How are the OECD countries, Australia, UK, Europe, and North America, going to deal with trillions of dollars of private and government debt amid very long term low or negative interest rates and severe economic stagnation?
Japanese Central Bank is close to monetizing its government’s external debt, essentially the JCB will print money and bail out the Japanese Government. The intergovernmental debts will be canceled or mutually written off in a big accounting consolidation exercise. This will lead to a further depreciation of the yen which has gradually halved since the ‘80s.
Europe would like to emulate Japan but unless there is both political and monetary union this is unlikely to happen. The next best thing is for the EU to have another massive bond bailout and kick the proverbial can down the road. The danger is as EU buys more time, it is giving rise to the ascent of nationalist and fascist fervor as evident in the success of various right-wing parties throughout Europe who are winning the populist votes. This then could lead to the breakup of the Union. Maybe the UK just got out in the nick of time, so as not to be around to be picking up the mess that it knew it will ensue from such a lesion.
The UK having parachuted is reliant on a service economy and net exports to the USA, Net exports of food, pharma, and works of art! Its best chance is to become the next Switzerland with a highly skilled and educated workforce and look for trade deals further afield in the old colonies of Africa, Asia, and even Iran which is a goldmine begging to be explored.
The US prides itself as a reserve trading currency and so its only choice, for now, is to resign itself to a very long period of low or negative interest rates, some restructuring and shedding of ‘zombie companies’ some 15% of the companies on the US stock market. The level of private corporate debt of non-financial US business has reached 50% of GDP and over two-thirds of that is of junk or BBB investment grade. The OECD has alerted its members to the dangerous widening credit spreads as a symptom of irresponsible lending and poor quality of loans a good chunk of which will be maturing in 2020 and 2021 amidst the global pandemic when there is no cash around.