Latest Channel 4 News:
Santos concedes Honduras defeat
Lib Dem changes on 'mansion tax'
Immigrants 'in £1,600-a-week flat'
Effort to cut teenage pregnancies
Supermarket gunman faces body quiz

The Era of Epic Economics

Updated on 25 January 2008

By Faisal Islam

Pulling into Davos this week on a twee little train, it's difficult to get away from a sense that we are in the middle of gargantuan geoeconomic times.

It's not just the crunch, or the crash, or the behemoth of bailouts being planned for the monoline monster.

I was flicking through a Merrill Lynch report that suggested the credit crunch was now over, and it had been replaced by the Credit Pandemic (© Merrill Lynch).

Right now we may be seeing the crystallisation of global economic shifts that will tower over our lives in the coming decades.


It's not microeconomics. And the word 'macroeconomics' is too piddly. So welcome to Epicnomics.

These are changes to global economic systems that influence our house prices, that enabled mortgage companies to throw money at desperate prospective homeowners, that see capital circulate around the world.

Can the Britain's credit-fuelled consumer economy run post the credit crunch?

Is the dollar decline permanent? Will European politicians continue to be relaxed about prolonged sterling decline? Anyone for competitive devaluations? Is a profit-maximising Chinese sovereign wealth fund allowed to short the dollar?

Where do the recycled petrodollars and Sinodollars go now? What happens to inflation when rising living standards in China means that average Chinese per capita meat consumption reaches, say 65 kg per year, up 30 per cent from today (for context that will still be half the average consumption in the US)?

Will Chindia really sacrifice economic growth for the sake of alleviating carbon emissions?

These issues are at the junction of geopolitics, and economics, so you could call it geoeconomics. Or you could say that these are plate-shifting tectonic economic shifts and say it's Tectonomics.

But my favourite description at the moment is that we are entering an 'era of epic economics'.

It's not microeconomics. And the word 'macroeconomics' is too piddly. So welcome to Epicnomics.

www.epicnomics.blogspot.com

Send this article by email

More on this story

Channel 4 is not responsible for the content of external websites.


Watch the Latest Channel 4 News

Watch Channel 4 News when you want

Latest Business & Money news

More News blogs

View RSS feed

Vauxhall not for sale

Vauxhall (Credit: Reuters)

Workers at two Vauxhall plants face an uncertain future.

Postal strike

A pillar box (picture: Reuters)

Which people are affected most by the CWU walkout?

The price of being green

image

Would you pay green taxes to combat climate change?

Windows v the internet?

A Windows logo (picture: Getty Images)

Are online applications the biggest competition for Windows 7?

Faisal Islam on Twitter

faisalislam

Sandstorm in a teacup... so far.

This week

Follow us

How to tweet

How and why to follow the Channel 4 News family on Twitter.

Week in pictures

credit: Reuters

A selection of the best pictures from around the world.




Channel 4 © 2009. Channel 4 is not responsible for the content of external websites.