Singapore port no safe haven in economic storm
Friday, 20 February 2009
David Greising
Chicago Tribune
On
a typical day, more than 500 ships sail in or out of the harbor here,
an armada of mercantilism that makes Singapore one of the busiest ports
in the world.
These days, though, Singapore stands at the terminus of a commerce parking lot.
Hundreds
of ships idle at anchor within sight of this city-state, giving the
Strait of Malacca the look of Burnham Harbor on the 4th of July. Except
the vessels in the water have the length and girth of a mid-rise office
building, and the people on board are not having fun.
"Look at
the number of ships anchored out there," exclaimed David Lum, chief
executive of Chicago-based Aon Corp.'s South Asia business, waving an
arm toward the still life on the waters visible through both corner
windows of his 32nd-floor office. "They're all anchored there with a
skeleton crew, waiting for some cargo to load. But there isn't any."
Singapore
harbor sums up how the global economic crisis has reached around the
globe. Starting with the housing and financial crises in the U.S., it
quickly leached into Europe's financial markets, then spread to China
when Americans stopped buying furniture, electronics and cars. Now that
China's growth engine has ground to a halt, the supply-chain economics
of Southeast Asia are sputtering toward a stopping point too.
That's
why maritime Singapore is at a standstill, one that affects the local
economy and revenue at Aon, the insurance giant with headquarters off
Michigan Avenue.
Aon's revenue from Southeast Asia has declined
sharply as ships that hired out a year ago for around $60,000 a day now
have a hard time fetching $8,000 a day, and far fewer are leaving port.
"Shipping values have collapsed completely," said Lum. And so
has revenue from the shipping insurance Aon sells from its Singapore
office.
Before the economic crisis hit, there was some talk that
the Asian economy had "decoupled" from the old days of U.S.-dominated
global economics. China's growth was so powerful a force, the argument
went, that a China-centered Asian economy was growing, and thriving,
almost independent of the U.S.
Few people talk that way anymore.
Chia
Siow Yue, senior researcher at the Singapore Institute of International
Affairs, used to see some logic to the argument for a decoupled global
economy.
"Now we know that Asia has not decoupled, and that is
the problem," she told a group of journalists touring Southeast Asia in
a program sponsored by the East-West Center of Hawaii.
Evidence of the close coupling abounds in Asia.
The
Chinese economy, which grew at double-digit rates in recent years, is
expected to slow to an 8 percent pace this year, a dizzying slowdown
that prompted Chinese officials this week to criticize the "Buy
American" policies in the U.S. economic stimulus package. Japan's heavy
reliance on U.S. exports was at the heart of its weakest economic
report in 35 years.
Tiny Singapore has seen multiple signs of
trouble, not surprising, perhaps, for the world's most trade-intensive
economy at the time of a global economic breakdown.
The key
electronics sector is staggering, with the electronics purchasing
managers index hitting a record low in December. Singapore Airlines, a
major carrier to Chicago and other U.S. cities, announced it is cutting
11 percent of its fleet and will cut staff. Singapore's economy is
expected to shrink some 2.4 percent this year, which would be the worst
performance since after the dot-com bust in 2000. Rents in Singapore's
densely populated office market are expected to drop by half this year.
The fully coupled economy may be a problem for now, but it has
the potential to be an asset to the Asian economic zone if the U.S.
leads the world back from recession a year or so from now, as many
economists expect.
When that happens, Aon's Lum may be among
the first to notice. The evidence of a comeback will move right before
his eyes, just outside his office window.
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