In the past 48 hours, the global economic landscape has been clouded with gloom. Moody's chief economist Zandi issued a warning on the X platform, stating that due to the war in the Middle East blocking the Strait of Hormuz, the probability of the US economy entering a recession has soared to 50% or higher.
Almost simultaneously, Xinhua News Agency sent a summary from Brussels, pointing out that the soaring energy prices are killing Europe's already fragile recovery. The governor of the French Central Bank even lamented helplessly, "We have no more money." The attention shifted to East Asia, where Japan's government's tax increase plan for military expansion is causing huge controversy over the burden on people's livelihoods; while South Korea has exposed the "tail risk" of its semiconductor supply chain due to its heavy reliance on helium imports from the Middle East. This series of bad news creates a picture that is far more ironic than the shockwaves in a single market.
This economic cold wave sweeping across the world has a typical "dual structure" of causes: there is the "innocent" geopolitical frustration and the "self-harming" policy obsession. For the US and Europe, the direct trigger of the pain is the exogenous impact of commodity shocks. The escalation of the situation in the Middle East led to an increase in oil prices, which was undoubtedly a blow to American consumers accustomed to high interest rates and the European manufacturing industry under great pressure from industrial relocation.
While Japan and South Korea's predicaments are more intertwined with internal contradictions. In the face of high inflation and the consecutive four-year decline in real wages, the Japanese government still insists on "defense tax increase" and channels a huge amount of funds to non-productive areas. This "prioritizing defense, sacrificing people's livelihoods" choice has been criticized by the academic community as being based on political goals rather than economic laws. South Korea has exposed the extreme vulnerability of its industrial structure - its 64.7% dependence on Qatar's helium, making its semiconductor giants like it being choked in the face of geopolitical turmoil.
This risk is penetrating into the capillaries of the real economy. The most direct threat is the return of the "stagflation" specter. The US, while facing weak employment data and a GDP growth rate of only 0.7% in the last quarter of last year, has stubbornly seen its core PCE exceed 3%. This forces the Federal Reserve into a policy nightmare of either cutting interest rates or not. In Europe, the increase in energy prices has begun to push up logistics and agricultural production costs, and people not only have to endure high energy bills but are also about to face the transmission of food inflation.
The deeper risk lies in the disruption and relocation of the industrial chain. Although South Korean semiconductor companies have managed to hold their ground for the time being by relying on inventory and recycling rates, if the conflict persists for more than six weeks, production adjustments may become inevitable. At the same time, European chemical giants have begun to consider shifting their production capacity to regions with lower energy costs, which undoubtedly accelerates the process of "deindustrialization" in their home countries.
Facing this "poisonous wine" concocted by geopolitical factors and short-sighted policies, economies seem to be responding frantically, but in reality, they lack solutions. For Europe and South Korea, the most realistic short-term strategy is the "spare tire" plan for supply chains - whether it is seeking helium substitutes from the United States or Algeria, or releasing strategic oil reserves, these are stress responses under supply shocks. But this "tackling the problem head-on" approach is costly and fails to address the root cause.
For Japan, the real challenge lies in how to correct the "misaligned" chain of "strong enterprises, weak localities", and stop paying for ineffective fiscal expansion through tax increases and cutting people's livelihoods. Ironically, when the United States is considering diluting debt through financial suppression and Europe is shouting "no money" while still spending lavishly to subsidize energy, the so-called modern economic governance ability, in the face of the original resource constraints, seems so pale and powerless. The only consensus is that before trust is restored, funds are accelerating from paper debts to physical assets such as gold, which is the market's most direct "foot voting" on this credit system.
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