Update Magazine III/2019

Being a rational optimist

by | 25/11/2019
Being a rational optimist

Summary

The world is becoming a better place. All the indicators concur: increasing life expectancy on every continent of the planet, falling child mortality and child labour, rising prosperity and, from a global perspective, declining inequality. Wherever the forces of creative disruption are allowed to unfold, we have every reason to be rational optimists. But what does this mean for investors and others?


Update Magazine III/2019
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The creative power of disruption

“Disruption”: no word better describes the age we live in. Disruption – the destruction of the old by the new (and better), driven by technologies based on digitalisation and artificial intelligence.

From the steam engine, the railway and the automobile to information technology, robots and artificial intelligence – groundbreaking innovations have always been the driving force behind changes in working processes and social structures, thereby helping to create the growth of affluence.

We can visualise this by looking at the growth in global gross domestic product (GDP). For centuries, GDP barely changed at all in a measurable way. Then, with the dawn of industrialisation, it began to rise sharply, even exponentially. Population growth followed suit. At the beginning of the 19th century, the global population exceeded one billion for the first time. Yet the famines feared by Robert Malthus did not come to pass. Innovations in agricultural technology not only ensured that more and more people could be fed, but also increased prosperity (income per head). Prior to industrialisation, bitter poverty had been the norm for all but a powerful elite. By the early 1980s, the proportion of the world population living in absolute poverty (living on less than US$ 1.90 a day) stood at 45%. Today, it is just 10%, despite the fact that the global population has grown to approximately 7.5 billion. Without innovation, without technology, many would simply have starved (see Chart A/ and Chart B/).

A/ GDP of the world (inflation adjusted in 2011 international dollars)
Exponential growth leads to more wealth

Chart A: GDP of the world (inflation adjusted in 2011 international dollars)

* inflation adjusted in 2011 international Dollars
Source: OurWorldInData.org/economic-growth, AllianzGI Global Capital Markets & Thematic Research; Data as of: 2015

B/ Percentage of the world population who has less than $ 1.90 a day to live

Chart B: Percentage of the world population who has less than $ 1.90 a day to live

Source: Thomson Reuters Datastream
As of: December 2017

The decline in absolute poverty has been paralleled by the emergence of a “global middle class.” The World Bank defines the “middle class” internationally as comprising those earning between US$ 11 and US$ 110 a day, based on 2011 purchasing power parity. As the Brookings Institution think tank has concluded, the world recently reached a “tipping point” in September 2018: for the first time, half of the global population are now “rich” or “middle class,” and the other half “vulnerable” or “poor.” Brookings predicts that this trend of declining poverty and a growing middle class will continue. While the number of people considered poor will fall further, the ranks of the middle class are set to swell to 5.3 billion people by 2030.

It is not only the population size that is growing, but also life expectancy. At the end of the 18th century, average life expectancy around the globe was less than 30. Today, it is more than 70. The average American lives to almost 80, and the average European even longer. In Africa, average life expectancy is around 60, while in Asia it is over 70 (see Chart C/).

Growing prosperity is the driver behind these developments, and is leading not only to higher living standards thanks to medical care, access to clean water and electricity, but also to the spread of technology. Over 85% of people have access to electricity.

At the same time, the spread of information is accelerating, and an ever-larger share of the world population has access to knowledge and markets e.g. via smartphones and the Internet (see Chart D/).

C/ Global and regional life expectancy since 1770

Chart C: Global and regional life expectancy since 1770

Source: OurWorldInData.org, AllianzGI Global Capital Markets & Thematic Research
Data as of: 2015

D/ Share of the population using the internet

Chart D: Share of the population using the internet

Source: OurWorldInData.org/internet, AllianzGI Global Capital Markets & Thematic Research
Data as of 2016/17

What now?

Of course, there is a flip side to everything. This is clearest when it comes to the environment, and especially the level of CO2 in the atmosphere, which has increased exponentially since the Industrial Revolution. The concentration of CO2, which stood at approximately 280 ppm in the centuries prior to industrialisation, is now 400 ppm and rising.

But there is another interesting trend: CO2 emissions per dollar of GDP have declined in recent decades (see Chart E/), as has energy intensity (units of energy per unit of GDP). Though it remains low, the share of renewables in the global energy mix is climbing.

E/ Carbon emission per US-dollar GDP

Chart E: Carbon emission per US-Dollar GDP

Source: OurWorldInData.org, Allianz Global Investors Global Capital Markets & Thematic Research, Data as of 2014

Investing as a rational optimist

The world is changing – but is our investment approach changing with it? Rational optimists should consider the following:

  1. Investing in shares – investing in tangible assets
    The most important question investors should ask themselves is: “If I follow the paradigm of rational optimism, am I also investing in this “optimism,” this “transformation?” “Do I participate in innovation and value creation?” This means investing in companies (e.g. through equity strategies) and therefore in real assets. Savings books and government bonds will not cut it.
  2. Investing in the drivers of change
    Technological change pervades every industry and every region. Why not also invest in those companies that are bringing about this change and leading the way in implementing new technologies?
  3. Investing in a better world
    The world may be improving, but there is still a long way to go. Child labour still exists, working conditions remain poor in parts of the world, and some businesses and countries are badly governed. There is still inequality, environmental pollution and an excessive human carbon footprint... The list could go on.

For investors, it is therefore important to invest in a better world. This need not mean missing out on profits. It is striking how “ESG” (Environmental – Social – Governance) criteria have become more important to investment decisions in recent years. The ESG criteria are a growing and evolving catalog of investment criteria that help to direct funds into investments that value environmental protection, good working conditions and good corporate governance. This approach, long used by institutional investors, is steadily gaining importance among individual investors, too – especially with the trend toward integrated ESG among investment professionals/strategists. The ESG criteria are no longer regarded as a category used to exclude investments, but as an integral part of analysis and security selection. Academic studies have shown that this need not be to the detriment of investors.

There are plenty of reasons for “rational optimism.” Things are often better than we think.

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About the author

Update Magazine III/2019

An ESG framework for EM sovereign bonds

25/11/2019
An ESG framework for EM sovereign bonds

Summary

The creditworthiness of an emerging market country is dependent on many factors. Typically, investors focus on a range of macroeconomic variables, such as fiscal deficits, debt levels, or the stock of foreign exchange reserves.

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