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The global financial crisis and developing countries Initial results

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Title: The global financial crisis and developing countries Initial results


1
The global financial crisis and developing
countriesInitial results
  • Dr Dirk Willem te Velde
  • Overseas Development Institute
  • ECORYS conference, Rotterdam, 16 April 2009
  • Rethinking the Development Agenda in the
    Perspective of the Global Crisis

2
The global financial crisis and 10 developing
countries
2
3
Methodology (simplified version)
Global shock (Private capital flows, trade,
migration/remittances, aid)
National shock (Private capital flows, trade,
migration/remittances, aid)
Macro effects (growth, development and debt)
Policy responses Short-term (economic and
social), long-run (economic)
4
Transmission belt (1)Private financial flows
  • Stock market declines everywhere (30-50 since
    start GFC)
  • Bond issuances put on hold in Ghana, Kenya,
    Uganda
  • Portfolio investment flows badly affected
  • FDI has been more resilient but plans put on
    hold
  • Ghana, Benin and to some extent Zambia have
    experienced decreases in both FDI and portfolio
    investment inflows.
  • There is little evidence so far of a drop in
    banks international claims, but some countries
    are vulnerable

5
Transmission belt (2)Portfolio flows and stock
markets
Uganda Portfolio Investment declines, 2006-2008
Nigeria Stock Market Declines, 2002-2009
Source Uganda Country Case Study
Source Nigeria Country Case Study
6
Transmission belt (2)Trade different shocks
  • Open countries (Cambodia, Ghana, Uganda, Zambia)
    and and more protected countries (Bangladesh,
    Nigeria). Most countries depend on a few export
    products
  • Different types of export shocks
  • Commodity price shock affecting Nigeria, Bolivia,
    Benin, Zambia, but also Uganda, Ghana, and Kenya
  • Manufacturing volume shock (e.g. garments),
    affecting Cambodia, and to some extent,
    Bangladesh
  • Tourism receipt shock (Kenya, Cambodia)
  • Multiple shocks of declining commodity prices and
    lower demand for simple manufactured, affecting
    Indonesia.

7
Transmission belt (2)Trade export concentration
Cambodia garments exports (mn USD)
8
Transmission belt (2)Trade prices Bolivia
Export values (US mn)/ volumes Fiscal balance
(red if 2004 commodity prices)
Source Central Bank of Bolivia Unidad de
Programaación Fiscal (UPF)
9
Transmission belt (2) Remittances
  • Dependency on remittances varies
  • Remittances likely to decline due to lower
    emigration flows or stocks (Bangladesh,
    Cambodia). In Bangladesh, emigration fell by
    38.8 between February 2008 and February 2009.
  • Reduction of remittances in some countries. In
    Kenya, remittances were down 27 in January 2009,
    compared to January 2008, after a year of
    volatility.
  • Remittances, 000 US, Kenya
  • (Jan2004- Feb 2009)

10
Transmission belt (2) Aid
  • Some countries are more aid dependent (e.g.
    Bangladesh) than others (e.g. Kenya). So far
    little evidence of a pull out
  • In Bangladesh, gross disbursement falling 8 from
    903.2 million in FY2007-08 (July-December) to
    898.3 million in FY2008-09 (July-December). But
    highest ever commitments.
  • But there have been declines in aid in Uganda
    (official and NGO aid)

11
Effects on growth
  • Effects differ (e.g. vulnerability, openness,
    sectoral distribution, growth constraints). Kenya
    from 7 in 2007 to 3-4 in 2008 and 2009,
    Cambodia from 10 to 0

12
Development and poverty
  • Too early to assess fully, but stresses have
    appeared
  • Significant job losses.
  • Cambodia has already lost 51,000 garments jobs
    (around 15 of garment workers). 15,000 lost in
    construction.
  • Zambia lost 8,100 (25) of 30,000 mining jobs in
    2008.
  • Remittances play a key role, but declining in
    countries
  • Rural-urban shocks and gender challenges (e.g.
    Urban manufacturing job losses in Cambodia)

13
Economic policy responses differ
  • Economic policy responses vary widely, from
    business as usual to more pro-active
    approaches
  • Implementing / accelerating long term growth
    policies (e.g. Cambodia),
  • Implementing a fiscal stimulus (Indonesia).
  • Small monetary policy steps, not much else (e.g.
    Kenya or Uganda).
  • The institutional context differs. Some countries
    (e.g. Kenya, Ghana, Bangladesh, Nigeria) have
    established a global financial crisis task force.

14
Social policy responses differ
  • Social policy responses range from
  • Reducing social sector allocations (Nigeria and
    Zambia) to
  • Upgrading social protection from low base
    (Cambodia), to
  • Expanding existing systems to need (Indonesia)
  • The scale of the social protection response
    affected by
  • Extent of revenue contraction,
  • Ability of the government to access resources to
    finance the fiscal deficit, and
  • Pre-existence of a social protection system.

15
Conclusions
  • The same transmission belts (trade, private
    finance, aid, remittances) affect country case
    studies differently
  • Some countries affected considerably and stresses
    visible.
  • Policy responses differ (capacity, fiscal space,
    willingness?)
  • Hypothesis institutions matter (e.g.
    State-business relations and the ability to
    respond to a shock)

16
Thank youdw.tevelde_at_odi.org.uk
Monitoring the global financial
crisis and policy implications in developing and
developed countries
16
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