Title: The global financial crisis and developing countries Initial results
1The 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
2The global financial crisis and 10 developing
countries
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3Methodology (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)
4Transmission 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
5Transmission 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
6Transmission 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.
7Transmission belt (2)Trade export concentration
Cambodia garments exports (mn USD)
8Transmission 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)
9Transmission 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)
10Transmission 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)
11Effects 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
12Development 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)
13Economic 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.
14Social 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.
15Conclusions
- 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)
16Thank youdw.tevelde_at_odi.org.uk
Monitoring the global financial
crisis and policy implications in developing and
developed countries
16