McKinsey Financial Crisis, Past and Present
Providing an analysis of previous recessions and depressions, McKinsey gives clarity to the economic situation we find ourselves in. The public discussion is beginning to recognize that this is both a financial crisis and a recession. Most would agree that this environment is more toxic then previous events.
The way that I see this downturn is very much through the lens of Professor Carlota Perez' long range economic analysis. Citing five previous "depressions" that occurred in predictable fashion, all of these events were significant in that they were the means of initiating fundamental change in the key economic drivers. My opinion is we are moving from the inefficiencies of the bureaucracy, to organizational business models that exploit the full value of the Information and Communication Technologies (ICT).
From a company standpoint, the critical issue is the impact such shocks and subsequent downturns can have on the availability of credit—and the impact of a credit shortage on the real economy and on consumer and corporate confidence. The downturn after the S&L crisis of the 1980s and ’90s, when bank write-offs equaled some 4 percent of GDP, lasted about two years. GDP ended up about 4 to 5 percent lower than it would have been given the pre-crisis trend line. After the bursting of Japan’s asset bubble, the country’s economy grew by less than half a percent a year in real terms for a decade, and GDP ended up around 18 percent lower than it would have given its pre-crisis trend line. We estimate that the present credit crisis will cut real GDP by around 3 to 7 percent from trend growth. If the US economy were to follow the same path it did in the more severe crises, the total lost GDP could be two to three times greater than that estimate. pp. 1 - 2Up to a 21% decline in U.S. GDP is a serious hit. A hit that would have to be ranked in the depression category. What is unique about a depression is the length of time that the declines occur and the lost opportunities of the economy during these protracted periods. Glossing over the problem, as the U.S. monetary and fiscal policies are attempting, is the wrong way to make the time shorten. Focusing on the strengths, job retraining and letting the social system kick in for those effected is where they should be focusing their efforts in my opinion. You have Toyota, Honda and Ford that are going to make it in the long term, lets leave it to them to work out the problems. A better fiscal stimulus may be tax cuts that provide the consumer with additional cash to use in their own transitions.
But the fallout from the past century’s two worst crises did considerably more damage. In the countries hardest hit by the 1990s’ Asian financial crisis—Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, South Korea, and Thailand—GDP shrank by an average of 8 percent in 1998 in local-currency terms. Since their currencies halved in value, on average, in US dollar terms the damage was catastrophic—bankrupting many companies and causing widespread social unrest. And during the Great Depression, from 1929 to 1933, 28 percent of real GDP was lost. p. 2Organizational changes would reduce the impact of these declines and enable the economies to grow well beyond what the current bureaucracies have established as possible. Acceptance of the scope of the difficulties that we are in seems to be the major impediment to thinking constructively as to our collective future. The pain is here, lets not wallow in it.
Equity markets are the most visible and dramatic indicators as crises unfold. At the end of October 2008, the S&P 500 index had fallen by 46 percent from its peak a year before (October 9, 2007, to October 27, 2008). By late November 2008, the US equity market had given up almost all of its gains since the 2001–02 dot-com bust. Although nobody knows if the market has reached bottom, the fall so far isn’t unusual by historical standards. Japan’s Nikkei 225 fell by 48 percent from peak to trough (December 29, 1989, to October 1, 1990) during the banking crisis, though the market has subsequently fallen still further; at the end of October 2008, it retained less than 20 percent of the peak value reached in 1999. During the Asian financial crisis, the equity markets of Indonesia, South Korea, and Thailand fell by 65, 72, and 85 percent, respectively, in local-currency terms. In the United States, the S&P 500 index fell by 49 percent from March 24, 2000, to October 9, 2002, after the tech bubble burst. pp. 2 - 3The Japanese stock market remains at 20% of what it was in December 29, 1989! Lets not go down that road, where people choose to ignore the problems they are in, the cost is too high. Now with the aging population of Japan becoming a significant issue, their inability to address the scope of their problems in the early 1990's threatens to remove their economy from the global system. All as a result of high real estate valuations.
Since the peak, housing prices have fallen by 18 percent, as measured by the Case–Shiller housing index, whose futures imply a further fall of 19 percent from the peak. Losses in the housing and mortgage markets, when realized, could considerably exceed those in the stock market as of early December 2008. p. 4
What should companies do?
We do not yet know how the current crisis will evolve. The confidence of consumers, corporations, and investors—a key factor—cannot be forecast. Nor can government policy. Yet research shows that in past recessions, companies pursuing a purely defensive strategy fared less well than their more active counterparts. As the economy enters what will probably be a difficult downturn, companies should prepare to seize their opportunities. p. 5And for oil and gas, they should turn to this community to begin the process of building the software necessary to define and support the innovative oil and gas producer. A software application that is based on using the Joint Operating Committee as the key organizational construct of the industry. One that aligns the Joint Operating Committees communication, legal, financial, cultural, and operational decision making frameworks with the bureaucracies sole purpose, compliance and governance. A software application that eliminates the bureaucracy and replaces it with the Compliance & Governance Modules Military Command & Control metaphor. With this alignment the conflict and contradictions between the JOC and the bureaucracy cease. The Military Command & Control Metaphor governance methods of the People, Ideas & Objects Draft Specification provides a sound vision of the possibilities of what this community could build and support in terms of a more innovative oil and gas producer.
Please, join me here.
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