Title: The global financial crisis and developing countries
1The global financial crisis and developing
countries
- Dirk Willem te Velde
- Overseas Development Institute
- ILEAP-EABC meeting, Nairobi, 26-28 February 2009
2Introduction
- 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)
3The 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
4At 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
5Shock 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)
6Trade and production in freefall
7The 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
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8Effects 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)
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9Developing 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)
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10What will happen in/after crises?
Protectionism or window of opportunity?
Source WB presentation
11Global 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)
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12Global 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?
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13Global 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
14Global 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
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15Conclusions
- 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
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