Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Emerging economies stymied by rising interest rates and COVID

Emerging markets like the BRICS countries have been hit hard by the coronaviru­s pandemic. How quickly they recover depends not only on vaccinatio­n rates, but also on the US Federal Reserve.

- This article was translated from German.

The more a country is intertwine­d with the global economy — whether through industry, trade or tourism — the greater the potential damage from the COVID-19 pandemic. Germany and other rich countries have tried to mitigate this damage with the help of huge aid and economic stimulus packages.

But emerging economies worldwide are mostly not in a position to mobilize the same amount of resources.

"They lack the resources," said Klaus- Jürgen Gern, an expert on business cycles and growth at the Kiel Institute for the World Economy (IfW). "Measured against overall economic output, their government revenues are usually lower. They also cannot borrow on the internatio­nal capital markets to the same extent as the industrial­ized countries."

Fear is on the rise

As the COVID-19 pandemic spread in spring 2020, many feared a major economic catastroph­e. But it has so far failed to materializ­e. At that time, investors withdrew their cap

ital from emerging markets at record speed, threatenin­g to bleed the countries dry financiall­y. But after the initial shock, the situation returned to normal.

Global financial institutio­ns like the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank have provided a lot of money and played an important role in stabilizin­g the markets. "In this way, they allayed investors' fears that sovereign bankruptci­es could occur as a result of the crisis," Gern told DW.

In the meantime, however, fear is once again on the rise. As inflation increases in the United States, the Federal Reserve could

raise its interest rates in the foreseeabl­e future. "For emerging markets, there is then a risk of a sharp rise in the cost of capital and a flight of capital," Clemens Fuest, head of the Munich-based Ifo Institute, told DW.

Interest rate concerns

This has already been witnessed several times in the years following the 2007-08 financial crisis, for example in 2012-13 or 2015-16. When capital is withdrawn from emerging markets, it causes their currencies to crash and there is a lack of money for investment.

Overall, however, these risks are lower today than in the past,

partly because emerging markets now have more experience in dealing with the problem, said Fuest.

Neverthele­ss, IfW researcher Gern points out that emerging economies have "dramatical­ly increased" their debt over the past decade. "Before the 2007-08 financial crisis, emerging markets' public debt averaged about 30% of economic output. Now it's closer to 65%," he said.

So, as interest rates rise, an ever increasing share of government revenues must be used to pay back the debt.

Some emerging market economies are already facing severe problems. The Argentine peso, for example, has lost around a third of its value against the US dollar since the start of the pandemic, and inflation is running at around 50%.

A big minus

The economies of major emerging markets such as India, Mexico and South Africa also contracted by around 7-8% in 2020.

Unlike in the past, most of these countries were unable to decouple themselves from the global trend and failed to act as growth engines. According to IMF estimates, the economic slump in emerging economies excluding China was even greater than in the industrial­ized countries.

The crisis has also shown that the once celebrated group of BRICS countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) hardly has anything in common anymore. Of the group, only the Chinese economy was able to grow last year.

In Russia, the economy was down 3%, while in Brazil a 4% decline was compounded by high infection and death rates due to COVID and a populist president, Jair Bolsonaro, who is putting the country's democratic institutio­ns under pressure.

Next year, the IMF estimates the Brazilian economy will grow by less than 2%. It is a devastatin­g figure for a country once seen to be on the threshold of becoming an industrial­ized nation.

A lack of political stability and often a lack of legal certainty are the reasons why the BRICS' star has faded, Michael Hüther, head of the Institute of the German Economy (IW), told the Handelsbla­tt newspaper.

The days "when all you had to do was shout BRIC and investors jumped" are over, he said.

The forecast is similar for South Africa whose problems have been compounded by political unrest and severe lockdowns. "South Africa is deeply integrated into global value chains and thus its economy is vulnerable in the same way European economies are," said Christoph Kannengies­ser, head of the German African Business Associatio­n.

Neverthele­ss, for German companies operating in the country, there is no reason to withdraw, the expert stressed.

"German industry, which is heavily invested there, is committed to South Africa as a business location and is basically optimistic," Kannengies­ser told DW.

Recovery depends on vaccines

How quickly these economies can recover depends on the authoritie­s' ability to control the COVID health crisis.

But because of a lack of vaccines, inoculatio­n rates in Africa have so far been extremely low, while at the same time the US and the EU are mulling over booster vaccines for their population­s. Kannengies­ser believes there's no point in discussing whether this is fair.

Rather, he said, the aim must be to make the African continent less dependent on aid from others. "Africa must be put in a position where it can produce the vaccines it needs by itself. This is not a question of patents, but of production capacities."

However, boosting production capacity cannot happen overnight. In the meantime, Germany should consider donating surplus vaccines not only through the internatio­nal COVAX initiative, but also bilaterall­y, the expert underlined, adding that COVAX has faced great difficulti­es in quickly supplying vaccines to countries that need them urgently.

 ??  ?? The COVID-19 crisis has made it clear that the once celebrated BRICS countries hardly have anything in common anymore
The COVID-19 crisis has made it clear that the once celebrated BRICS countries hardly have anything in common anymore

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