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Saturday, March 15, 2025

Weekend reading links

1. Globalised nature of supply chains is captured in the form of the supply chain of the Chevrolet Silverado.
The high-margin General Motors model, which costs roughly $40,000-$70,000, relies on one of the most complex, international and interconnected automotive supply chains, making it particularly vulnerable to the US president’s threat to impose 25 per cent tariffs on Canada and Mexico. Of the 673,000 Silverados produced last year, 31 per cent were built at GM’s factory in the Mexican city of Silao and 20 per cent at its plant in Oshawa, Canada. But even for the roughly half manufactured at three US plants in Michigan and Indiana, it is likely that the power steering and door trim panels were built in Mexico; the rear lighting in Canada; the airbag module in Germany; and the centre stack display in Japan, according to S&P Global Mobility data... Data compiled by Export Genius shows that key components in Silverados are heavily dependent on parts imported from Mexico. The country’s exports of parts for the vehicle were worth almost $30bn last year, with braking systems alone accounting for $4.3bn.
2. Russia was the biggest beneficiary of the increased natural gas price from its invasion of Ukraine. The other beneficiary was Norway!
In 2022 and 2023 (until European gas-importing countries were able to build LNG import terminals) Norway received excess natural gas export revenues of €109bn, according to estimates by the Norwegian Ministry of Finance. Norway’s 78 per cent marginal tax on profits in the oil and gas sector, along with returns on the government’s direct investments in oil and gasfields, and dividends from its ownership share in its parastatal oil company Equinor, ensured that the lion’s share of this windfall went into the country’s coffers while a much smaller share was retained by the companies that produced the gas. Oil and gas companies operating in Norway responded to the rise in prices by increasing production. Markets did their job of allocating scarce gas supplies to their most efficient use, in many cases mitigated by energy subsidies... But Norway’s government has not recognised its windfall as profits from the war. This year it allocated a measly €3bn to support Ukraine’s desperate war effort... The value of Norway’s war windfall is almost equivalent to all US military and civilian support for Ukraine to date... Any increase in Norway’s support for Ukraine, they argue, should be subject to the national spending rule that stipulates no more than 3 per cent of the value of its sovereign wealth fund can be spent each year.

3. Steve Bannon and Donald Trump are not being whimsical when seeking closer ties with Russia, but are merely following the attitudes of their electoral base

Similarly, a large share of Republican voters support ending aid to Ukraine.
4.  Excellent tribute by Tim Harford to the late Donald Shoup, the father of "parking" economics. Some insights
Shoup reckoned that in a small Los Angeles neighbourhood — just 15 blocks — drivers collectively drove an extra million miles a year in their hunt for a good spot. “Shoup concluded that nearly one-third of all the cars in parking-scarce neighbourhoods were looking for a place to park,” writes Grabar... An apartment parking lot would be vacant during the day, while the office and retail would be empty at night. Regulatory parking minimums did not allow for sensible ideas such as the idea that an apartment building might share parking with a neighbouring mall... given that each new parking space cost thousands of dollars to provide, and given that there were at least three spaces per vehicle, the value of all the parking spaces in the US exceeded the value of all the cars... Shoup suggested solutions: abolish regulatory parking minimums, introduce parking meters and set the prices sufficiently high that people don’t have to waste time looking for a space — although they may instead walk, cycle, switch to public transport or drive at a less busy time. But the game-changing idea was to propose that parking revenue from kerbside meters should be invested in local improvements to the streetscape such as litter collection, tree-planting or pleasantly paved sidewalks. This, says M Nolan Gray, one of Shoup’s many acolytes, was his “greatest contribution”. Locals stopped opposing parking meters, and started demanding them.

5. Stanley Druckenmiller, founder of Duquesne Capital Management hedge fund and formerly George Soros's right hand man, may be the most influential Wall Street personality in the Trump administration through his two proteges - Scott Bessant, Treasury Secretary, and Kevin Warsh, the most likely successor to Jay Powell.

7. Amidst the extreme polarisation in US politics, the one area where the Republicans and Democrats may be converging is in anti-trust. This is borne out by the bipartisan consensus on the nomination of Oxford-educated and business concentration wary Gail Slater to succeed Jonathan Kanter and head the Justice Department's anti-trust division. 

Slater embodies the unlikely alignment of progressives who support tough antitrust enforcement and a new generation of populist conservatives helmed by vice-president JD Vance, who has called for the break-up of Google. While the motivation of the two groups differ — progressives look to curb anti-competitive behaviour and corporate power while Maga populists also aim to clamp down on platforms and companies they accuse of censoring conservative voices — the unlikely bipartisanship has spooked Wall Street.

6. As tariffs rise, here's a summary of the trade-weighted tariffs of major countries.

The trade-weighted US tariff of 2.2 per cent is lower than that of any of its trading partners, except Japan at 1.7 per cent. The European Union’s stands at 2.7 per cent, China at 3 per cent, Canada at 3.4 per cent, Mexico at 3.9 per cent, Vietnam at 5 per cent, Brazil at 6.7 per cent, South Korea at 8.4 per cent, and India—labelled by Trump as the “tariff king”—at 12 per cent.

7. Maurice Obstfeld makes some important points.

The trade balance equals what an economy produces minus total spending on consumption and investment. It is therefore linked to manufacturing output and employment. This is not because importing more lowers GDP. Rather, when demand rises beyond output in an economy close to full employment, as in the US today, part of that higher demand is for non-tradeable goods. As supply expands to meet demand, production inputs including labour are drawn away from tradeable sectors like manufacturing. Demand for tradeable goods is thus satisfied by imports — the trade deficit grows and manufacturing shrinks. Tariffs do not necessarily push the balance between income and spending in one direction or the other, which is why they don’t improve the trade balance or manufacturing employment. Tariffs will cause the currency to strengthen... This both raises imports and harms exports. Tariffs also hurt exports by raising the prices of critical intermediate goods... Tariff talk distracts us from the appropriate economic policies to help America. Better targeted policies could include a more redistributive tax system, limits to corporate market power, further healthcare reform, and workforce development. The Trump administration is offering none of these.

8. American corruption fact of the day  

Mr. Trump’s post-election fund-raising... inaugural committee, which is a separate entity, brought in more than $170 million in private donations as of early January, a record... Among them are the technology companies Amazon, Meta, Google and Microsoft, each of which donated $1 million. Kraken, a cryptocurrency exchange that was sued by the Securities and Exchange Commission in 2023, put in $1 million as well. On Monday, the S.E.C. said it was dropping the case voluntarily. Last week, it dismissed a suit against another cryptocurrency exchange, Coinbase, which also donated $1 million to Mr. Trump’s inauguration.

9. DOGE takes the chainsaw to consulting firms working with US federal government agencies. 

10. Indonesia's middle class is shrinking, even as the new President, Probowo Subianto, seeks to turn Indonesia to a developed country by 2045 with an annual growth rate of 8%.

The number of Indonesians in the middle class had fallen to 47.9mn by March 2024, down from a peak of about 60mn in 2018, according to the most recent government data. Indonesia defines its middle class as those who spend Rp2mn-Rp9.9mn ($122-$605) a month. In the four years to 2018, the middle class grew by 21mn. The middle class accounted for 17 per cent of the population last year, down from as much as 23 per cent in 2018. Indonesia has also seen an increase in the number of people in the “aspiring middle class” and “vulnerable” categories, indicating a reversal in economic progress, said analysts. At the same time, employment in the informal sector — typically poorly paid and insecure — has risen to 59 per cent in 2023 from 57 per cent in 2018, according to government data...
“The culprit for this is the inability to produce jobs in the formal sector,” said Chatib Basri, a former finance minister who is now advising the government on the economy. “From 2019, most of the jobs created were basically in the informal sector.” Such growth results in weaker consumer spending and lowers tax collection, said Eko Listiyanto, vice-director of the Institute for Development of Economics and Finance. Manufacturing, a mainstay of middle-class jobs, as a contributor to GDP has dropped steadily over the past two decades. Instead, resource-rich Indonesia has focused on developing its commodities sector.
11. FT reports that Chinese competition and high electricity prices annihilated the US aluminium industry. President Trump has raised tariffs on aluminium imports from 10% to 25%.
The downturn in the US industry is being driven above all by high energy costs. And they show no sign of abating... “For aluminium, everything comes down to electricity,” said Annie Sartor of Industrious Labs, a non-profit focused on the decarbonisation of heavy industry. “There’s a phrase that aluminium is electricity in solid form.” New Madrid is no exception. “This smelter uses more electricity in 24 hours than the whole city of Springfield, Missouri,” said Lester. That is why the recent rise in power prices has been so painful for producers. The average cost of electricity for US smelters is expected to rise to $36 per megawatt hour in 2025, up from $33/MWh in 2024, according to CRU Group, a commodity data company. An industry veteran, Lester has had a ringside seat at the decline of American aluminium. When he started out, the US had 34 smelters — now it has four. It produced 30 per cent of the world’s aluminium in 1980 — now it accounts for just 1 per cent.

12. Aid facts of the day.

Rich countries spent $256bn (or 0.4% of GDP) on foreign aid last year—enough to provide sub-Saharan African governments with a sum as large as their total tax revenues. Only a sliver of the spending will have gone to cultural causes, funding the sort of pro-democracy charities and independent newspapers that maga types despise. Around a quarter will have been humanitarian aid (covering disaster relief and refugees) and health funding (such as hiv treatment, vaccines and so on)... Development spending accounts for almost three-quarters of all aid. It most often subsidises favoured industries, frequently funds infrastructure construction and sometimes pays the salaries of teachers. The average Malawian has had more money spent on them by international agencies than by their own government every year since the country gained independence from Britain in 1964... 

In 2004 William Easterly of New York University and co-authors found that, from 1970 to 1997, aid was just as likely to shrink the world’s poorest economies as to help them grow. A year later the World Bank produced a post mortem on two decades of development aid, poring over the history of its recipients. The researchers concluded that its grants and loans did not move the needle on growth. In 2019 the IMF reached a similar conclusion. As Charles Kenny of the Centre for Global Development, a think-tank, notes: “There is no country that has really grown from aid.”... In 2005 David Dollar and Jakob Svensson, both then of the World Bank, and Dani Rodrik of Harvard University, looked at disbursals tied to political reforms—and could not find a country where they had produced better policy... In 2015 Axel Dreher of Heidelberg University and Steffen Lohmann, then at the University of Göttingen, looked at local economic activity after the building of schools, social housing and other projects in a range of locations, and found no increase in the amount of electric light, their proxy for economic growth... And instead of strengthening recipient countries’ ability to provide public services, aid often weakens it. The IMF has found that more development spending tends to result in lower taxes. Last year Avi Ahuja of New York University concluded that it produces less competitive political systems, as incumbents wield the cash to win votes.

And more here

In 2023, the latest year for which there are comparable data, rich Western countries spent $60bn on aid in Africa, which is 27% of global aid spending by these countries. For the median African country aid accounts for about 4% of gross national income (gni), though it ranges from less than 0.5% in fairly rich countries like South Africa to 27% in very poor ones such as Central African Republic (see map).
A study published in 2023 by academics at Lund University in Sweden found that aid led to weaker fiscal capacity in African democracies, suggesting it got in the way of social contracts between the taxed and the taxer. “In effect, aid-dependent democracies become more autocratic,” say the authors.

Also Martin Wolf on aid.  

13. Livemint points to the differences between tariffs imposed by India and US. At the aggregate level, weighted average tariff gap has declined sharply from 22.9 percentage points in 2000 to just 2.5 percentage points in 2022.
At the broad sectoral level.
And at the product level.
14. Fascinating long read about the complex financial structure of the Canadian PE firm Brookfield Corporation, especially on its related party transactions where it's both the buyer and seller. The article describes the sale of One Liberty Plaza in Manhattan. 
A rare transaction in a moribund market for office towers, it received little publicity because the building’s ultimate owner, Canada’s Brookfield Corporation, was both the buyer and the seller. One of the world’s largest and most complex financial conglomerates, Brookfield sold property to itself like this dozens of times in 2024, using $1.4bn from its insurance arm to finance transactions that supported its “distributable earnings” — a non-standard measure of profit that underpins the corporation’s $90bn stock market valuation. These earnings were then recycled back into the portfolio in a circular flow of cash that is attracting scrutiny of both the relative opacity of Brookfield’s accounting practices and how it juggles its vast global portfolio of real estate...
Such trades support an expansive but lossmaking portfolio of more than 200 malls and offices dotting skylines around the world, including London’s Canary Wharf, One Manhattan West and the Las Vegas Fashion Show mall. The transactions pose questions about the quality of Brookfield Corporation’s earnings, and the valuation of assets held to pay annuity policies at the Brookfield-owned insurance businesses that trade with other parts of the conglomerate. They also raise the question of whether Brookfield and chief executive Bruce Flatt are presenting a sufficiently transparent picture of the organisation — a labyrinth containing thousands of entities, the interconnected funds, partnerships, trusts and companies that control $1tn of assets. Flatt, an accountant by training, owns a third of the Bermuda trust that appoints half the board of Brookfield Corporation in Toronto, the topmost of six listed companies operating in real estate, private equity, infrastructure, green energy, insurance and asset management. Brookfield also exercises control over a wide range of businesses and investment funds even though it often owns only a small part of them... Brookfield is a fiduciary that manages assets and money for public sector and union pension funds, annuity holders and investment funds. It runs critical infrastructure, is responsible for huge sums in long-term liabilities, and operates regulated businesses in many jurisdictions.
15. The size of the US Treasury market has doubled in the last decade!

In a comprehensive study, Andrew Fieldhouse and Karel Mertens classify major changes in non-defence R&D funding by the DoE, Nasa, NIH and NSF over the postwar period. They estimate implied returns of as much as 200 per cent — raising US economic output by $2 per dollar of funding. This is substantially higher than recent estimates of returns to private R&D. According to the Congressional Budget Office, the high returns to public funding are more than 10 times that on public investment in infrastructure. With the higher tax revenue generated from additional GDP, an increase in R&D funding more than pays for itself. In aggregate, productivity gains from federal R&D funding are substantial. Indeed, Fieldhouse and Mertens estimate that government-funded R&D amounts to about one-fifth of productivity growth (measured as output growth less all input growth) in the US since the second world war.

17. Business Standard points to a new study by ICAR-National Institute of Agricultural Economics and Policy Research which finds limited outreach of MSP operations. 

The findings indicate that only 15 per cent of paddy and 9.6 per cent of wheat farmers engage with the procurement system. Moreover, it remains confined to mostly large farmers. Small and marginal farmers, despite producing 53.6 per cent of paddy and 45 per cent of wheat, have low participation in public procurement. The direct relationship between participation in the MSP-backed procurement system and farm size arises because small and marginal farmers are likely to have low awareness about the procurement system, and are often constrained by their limited scale of production.

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