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No need for market gloom on China — the eurozone is the real economic disaster to worry about

Roger Bootle: It is now widely acknowledged that the euro has been an economic disaster for Europe.

Regular readers would not normally turn to me as a source of optimism. Yet, in the middle of the current all-enveloping gloom about the world economic outlook, while not exactly optimistic, I find myself nothing like as pessimistic as the markets seem to be.

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Their gloom has begun to affect most commentators and may, I suppose, lead to a widespread fall in confidence in the real economy which could then produce, unnecessarily, the very thing that the financial markets are concerned about.

So, would be the markets to worry? Supposedly, they look into the future in a cold, calculating, rational way. Not for them the swings of emotion that affect human beings in the remainder of their life. Well, that’s exactly what the financial textbooks say.

Yet we know that markets can occasionally succumb to euphoria. Former Fed chairman Alan Greenspan once known their “irrational exuberance”.

They were irrationally exuberant about tech stocks during the Internet boom and then they were irrationally exuberant about both the American property market and the ability of derivatives and various forms of financial engineering to magic risk from the economic climate.

But if the financial markets are able to irrational exuberance, then they should surely be also able to irrational despair. I believe that is what is happening right now. Every item of news seems to be interpreted bearishly.

So, when the Swedish central bank a week ago cut rates of interest in an attempt to raise the economy, which was interpreted like a signal that things should be really bad. Ditto each fall in oil prices. Just as we thought we were clawing our long ago following the disaster of 2008-09, we’re now experiencing a succession of false dusks.

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