Economist Dambisa Moyo predicts in her new book that the West's economic dominance will collapse unless some very difficult choices are made.
By Andrew Cave
Dambisa Moyo is
that rare type of person – an economist who makes waves. Her first book, Dead
Aid, angered many in the charity sector by arguing that foreign aid has harmed
Africa and should be phased out.
Her second,
which is published in London on Thursday, accuses America and other Western
powers of squandering their world economic dominance through a sustained
catalogue of fundamentally flawed policies.
How the West Was
Lost: Fifty Years of Economic Folly – And the Stark Choices Ahead goes so far
as to predict that the US will be a “bona fide socialist welfare state” by the
latter part of this century.
“Indeed, if nothing else changes it from its current path,” writes Moyo, “it is almost certain that America will move from a fully-fledged capitalist society of entrepreneurs to a socialist nation in just a few decades.
“The trouble is, it won’t be just any socialist welfare state... the US is on a path to creating the worst and most venal form of welfare state [poorly developed and designed] – one born of desperation from many years of flawed economic policies and a society that rapaciously feeds on itself.”
There’s plenty more. If current trends continue unabated, Moyo goes much further than the usual surveys predicting when China will surpass the US in GDP – she suggests China’s new hegemony could include the “redback” renminbi replacing the “greenback” dollar as the world’s favourite currency.
“Think about it,” she urges Americans. “Foreign exchange share prices, the price of copper, the price of oil, all in Chinese renminbi.”
The US and other
Western powers will be reduced to second division players and the new global
powerhouses will not just be China. Forget East versus West. It’s now the Rest
versus the old West.
If Dead Aid was
labelled “provocative and incendiary”, How the West Was Lost will likely see
reviewers’ lexicons raided for even more emotive language. However,
Zambian-born Moyo, 41, is not afraid of being a pioneer. The London-based
former Goldman Sachs economist is arguably one of the most powerful women in
British business, sitting on the boards of FTSE 100 constituents Barclays and
brewing giant SAB Miller.
Last year, she
featured in Time magazine’s list of the world’s 100 most influential people and
also appeared in Oprah Winfrey’s power list of “20 remarkable visionaries”. She
is also one of the World Economic Forum’s “young global leaders” and last year
took part in the power-broking Bilderberg Conference, frequented by the world’s
movers and shakers.
So what has led
her to aim fire at the West’s leaders, struggling as they are with budget
deficits and waning economies? The answer, she says, is that she believes the
global economy is at an inflexion point in terms of where it goes from here.
“I wanted to
write a book that is one-stop shopping for where we are in the world today,”
she says. “There’s so much focus on dealing with tactical issues to do with the
emergency solution, which are all necessary of course. But people are missing
the bigger issues because the way the political structure is set up encourages
you to focus on the immediate, rather than what I would say are the important
issues, the structural things which have been going on for 50 odd years.
“I hope the book
will be picked up by people who are saying: ‘I don’t want to hear all this
noise. I just want a clean perspective on what the heck is going on around the
world and how is it that we have got to this point.’ ”
So how have we?
Apparently with the best of intentions. Moyo says the idea of unintended
consequences is a running theme in both Dead Aid and How the West Was Lost,
with policies that Western populations have rallied around as great ideas
turning out to produce detrimental results.
In this way, she
says, Western governments have implemented laudable notions like the idea that
everyone should have a roof over their head, receive access to food and be
supported in old age
by pensions.
These have led to unfortunate outcomes in terms of capital, labour and
productivity, the key ingredients for economic growth.
It’s not just
the US. “There are tons of examples of UK and European mistakes,” she says. “A
classic one is pensions. That’s obviously not an America-specific thing. The
British and European economies are suffering under the weight of what is to
come. The next great Ponzi scheme after Madoff is probably pensions. Also, it’s
not just the United States where performance is declining in a very detrimental
and rapid way in maths and science and reading. It’s also very much a problem
in the UK.
“And if you
compare 1950-1980 with 1980-2000, in terms of GDP growth in the US and many
European countries, it’s been exactly the same. Yet between 1950 and 1980,
people were living in pretty protectionist regimes and between 1980 and 2000
there was much more capital and trade flows. In addition, real wages have been
relatively flat in the US and Europe, so taken together you have a question
about whether globalisation, which is another great idea on paper, has actually
worked in practice. Has it helped Americans? Has it helped the British people?”
Is there still
time to fix these problems? Yes, she says, but the choices are going to be very
difficult and may need to be facilitated through political changes, for example
in the terms of governments, so they have more incentives to think longer-term.
“We all know
what the problems are,” she says. “Which is why I actually think the coalition
Government is brilliant because so far they have been able to implement some of
the hardest choices of the austerity measures in an environment where it’s much
less politicised than if it was just a left-wing or right-wing government in
power. You kind of need to strip out the politics.”
It also may
require a change of mindset, with Moyo arguing that governments need people who
are absolutely focused on long-term structural issues such as education,
deficit management, energy, food commodities, longer-term productivity and
infrastructure. “The problems have been highlighted but where’s the plan for
those issues? There isn’t one.”
It’s these sorts
of awkward questions that Moyo seems to most like posing. In Dead Aid she
argued that more than $1 trillion of development aid from Western governments
to Africa over the past 50 years has not helped Africa but has ruined it, with
millions of people poorer because of aid.Destroying the myth that aid works, she
said, means making charity history.
Former United
Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan agreed, saying that Moyo made a compelling
case for a new approach to Africa, while Rwandan president Paul Kagame bought
copies of Dead Aid for his entire cabinet. Some others were not so
complimentary, however, with David Roodman, a research fellow at the Centre for
Global Development, calling the book “sporadically footnoted, selective in its
use of facts, sloppy, simplistic, illogical and stunningly naive”. The pro-aid
organisation ONE claimed Dead Aid was “reckless”.
Moyo is unmoved.
“I was actually pleasantly surprised,” she says. “I thought it would be much
more fractious and that there would be many more NGOs and governments that
would be incredibly hostile to the message, but it was actually to the
contrary.
“I think there’s
clearly a fringe group. I can probably count on one hand the organisations that
took a lot of offence and I would argue that many of them have a bigger agenda
than trying to help resolve the Africa problem. But a lot of NGOs have
approached me. Some asked me to join their boards.
“Many of them
just asked for advice because they genuinely want to see a turnaround. I think
there’s no doubt in anybody’s mind, whether you love or hate aid, that there’s
clearly something wrong. There’s clearly a problem with a system that has not
delivered economic growth and reduced poverty for 50 years. Nobody can tell me
that things are working swimmingly in Africa. they ain’t.”
Born and raised
in Lusaka, Moyo achieved a chemistry degree and MBA at Washington DC’s American
University, a doctorate in economics from Oxford University and a masters from
Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government before working as a
consultant at the World Bank and then for nearly a decade at Goldman.
“I don’t think
my background in Zambia has really affected my lens because my classical
training has been Western-style,” she says. “But it’s fantastically fortuitous
to have been born African because I don’t feel I have a vested interest to the
US or China or wherever.
I feel like I
have an impartial perspective on the way the world works. Coming from a
continent that’s arguably on the bottom rung, it’s just amazing to see how
things operate.”
It certainly
hasn’t stopped her from becoming a pronounced free marketeer.
“I think the
markets can work in a managed way,” she says. “If they’re left to run rampant
it’s obviously problematic, but I think they are the best way of delivering
economic benefits and have been shown to be the method to generate the biggest
economic benefits to the highest number of people.”
What does she
make of the current furore over banker bonuses? “I think some of the proposals
coming from Europe are quite interesting,” she says with understatement.
“I’ve seen that
they’re going to require vesting schedules on how you get your bonus and there
will be caps on what proportion you can earn in cash. There are some
interesting things but bonuses are on the whole a red herring. They were an
easy target.
“Yes, there
might be a need to change things but I think there are more serious things to
be addressed. It may be a negative externality of a system but they’re not
illegal.
They’re the
creation of a system and the only reason that government might be involved in
this type of discussion is because they did bail out the banks.
“But beyond that
what relevance is there to a broader economy which has some very serious
problems in education and health care? I think they are more interesting [than
those issues].”
That will please
Barclays’ new chief executive, Bob Diamond, but Moyo won’t discuss her
non-executive jobs or her time at Goldman, which she clearly doesn’t view as a
“great vampire squid”, as Rolling Stone infamously described the investment
bank.
She’s already
focusing on her next book. Which urban myths does she want to demolish next? “I
know what it will be about but I’m not telling,” she smiles.
First, she’ll
have to deal with a backlash from proud Americans who don’t agree that the West
has been lost.
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