International Dealer News IDN 154 April/May 2020 | Page 4
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COMMENT • COMMENT • COMMENT • COMMENT • COMMENT • COMMENT •
The ultimate stress test
of all that we have built
ell, this is one of the most difficult pieces I have ever had to sit
and write. It is right up there with the 'Lehman Apocalypse' that
presaged the full horror of global economic meltdown that we
were about to endure in October 2008, and the occasion I had to try to
write something the day after the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center
had come crashing down on 9/11.
At times like that, times like this, it feels somehow dishonest and dirty to be worrying
about our beloved international motorcycle industry, when potentially hundreds of
thousands of people are losing their lives - for some of us right in our own
neighbourhoods or families.
But worry we must, because part of any recovery from the health emergency, whenever
and however that materialises, will be getting our lives, our communities, our workplaces
and our economies back on their feet again.
Just as we all have a role to play in keeping ourselves and our families, friends and co-
workers safe, so too we will all have a role to play in trying to get the global economic
juggernaut inching forward again.
One of the biggest problems we face though is that we do not know
when either of these things will be - when our lives may be safe (or
at least safer), or when industries like ours may be able to switch the
lights back on and start the machines up again. We just don't know
- and the not knowing is one of the hardest things about this
emergency.
However, one thing we do already know (and I am writing this on April 3rd) is that the
outcome isn't going to be trivial.
Another thing that we all by now must know and realise is that while society as a whole
may return somewhat to normal, our industry, the humble little backwater of global
capitalism we make our livelihoods from, will never be the same again.
Most people are concatenating the two issues of health and financial emergency.
Viewing them as one and the same, as solvable in the same way and at the same time.
There is an entirely erroneous assumption that just as soon as the spiralling death toll
is under control, people will start spending again and all will be right with the world.
How naïve. How wrong. While the two issues are clearly connected in that the health
crisis has given rise to the economic downturn, the only enduring relationship between
the two will be time - the time it takes for the health issues to tamp down sufficiently
for us to be able to switch focus back to the economic issues. But doing so is simply
like first gear on a bike. A mighty and powerful mover of a heavy inanimate object, but
not one that will produce the kind of results needed in the timescale needed.
The economic downturn created by the health crisis has had its umbilical cord snipped
and it is now out in the wild on its own, maturing quickly and taking on a life of its
own. The economic crisis that has been set in play is going to cast a long, dark shadow
over our lives - even if we are lucky enough to emerge from the health crisis personally
unscathed.
Many people are pointing to factors like globalisation and international
interdependency as putting us at a greater risk, of making us more vulnerable to viral
and fiscal shocks like this. In fact, that view couldn't be more wrong.
W
Those who point to our dependency on an international just-in-time supply chain as
being proof that barriers need to be erected, manufacturing be brought home and
perspectives turned inward are simply perpetuating the very problems that 70 years of
post war international progress and cooperation have done so much to allow history's
horrors to disappear in the world's rear view mirror.
Far from proving our vulnerability, the international system of trade that sees China (at
the West's request) placed at the centre of a newly imagined global supply chain has
proven to be remarkably robust. In the scheme of things, the global free trade order
that has fuelled growth and prosperity from the 1980s onwards, is still a relatively
juvenile product.
Sure, it clearly needs fine-tuning, but the stability and reliability that a global system of
commerce needs is one that needs more cooperation, not less. More freedoms and
opportunities, not less. More acceptance and adherence to the established principles
of intellectual property ownership, regulatory equivalence and equal business
opportunities, not less.
What these twin emergencies point to is not the weakness of a world of
interdependency, shared values and common goals, but its strengths. If
countries pursue a 'my country first policy', we will all be last.
Far from pointing towards the desirability of increased national
isolationism, the fact that we all got into this together points to the fact
that we will all only be able to get out of this together. Only by deploying
concerted, coordinated efforts to 'put the band back together again' can the economic
order that had been serving us all so well prosper again. We need to work more closely
together - politically, economically and socially - not less.
There is emerging evidence around the world that failure to work together has already
made the damage done by the coronavirus way worse than it needed to be. From
deciding to isolate entire countries from the international self-help and shared resource
health provision networks that could have made more respirators, tests and PPE
available sooner and faster, through to the misguided, outdated soviet era social control
and news management that totalitarianism thinks was ever a good idea.
Yes, China - I'm looking at you, and the time, lives and money your lies cost us, your
customers, around the world. Time for a reboot, yes? Wuhan will likely go down in history
as Chinese communism's Chernobyl. I hope it does. It deserves to.
Meanwhile, if the ECB isn't allowed to emerge butterfly-like from its chrysalis, the
indecision and introspection that keeps EU financial policy makers in the slow lane is
likely to cast the Euro Zone 19 into a financial abyss that will make Japan's lost decades
look like a dress rehearsal. Wake up Berlin and show leadership!
What is happening to our world, to our economies, is the ultimate stress test of all that
we have achieved and built. We can only pass that test by reducing the influence of
amateurs (aka Politicians) and adopting the twin pillars of Good
Governance - transparency and honesty - as our touchstones.
wake up
Berlin
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INTERNATIONAL DEALER NEWS - APRIL/MAY 2020
Robin Bradley
Publisher
[email protected]
www.idnmag.com