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Slowdown in Emerging Markets : Rough Patch or Prolonged Weakness?

Authors :
Didier, Tatiana
Kose, M. Ayhan
Ohnsorge, Franziska
Ye, Lei Sandy
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
World Bank, Washington, DC, 2015.

Abstract

A synchronous growth slowdown has been underway in emerging markets (EM) since 2010. Growth in these countries is now markedly slower than, not just the pre‐crisis average, but also the long‐term average. As a group, EM growth eased from 7.6 percent in 2010 to 4.5 percent in 2014, and is projected to slow further to below 4 percent in 2015. This moderation has affected all regions (except South Asia) and is the most severe in Latin America and the Caribbean. The deceleration is highly synchronous across countries, especially among large EM. By 2015, China, Russia, and South Africa had all experienced three consecutive years of slower growth. The EM‐AE growth differential has narrowed to two percentage points in 2015, well below the 2003‐08 average of 4.8 percentage points and near the long‐term average differential of 1990‐2008. The recent slowdown in EM has been a source of a lively debate, as evident from the quotations at the beginning of this note. Some economists paint a bleak picture for the future of EM and argue that the impressive growth performance of EM prior to the crisis was driven by temporary commodity booms and rapid debt accumulation, and will not be sustained. Others emphasize that a wide range of cyclical and structural factors are driving the slowdown: weakening macroeconomic fundamentals after the crisis; prospective tightening in financial conditions; resurfacing of deep‐rooted governance problems in EM; and difficulty adjusting to disruptive technological changes. Still others highlight differences across EM and claim that some of them are in a better position to weather the slowdown and will likely register strong growth in the future. This policy research note seeks to help move the debate forward by examining the main features, drivers, and implications of the recent EM slowdown and provides a comprehensive analysis of available policy options to counteract it.

Subjects

Subjects :
ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES
INVESTMENT
CAPITAL FLOWS
GROWTH RATES
DEMOGRAPHIC
ECONOMIC GROWTH
SHARE OF WORLD OUTPUT
DURABLE GOODS
WORLD TRADE
DISCOUNT RATES
GOVERNMENT DEBT
COMMODITY
TERMS OF TRADE
INTERNATIONAL CAPITAL MARKETS
EMERGING MARKET
ECONOMIC  GROWTH
MARKET ECONOMIES
POPULATION GROWTH
UNEMPLOYMENT
INCOME
EXPORT GROWTH
GLOBAL RISKS
INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT
VALUES
RESOURCE ALLOCATION
LABOR PRODUCTIVITY
FINANCIAL CRISIS
URBANIZATION
WORLD DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS
OIL
INCENTIVES
BALANCE SHEETS
INVESTORS
OPTIONS
E60
FINANCIAL MARKET
PRODUCTION PROCESSES
PRIVATE CAPITAL FLOWS
METALS
OPEC
ADVANCED ECONOMY
EMERGING MARKETS
EXPOSURES
GLOBAL INVESTORS
MODELS
EMERGING ECONOMIES
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
SUBSIDIES
TAX REFORM
GLOBAL OUTPUT
BUSINESS CYCLES
GOVERNANCE INDICATORS
PRICES
WAGES
GLOBAL ECONOMY
PURCHASING POWER
PROPERTY RIGHTS
ENERGY TAXES
DEREGULATION
BANKING
NATIONAL INCOME
ENVIRONMENT
MONETARY POLICY
CONSUMPTION
FISCAL DEFICITS
INTEREST RATES
PRIVATE CAPITAL
ENVIRONMENTAL
DEBT
DISINFLATION
TRADE
POWER OUTAGES
EQUILIBRIUM
TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGES
ECONOMIC CONDITIONS
INTERNATIONAL BEST PRACTICE
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
PROPERTY
DEBTS
MARKET VOLATILITY
IRREVERSIBILITY
ENVIRONMENTS
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
O43
MONETARY POLICIES
DIVIDENDS
RESOURCES
DEVELOPED COUNTRIES
DEMAND
PRIVATE CONSUMPTION
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
EXPANSIONARY FISCAL POLICY
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
DEVELOPING ECONOMIES
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ADVANCED ECONOMIES
SCIENTIFIC KNOWLEDGE
structural reforms
CURRENCIES
COAL
POLITICAL ECONOMY
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
MULTIPLIERS
EXCHANGE
ENERGY CONSUMPTION
ECONOMIES
AGGREGATE DEMAND
CAPITAL MARKETS
GOVERNANCE
GLOBAL FINANCIAL MARKET
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
STOCK INDEXES
GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS
FISCAL POLICY
FINANCIAL SYSTEM
OUTPUT
OIL PRICES
TERMS‐OF‐TRADE
F43
CURRENCY
TECHNOLOGICAL PROGRESS
TAXES
EQUITY
BOND
GOVERNMENT SECURITIES
LAND
EFFICIENCY
CAPITAL GOODS
ECONOMIC EFFECTS
STRUCTURAL UNEMPLOYMENT
O4
ECONOMISTS
CREDIT
EXPENDITURES
COMMODITY PRICES
MACROECONOMIC POLICY
SECURITIES
FUTURE
ddc:330
LABOR INPUTS
FISCAL POLICIES
INFLATION‐TARGETING
CENTRAL BANKS
LABOR MARKETS
EMERGING MARKET ECONOMIES
WORLD ECONOMY
EXPECTATIONS
DATA AVAILABILITY
growth slowdown
ECONOMICS
INTEREST
policy space
NATURAL RESOURCES
LABOR FORCE
REVENUES
ADVERSE EFFECTS
SHARE
INTEREST RATE
F6
CAPITAL CONSTRAINTS
VOLATILITY
INTERNATIONAL CAPITAL

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..61ad442a08641a7cd76414ace51f5937