The G-20’s Hidden Issue: A Global Trade Imbalance

The G-20s Hidden Issue: A Global Trade Imbalance

No one asked President Barack Obama directly about the elephant in the room on Wednesday. But he brought it up anyway, during a joint press conference with British Prime Minister Gordon Brown. A British reporter asked Obama about the proper size of government stimulus spending, and the U.S. President decided to talk about the perilous balance of global trade.

“In some ways, the world has become accustomed to the United States being a voracious consumer market and the engine that drives a lot of economic growth worldwide,” Obama said, hinting that this position may not be sustainable. “We’re going to have to take into account a whole host of factors that can increase our savings rate and start dealing with our long-term fiscal position as well as our current account deficits.”

The comments were filled with economic jargon but pregnant with meaning. “If there’s going to be renewed growth, it can’t just be the United States as the engine. Everybody is going to have to pick up the pace,” Obama continued. He went on to say that the world would have to shift away from the situation where other nations are “only exporting and never importing” to a “balance in how we approach these issues.”

The words did not make zippy sound bites, so they won’t be making a heavy rotation on cable news. But they struck to the heart of an often ignored cause of the economic crisis now gripping the world. For weeks, world leaders have been blaming the crisis on the immediate villains: banks, investors and derivatives traders who took on more risk than they could handle. A regulatory structure that failed to notice the problems. A global consumer delusion that the bubble could expand forever.

Largely left out, however, is the vital role that trade balances played in igniting the crisis in the first place. Since the late 1990s, the U.S. has been spending far more than it has earned, sending huge sums of capital overseas, a dynamic measured as the current account deficit. This “giant pool of money,” as the radio program This American Life described it, did not stay in low-spending surplus countries like China or oil-producing states. Instead, much of it came back to the U.S. in the form of cheap credit. “Like water seeking its level, saving flowed from where it was abundant to where it was deficient, with the result that the United States and some other advanced countries experienced large capital inflows for more than a decade,” explained Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke in a March 10 speech.

The glut of investment led to what economists call an “underpricing of risk,” as lending standards were weakened and leverage grew. Economists now widely agree that the systemic sloshing about of capital was a recipe for disaster. If a lack of regulation allowed the fire to spread quickly, the global trade imbalance provided the dry kindling to start it.

Over the past year, government officials have been somewhat hesitant to bring the issue of trade imbalances up because it isn’t as pressing as getting people back to work and restoring confidence. At the first meeting of the G-20 last fall, it was hardly mentioned at all. But as former Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson said in November, it cannot be left untreated over the long term. “The pressure from global imbalances will simply build up again until it finds another outlet,” he explained.

That is why Obama’s comments on Wednesday were so notable. The issue of imbalances is not expected to play a big role in the coming G-20 communiqué, which focuses on regulation, aid to developing countries, protectionism and stimulus. But Obama clearly signaled that the issue is on his radar, and that policy shifts may be coming. In practice, this means measures in the medium term that will encourage greater consumption and spending in developing nations like China, and more saving and less debt in the U.S. Although he was vague, Obama discussed what would amount to a reworking of the basic economic physics that governs our world. It’s a delicate balance, however, because too much savings in the short term could delay an economic recovery.

This issue popped up again, in the most oblique way, later on Wednesday, when Obama met with Chinese President Hu Jintao. Although the issue of imbalances was not raised directly by either man, according to a senior U.S. Administration official, the joint statement released by the two nations said both countries want to deal with the underlying causes. “[Obama] underscored that once recovery is firmly established, the United States will act to cut the U.S. fiscal deficit in half and bring the deficit down to a level that is sustainable,” the statement reads. “President Hu emphasized China’s commitment to strengthen and improve macroeconomic control and expand domestic demand, particularly consumer demand, to ensure sustainable growth and ensure steady and relatively fast economic development.”

In other words, China will seek to spend more, and the U.S. will seek to spend less. Many economists are critical of the lack of specific policy solutions beyond these acknowledgements, saying the imbalances and the resulting distorting effects on currency exchange rates should have been a central agenda item at the G-20. “Unless and until surplus countries recognize that this cannot continue, no durable escape from the crisis will be achieved,” Martin Wolf, author of Fixing Global Finance and the Financial Times’ economics columnist, wrote in Wednesday’s edition. “Understandably, but foolishly, they are unwilling to do so.” But as Wednesday showed, the issue is not entirely unnoticed by senior leaders. The elephant in the room, after all, is large, threatening and unlikely to go away on its own.
See TIME’s Pictures of the Week.
Cast your votes for the TIME 100.

Share

Cars searched for clues to missing California girl

Sandra Cantu, 8, disappeared on Friday, according to police in Tracy, California.
Police in the Northern California town of Tracy are pursuing hundreds of possible leads in the disappearance of 8-year-old Sandra Cantu, a police spokesman said Wednesday.

Police have received 477 tips since she disappeared Friday, 100 of them on Tuesday alone, Lt. Jeremy Watney of the Tracy Police Department told reporters. “We’re following up on all of them,” he said. “It’s extremely frustrating. We want her back safe. That’s the bottom line. “At this point, everything is still open.” Authorities Tuesday afternoon impounded and searched a car — the fourth one to be seized — that was parked near the mobile home park where Sandra lives and was last seen. On Monday night, Tracy police and FBI agents searched six locations, some in the Orchard Estates Mobile Home Park and some in Tracy. All of the places were connected to two men who live in the mobile home park, officials said. Watch CNN report on Sandra’s disappearance »

Don’t Miss
KCRA:  Tracy Police ‘Leaving the whole book open’

AC360:  Out to play and gone

Authorities have not called the men suspects and have not named them publicly. They did not say how or if they might be related to the case. On Friday afternoon, Sandra came home from school, kissed her mother and left to play with a friend who lives a couple of homes away. A short time later she left that home to go to another friend’s home, a spokeswoman for her family said Tuesday. The girl, who was wearing a pink Hello Kitty T-shirt and black leggings, has not been seen since, said the spokeswoman, Lisa Encarnacion.

Call with tips:Police in Tracy, California, are asking anyone with information about Sandra Cantu to call the Tracy Police Department at 209-831-4550 or the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children at 1-800-843-5678.

Her parents reported her missing about 8 p.m. Friday. Officials said surveillance camera footage recorded the girl playing in the park. A dozen agencies are involved in the search. The number of searchers swelled over the weekend, and a similar effort is likely Saturday and Sunday, Watney said. Police have said they doubt she ran away.

The mobile home park has fewer than 100 units. There are about 80 registered sex offenders living in a five-mile radius around it. Tracy is about 60 miles east of San Francisco, California.

Share

South Korea edges past North in World Cup qualifier

South Korea's Oh Beom-Seok, left, celebrates with Kim Chi-Woo after Kim's late goal Wednesday in Seoul.
South Korea scored a late goal Wednesday to defeat North Korea 1-0 in a World Cup qualifying match set amid the backdrop of heightened political tensions in the region.

Substitute Kim Chi-Woo scored in the 88th minute when his left-footed free kick went past defenders and into the back of the net. Replays showed that a North Korean defender may have deflected the ball just enough to prevent goalkeeper Lee Woon-Jae from the save. The match in Seoul was played with tensions high in the region ahead of an announced rocket launch by the communist North. Pyongyang has said it will launch the missile sometime between April 4 and April 8. A launch would violate a 2006 United Nations Security Council resolution banning the recluse state from launching ballistic missiles. U.S. military officials worry less about the payload and more about the launch itself, saying any kind of launch will give the North Koreans valuable information about improving their ballistic missile program.

Don’t Miss
Blog:  Political football in Seoul

Japan recently mobilized its missile defense system — an unprecedented step — in response to the planned North Korean launch, Japanese officials said. The game was played before a boisterous partisan crowd in Seoul that booed frequently when the North had the ball. The match featured controversial moments, as well.

Football Fanzone

Football fans, the chance to have YOUR say on CNN is here!

Join in the debates now »

North Korean forward Jong Tae-se nearly scored just four minutes into the second half with a powerful header. But his shot was saved at the goal line by Lee. Television replays suggested that a portion of the ball may have crossed the line. The victory moves South Korea atop Group 2 of the Asian section of qualifying for next year’s World Cup in South Africa. The South now has 11 points after five games, while the North has 10 points after six games played.

Saudi Arabia moved into a second-place tie with North Korea after it defeated the United Arab Emirates, 3-2. Australia and second-place Japan lead Group 1 of the Asia section by a comfortable gap over third-place Bahrain. Only the top two from each group qualify, with the third placed teams playing off for the right to meet New Zealand for the fifth berth available.

Share

Heavy rain floods Australia’s east coast


More than 30 hours of incessant rain eased Thursday on Australia’s east coast, where widespread flooding cut off thousands of people from services and resulted in four areas being declared disaster zones, officials said.

Share

Sweden passes same-sex marriage law


Sweden’s parliament on Wednesday approved same-sex marriage legislation, according to the parliament’s Web site.

Share

Jenny McCarthy on Autism

Jenny McCarthy on Autism

There was not much in Jenny McCarthy’s early career as a Playboy model and MTV star to suggest that she would become a passionate advocate for family issues, children’s health and autism awareness. But the birth of her now almost 7-year-old son Evan, who developed autism early in life, changed all of that. McCarthy has become a best-selling author, first of lighter stuff like Baby Laughs and Life Laughs; then of more serious fare, like Louder than Words: A Mother’s Journey in Healing Autism.

Now, she is releasing her fifth book — co-authored with autism specialist Dr. Jerry Kartzinel, titled Healing and Preventing Autism. The book is awfully smart when it comes to hardheaded advice for families trying to heal — or at least draw out — an autistic child. But McCarthy goes soft when she starts exploring the causes of autism, making the usual charges against the usual suspects, including nutrition, environmental toxins and, as always, vaccines. McCarthy and TIME science editor Jeffrey Kluger sparred over the causes of autism and the safety of vaccines.

Your book points out that autism rates between 1983 and 2008 have climbed in lockstep with vaccination rates, yet childhood obesity, diabetes and even cell-phone use have soared since then, too. Why do you find causation in one and not the others

I’m not saying it’s only the vaccines. But children are given so many shots from the moment they’re born. They get multiple injections all at once, and if they fall behind, doctors put them on a catch-up schedule. Babies get the hepatitis B vaccine immediately after they’re born and the only way for a newborn to contract that disease is if the mother is a carrier. Why not just screen the mother Evan was handed to me pre-vaccinated with a Band-Aid on his foot.

Most people who blame autism on vaccines point to the mercury in the shots, yet mercury has been removed from most vaccines and autism rates continue to climb.

We don’t believe it’s only the mercury. Aluminum and other toxins also play a role. The viruses in the vaccines themselves can be causing it, too.

Your collaborator recommends that parents accept only the haemophilus influenzae type B and tetanus vaccine for newborns and then think about the rest. Not polio What about the polio clusters in unvaccinated communities like the Amish in the U.S. What about the 2004 outbreak that swept across Africa and Southeast Asia after a single province in northern Nigeria banned vaccines

I do believe sadly it’s going to take some diseases coming back to realize that we need to change and develop vaccines that are safe. If the vaccine companies are not listening to us, it’s their f___ing fault that the diseases are coming back. They’re making a product that’s s___. If you give us a safe vaccine, we’ll use it. It shouldn’t be polio versus autism.

And yet in many cases, vaccines have effectively eliminated diseases. Measles is among the top five killers in the world of children under 5 years old, yet it kills virtually no one in the U.S. thanks to vaccines.

People have the misconception that we want to eliminate vaccines. Please understand that we are not an antivaccine group. We are demanding safe vaccines. We want to reduce the schedule and reduce the toxins. If you ask a parent of an autistic child if they want the measles or the autism, we will stand in line for the f___ing measles.

Many scientists believe we’re simply diagnosing autism differently now — both overdiagnosing it in kids who don’t have it and spotting it better in kids who do. That makes it look like the condition is on the rise when it’s not.

All you have to do is find a schoolteacher or principal and ask them that question. They would say they’ve never seen so much ADHD, autism, OCD as in the past. I think we’re overdiagnosing it by maybe 1%. Now you look around and there are five shadows — kids with disabilities — in every class.

You write in your book that when your son began to emerge from the worst of his autism he said that having the condition felt like being buried alive. What’s the most important thing a parent can do to help draw a child out

Just remember that there is a very alert, bright, loving sweet child in there who simply looks like he doesn’t care and can’t hear you. They very much know what’s going on. Evan has repeated things to me that I said to him when he was three and in his worst state.

How do you manage the frustration or even resentment any parent would feel after pouring out so much love to a child who seems utterly indifferent to it

It’s really, really difficult. I remember being on the floor with Evan sometimes 10 hours a day trying to get him to smile. Eventually, my mother said to me, “Jenny, everything responds to love.” It was what my mother said that allowed me to stay on my knees with my child.

How do you balance the needs of the autistic child with the needs of the other children in the house — who are far less challenging and are rewarded for that with far less attention

Therapists deal with that all the time. They strongly urge that you bring the healthy kids — or what we call the typical kids — into the therapy. Get them involved with the autistic child. Also, it’s absolutely imperative for the parents and the typical kids to have time by themselves, to go out to dinner or even go on vacation while someone else cares for the autistic child. When families eat at home, sometimes the autistic child will have dinner first and then watch a movie, while everyone else has dinner in peace.

What’s the best prognosis for autistic kids

For a seriously autistic kid, the best prognosis might be getting into a mainstream school without being too much of a shadow. For a moderately autistic kid the best prognosis is full recovery.

Read “The Secrets of Autism.”

See TIME’s pictures of the week.

Share

Terry keeps England on track for 2010 finals

Crouch fires England into the lead at Wembley on his first start under coach Capello.
John Terry kept England’s charge to the 2010 World Cup finals firmly on track when he snatched a dramatic 2-1 qualifying victory over Group Six rivals Ukraine at Wembley on Wednesday.

England have now won their first five qualifiers under new coach Fabio Capello, but it looked as though their run could end when Andriy Shevchenko struck a shock equaliser for Ukraine after 74 minutes. It was skipper Terry came to the rescue, sidefooting home from a couple of yards five minutes from time following a trademark David Beckham free kick. “We were disappointed to concede a goal late on but showed great character to come back and win the game, so there are some real positives,” Terry told ITV1. “It meant a lot (to score) and it has given us the win, so I’m delighted.There was some great fight and desire from the lads, we’re not settling for 1-1 and we went on to win the game. “We’re in a great position in the group and this has really set us up. They (Ukraine) have a game in hand but this puts us in a great position.” Gangly striker Peter Crouch earlier produced a stunning first half strike after being promoted to the starting line-up for the first time since Capello took charge 15 months ago. Crouch was given his chance following injuries to Emile Heskey, Carlton Cole and Darren Bent and he responded with his 15th goal in 33 appearances for his country. The Portsmouth marksman swivelled to fire right footed into the net after Terry directed a header back into the goalmouth following Frank Lampard’s corner. England were generally on top with Wayne Rooney, who was winning his 50th cap, a constant threat. Rooney was his usual lively self and Taras Mykhalyk was booked for bringing down the Manchester United star 20 yards out in a central position. Frank Lampard rolled the free-kick to Steven Gerrard, whose curling shot was only a couple of feet off target. England were starting to enjoy more of the possession with Gerrard floating into the centre and Rooney acting as cover on the left flank for the Liverpool skipper. Rooney was constantly involved in the action and one 50-yard pass picked out the unmarked Lennon. The striker raced into the middle in anticipation of a cross but could not keep down his volley which flew into the crowd. Keeper James, not enjoying one of his best games, made a meal of parrying a swerving shot from the edge of the box by Anatoliy Tymoshchuk but England were now generally in command. England looked full of confidence at the start of the second period and Ukraine made a big change after 55 minutes when former Chelsea striker Shevchenko replaced Andriy Voronin. Beckham, fresh from his record-breaking appearance against Slovakia, won his 110th cap when he replaced Lennon after 57 minutes. The former captain came close to quickly making his mark when he curled a 25 yard kick just too high after Rooney had been brought down by Mykhalyk. Substitute Shevchenko, who proved an expensive flop during his time in west London, then provided an emphatic close-range finish following a free kick to thrown Ukraine a late lifeline. And he had a freekick saved by James after Terry had put England back in charge. Belarus won 5-1 away to Kazakhstan and Croatia beat Andorra 2-0 in the night’s other group games. Dirk Kuyt scored twice as the Netherlands maintained their 100 percent record in qualifying with a comfortable 4-0 win over FYR Macedonia. The Oranje all but secured their place in South Africa as they stayed well clear at the top of Group Nine after five games thanks to first-half goals from Kuyt either side of Klaas Jan Huntelaar’s strike.

Football Fanzone

Football fans, the chance to have YOUR say on CNN is here!

Join in the debates now »

Rafael van der Vaart added some gloss to the scoreline in the 88th minute. The Dutch were again in irrepressible form following Saturday’s 3-0 defeat of Scotland, and victories over Norway, Iceland and tonight’s opposition last year. The Scots bounced back from their weekend loss a to keep their dream alive with a crucial 2-1 win over Iceland at Hampden thanks to first international goals from Ross McCormack and Steven Fletcher. Indridi Sigurdsson had levelled for the visitors but George Burley’s men managed to claim the three points which allows them to put distance between them and their nearest rivals in second place in the pool. Just hours earlier it emerged that captain Barry Ferguson and goalkeeper Allan McGregor — who had made his competitive debut in Holland — were dropped from the team for a breach of discipline.

Share

Forget the G-20, what are the spouses wearing?

Sarah Brown, left, wears a dress from an American designer. Michelle Obama wears J.Crew.
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s wife, Sarah, wore an outfit from designer Britt Lintner to greet President Obama and his wife, Michelle, while Michelle Obama wore J. Crew, according to spokeswomen for both sides.

Both women later changed and wore other designer outfits for the formal pre-G-20 summit dinner at 10 Downing Street, the British prime minister’s official residence. Wednesday morning, Sarah Brown wore a one-of-a-kind navy dress with red lining by the American-born Lintner, a spokeswoman for 10 Downing Street said. The designer specially made the dress in navy for Brown, but retails the garment in black for $720, Lintner said. Michelle Obama’s outfit included a $158 green skirt and $298 bead and rhinestone cardigan from J. Crew, the store’s Web site showed. Brown also wore a pair of Astley Clarke earrings, according to a spokeswoman from 10 Downing Street. The Astley Clarke Web site sells earrings from less than $100 to more than $10,000. The first ladies’ choices of outfits during this summit are being closely watched by the world’s media, both in terms of style and comparative cost.

Don’t Miss
Financial crisis dominates G-20 agenda

Celebrity chef reveals G-20 menu

Thousands protest ahead of G-20

G-20: Rebuilding the global economy

Both women pay for all of their clothes themselves and receive no clothing allowance, according to spokeswomen for both sides. Lintner first designed a dress for Brown for the British Fashion Council Awards in November 2007, Lintner said. She sells to clients only through her West London studio, and said she started her company out of frustration over the selection of work wear available for women. Although the clothes are expensive, she said, they are made to last. This is not the first time Michelle Obama has chosen an “off the rack” outfit. She has worn J.Crew before, including in American Vogue. When appearing on “The Tonight Show” with Jay Leno, she wore a J. Crew ensemble, on which she commented, “You get some good stuff online.” After the photo call, Obama and Brown visited Maggie’s Cancer Caring Center, where Brown is a patron. The spouses of the G-20 leaders have several events scheduled during their stay in London. On Tuesday, Brown will be host of a dinner for G-20 spouses. The dinner will take place at No. 11 Downing Street, the London residence of the chancellor of the exchequer, while the G-20 leaders take a working dinner next door at No. 10. As well as the spouses of the G-20 leaders, prominent women in British sport, arts, fashion, charity and business are also expected to attend. Downing Street has said those invited are “all intended to show off British talent.” Those invited include “Harry Potter” author J.K. Rowling, supermodel Naomi Campbell and Olympic gold medal runner Kelly Holmes. Downing Street sources said Michelle Obama will be seated between Holmes and Rowling. The spouses also will visit the Royal Opera House in Covent Garden, London. They are expected to watch some short performances of opera and ballet, the Prime Minister’s Press Office said.

Share

Indictment: Group shackled, tortured teen


Four Californians are accused of kidnapping a 16-year-old boy and torturing him for nearly a year before he escaped captivity wearing only boxer shorts and a shackle on his ankle, according to an indictment released Wednesday.

Share

As Egg Donations Mount, So Do Health Concerns

As Egg Donations Mount, So Do Health Concerns

At the time, donating her eggs to an infertile couple seemed like the perfect solution for Marilyn Drake’s money troubles. A single donation helped her finance her divorce. Then she did it four more times over the course of two years, as she struggled to raise two children on her own.

In 2004, having remarried, Drake began trying for baby No. 3. She tried for three years, with no luck. At 30, she was diagnosed with premature menopause and, in an odd twist of fate, had to undergo fertility treatment to have her third child. It struck her as particularly curious, since her identical twin sister never had any fertility problems.

“At the time, I was told it wouldn’t affect my health or fertility,” says Drake, 32, of Lebanon, Ore., referring to her egg donation.

Doctors say there is no biological reason that donating eggs would cause infertility, but they also cannot say for sure that it doesn’t. The long-term health effects of egg donation have never actually been studied, in large part because the high cost of studies doesn’t “seem justified in terms of what the possible risks [of the procedure] might be,” according to Sean Tipton, spokesman for the American Society for Reproductive Medicine . He points out that egg donors undergo the same drug treatment as IVF patients — hormone injections and other drugs that stimulate follicles, promote egg maturation and prevent the release of eggs before they can be retrieved — and that studies of the latter population show it is safe.

But some women’s health advocates say that evidence isn’t strong enough, calling for further study and a national, trackable registry of egg donors. While the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention logs the number of donated eggs transferred to infertile women each year — there were some 15,500 in 2006, the most recent year for which data are available — no one knows how many individual donors those eggs came from, who they were or whether they were exceeding industry guidelines of six donations in a lifetime.

“Right now egg donors are treated like vendors, not as patients. Patients need to be followed up,” says internist Jennifer Schneider, who has been advocating for the government to track egg donors since 2007, a few years after her daughter, a three-time egg donor, died of colon cancer at age 31. “After the first few days of being discharged from the IVF clinic and seeing that there were no immediate consequences, they are never contacted again.”

The issue has resurfaced recently, with fertility clinics and egg-donation agencies across the country reporting a precipitous increase in applicants seeking to donate eggs — as high as 55% over the past four months compared with the same period last year. With college students struggling to pay tuition and young homeowners facing foreclosures, much has been made of the potential economic benefits of donation, a term that belies its lucrativeness: egg donors can earn about $5,000 per donation, with thousands more in premiums for eggs from women with exceptional looks, high SAT scores or an Ivy League diploma, and an in-demand ethnic background, such as Jewish or Asian. Proven donors whose eggs have already succeeded in making a baby are also often paid premiums for subsequent donations.

The surge in interest hasn’t yet translated into an uptick in donations, since the majority of applicants are weeded out in a rigorous screening process. But it still prompts the question: What are the long-term risks of donating

So far, there have been no long-term medical studies of donors. But fertility doctors agree that a lot can be gleaned from the smattering of studies of long-term risks for infertility patients, who receive the same protocol for ovarian stimulation and retrieval as donors. The primary health concern is cancer, and studies assessing cancer rates among infertility patients have drawn conflicting results. Many such studies are hobbled by small sample groups, or are too short term. The most extensive study to date, published in February in the American Journal of Epidemiology, used historical data from women who gave birth in Jerusalem in the early 1970s. It found a significant 30-year increase in various cancers among women who underwent fertility treatments, with the highest risk being for uterine cancer.

But studies like this establish only an association, not a cause; fertility doctors note that infertility itself is associated with elevated risks of uterine cancer. “It’s hard to say if the cancer was caused by the disease, the treatment of the disease or some combination of the two,” says Elizabeth Ginsburg, a fertility doctor and president of the Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology.

Reproductive-health advocates respond by calling for a study of egg donors, who could also serve as a natural control group for a study of cancer in women who are treated for infertility. Another long-standing question among doctors and donors is whether egg donation affects future fertility, says Schneider, who has conducted a survey of 155 egg donors and heard several reports of fertility problems among women post-donation. Schneider concedes that her poll was too informal and small to lead to any conclusions and suggests that a larger, national study be undertaken.

See the most common hospital mishaps.
See the top 10 everything of 2008.

Share