The Economist - UK (2022-04-30)

(Antfer) #1

68 Finance&economics TheEconomistApril30th 2022


moredependentthaneveronfiscalstimu­
lus.Ata meetingofthepowerfulCentral
CommitteeforFinancialandEconomicAf­
fairsonApril26th,XiJinping,China’spres­
ident,calledformoreinvestmentininfra­
structure, from rural roads and urban
drainstosmartelectricitygridsandartifi­
cial­intelligence platforms. Citigroup, a
bank,forecaststhatinfrastructurespend­
ingcouldgrowby8%thisyear.Butaccord­
ingtoNatixis,anotherbank,Chinawillnot
meetits(increasinglyforlorn)growthtar­
getofaround5.5%unlessinfrastructure
investmentgrowsbyalmost18%.Evena
conventionalemergingmarketwithvast
infrastructure needs would struggle to
boostspendingbythatmuch.China’sfear
offloatinghasinhibiteditsmonetaryre­
sponsetoitseconomicwoes.Andthathas
raisedfearsofitsfloundering.n

Europeangas

Tit fortaps


N


ot longagoit seemedthatthegameof
energypokerbeingplayedbyEurope
andRussia,thoughdangerous,wasunder
control.Oilandgaswasoneofthefewsec­
torsEuropehadnottargetedwithsanc­
tions.Russiahadkeptsuppliesflowing.
Yes,Europewasmullinga banonenergy
imports, and Russia demanded in late
Marchthat“unfriendly”countriespayfor
theirnextgasdeliveriesinroubles(rather
thaneurosordollars),orbecutoff.But
eachsidethoughttheotherlackedtheguts
togoallin.Afterall,Europeimports40%
ofitsgasfromRussia,whichinturnmakes
about€400m($422m)a dayfromitssales.
OnApril27th,however,Russiaupped
theante.Gazprom,a state­ownedenergy
giant,stoppedsendinggastoBulgariaand

Polandaftertheymissedthedeadlinesthat
Russiahadsetforpayinginroubles.The
euisscramblingtorespond;Europeangas
prices jumped by a fifth on the news
(thoughtheyhavesincefallena little).
TheimmediateeffectofRussia’slatest
move,whichtheeuhasdescribedasbeing
a breachofcontract,islimitedinscope.Po­
land’simports,of 10 billioncubicmetres
(bcm)a year,andBulgaria’s,of3 bcm,to­
getheraccountforjust8%oftotaleuim­
ports.Poland’scontractwithRussiawas
duetoexpireinDecemberanyway,sothe
revenueRussialosesfrombreachingitis
small.AndalthoughBulgariaandPoland
bothreliedonRussiaformostoftheirgas
imports,theymaybeabletocopewithout,
saysXiNanofRystadEnergy,a consultan­
cy.Polandshouldstartreceivinggasfrom
NorwayinOctober.Nearbyregasification
terminalscouldhelpitimportmorelique­
fiednaturalgas(lng). Bulgariaisexpected
tostartimportingAzerigasviaGreecelater
thisyear.
Exactlywhomightbecutoffnextisnot
clear.Russia’sdeadlinesforpayinginrou­
blespartlyreflectthedetailsofcontracts
thatarenotpublic.Butsourcescanvassed
byTheEconomistthinktheywillfallinMay.
Thestakesarehigh.ItisnotthatEurope
needsthegasnow:astemperaturesrise,
consumption is ebbing. But the bloc’s
stocksareonlyat33%ofstoragecapacity.
The European Commission has urged
memberstatestoensurethattheirfacili­
tiesare80%fullbyNovember,implyinga
spikeindemandtocome.
Still,ifRussiaweretocutoffbigim­
porters,itwoulddepriveitselfofsomeof
thecashitneedstofunda costlyandpro­
tractedwar.Sowhowillfoldfirst?Most
Europeanbuyers havealreadyruled out
payingdirectlyinroubles.ButMoscowis
offeringa compromise.Buyerswouldopen
twoaccountswithGazprombank(alender
thatisnotundersanctions).Theywould
payeurosintothefirst,andaskthebankto
convertthesumintoroublesanddeposit
themoneyintothesecondaccount,which
wouldthenbewiredtoGazprom.
ManyEuropeancountries dislike the
plan, which wouldlook asthough they
were giving in to Russian bullying and
riskscreatinglegalheadaches. Theywill
fallintothreegroups.One,whichincludes
Belgium,BritainandSpain,importslittle
ornogasdirectlyfromRussia,andmayre­
fuse to compromise. Another groupin­
cludesbigbuyerssuchasGermanyandIta­
ly,whichwillstruggletoreplaceimports
quickly;theymaytakethedeal.A thirdset
ofwaverersincludescountriesthatareon­
lypartiallydependentonRussia,andmay
alsohavecontractsthataresoontoexpire.
Eventhissituationwouldcreateuncer­
tainty. One countrybeing cut off could
have knock­oneffectsonothers,forin­
stanceifgastransits throughittoother

places.Norisit clearwhowilltaketheRus­
siancompromise,orwhetherRussiamight
eventuallyturnthetapsoffanyway.
IfGermany,say,werecutoff,gasmar­
ketswouldgo haywire. European prices
arealreadysixtimeshigherthantheywere
a yearago.Theywouldsoartonewpeaks,
luringmorelngfromtherestoftheworld
andcausing prices elsewhere to rise in
turn.JackSharplesoftheOxfordInstitute
forEnergyStudies,a think­tank,reckonsa
fullshutdown ofRussiangasto Europe
maywellcausea globalrecession.Russia’s
gameofpokerisgettingscarier—andthose
losingtheirshirtscouldincludebystand­
ers,too.n

RussiahascutoffgastoBulgariaand
Poland.Who’snext?

The energy stakes
Gas imports, 2021, bn cubic metres

Source:Rystad

Restof world

Imports from:
Russia
Bulgaria

Hungary

Austria

Poland

Belgium

Netherlands

Spain

France

Britain

Italy

Germany

0 30 60 90

How do I turn this thing back on?

America’seconomy

Surveying the


coming wreckage


A


mericans have much  to  like  and
much  to  dislike  about  the  economy
these  days.  Thanks  to  a  red­hot  labour
market,  it  is  unusually  easy  both  to  find
work  and  negotiate  a  pay  increase.  At  the
same  time,  rising  prices  have  taken  a  bite
out of their earnings in real terms. To get a
handle  on  how  people  perceive  these  op­
posing trends, analysts can look at surveys
that measure consumers’ sentiment about
the economy. There is, however, a problem
at  the  moment.  Like  the  contradictory
trends, the two main surveys are present­
ing different pictures.
The first is a survey of consumers by the
University  of  Michigan.  Started  in  1946,  it
is  respected  as  a  leading  indicator  of
whether Americans are planning to spend
money or tighten their belts. As such, it is

WASHINGTON, DC
A big divergence in consumer surveys
adds to recession worries
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