The global financial crisis and developing countries Taking Stock and Taking Action

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The global financial crisis and developing countries Taking Stock and Taking Action Dr Dirk Willem te Velde Overseas Development Institute ODI meeting: 21 September 2009, London

Outline Taking stock Global economy Low-income countries Policy responses (developed, developing, donors) Taking action Getting out of the crisis: rainbow recovery Preventing future crises: regulation and imbalances Living with crises: crisis-resilient growth 2

Global economy: Recovery? Q-Q GDP Growth forecasts (IMF) OECD report: OECD countries coming out of recession; Shape of recovery not yet known: V- shape (or Square Root) L ( long term correction) or W (double dip, e.g. if oil prices rise, consumption remains depressed, higher inventories, and stimulus / easing undone)? 3

Industrial production in BRICs up Source: OECD 4

2004M1 2004M3 2004M5 2004M7 2004M9 2004M11 2005M1 2005M3 2005M5 2005M7 2005M9 2005M11 2006M1 2006M3 2006M5 2006M7 2006M9 2006M11 2007M1 2007M3 2007M5 2007M7 2007M9 2007M11 2008M1 2008M3 2008M5 2008M7 2008M9 2008M11 2009M1 2009M3 2009M5 2009M7 Commodity prices rebounded (2004M1 2009M7; index 2005=100) 270 250 230 Fuel 210 Metals 190 170 150 130 Beverages Food 110 90 70 Source: IMF 5

Effects on low income countries affected? 6

ODI s monitoring methodology Global shock Unprecedented since 1930s National shock (Same transmission belts, different effects: Private capital flows, trade, remittances, aid) Macro effects (differs: growth, development and fiscal space ) Policy responses (range from pro-active to business as usual ) Short-term (economic and social), long-run (economic) 7

Monitoring update (in LICs) Private flows. Portfolio flows not returning quickly; FDI plans postponed last year, decreasing this year in several countries. Trade. Large effect. Especially price effects (commodity and oil prices) vs volume/inventory effect? Remittances. Decreasing (Kenya -10% in y to 2009H1, Bolivia -9% in y to 2009Q1) following strong increases over years. Bangladesh exception. Aid. No pull out overall so far, increase in multilateral engagement Likely growth effects 2009. Large slowdown up to 7% (Cambodia, DRC), moderate 3-4% (Kenya), few growth effects (Bangladesh, Zambia) Poverty and employment. Cambodia lost 63,000 garments jobs (nearly a fifth, to 2009Q1). Zambia lost 8,100 (25%) of 30,000 mining jobs 2008. DRC 200,000? Possible increase in number of poor due to GFC: 110,000 in Cambodia (0.8%); 233,000 in Uganda (0.8%); 8

Monitoring update (questions) Recovery. Will low-income countries see a lagged response? Budgeting. Why do countries such as Sudan rely on record high oil prices as basis for government revenue forecasts? Is the role of the IMF changing (DRC, Zambia)? Regional trade amongst developing countries (Uganda) holding up better than north-south trade? Structural issues? Why have garment exports from Bangladesh increased and those from Cambodia decreased? Will Zambia be in a better competitiveness position than DRC and ready for the upturn 9

Policy responses to GFC Developed countries: quick and bold Co-ordinated bailing out of financial sector; plans for financial regulation Unprecedented monetary easing; co-ordinated, large stimuli and increasing government deficits But some increases in protectionism (labour, financial, trade) Donor agencies: varying, but shifts visible Stick to existing commitments (UK), but some cutting aid volumes for different reasons (Italy, Ireland, with declines in ODA/GNI; Netherlands keeping ODA/GNI at 0.8%); Reprogramming (across / within countries) Multilateral responses fast (e.g. tripling in IMF lending to LICs, in IBRD lending, by 2009) Developing countries: fewer responses Monetary steps (but many countries still suffered inflationary pressures) Fiscal steps (few, but deficits has widened, due to lower revenues) Other? Will poorest be able to gain from any upturn? 10

Taking action (1) Ensuring rainbow recovery for all Keep monitoring. Sustain stimulus. Rainbow stimulus (red, blue, green): safeguard grant aid to LICs in 2010? Poorest & liquidity constrained part of solution. New trade package. Aid for Trade. Developing countries need to actively position themselves for future Prevent extreme volatility Improve global regulation and transparency: Reduce pro-cyclicality of bank s capital adequacy ratios (Persaud, Goodhart); Bonuses / incentives in banking systems geared towards economic rates of returns (not just financial rates of returns), learn from DFIs? Curb global imbalances: e.g. IFIs to leverage surplus capital to LICs? 11

Taking action (2) Global compact for crisis-resilient growth Provision of governance global public goods: stronger co-ordinating role for UN and G-20; stronger trade, financial and environmental rules; Ensure adequate resources/facilities for the IMF, WB and other global institutions for countries to deal with crises; new roles in TA and global imbalances/challenges; governance reforms; Climate finance and new targets at Copenhagen to provide environmental global public goods; Support developing countries to cope with crises (institutional, policy) and prevent the worst impact through development & diversification: new growth strategies. Includes provision of knowledge public goods. 12

Thank you dw.tevelde@odi.org.uk Global financial crisis and developing countries: Taking stock and taking action 13