Global briefing: Prigozhin/ PM Modi/ Fiscal v monetary policy/ China/ El Nino

In this week’s global briefing:

  1. The consequences of Prigozhin: the main impact of Prigozhin’s march on Moscow is to broaden the distribution of possible outcomes for Russia and Russia/Ukraine, and likely with a slightly positive skew.  The mutiny was short but will leave a lasting imprint on Russia and Ukraine.

  2. Mr Modi goes to Washington: Prime Minister Modi’s state visit to the US reflected shifting patterns of economic and geopolitical influence. The US/India relationship is strengthening in response to shared threat perceptions of China, reinforcing the structural Indian growth story (with caveats).

  3. Monetary policy v fiscal policy: Andy Haldane, the BIS, and Gita Gopinath made interesting, but inconsistent, macro policy contributions during the week. Calls for tight fiscal policy to support monetary policy objectives will collide with growing pressures for monetary policy to support expansionary fiscal policy.

  4. The limits to China’s charm offensive: China’s more moderate recent tone to business and to other countries partly reflects its sluggish economic recovery. However, little has changed in China’s domestic or foreign policy and mutual de-risking continues.

  5. El Nino as catalyst: extreme weather events are increasing, with more to come as El Nino strengthens.  This will create pressure for governments to do more to reduce emissions, although in a politically constrained space.  Expect more government subsidies and investment in renewables.  

The full note is available at: https://davidskilling.substack.com/p/global-briefing-prigozhin-pm-modi

David Skilling