"Innocent bystanders": Emerging economies struggle to contain capital outflows

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
By Ed Davies, Sumeet Chatterjee and Gayatri SuroyoAfter suffering months of capital outflows, policy makers from emerging markets attending
IMF-World Bank meetings in Indonesia had a message for leading economies: current monetary and trade policies risk undermining us all. The
International Monetary Fund-World Bank meetings wrapping up on Sunday gave central bankers and finance ministers from around the world a
chance to meet face-to-face in Indonesia, whose rupiah currency hit a new 20-year low this week. Poorer and populous emerging markets have
been particularly vulnerable to the escalating US-Sino tariff war and rate rises by the US central bank
Investors dumped assets seen as riskier, sparking painful currency plunges that have punished countries from India to recession-hit South
Africa, as well as triggering crises in Turkey and Argentina. "We are all aware that the normalisation of the monetary policy in the US,
combined with their fiscal policy and trade policy are all creating a systemic impact to the whole economy in the world," Indonesian
Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati said in an interview during the meetings in Bali. The Federal Reserve's nearly three-year-old
tightening cycle has in part prompted a global shift in capital away from emerging markets and after three hikes this year, it foresees
another December rise, three more next year, and one in 2020. A senior Fed official in Bali said the rate rises were right for domestic
policy and ensuring they were gradual and predictable was "the best solution" for minimising unintended volatility in emerging markets. In a
bid to support the rupiah, Bank Indonesia has raised rates five times since mid-May and intervened regularly, but still the currency has
lost nearly 11 per cent this year, leaving it at the weakest levels since the 1998 Asian financial crisis. Bank Indonesia Governor Perry
Warjiyo said that the 150 basis point rate hikes since mid-May aimed to keep Indonesian assets attractive enough for foreigners to stay
invested, but calibrating this in the current environment was hard. "The risk premia are very difficult to incorporate because risk premia
are responding to geopolitical, responding to trade tension," Warjiyo told a panel in Bali. Spillover risksFinance ministers for developing
nations in the Group of 24 economies urged major economies to reform the global trading system, rather than discard it. The G24 statement,
issued on the sidelines of the Bali meetings, said all emerging markets were "adversely affected" by excessive capital flow
volatility. While many countries shared common fears, Indrawati said it was difficult to forge cooperation to counter the risks. "It's not
really clear how the world is going to coordinate more effectively, especially when each country has their own domestic issues," she
said. The Philippine peso has shed nearly 8 per cent this year and its deputy central bank governor, Diwa Guinigundo, said the IMF and other
global institutions should advise advanced economies on the potential negative consequences of their moves. "It's the spillovers that we are
concerned with the spillover could have effects from one market to the other, from the financial market to the real market," said
Guinigundo. He said while it was good for policymakers to be ahead of the curve in tightening, they should take account of the growing clout
of emerging markets
"It should also be emphasized that ASEAN+3 (China, Japan, Korea), we account for a good bulk of the world's population and GDP." Either all
are winners or all are losersIMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde urged members at the meeting to "de-escalate" trade tensions and work
on fixing global trade rules
She also warned against adding currency to the trade conflict, saying this would hurt global growth as well as "innocent bystander" nations,
including emerging markets that supply commodities to China. Egyptian Finance Minister Mohamed Maait said policy makers in developed
countries should understand that if their actions hurt other countries it would have knock-on effects. "You need me
I am a market for you, I am an opportunity for you," Maait told Reuters
"I don't believe there will be a winner and a loser
Either all are winners or all are losers." Indeed, market ructions have now cascaded through to developed markets with Wall Street seeing a
six session slide until a rebound on Friday, amid fears over the trade war between China and the United States. However, other than having
effective monetary policies, developing markets can do little to cope with the impact of rate hikes and trade battles, said Jacob Frenkel,
chairman of JPMorgan Chase International. "When elephants fight, the grass suffers."