U.S. and China: A World of Two Asset Classes?

The world has all fallen into the coronavirus pandemic—and now some parts of the world are beginning to emerge. The impact has been significant everywhere but has been handled better by some countries than by others. The world was somewhat prepared (or should have been) because of the events of SARS, MERS, swine flu, and the Global Financial Crisis. And it appears that some have learned those lessons better than others. As we look at emerging from the crisis, it is now becoming clear that there may be some long-lasting impacts to the world that will affect politics, economics and investments. I would point to one potential development in particular—the transformation of the world into a bipolar world—the United States at one pole and China at the other.

It is not as if these two powers weren't already in competition to some extent. After all, we have been living through an extended trade dispute between the U.S. and China—a dispute that seemed to be ending just as the coronavirus hit and has now set the relationship back again. Rhetoric around the virus and how it might have started and who is to blame will only continue to build as the demands of an election year in the U.S. outweigh reality and long-term thinking. And there has generally seemed to be a sense in which the world was simply witnessing the decline of one great power and the rise of another. However, in my mind, there was always a sense in which the world was split into three—with Europe as a cushioning role in the middle. I am not sure, however, that this is the case anymore.

First, Europe's response to the economic effects of lockdowns has been insufficient. The European Central Bank (ECB) was at first reluctant to be anywhere near as aggressive as the U.S. Federal Reserve, or even as aggressive as it had been itself when Mario Draghi was in charge. In addition, the fiscal response, which was arguably even more important than the monetary response, is paltry in comparison to the amounts (both absolute and as a percentage of GDP) committed by countries like the U.S. and Japan. This leaves Europe as a political force in a crisis. The U.K. has already split from the EU and now countries like Italy and Spain—among the hardest hit countries due to the virus—face economic crisis and the prospect of very little help. That help is not yet forthcoming from the EU; it will likely not be forthcoming from the U.S. But it will and already is coming from China. The One Belt One Road initiative, since the crisis, can now be seen even more clearly for the economic diplomacy that it always was. Political parties in Italy are embracing the Chinese as a potential source of spending to emerge from the crisis. Meanwhile, the conversation in the U.S. is about who can be toughest on China and that is likely to mean a recommitment to the region and to geopolitics through military diplomacy rather than investment.