The Economist - UK (2022-04-30)

(Antfer) #1

66 Finance&economics TheEconomistApril30th 2022


surgesinfoodandenergycosts.Wheatand
oilare bothabout50%more expensive
thantheywerea yearago.Forimporting
countriesthisincreasesthefiscalcostsof
foodandenergysubsidies, drainshard­
currencyreservesandweighsoneconomic
growth.Risingpricesalsointensifypres­
sureoncentralbanksintherichworldto
tightenmonetarypolicy.Investorsexpect
theFedtoraiseitsbenchmarkinterestrate
bynearlythreepercentagepointsin2022;
thatwouldbethelargestrateriseina sin­
gleyearsincetheearly1990s.Addintheef­
fectofa shrinkingFedbalance­sheet,and
thetighteningthisyearcouldbethemost
dramaticsincethe1980s.
Marketsarealreadyheapingpressure
on vulnerable emerging economies. As
capitalflowstoAmericatotakeadvantage
ofhigherrates,thedollarisstrengthening:
it isupbymorethan10%overthepastyear.
Fundingcostsintheemergingworldare
risingwithit.Theyieldonthehard­cur­
rencydebtofthemedianemergingecon­
omyhasrisenbymorethana thirdsince
the summer. The share of issuerswith
bondstradingatdistressedlevelshasmore
thandoubled,tojustovera fifth,according
totheimf. ThatincludesUkraineaswellas
EgyptandGhana.
Morecountrieswillprobablyfollowthe
leadofSriLanka,whichonApril12thde­

faultedonitshard­currencygovernment
debt.Nonetheless,thesystemiccrisesthat
werea featureofthepreviouslostdecades
may be avoided. Many middle­income
economieshavebolsteredtheirfinancial
defencessincethe1980s,bybeefingupfor­
eign­exchange reserves,forinstance.In­
vestorshavebecomemorediscerning, re­
ducingtheriskofwidercontagion.The
biggerworryinsteadisthatdebtloadswill
hitgrowth,bylimitinggovernments’room
tocuttaxesandinvestineducationandin­
frastructure. Local banks that have lent
heavilytogovernmentsmayfindtheirca­
pacity to lend to private borrowers im­
pairedifthebondstheyholdlosevalue.
Home­country government debt now
makesupabout17%ofbankassetsacross
emergingeconomies,upfrom13%inthe
early2010sandwellabovethe7.5%average
inrichcountries.
Anotherheadwindcomesfromglobal
trade. Developing economies’ fortunes
havelongrisenandfalleninlinewithit.
From 1960 to1980,goodstradeasa shareof
worldgdpdoubledfrom9%to18%;during
thelostdecades,bycontrast,itstagnated.
Tradethensoaredagainasglobalsupply
chains expandedacrossEastandSouth­
EastAsiainparticular.Butthatintercon­
nectednessisoncemoreatrisk.Geopoliti­
caltensions,nationalcampaignsforself­
sufficiency and concerns about supply­
chainreliabilitymayweighontrade,re­
ducingpooreconomies’opportunitiesto
borrow technology andknow­howfrom
foreignfirms,andselltotherichworld.
The global economy will also suffer
fromthesputteringofthelargestemerging
marketofthemall,andtheworld’sprimary
growthengine:China.Between 1970 and
2000 AmericaandEuropeaccountedfor
nearlyhalfofglobalgdpgrowth.Thesharp
and sustained slowdown in rich­world
growth that began in the 1970s thus
weighed heavilyonthe globaleconomy
andtheprospectsfortheemergingworld.
Fortunesturnedinthe2000s,however,as
anexplosiveexpansioninChinaleditto
contribute more to global growth than
AmericaandEuropecombined.Amodest
decelerationinChina,togdpgrowthrates
ofaround5%,wouldnotdoomtheglobal
economytostagnation. Draconiancovid
lockdowns,aprotractedproperty­market
bustandthepotentialcostsofgeopolitical
misadventures, however, could do great
damage(seenextstory).
Someemergingmarketsstandtobene­
fitfromaneraofstagnation.Firmswaryof
dependenceonChinacouldmoveproduc­
tiontootherlow­costplaces.Richcoun­
trieshopingtopreventpooreronesfrom
drawingclosertoRussiaandChinacould
lowertradebarriers andincreaseinvest­
mentabroad,boostinggrowthprospectsin
theprocess.Highcommodityprices,while
theylast,willbuoythefortunesoffood,

energyandmetalsexporters.
Overall,however,thehigherdebtsand
forgoneinvestmentinhumanandphysi­
calcapitalofthepastfewyearswilltakea
heavy toll. The imf forecasts that gdp
across the emerging world will remain
some5%belowitspre­pandemictrendat
theendof2024.(Bycomparison,gdpin
mostoftherichworldisexpectedtobeless
than1%belowtrend.)Withoutboldinitia­
tivestolowerdebtburdens,investinpub­
licgoodsandexpandtrade,suchmediocre
performancemightbejusta tasteofwhat
istocome.n

Catching up is hard to do

Sources:IMF;WorldBank;TheEconomist

*Medianchange †April 2022 forecastcomparedwith
January 2020 forecast ‡Excl.China §Excl.UnitedStates

3

2

1

0

-1
2110200090801970

GDP per person, average annual % change
Ten-year moving average

United States

Emerging markets*

UnitedStates

Advanced
economies§

China

inEurope

inAsia‡

Emergingmarkets

-8-10 -6 -4 -2 20

GDP,202forecast,%changefrom
pre-pandemicforecast†

Theyuan

Fearoffloundering


I


t iseasytoforgetthattheworld’ssec­
ond­biggesteconomyisstillanemerg­
ingmarket.China’sglobalclout,itstech­
nological prowessin certain fields, and
evenitslowbondyieldsalldistinguishit
fromthetypicalmemberofitsassetclass.
ButinatleastonerespectChinaresembles
a classicemergingmarket: itretainsa pal­
pablefearoffloating itscurrency.Instead
Chinakeepsa closeeyeontheyuan’svalue
againstthedollaranda basketofitstrad­
ing partners’ currencies, limiting any
sharpmovements.
Formostofthepastyear,it worriedthat
the yuan would float too high. China’s
largelysuccessfuleffortstostampoutthe
earlyvariantsofcovid­19keptitsfactories
openanditsbordersclosed.Thatallowed
itsexportstoboom,puttingupwardpres­
sureontheyuan,evenasoutboundtou­
rismandotherservicesimportssuffered,
removinga sourceofdownwardpressure.
Theyuanrosesharplyagainstthebasketof
trading partners’ currencies and gently

H ONGKONG
Chinashouldworrylessaboutits
currencyandmoreaboutitseconomy

Covid contagion
China

Sources:RefinitivDatastream;
ChinaForeignExchangeTradeSystem *CFETS RMB index

7.25

7.00

6.75

6.50

6.25

22212020

Yuanper$
Invertedscale

110
105
100
95
90
22212020

Yuan, trade-weighted
exchange rate*
Dec 31st 201=100
Free download pdf