The Economist - USA (2022-02-12)

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66 Finance & economics TheEconomistFebruary12th 2022


InflationinAsia

Rice restraint


I


nflation has shot to multi­decade
highs  in  much  of  the  rich  world  during
the past year, with the effect of supply con­
straints, covid restrictions and a burgeon­
ing economic recovery all helping to drive
consumer prices higher. In Asia, however,
pressure on prices is much weaker. Why?
In much of the region—in China, Hong
Kong,  India,  Indonesia,  the  Philippines
and Vietnam—inflation is in fact below av­
erage levels over the decade before the pan­
demic, notes Abdul Abiad, director of mac­
roeconomic research at the Asian Develop­
ment Bank. Where it is higher than the av­
erage  for  2010­2019—in  Malaysia,
Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan and Thai­
land—it  is  by  around  two  percentage
points or less. 
The divergence between East and West
is the result of several factors. Some of the
disparity with the booming prices seen in
North America and Europe, as well as ma­
ny  non­Asian  emerging  markets,  comes
down to food. Whereas prices of food glob­
ally  have  surged,  Mr  Abiad  notes  that  the
effect  has  been  uneven.  Maize  and  wheat
prices rose by 18% and 20% respectively in
the 12 months to the end of January. In con­
trast, the price of rice fell by around a fifth
in  the  same  period.  In  a  country  like  the
Philippines, rice makes up a quarter of the
food  share  of  the  consumer­price  index,
and one­tenth of the entire index. In China
in particular, average wholesale pork pric­
es  dropped  by  more  than  half  in  the  12
months to January, as the African swine fe­
ver  epidemic  that  has  raged  through  the
country since 2018 began to abate.
The impact of food prices is most obvi­
ous in developing economies, but there are
reasons  why  Asia’s  richer  countries  have
recorded  lower  inflationary  pressure  too.
For  one,  supply­chain  bottlenecks  are  not
as severe as they are in the West. The cost of
shipping a 40­foot container from Shang­
hai to Rotterdam has risen by around 60%
in  the  past  year,  to  $13,686,  according  to
Drewry,  a  supply­chain  consultancy.  In
contrast, the price for the return journey is
little more than a tenth of that, at $1,445, a
figure which has dropped by 1% in the past
year. Surveys of purchasing managers sug­
gest  that  supplier  delays  are  still  worsen­
ing  in  most  of  Europe  and  America,  but
falling  in  China,  India,  Indonesia,  Thai­
land and Vietnam.
The  different  ways  in  which  countries
have  emerged  from  the  pandemic  matter

too. Researchers at Capital Economics, an­
other  consultancy,  note  that  Asia’s  “re­
opening”  inflation  in  consumer  services
remains low. The rise in prices for recrea­
tion  and  cultural  services  in  Indonesia,
Malaysia,  the  Philippines,  Singapore,
South  Korea  and  Taiwan  is  half  or  less  of
the  American  year­on­year  rate  of  around
4%. The difference may be caused by more
gradual loosening of restrictions, as well as
a dearth of international tourists.
Not  all  forms  of  inflationary  pressure
can be avoided. Energy prices are more in­
fluenced  by  global  trends  than  those  for
most other goods and services. Rising en­

ergy costs have been the biggest contribu­
tor  to  the  inflation  surge  in  Asia,  making
up as much as a third of the total increase
recently, according to analysts at Goldman
Sachs, a bank.
Many economies in the region may face
higher  interest  rates  despite  their  milder
inflation.  Potential  interest­rate  increases
from the Federal Reserve this year raise the
threat  of  a  stronger  dollar,  which  would
bring imported inflation to Asia. Monetary
policymakers in Indonesia, Singapore and
South Korea have alreadyannounced small
steps to tighten monetarypolicy. They are
unlikely to be the last.n

H ONG KONG
Asia is not feeling the same price
pressures as the West—for now C

hina’slendingboomtopoorcoun­
triesisturningsour,asgovernments
struggletorepaytheirdebtstoitsstate­
ownedlendersliketheExport­Import
BankofChinaandChinaDevelopment
Bank.SohowwillChinahandlecoun­
triesonthebrinkofdefault?Willit show
thesolidarityonedevelopingcountry
mightexpectfromanother?Orwillit
insistonitspoundofflesh?
Somethinkdefaultswouldbegood
forChina.Itisoftenaccusedof“debt­
trapdiplomacy”:lendingheavilytopoor
countrieswithaneyetoseizingtheir
strategicassets,suchasports,whenthey
cannotrepay.Thetruthismoreprosaic.
A freshefforttocountChina’sdebtre­
structuringsfindsthatwhenfacedwitha
debtorthatcannotrepay,Chinamostly
justkicksthecandowntheroad.
ThenewpaperbySebastianHornand
CarmenReinhartoftheWorldBankand
ChristophTrebeschoftheKielInstitute
fortheWorldEconomycounts 261 in­
stancesofdebtrelieforrenegotiation
since2000.SinceChinaisfarfromopen

aboutitslending,thenumberisprob­
ablyanunderestimate.Itincludes 149
cancellationsorreschedulingsofsmall,
interest­freeloansbyChina’scommerce
ministry,mostlyinthe2000swhendebt
reliefbecamea causecélèbre,embraced
byg7 governmentsandIrishrockstars.
Another 28 werepaymentholidaysgrant­
edtocountriesinnogreatdebtdistress
aspartoftheg20’sresponsetothepan­
demic.Thatleaves 84 restructurings
proper(ofwhich 30 werealsopartofthe
g 20 initiative,buttocountriesunder
financialstrain).
China’s 84 creditmishapscompare
with 158 intotalbyall 22 membersofthe
ParisClub,aninformalgroupofrich­
countrygovernmentsincludingAmer­
ica,JapanandBritain(seechart).China
wasperhapsunluckyinlendinga lotata
badtime,justbeforethepricesofoiland
othercommoditiesexportedbyAfrican
countriesbegantodropin2014.Inal­
mostallthesecases,Chinasimplygave
borrowersmoretimetorepay.Inonly
fourdidit reducethefacevalueofthe
debt(Cuba,IraqandSerbia,twice).Its
approach thusresemblesthatofWestern
lendersinthe1980s,whentheyseldom
provideddeepdebtrelief.
ThepandemicmayforceChinato
movefromforbearancetoforgiveness.
Otherwisetheauthorsfearthata debt
“overhang”mayinhibitgrowthinpoor
countries.Chinahasjoinedtheg20’s
“commonframework”fordebtrelief,
whichismeanttobringit intolinewith
theParisClub.Inbecominga biglender
topoorcountries,Chinahasfollowedin
thefootstepsoftheclub’sleadingeco­
nomicpowers.Ithasalsorepeateda
numberoftheirblunders.Nowit must
followtheminwritingoffsomeofits
pastmistakes.WhoisChina’sBono?

Debtrelief

How to defaulton China


H ONGKONG
Asia’ssuperpowerdoesnotalwayscollectitsdebtsontime

Stress without the relief
Number of distressed debt restructurings
by lender

Source:Horn,Reinhart
andTrebesch, 2022

20

15

5

10

0
2000 05 10 15 21

China Paris Club* Withface-valuereduction

*Group of traditional
creditor countries
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