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The global financial crisis and developing countries

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Title: The global financial crisis and developing countries


1
The global financial crisis and developing
countries
  • Dirk Willem te Velde
  • Overseas Development Institute
  • ILEAP-EABC meeting, Nairobi, 26-28 February 2009

2
Introduction
  • The global financial crisis which originated in
    developed countries will affect developing
    countries.
  • Which countries will be affected and how (ODI
    co-ordinates a 10 country study).
  • What does this mean for policy
  • In developing countries
  • Global responses / e.g. G20 process (e.g.
    financial regulation, aid and development
    finance, trade etc)

3
The effects expected to be serious especially for
developing countries
Revisions of forecasts for GDP per capita for
2009 (annual change, )
Source IMF and own calculations
4
At country level, there is a need to understand
  • What are the likely transmission mechanisms at
    national level
  • What are the actual and likely effect on growth
    and development
  • What are actual, possible and optimal policy
    responses

5
Shock at national level
  • Private capital flows (ODI, WB and IIF forecasts,
    e.g. from more than US 900 bn in 2007 to US 165
    bn 2009) stock markets down everywhere.
  • Trade (shocking drops esp. Asia, 20 y-on-y drops
    in trade mining and oil exports tourism in
    Caribbean)
  • Remittances (Mexico, Kenya?) and migration (e.g.
    Bangladesh)
  • Aid (under pressure may not grow as much as
    thought in 2005)

6
Trade and production in freefall
7
The global financial crisis and trade in services
in poor countries
  • Financial services
  • Directly, limited?, although stock market
    changes
  • Indirectly large
  • Effect on trade policy?
  • Tourism (booking down) luxury product
  • Transport services (trade dropped)
  • Migration and remittances down increase in
    protectionism

7
8
Effects on growth and development
  • Effects on growth. Output loss for 2008/9 at
    least 50bn in SSA, 800bn in developing, 2.4tr
    in world. Developing countries still to grow (but
    low in pc and large slowdown).
  • Feedback real financial sectors (Nigerian
    banking and real estate)
  • Employment, investment, poverty, social effect
  • rural-urban / gender and garments (Cambodia),
  • mining employment (Zambia),
  • poor and tourism (Kenya)
  • Government budget (e.g. commodity dependent
    exporters such as Bolivia, Nigeria and Zambia
    suffer)

8
9
Developing country responses
  • Economic policy measures (e.g. fiscal stimulus,
    early disbursements, need for IMF/BoP shock
    facilities, monetary easing, changed reserve
    requirements, eg Cambodia or Mauritius)
  • Social policies (e.g. social protection, lending
    to SMEs)
  • Normal growth and development policies
    (acceleration of investment climate support,
    trade liberalisation, infrastructure)
  • ? Countries are beginning to respond, but not all
    (e.g. Cambodia vs Uganda)

9
10
What will happen in/after crises?
Protectionism or window of opportunity?
Source WB presentation
11
Global policy responses Financial globalisation
  • All sources of finance and export revenues under
    pressure financial flows have been too cyclical
  • International banks now required to hold more
    capital at home and hence withdraw lending
  • Persaud/Goodhart change capital adequacy ratios
    / reserve requirements over the cycle
  • Also transparency, supervisory colleges, tax
    haven and avoid financial mercantilism
    (safeguarding national deposit holders only)

11
12
Global policy responses Aid
  • The case for aid is stronger now than before
    (market failures in finance/climate change more
    visual). Aid needs to play the counter cyclical
    role it is likely that lack of capital is a
    binding constraint to growth.
  • 1.5 Fiscal stimulus 2 trillion USD around the
    world risk of beggar-thy-neighbour economic
    nationalism against poor countries?
  • Fiscal stimulus red, blue or green? Rainbow
    stimulus requires early disbursement with
    streamlined rules?

12
13
Global policy responsesDevelopment Finance
Institutions
  • Directed credit is back in fashion. DFI sector
    has experience in using state-backed guarantees
    from cash rich balance sheets in 2007 toward
    rationing in 2009?
  • Recognise contribution of DFIs (USD 50 bn in
    2006/7)
  • IFC increasing exposure
  • EBRD increasing 20 to US 7bn
  • AfDB, AsDB, EDFIs?

IFC Cap Adequacy
14
Global policy responses Trade
  • Doha Round at WTO a priority? Not really.
  • Focus on
  • Avoiding protectionist labeling of goods against
    developing country interests
  • Monitor fiscal subsidies Resist domestic
    pressures to apply expensive protectionist
    measures or targeted trade distortionary
    subsidies
  • Support the surveillance process that the WTO has
    put in place to track new protectionist measures
  • Promote and enhance existing WTO rules
  • Bring forward Aid for Trade allocations and
    address trade financing constraints

14
15
Conclusions
  • GFC has already had large development effects
    different countries affected differently. Worse
    is likely to come throughout 2009.
  • Need for developing countries to monitor and
    respond to GFC. It also affects services and
    regulatory models.
  • Global policies responses to include
    development concerns

15
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