Yuma Sun

Federal Reserve rate increases pressure on emerging economies

-

WASHINGTON — President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is blaming the United States for Turkey’s financial crisis, ignoring homegrown problems like high debts, raging inflation and his own erratic policies.

Yet one of the threats facing Turkey and other emerging-market countries really is made-in-America: By ratcheting up U.S. interest rates, the Federal Reserve has — unintentio­nally — led investors to pull money out of emerging markets like Turkey, strengthen­ed the dollar’s value and made it harder for foreign companies to repay their dollardeno­minated debts.

The resulting flight of capital into safer and higher-yielding U.S. investment­s has sent many emergingma­rket currencies tumbling. The MSCI Emerging Markets Currency Index has sunk nearly 8 percent since early March.

Especially vulnerable are countries with weak economic fundamenta­ls: Runaway inflation, bulging trade deficits, piles of foreign debt and paltry foreigncur­rency reserves available to intervene in the markets to help prop up their own currencies.

Turkey is Exhibit A: Inflation is running near 16 percent a year. The country buys much more than it sells abroad. Its borrowing binge has left Turkey highly vulnerable. Erdogan has rattled global investors by pressuring the country’s central bank not to raise interest rates — the convention­al response to high inflation. High interest rates normally help strengthen a nation’s currency. But they also tend to slow economic growth, something Erdogan clearly wants to avoid.

Erdogan has named his son-in-law as finance minister, blamed foreigners for his country’s woes and escalated tensions with Turkey’s longtime ally the United States. On Wednesday, Turkey said it was increasing taxes on U.S. products like cars, alcohol and coal in retaliatio­n for President Donald Trump’s move to double tariffs on Turkish steel and aluminum. The two countries are feuding over Ankara’s decision to arrest an American pastor and try him on espionage and terrorism charges related to a failed coup attempt two years ago.

The Turkish lira’s value recovered a bit on Wednesday, by 5 percent to around 6.05 lira per dollar, after the government acted to shore it up by reducing the daily limit in bank foreign currency swap transactio­ns. But even with Wednesday’s gain, the lira is down 38 percent against the dollar since early March.

Yet among the currencies of emerging economies, it’s hardly alone: Argentina’s peso has lost 34 percent over the same period. That nation is grappling with a corruption scandal and doubledigi­t inflation. Argentina’s central bank just jacked up its benchmark rate to 45 percent.

Likewise, South Africa’s rand has tumbled 18 percent. That country’s economy hasn’t achieved even a modest 2 percent annual growth in five years. And it runs a gaping deficit in its current account, the broadest measure of trade.

A crumbling currency inflicts many damaging consequenc­es: Companies that borrowed in dollars — the global reserve currency — have to come up with steadily more money in their local currencies to repay U.S. dollar debts. Having to do so also raises risks for the banks that lent to them.

That’s the kind of squeeze that ignited the catastroph­ic 1997-1998 Asian financial crisis. A currency disaster in Thailand infected the entire region, and East Asian economies absorbed devastatin­g damage.

Fears of a replay have gripped financial markets as Turkey’s crisis has intensifie­d. “Contagion” is the word analysts use to describe their nightmare of seeing Turkey’s problems spread across the developing world.

Still, most economists remain optimistic for now that another such crisis can be avoided. For one thing, Turkey’s economy is uniquely mismanaged.

“Turkey is the No. 1 country we had our eyes on for a potential financial crisis in the Obama administra- tion,” said Jason Furman, a Harvard economist and a former chief economist for President Barack Obama.

Turkey’s “economic circumstan­ces are so different than many other emerging markets,” Furman said, referring to the country’s debts and Erdogan’s unconventi­onal policies.

And emerging-market countries learned lessons from the debacle two decades ago. Many piled up reserves to fend off speculativ­e assaults on their currencies. At the start of 1997, emerging-market countries’ reserves amounted to barely 6 percent of their economic output. Now, they equal nearly 18 percent, according to the Institute of Internatio­nal Finance, a banking trade group.

“Emerging-market countries, on the whole, have much stronger financial positions than they did 20 years ago,” the Wells Fargo Investment Institute said in a report Tuesday. Their foreign debts, for instance, have fallen from 38 percent of economic output in 1999 to 29 percent last year.

What’s more, emergingma­rket economies, for the most part, appear relatively stable. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund expects them to collective­ly register growth of roughly 5 percent this year and next, which would be the best showing since 2013.

Turkey’s troubles are “unlikely to trigger a meltdown — just a fair bit of volatility in currency and financial markets,” said Eswar Prasad, a Cornell University economist and senior fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n.

“Turkey is in a crisis because of a particular potent mix of bad economics mixed with even worse politics,” Mandy Xu, a Credit Suisse analyst, wrote in a research report.

More worrisome, Xu and others say, is the prospect of a sharp slowdown in the Chinese economy, the world’s second-largest after the United States. China’s growth slowed in the AprilJune period. Beijing has tightened lending controls over the past year to stem a surge in debt. The IMF expects Chinese growth to decelerate to 6.6 percent this year from 6.9 percent in 2017.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? TURKEY’S PRESIDENT RECEP Tayyip Erdogan addresses his supporters in Bayburt, Turkey, Aug. 10.
ASSOCIATED PRESS TURKEY’S PRESIDENT RECEP Tayyip Erdogan addresses his supporters in Bayburt, Turkey, Aug. 10.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States