Sunday, February 02, 2020

The Coronavirus Pandemic: Who is Panicking? More From the Year of the Rat: Will History Rhyme?



Great dangers arise whenever human beings with strong conviction about the rightness of their cause are authorized to use instruments of evil to do good.—Vincent Ostrom

In this issue

The Coronavirus Pandemic: Who is Panicking? More From the Year of the Rat: Will History Rhyme?
-The Baggage from the Year of the Pig, The Year of the Rat: Will History Rhyme?
More Absurd Predictions?
-nCoV: a Rapidly Mutating Virus
-nCoV: Who is Panicking?
-nCoV’s Economic Impact to the World and the Philippines; Food Shortages Ahead?

The Coronavirus Pandemic: Who is Panicking? More From the Year of the Rat: Will History Rhyme?

The Baggage from the Year of the Pig, The Year of the Rat: Will History Rhyme?

Additional observations on the notorious year of the Rat-Pig tandem.

From the financial side, do you remember that 2019 opened with the Hanjin Heavy Industry’s debt default in January? Although this event was downplayed by the BSP and the banking system, it certainly contributed to the siphoning of the financial liquidity that the led to the inversion of the yield curve, and subsequently, the aggressive response of paring down 400 bps of RRR requirements in favor of banks, the 75 bps policy rate cuts and the BSP’s record QE.

From the real economy side, do you recall the emergence of the NCR’s water crisis and the power shortages in the first semester last year?

How about the deluge of national health issues, such as the spike in the dengue cases, which led the National Government to declare the “national dengue epidemic”, the polio outbreak, the HIV outbreak, the measles, and the African Swine Fever (AFS) outbreak?

While some concerns, such as water, and power shortage, may have subsided, the year of the RAT continues to carryover dengue (though at diminishing rate), polio, HIV, measles, and AFS.

Because earthquakes are natural calamities, let us put them aside.

Figure 1

Circling back to the financial sphere, the stock market’s heavily distorted headline index, the PhiSYx broke its 2018 uptrend in December 2019, and which had been confirmed in mid-January of 2020 before the Chinese New Year.

From an 11-year perspective, the fourth critical trend line, having been established in late 2018, was violated anew last week.

For the chart observers, the slope of the trend lines continues to downshift, signaling the dominance of entropic force, in spite of the massive rigging of the index.

Reflecting the zodiac cycle, the Philippine has now lagged the Asian region based on Year to date performance in 2020, in the wake of this week’s remarkable plunge of the headline index.

History never repeats itself, said American writer Mark Twain, but it does often rhymes.

More Absurd Predictions?

Immediately after the announcement of the first case of the Novel Coronavirus (nCoV) in the Philippines, the spin machines went to work.

From the Inquirer: (January 30) The Philippine economy will be shielded by robust domestic demand from any global or regional economic impact from the deadly nCoV virus but Philippine Offshore Gaming Operators (Pogo) face downsizing when China keeps its citizens from traveling to prevent the virus’ spread, Malaysian financial giant Maybank said.  Just like the SARS outbreak in 2002-2003, the Philippines and Indonesia “will likely see the least impact, given that they are more domestic-oriented economies and less reliant on tourism receipts,” said Maybank Kim Eng in a Jan. 29 report titled “Wuhan Virus: Anatomy of an Outbreak.”

From the Inquirer: (January 30) The Duterte administration’s economic team sees a “short-term” impact on the Philippine tourism industry of the spread of the novel coronavirus (nCoV) and expects economic growth to be stronger in 2020. After the Economic Development Cluster (EDC) meeting, wherein economic managers mapped their strategies to achieve the higher gross domestic product (GDP) growth goal of 6.5-7.5 percent in 2020, Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III said besides infrastructure spending, planners expected the country’s more aggressive tourism push to “rev up the economy this year.”

Do they know something that even the medical field doesn’t?

nCoV: a Rapidly Mutating Virus

As a layman of the emerging pandemic, quotes from experts will be used to illustrate the risk conditions from the nCoV.

What do we know about the Coronavirus?

It is a complex and dynamic virus subject to a high rate of mutation.
Figure 2

Dr. Eric Fiegl-Ding Harvard and John Hopkins Epidemologist in a series of tweets noted that “The new #coronavirus is an RNA virus—that is, viruses that have RNA as their genetic material rather than DNA—which have a “high mutation rate,” which allows it to “change properties very quickly” such that “RNA sequences of the #coronavirus isolated from 6 patients from the same household are different from each other (lancet), sign of the virus evolving. This may not be so good to the ear; it suggest the difficulty of containing this virus.” (bold mine)

Again Dr. Ding, One source or many sources? The mutation rate suggests the 2019-nCoV came from just one recent source in single jump (as opposed to several mutation sources). This doesn’t mean much other than it wasn’t several strains that started outbreak. Don’t over-interpret. Just FYI.

While sharing some relations to SARs and MERs, the nCoV is a different strain, again Dr. Ding, As you can see, the new nCOV is a branch off the bat coronavirus subgenus. It is too distant from SARS (79%) or MERS (only 50% related)

If Dr. Ding’s analysis is accurate, why should SARs be worth the comparison? (This observation is just from the perspective of the virus and not the economic climate)

Dr. Ding also remarked that the seafood market origins of the nCoV lacked scientific foundations: “First, I don’t like unsupported conspiracy theories, but it’s a lingering question. @sciencemagazine examined this based on the Lancet article. Nobody knows, but the seafood story isn’t whole story.”

With China’s biolab, the Wuhan National Biosafety Laboratory, located about 20 miles away from the Huanan Seafood market, researching some of the world’s most dangerous viruses, it’s hardly any doubt why some see a connection to this. The US warned reportedly warned that a virus could escape from the lab, according to UK’s Metro News.
nCoV Pandemic: Asymptomatic Disease, Lack of Logistics, Reporting Deficiencies, Suppression of Statistics and Non-Transparent Governments

On his blog, Mish Shedlock compiled a Series of Thirteen Tweets by physician (MD) and scientist (PhD) Dr. Dena Grayson. (bold added)

Dr. Dena Grayson: Having YEARS of experience developing an Ebola treatment, I was concerned about this Coronavirus Outbreak from the outset, because this coronavirus strain is very contagious, causes severe illness, and NO treatments or vaccines are available.

Dr. Dena Grayson: Unlike H5N1 "bird flu" (which does not spread easily between people) or SARS (which was spread by only a handful of "super spreaders"), this coronavirus DOES appear to spread easily between people, even after making the jump from an animal (this is not common).

Dr. Dena Grayson: In addition to being highly contagious, this novel coronavirus can cause a SEVERE infection that can kill even healthy people. It's rare to see BOTH of these (bad) attributes in the same novel virus. Usually, it's one or the other.

Dr. Dena Grayson: One way experts judge how deadly a pathogen (virus, bacteria, etc) is by the "case-fatality rate," which is the # of deaths / # infected people. It's WAY too early to know what this is, because it takes time for patients to succumb to the infection.

Dr. Dena Grayson: Thus far, the case-fatality rate appears to be ~4%...but its' WAY too early to know what it really is, due to spotty reporting (both of deaths and cases), and because patients are still sick and could die tomorrow, next week, etc., even if no new infections occur.

Dr. Dena Grayson: Per @CDCgov, "Early on, many of the patients in the outbreak in Wuhan, China reportedly had some link to a large seafood/animal market, suggesting animal-to-person spread." Now, many newly diagnosed patients have NO connection to the market, supporting human-human spread = BAD

Dr. Dena Grayson: @CDCgov I get asked: "How will I know if I have the coronavirus?" Answer: it's very hard to tell, because the symptoms are similar to having influenza – anywhere on the spectrum from a very bad cold to severe pneumonia with respiratory compromise.

Dr. Dena Grayson: @CDCgov Although there are no specific treatments (medicines to combat the coronavirus) or vaccines, excellent supportive care, such as IV fluids, intubation (on a "breathing machine"), can help support patients while their immune system battles (and hopefully, defeats) the infection.

Dr. Dena Grayson: @CDCgov In an "outbreak," local hospitals can get overwhelmed, and there aren't enough hospital beds, staff, ventilators (breathing machines). This appears to be the case in Wuhan, where authorities are working to build a 1000-bed (mobile) hospital in JUST 10 DAYS. This is ALARMING.

Dr. Dena Grayson: @CDCgov China has a history of not accurately reporting outbreaks, so it's hard to know exactly what is happening, especially with no free press, internet, etc. China's massive response is VERY telling and strongly suggests that the Coronavirus Outbreak is VERY bad, especially in Wuhan

Dr. Dena Grayson: @CDCgov How can you protect yourself and others? 1: Avoid contact with people who are visibly ill (even loved ones) 2: Stay home if YOU are sick 3: Cover your nose/mouth with a tissue (not hand) when coughing/sneezing 4: Don't touch your face (difficult) 5: Wash your hands frequently

Dr. Dena Grayson: @CDCgov Right now, the risk appears low in the US, with only a few isolated cases. Unfortunately, I expect that this will change, as more cases arise here, especially with global travel and how readily this coronavirus appears to spread (via droplets in the air).

Dr. Dena Grayson: @CDCgov I will continue to provide commentary about the emerging Coronavirus as news emerges over time. In this Tweet link , you will find links to excellent @who and @CDCgov websites that track the Coronavirus Outbreak.

In her recent tweets, Dr. Dena Grayson emphasized the understatement of the official rates and the reasons for these.

Dr Grayson: The ACTUAL number of #coronavirus cases is MUCH higher than reported: “#Wuhan residents widely report a severe shortage of testing kits…authorities announced hospitals would only give tests to those who showed severe symptoms

Dr. Grayson: There are credible reports that #China didn’t perform testing on some people who died from #coronavirus, so the underreporting could affect both total cases and deaths. There is apparently a huge backlog of #2019nCoV tests to be performed.

Dr. Grayson: A major challenge is that the ability of #2019nCoV to spread (R0) and the mortality rate (% inflected who die) are not confirmed, because it’s highly likely that there are FAR MORE cases of #coronavirus than reported. Some don’t see a doctor, lack of testing, poor reporting…

Dr. Grayson: Although seasonal #influenza causes far more deaths than the new #coronavirus has (thus far), #2019nCoV appears to spread more readily from person-to-person + appears to be more deadly (higher mortality rate in those infected) =VERY bad.

The fact that China has been the chief source of medical supply, the disruptions from the virus only exacerbates the risks of nCoV spreading.

Former Food and Drug Commissioner Scott Gottlieb’s tweet, “China seeing shortage of protective body suits. Since much of supply chain for masks, gowns, gloves is through China; we should prepare for potential of stretched supply chains and increased demand here in U.S. in event of outbreaks or epidemic spread in America”

Along with Dr. Grayson, Dr. Gottleib charged that the Chinese Government has been non-transparent, “Add to the long list of China’s infractions against world health: They refused to share viral samples or process for synthesizing it; they only admitted there was human to human spread Jan 20 the same day they disclosed 14 healthcare workers were infected.”

Aside from suppressing actual statistical numbers, some Western media outfits have alleged that the Chinese government has been “cremating bodies in secret to hide the true extent of the death toll”.

And because the virus can be asymptomatic, it is hard to detect.

Nevertheless, Dr. Eric Ding, Dr. Dana Grayson, and Dr. Benhur Lee think that the pandemic will continue to spread. (Figure 2)

Despite the race to develop a vaccine against the nCoV, this may yet take time. So unless the outbreak stops by its own similar to SARs, the chances for it to spread may only continue.

Figure 3

Because heat may kill viruses, perhaps the advent of summer may help reduce its spread. (Figure 3)

nCoV: Who is Panicking?

Given China’s population of 1+B, why then have many been panicking when current numbers have been a fraction of these?

One possible answer, because of enhanced risks of ruin.

As mathematician, philosopher, and author, Nassim Taleb, described the precautionary principle. (bold mine)

The general (non-naïve) precautionary principle delineates conditions where actions must be taken to reduce risk of ruin, and traditional cost-benefit analyses must be not be used. These are ruin problems where, over time, exposure to tail events leads to a certain eventual extinction. While there is a very high probability for humanity surviving a single such event, over time, there is eventually zero probability of surviving repeated exposures to such events. While repeated risks can be taken by individuals with a limited life expectancy, ruin exposures must never be taken at the systemic and collective level. In technical terms, the precautionary principle applies when traditional statistical averages are invalid because risks are not ergodic.

Figure 4

There seem to be three phases of nCoV’s dispersion; first, the epicenter, Wuhan, the capital of the Hubei province, second, the rest of China, and last, the world.

By the looks of the current statistics, nCoV has reached phase two or has spread to the rest of China, where local outbreaks could be morphing into secondary Wuhans. Phase three translates to the localized transmission of the virus around the world. nCoV’s transmission may mean adaption to local habitat given its trait to rapidly mutate.

Dr. Ding reacted to a study by Joseph T Wu*, Kathy Leung*, Gabriel M Leung: Whoa-the rate of increase ***outside of China***is steeper than inside of China or Wuhan! Figure 1A. From: @TheLancet “Nowcasting and forecasting the potential domestic and international spread of 2019-nCov bit.ly/2GF6gZP

The study’s findings: Given that 2019-nCoV is no longer contained within Wuhan, other major Chinese cities are probably sustaining localised outbreaks. Large cities overseas with close transport links to China could also become outbreak epicentres, unless substantial public health interventions at both the population and personal levels are implemented immediately. Independent self-sustaining outbreaks in major cities globally could become inevitable because of substantial exportation of presymptomatic cases and in the absence of large-scale public health interventions. Preparedness plans and mitigation interventions should be readied for quick deployment globally. (figure 3)

In other words, at the current rate of infection, which comes at random, millions of lives are at risk from a full-blown epidemic. While not to take on superstitions, major pandemics have occurred every 100 years (Great Plague of Marseille 1720, Cholera Pandemic 1817-24 and the Spanish flu 1918-20).

The Philippines government reported not only its second nCoV case today, but this was the first death registered outside China.

Just a thought experiment: what could happen if just one of the nCoV finds its way to the high density, population packed, depressed area in the NCR?

Besides, who has been panicking?

Who has been forcing quarantines of people from many cities affecting some 60 million of its population? Who has been closing borders in response to the expanding pandemic? Who has declared a state of emergency in reaction to the surfacing of 2 cases of nCoV?

Have they not been the governments?


And China’s government has been pushing back.

From RT.com (February 1) [bold italics and italics original, underline mine]: Beijing has lashed out at countries fanning fears of the novel coronavirus — which so far claimed 259 lives — insisting that its response against the deadly disease goes far beyond standards accepted worldwide. "We have adopted the most comprehensive and strictest prevention and control measures, and many of them go far beyond the requirements of the International Health Regulations," Foreign Minister Wang Yi assured while speaking with his Indian counterpart Subrahmanyam Jaishankar on Saturday. China's efforts are [aimed at] not only protecting the health of its own people, but also safeguarding the health of people worldwide. Governments and the World Health Organization have given full recognition to this. The death toll from the previously unknown virus has risen to 259 overnight — all registered in China — with almost 12,000 confirmed cases elsewhere in the world. Beijing "does not agree with the approach adopted by individual countries to create tension or even panic," the minister pointed out, reminding that the World Health Organization (WHO) "did not approve of travel or trade restrictions on China." Nevertheless, countries around the world rush to contain the spread of the new coronavirus outbreak, including closing borders, introducing stricter screening of those returning from China, or suspending direct flights to and from Chinese cities. Others have dramatically escalated travel advisories for the world's most populous country.

The implicit mobility walls being built to isolate China have resulted in intensifying strains, instead of cooperation, of the geopolitical climate. Will the Chinese retaliate? If so, how?

And yes, it would be better to panic ahead and prepare than panic when it is late and join the stampede.

nCoV’s Economic Impact on the World and the Philippines; Food Shortages Ahead?

All actions have consequences.

Political walls against the public's movements will not only fuel social tensions such as emerging racism here and abroad, but it will also have economic repercussions as well.

Because the war on people translates to the disruption to the global division of labor, shocks to the demand and supply chains will occur.

Aside from city and province lockdowns, many US, global and Chinese companies suspended work or closed shop in China. Apple temporarily closed all its stores.

On the demand side, prolonged suspension of trade and work would lead to diminished, if not loss of income, thereby curtailing expenditures and amplifying the risks of debt delinquency.

So for cities experiencing sustained draconian lockdowns, unless amply provided by the Government, the citizenry would either suffer from nCoV or starvation.

On the supply side, prolonged suspension of trade translates to the discoordination in the allocation of resources, revenue shortfalls, reduction of savings, capital losses and depletion, a rise in credit delinquencies, and most importantly, reduced output.

From the Financial Times (January 31), The Wuhan coronavirus is wreaking havoc within the global technology supply chain, as many Chinese provinces extend the new year holiday in an effort to contain the spread of the deadly disease.  Underlining the concerns for the tech industry, Taiwan’s Hon Hai Precision Industry, which is also known as Foxconn and makes the majority of the world’s iPhones, suffered its biggest share price fall in almost 20 years on Thursday.  Elsewhere, shares of Japanese electronics parts makers and other tech groups with exposure to China were hit hard, with Murata Manufacturing, Tokyo Electron and Sharp all suffering dips of more than 3 per cent as a result of anxieties about disruption to supply chains.  The wobbles came after the governments of six Chinese provinces, including manufacturing hubs crucial for the global technology industry such as Shanghai, Jiangsu, Guangdong and Chongqing, mandated that the return to work after the Lunar New Year be delayed by a week to February 10 for all but essential industries.

From the Wall Street Journal (January 31) “As the spread of the new coronavirus in China causes more factory shutdowns, the effect on global industrial supply chains could linger for years. China now makes up more than twice the share of global merchandise exports it did in 2003, when the SARS virus hit. Guangdong province alone exported more in 2018 than China did as a whole 17 years ago. Manufacturers already gripe about the effect of the Lunar New Year holiday… on their business as Chinese factories shutter. But the public health response to the virus this year effectively means extending the holiday. China’s industrial output could be running at a similarly low level for a much longer period.”

The longer the growth of the nCoV pandemic, the greater the damage to China and the global economy.

The nCoV is likely to trigger an economic shock, considering China’s present conditions of soaring debt levels in the face of falling GDP.

With the sudden emergence of the H5N1 bird flu virus close to the epicenter of the coronavirus, in Hunan beside Hubei, and with the Asian Swine Flu still affecting China’s pork supply, the Chinese government has been expanding its meat imports.

According to YuanTalk: China’s commerce ministry urged to actively expand meat imports amid the coronavirus outbreak. Imports of meat products totaled 310,000 tonnes in the first half of January, up 275% y/y. Imports are expected to rise 190% y/y to 640,000 tonnes in Jan, it said.

China’s government may continue to import to cover the dislocations on China’s supply chain because the global chain remains intact. For now. But what if the third phase of the nCoV dispersion reaches a critical mass to impact the food supply chain everywhere or globally? Will such incite a food crisis?

How can these be positive for the Philippines?

And nCoV is just one of the many other adverse factors affecting the domestic economy.

Though I think that this virus may eventually exhaust itself naturally, or by the development of a vaccine, it does seem that the global government’s response may do more harm than the virus itself.
...

Monday, January 27, 2020

Why the Continuing Shortfall of the GDP, Despite Massive Stimulus in 2019? Risks Barely About POGOs, But About Concentration!



The core of the fallacy lies in the equating of the community as a unit, in some aggregated national accounting sense, with the individuals-in-the-community, in some political sense as participants, direct or indirect, in collective decision making—James Buchanan

In this issue

Why the Continuing Shortfall of the GDP, Despite Massive Stimulus in 2019? Risks Barely About POGOs, But About Concentration!
-An Incredible Record of Wrong Predictions
-Despite the Record “Shot in the Arm” Steroids, Why the Shortfall of the GDP?
-Forecasting Errors: In Defiance of Data, Trend and Theory, Mainstream Sells Hope!
-Why State Capitalism or Neo-Socialism Destroys Wealth
-The Clashing Trends of Consumer GDP and Trade GDP, Bank Loans Favored Consumers over Trade
-Has the Real Estate Industry Been Booming? Anecdotes and Prices Say Yes, GDP Says No!
-GDP and Financial Risks: It’s Hardly from the POGOs, It is Risks of Concentration!

Why the Continuing Shortfall of the GDP, Despite Massive Stimulus in 2019? Risks Barely About POGOs, But About Concentration!

An Incredible Record of Wrong Predictions

At the outset of 2019, these were some of the predictions made by mainstream institutions. (bold mine)

Panay News (December 26, 2018): The Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry (PCCI) said on Saturday that they expected the country’s economy to grow at an accelerated pace in 2019 on the back of robust consumer and government spending. “We agree with the projections of the Asian Development Bank (ADB) and the World Bank (WB) that see a growth rate of 6.7 percent in 2019 despite rising global uncertainty,” the PCCI said in a statement. “Indeed, we continue to be recognized as one of the more resilient economies in Asia.”

Inquirer (January 16, 2019): The Philippines will likely return to a high-growth, low-inflation regime this year, allowing the local stock barometer to recover to as high as 8,800 after a challenging period last year, local investment house First Metro Investment Corp. said. In a separate research note, however, Dutch financial giant ING said Philippine growth might hit a speedbump in the next two quarters with still-high levels of inflation and higher borrowing expected to somewhat sap both consumption and investment momentum. In a joint briefing with the University of Asia and the Pacific (UA&P) on Tuesday, FMIC said the Philippine domestic economy could expand by at least 6.8 percent to as high as 7.2 percent this year as slower inflation boosts consumer spending.

Inquirer (January 17, 2019): For 2019, the Amro’s growth forecast for the Philippines was 6.3 percent, below the earlier projection of 6.4 percent in its October 2018 report as well as the government’s 7-8 percent target.

Inquirer (February 19, 2019): The regional macroeconomic surveillance organization Asean+3 Macroeconomic Research Office (Amro) has slightly raised its 2019 growth forecast for the Philippines as inflation eases and the government builds more infrastructure this year. In a statement Monday, Amro said its latest projection showed the Philippines’ gross domestic product (GDP) expanding by 6.4 percent in 2019, up from the downgraded 6.3-percent growth forecast in January.

Businessworld (January 22, 2019) S&P expects Philippine gross domestic product (GDP) to grow by 6.4% this year, which is slower than the 6.6% forecast it gave in November. Still, this is faster than the 6.2% forecast for 2018 but well below the low end of the state’s target.

Inquirer (January 23, 2019): The Philippines nonetheless enjoyed accelerated public investment growth in 2018, “driven mainly by the implementation of large transport development projects,” and the UN expects this to be sustained this year. In 2019 and 2020, the UN projected the Philippines’ GDP growth at 6.5 percent and 6.4 percent, respectively.

Inquirer Gov’t: 7% GDP this year should be easy” (January 24, 2019): Despite expectations of slower global growth, the head of the Duterte administration’s economic team yesterday expressed optimism the Philippines would achieve at least the lower end of its 7-8 percent growth goal in 2019 as the government ramps up infrastructure. “We are maintaining a 7-percent GDP (gross domestic product) growth rate as a fighting target even as major multilateral institutions have adjusted global growth projections. We are building on our own momentum and on the massive economic investments we have programmed for this year,” Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III told members of the Financial Executives Institute of the Philippines during its inaugural meeting for 2019.

Inquirer (January 26, 2019):The Philippines’ economic growth is expected to further slow and remain below government target in 2019 due to global economic uncertainties coupled with sluggish investment prospects in the domestic front. In a Jan. 24 report titled “Philippine Economy Unlikely To Gather Steam In 2019,” Fitch Solutions said expected the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) to grow by only 6.1 percent this year.

From ABS-CBN (January 29): The Philippine economy needs a "shot in the arm" on the fiscal and monetary fronts to achieve at least the low end of its 7 to 8 percent growth target this year, an analyst said Tuesday. Election-related spending is expected to stimulate consumption growth this year, as it did during the 2010, 2013 and 2016 polls, ING Bank senior economist Nicholas Mapa said in a statement.

Businessworld (February 13, 2019): “I don’t think you can have that kind of capital formation this year. One, the BSP hiked rates by 175 basis points (bp) — capital formation will take a hit. Second… you don’t have that public construction boom,” Mr. Mapa said, referring to the delayed enactment of the 2019 budget. “We’ll still get a decent number — maybe 3.3% — but it’s not gonna be enough to bring you back to close to 7% growth just because it’s an election year.” ING sees 2019 growth at 6.3%, which if realized will slightly pick up from last year’s pace but will miss the 7-8% target set by the Duterte administration.

Such excerpts constitute a splendid showcase of “When everyone thinks the same, no one is thinking.”

A puffed-up number of the statistical economy that fits into the political agenda can be easily presented by the National Government, which it has been done so. Even with this, the consensus has missed badly with their projections.

Or, in spite of this ability of fudge data, it has come with no surprise how mainstream economic wisdom can be so out of bounds!

That said, the real economy must be in a position worse than has been popularly perceived.

And yet, a "shot in the arm" on the fiscal and monetary fronts has been prescribed as an elixir to boost the economy.

Despite the Record “Shot in the Arm” Steroids, Why the Shortfall of the GDP?
Figure 1

Where we not provided with more than just shots, but an avalanche of policy ‘steroids’???

Let us count the ways.

From the fiscal side, the 11-month deficit of Php 409 billion has just been Php 149 billion short of the 2018’s record Php 588.3 billion, yet the second-largest deficit in history! Given 2019’s annual GDP data, December’s deficit must have narrowed this gap substantially. (Figure 1, topmost pane)

On the monetary side, haven’t the BSP dramatically slashed the ReserveRequirementRatio (RRR) by 400 bps that released about Php 400 billion of cash into the financial system, measures of which resonated with the RRR cuts taken against the Asian Crisis in the late 1990s? (Figure 1, middle window)

And had overnight lending rates been slashed by the BSP by 75 bps in 2019? While not a record, 2019's aggregate cuts should be seen in the light of combined policies.

And most importantly, through debt monetization, has the BSP not revitalized its inflationary tool by infusing Php 150.6 billion in November, or by Php 208 billion in 11-months, to lift the BSP’s net claims to the central government to an unprecedented Php 2.12 trillion? (Figure 1, lowest pane)

Again, in the face of such historic sale of inventions, why then the sustained downtrend of the statistical economy, the GDP, which climaxed in 2016?

Have such interventions been insufficient? Should the BSP and the NG double or triple down to achieve their objectives? To reach the optimal growth, exactly what extent of stimulus must be applied?

But ironically, why did the GDP perform better before all these?

Forecasting Errors: In Defiance of Data, Trend and Theory, Mainstream Sells Hope!
Figure 2

The itemized breakdown of the spending of the key sectors constitutes the expenditure side of the GDP.

In the 4Q, the near doubling of real public spending to 18.7% from 9.6% a quarter ago has functioned as the critical factor for the headline number of 6.4%! (Figure 2, upmost window)

After all the buzz about domestic demand, household consumption GDP even fell to 5.6% from 5.9% in the 3Q!

In the meantime, Capital Formation, Exports, and Imports GDP registered paltry gains of .4%, 2% and .3% from the 3Q’s -2.6%, .7% and -.2%, respectively.

And with the 4Q CPI falling to a 3.5 year low to 1.6% from 3Q’s 1.7%, the depressed PCE deflator used to arrive at the GDP must have been a crucial factor for ballooning these numbers. The Expenditure 4Q GDP’s implicit YoY index posted .38%, a smidgen above 3Q’s .37. (Figure 2, lowest left window)

And because 4Q actions constituted a continuation of the driving dynamic for the year, or more importantly since 2017, the annual data paints the same picture. (Figure 2, middle pane)

The crux: As the GDP construct shifted towards public spending, the contribution from the other segments have been weakening significantly.

The annual per capita GDP and per capita household consumption data exhibits such entropy.
Real per capita GDP of 4.3% in 2019 has stumbled to a 2015 low. Real per capita GDP has steadily been in decline, again, since 2016.

While real household spending per capita improved marginally to 4.1% in 2019 from 3.9% in 2018, it has been way down from the 2016 high of 5.4%. (Figure 2 lowest right pane)

That is, even from the mainstream’s standpoint of anchoring on statistics of national accounts, instead of a boom, the GDP has been emaciating!

Yet, institutional and establishment analysts have repeatedly been dismissing or overlooking the data, trends, and economic dynamics underpinning these, by forecasting high GDPs!

And because of such stubborn defiance, why wouldn’t their highly sanguine start of the year forecast miss badly by the year’s end?

And here’s the thing. What are the costs or penalties of failed predictions and advice? Nothing! Should anything go wrong, they would wash their hands by passing the blame on certain external factors that hugged the headlines. For them, to ensure access to savings, they would keep selling hope to the public…only cloaked with economic terminologies!

Perhaps they’ve all been smitten by John Maynard Keynes’ observation on investment crowds, “Worldly wisdom teaches that it is better for reputation to fail conventionally than to succeed unconventionally.”

Why State Capitalism or Neo-Socialism Destroys Wealth

Hardly any of these experts ever seem to explain that in the world of scarcity, known as economics, there are opportunity costs to every action. Such that when the government spends and consumes resources, these would have to come at the expense of someone else, through present taxes, future taxes (debt), and or currency debasement (inflation). And such actions merely destroy savings by diverting scarce resources to unproductive projects, as well as, creates powerful vested interest groups.

And accompanying the increased demand for resources would be the enlargement of the political bureaucracy, which will exercise expanded control through regulations, prohibitions, and mandates over the distribution of resources.

Besides, the intensifying leverage used to satisfy such political transfers would eventually become intractable to render the economy, and the NG vulnerable to risks from sharp changes in interest rates, credit, as well as currency.

And has it not been a puzzle to them that attendant to the increased centralization or expanded politicization of the economy leads to MORE, and not less, corruption?  

From the Inquirer (January 23): The Philippines slipped 14 notches from its previous ranking in the latest Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI), a rating of global anti-corruption watchdog Transparency International has shown. In the group’s Corruption Perceptions Index 2019, the Philippines scored 34 to land in the 113th spot – a decline of 14 places from its previous rank at 99 in 2018.

As the great Ayn Rand warned in her magnum opus the Atlas Shrugged, (bold added)

When you see that trading is done, not by consent, but by compulsion - when you see that in order to produce, you need to obtain permission from men who produce nothing - when you see that money is flowing to those who deal, not in goods, but in favors - when you see that men get richer by graft and by pull than by work, and your laws don't protect you against them, but protect them against you - when you see corruption being rewarded and honesty becoming a self-sacrifice - you may know that your society is doomed.

Or as the great Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises admonished also in his masterpiece Human Action:

A society that chooses between capitalism and socialism does not choose between two social systems; it chooses between social cooperation and the disintegration of society. Socialism is not an alternative to capitalism; it is an alternative to any system under which men can live as human beings.

So why should anyone think that the progressive transformation towards centralization/big government/crony/state capitalism or neo-socialism will deliver prosperity?

Only because we’ve been told so?

The Clashing Trends of Consumer GDP and Trade GDP, Bank Loans Favored Consumers over Trade
Figure 3

I would even say that the GDP represents a hodgepodge of statistical flimflams.

For example, the consumer GDP and trade GDP data emits contradictory signals.

Consumer spending GDP is supposed to represent the demand side, while trade GDP is supposed to account for the supply side. Or, when consumers buy from stores, they are accounted for by the household GDP. (Figure 3, upper pane)

On the other hand, the trade industry GDP exhibits sector’s spending, representing investments/expansions, inventory replenishment, labor spending, etc., from the supply side.

The NG’s data shows that the consumer spending GDP has been slowing steadily from 2016 through 2019. Bizarrely, in the face of the diminishing consumer strength, the trade GDP has been booming!

Again consumer GDP grew 5.6% in the 4Q down from 5.9% a quarter ago, has been trending lower since hitting a pinnacle of 7.2% in 2Q of 2016. Meanwhile, trade GDP spiked to 8.6%, the second-highest rate since 2Q of 2016’s 8.9%. Trade GDP began to ascend sharply since its bottom in the 3Q of 2018.

If these data have some accuracy, then the economy is shown as undergoing a disproportionate buildup of supply relative to demand, which should compound the problem of excess capacity.

Second, again if this represents close to actual activities, the weakening trend of consumer spending should be bad news to the GDP.

In the context of business planning, stores should keep inventories at the minimum, expansion plans should also be conservative or shelved until household consumption shows adequate signs of strengthening.

Of course, consumer recovery would be unlikely, considering the aggressiveness of transfers undertaken from the average citizenry to the government mainly channeled through deficit spending, higher taxes, and the increasing bureaucratic economy. The cronies benefit from these too.

One notable example: The dilemma being faced by motorcycle taxis represented by the Angkas, resonates with the Transport Network Vehicle Services (TNVS) experience. The TNVS have been subjected to repeated onslaughts from authorities on the demand side (pricing caps), operations (licenses, driver requirements, and other operational regulations), and supply-side (limits).  

Interestingly, the BSP’s data on banking loans to the consumers and trade has been diametric to the GDP trends.

Despite slowing consumer GDP, banking loans to the consumers have been booming! In contrast, bank lending to the trade industry has been flagging even when its GDP has supposedly been soaring. (figure 3, lower window)

Here’s a question, if the GDP data is accurate, then how has the trade industry been financing its expansion, if bank loans had become a less preferred option? By drawing down on its savings (retained earnings)?

Between the GDP and bank loans, which of these have been defective, and which have been accurate? Or could both have been amiss?

Has the Real Estate Industry Been Booming? Anecdotes and Prices Say Yes, GDP Says No!

The data on the real estate sector also exhibits signs of contradiction.

Demand from the mainland Chinese have been driving up prices of real estate has been a popular knowledge.

Back in the 1Q of 2019, the Philippines topped the IMF’s Global Housing Watch in price appreciation, while taking the eighth place in the real credit growth in support of this.

And since the demand from the mainlanders has powered sales and rent occupancy of many developers sending end-user (property and rent) prices rocketing, the supply-side should be expected to follow. 
Figure 4

But the odd part has been that commercial prices, for the first time since 2017, has lagged condo prices through Q3 2019, according to data from the Bank for International Settlements. Also, the GDP data obscures such a perspective. (Figure 4, upmost window)

According to the GDP, after peaking in 2013, rent has been in a downtrend and stagnating, while real estate activities have hardly been booming. On the contrary, its GDP trend has been sliding since Q1 2014.

Real rent GDP was only 2.3% in Q4, while real property GDP was 5.3%, below the headline rate of 6.4%.  Gross value added for the sector was a dismal 3.3%. (Figure 4, middle window)

In the meantime, bank loan data suggest that the growth rate of real estate loans have been improving since January 2019, while loans to the trade industry have sharply slowed (discussed above). (Figure 4, lowest pane)

The advancing growth rate of real estate loans must be signaling speculative positions on the end-user units than acquiring inventory, operations, and construction projects. Meanwhile, the mixed signals from trade muddle the actual conditions of the sector.

Additionally, since peaking in Q4 2018, construction permits, a leading indicator, has not only failed to produce a boom in the GDP in 2019 but has also been slowing dramatically through the 3Q. Have these permits vanished in a vacuum?

That said, rent and property prices, GDP, bank loans, and permits have been producing contradictory numbers suggesting a collision course in the economic picture from mainstream anecdotes, statistics, and economic theory.

A better viewpoint would likely come from the annual reports of listed firms from the sector.

GDP and Financial Risks: It’s Hardly from the POGOs, It is Risks of Concentration!

Finally, as I have been repeatedly saying: when in front of the public, the BSP will whitewash all forms of risks.

In response to a Fitch report stating higher risks from increased exposure of POGOs to the banks and the real estate sector, here’s a quote from the Philstar (January 20)…

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) has downplayed the risks posed by the offshore gaming industry to the real estate and banking sectors, saying measures are in place to manage the exposure of banks.

In a press briefing, BSP Governor Benjamin Diokno said the reliance of the real estate sector to Philippine offshore gaming operators (POGOs) does not yet pose a major risk to banks and property developers.

I do not need to repeat the BSP’s quotes at the Financial Stability Report.

Instead, the following graphs should tell us, that with or without POGOs, concentration risk has been mounting on the GDP, which has matched by the banking system’s loan portfolio!

Figure 5

The % share of Real estate, construction, and retail GDP to the headline GDP, have soared to 35.8% as of the 4Q, which including financial GDP expands to 42.8%. The latter reached a record 45.92% nearly half of the real GDP in 3Q! (Figure 5, upper window)

The % share of Real estate, construction, and retail loans to the total, have soared to 36.4% as of November, which including financial loans expands to 46.7%, that’s almost half of all loans! (Figure 5, lower window)

These numbers tell us that once these credit-dependent sectors suffer a considerable slowdown, due to the feedback loop of their connectivity with each other, and with the general economy, severe dislocations will ripple across the real economy, and not just the GDP.

POGOs? They are just an aggravating factor.

Remember, since the online gaming industry is illegal in China, which most POGOs here cater to, one shouldn’t expect demand from this sector to be lasting.

When will the public and officials learn to distinguish between artificial and organic or natural?
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