Why the world is like a real-life game of global
domination
Five mighty empires across the globe are gearing up
for an economic wargame where there could be no winners
Paul Mason
The Guardian, Sunday 7 December 2014 / http://www.theguardian.com/business/commentisfree/2014/dec/07/world-real-life-game-global-domination
Putin gives a speech and the rouble falls. Europe ’s central bank boss gives a speech and the stock
markets fall. Opec meets in Vienna
and the oil price plummets. Japan ’s
prime minister calls a snap election and the yen’s slide against the dollar
accelerates. All these things in the last six weeks of an already fractious
year.
There are suddenly multiple conflicts being
played out in the global markets, conflicts the global game’s usual rules are
not built to handle.
The first concerns a clear game of beggar
thy neighbour between China
and Japan .
Since 2012 Japan
has printed money hand over fist, with the aim of kickstarting economic growth.
With growth stalling for a third time in the final quarter of 2014 its premier
Shinzo Abe printed more. China
perceives this as unfair competition, and with its own growth slowing, it
responded in late November with a surprise interest-rate cut.
Many see this as the outbreak of a classic
currency war, along 1930s lines, where rival economic giants engage in a
pointless game of devaluing their own currency – boosting exports but hitting
the spending power of their people – to their mutual detriment. By hitting each
other’s capacity to export, they edge the region towards deglobalisation.
The second new dynamic is the game of
chicken being played over the oil price between America ,
Russia
and Opec. Oil demand is falling because growth in the emerging markets – China , Brasil
and the like – is slowing down. Yet supply has risen – by 11m barrels to 92m
barrels per day since the global financial crisis began. America has
become the world’s biggest oil producer thanks to the rapid rollout of shale
and deep sea oilfields. Since June 2014 the price of a barrel of Brent crude
has fallen from $115 to $68 – and after Opec met in late November and rejected
calls to cut production some analysts predicted the price could collapse to
$40. Saudi Arabia
and the other gulf monarchies were the key players in the decision to keep
production high and prices falling – and few doubt there is politics behind the
move. It hurts Russia , Venezuela and Iran . For Saudi Arabia there are scores to settle with
both Russia and Iran over their role in crushing the Syrian
revolution, and with Venezuela
for being Russia ’s
perpetual Bolivarian cheerleader. As a result, Vladimir Putin has had to admit
to his people that a combination of western sanctions and Saudi oil strategy
will push Russia
into recession next year.
At times like this economists resort to
game theory, warning sparring countries that, in a game where everybody is
trying to shrink something – whether it be prices or currencies – everybody
loses out. So let’s game it out – not in the austere language of theory but of
the empire-building “god games” popular on games consoles.
Empire A is a rich, stagnant ageing
country, paying itself high social benefits but running debts at 250% of its
annual output. That is Japan .
Empire B is a poor-ish and also ageing
country, ruled by a dictatorship, which has achieved high rates of growth and
modernisation but has now slowed down. That is China .
Empire C is run by a lunatic. It has
invaded a neighbouring country twice in 12 months, has its warplanes buzzing a
historic foe – and has a bloated upper-middle class in a state of near panic as
its currency tanks. It is more or less totally dependent on the price of oil
and other global commodities. I don’t need to name this country, but if you are
unlucky enough to be anywhere near it in the computer game, it is making you
very worried.
Now let’s look at Empire D. If you’d been
playing this side in a game set 800 years ago, when it was called the Holy Roman Empire , you’d have been worried about its
eternal fractiousness; its ethnic and religious strife – and the fragility of
its governance systems. And if you’ve any sense, you still are: half of its
economies are stagnant. This is Europe , and it
is the only one of our global players that is not supporting itself by printing
money.
Finally, Empire E. After marauding across
the globe for a century in search of oil it has suddenly become
self-sufficient. It has a paralysed governance system and a fractious civil
society, but nothing the flickering spectacles on its plasma screens cannot
pacify, together with a few tasers. That is America .
As long as the game is collaborative, four
out of five players can pursue their aims to mutual benefit. Japan can enjoy happy stagnation, China brutalist growth; the EU can stagger from
crisis to crisis; America
can shoot its own citizens and drone-strike its enemies. Only Russia is in
trouble.
The real problem comes if the game
atmosphere turns overtly competitive. That is, if the players perceive
themselves to be fighting over shrinking resources, shrinking growth – and to
be in a game where pure selfishness is the optimum strategy. Think of this this
way and the real story of 2014 becomes clear.
In 2014 Russia ’s
perception of its “game” with both Europe and America has became purely
combative. Reluctantly, these other two players recalibrated their stance,
while trying to maintain the global rules as collaborative. But in the last
quarter of the year, the game has also changed between China and Japan .
If this was a game played in annual turns,
the umpire would probably call some kind of time out at Christmas. And in that
pause it would be sensible to say: “Ladies and gentlemen, there are clear signs
that the rules of this game are about to invert. Are you completely sure you
want to go on to the 2015 turn with the same strategy?”
Paul Mason is economics editor at Channel 4
News. Follow him @paulmasonnews
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