects of poor countries that rely on flows of remittances from their migrant

workers abroad, reinforcing the damage done by the pandemic itself. Some 150m

people are likely to fall into extreme poverty by the end of 2021.

Global commerce will be conducted against an inauspicious geopolitical backdrop. Mr

Trump’s mercurial mercantilism will be gone, but America’s suspicion of China will not

end with the departure of “Tariff Man”, as the president was proud to be known. Tariffs,

now levied on two-thirds of imports from China, will remain, as will restrictions on its

technology companies. The splintering of the digital world and its supply chain into two

parts, one Chinese-dominated and the other American-led, will continue. Sino-American

rivalry will not be the only fissiparous influence on globalisation. Chastened by their

reliance on imported medical supplies and other critical goods (often from China),

governments from Europe to India will redefine the scope of “strategic industries” that

must be protected. State aid to support this new industrial policy has become and will

remain ubiquitous.

All this will leave the world economy divided and diminished. The gap between strength

in China (and other post-covid Asian economies) and weakness elsewhere will remain

glaring. China’s was the only big economy to grow in 2020; in 2021 its growth rate will

exceed 7%, substantially faster than the pace of recovery in Europe and America. And

unlike Western economies, its recovery will not be underpinned by gaping budgetdeficits or extraordinary monetary stimulus. China’s economic success and quick

vanquishing of covid-19 will be the backdrop for a year of triumphal celebration in

Beijing, as the Communist Party marks its centenary.

The contrast with the West will be stark. America will start the year with wobbly

growth, not least because of the failure to pass a sufficient stimulus package in the last

days of the Trump administration. Europe’s economies will be sluggish far longer, with

generous furlough schemes tying people to jobs that no longer exist and zombie firms

propped up by the state. On both sides of the Atlantic, the inequity of the impact of

covid-19 will become ever clearer: the most vulnerable hit hardest by the virus; job

losses concentrated among the less skilled; educational disruption harming poorer kids’

prospects the most. Public anger will grow, particularly in America, which will enter

2021 still a deeply divided country.

With the West battered and China crowing, plenty of pundits (including in this

publication) will declare the pandemic to be the death knell for a Western-led world

order. That will prove premature. For all its “vaccine diplomacy”, China inspires fear

and suspicion more than admiration. And for all his determination to bring China

centre-stage, its president, Xi Jinping, shows little appetite for genuine global leadership.

Although Mr Trump’s contempt for allies and forays into transactional diplomacy have

shaken trust in the American-led global order, they have not destroyed it.

That means America, once again, will have disproportionate ability to shape the post￾pandemic world—and the man most able to set the tone is a 78-year old, whose political

career began closer to the presidency of Calvin Coolidge than today. Joe Biden, a

consensus-building moderate whose own political positions have always tacked close to

his party’s centre of gravity, is an improbable architect of a bold new era.

But he could be just the right person. Mr Biden’s policy platform is ambitious enough.

Behind the slogan of “build back better” is a bold, but not radical, attempt to marry

short-term stimulus with hefty investment in green infrastructure, research and

technology to dramatically accelerate America’s energy transformation. From

expanding health-care access to improving social insurance, the social contract

proposed by Bidenomics is a 21st-century version of the Progressive era: bold reform

without dangerous leftism.

In foreign policy Mr Biden will repair relations and reaffirm America’s values and global

role. A veteran of diplomacy and instinctive multilateralist and institution-builder, Mr

Biden will send strong signals quickly: America will re-enter the Paris climate

agreement, stay in the World Health Organisation and join COVAX, the global coalition

to distribute a covid-19 vaccine. He will head quickly to Europe to reaffirm America’s

commitment to NATO and the transatlantic alliance—though his first stop will be Berlin

or Paris, rather than Boris Johnson’s Brexit Britain. Mr Biden will reassert the

importance of human rights and democracy to American foreign policy. Expect tougher

criticism of China for its treatment of Uyghurs in Xinjiang and its oppression in Hong

Kong; there will be no more palling with dictators.

On the most important issues, however, Mr Biden’s presidency will offer more a change

of approach than of direction. America will remain concerned about the threat posed by a rising China: the Trump administration deserves credit for focusing attention on it.

But rather than attack with unilateral tariffs, Mr Biden’s team will focus on building a

multilateral coalition to counter China. Expect talk of a transatlantic grand bargain,

where America assuages European concerns about its tech giants, particularly the

personal data they gather and the tax they don’t pay, in return for a joint approach

towards Chinese tech companies. Expect talk of a new global alliance, binding Asian

democracies into the Western coalition to counter China—the basis, conceivably, of a

new kind of American-led world order.

The opportunity is there. The question is whether Mr Biden will grasp it. The risk is that,

both at home and abroad, a Biden presidency proves to be long on soothing words and

short on effective action; that, whether or not he is constrained by a Republican Senate,

Mr Biden himself is too focused on repairing yesterday’s world rather than building

tomorrow’s, and too keen to protect existing jobs and prop up ossified multilateral

institutions to push for the kind of change that is needed. The biggest danger is not the

leftist lurch that many Republicans fear—it is of inaction, timidity and stasis. For

America and the world, that would be a terrible shame.....

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