You can do the right thing and still be punished, at least for a while.
When most of the big powers are tightening the reins, emergingmarket economies are going to suffer.
It’s true for the frugal nations as well as the profligate.
In the short term, global factors and broader capital market tides always matter more than national discipline.
The European Central Bank is tapping the brakes, and the Federal Reserve is raising interest rates further and faster than anyone else.
This siphons investors away from emerging markets.
Compounding their pain: The manufacturing-supply chains on which they built their economic models are threatened by the White House.
Emerging markets are rarely masters of their own destiny.
This reality is conveniently overlooked during bouts of emergingmarket mania.
They aren’t powerless, though.
Countries can make decisions that limit the pain when sentiment sours and that position them well for the inevitable rebound.
Alternatively, emerging economies can be cavalier in good times, which aggravates the next downturn for them and sows the seeds for more lasting problems.
Argentina, with fiscal mismanagement and a plea for international aid, would be Exhibit A from recent headlines.
Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan only harmed his nation by putting relatives in key economic jobs and railing against shadowy forces intent on higher rates.
Emerging markets, as a whole, have made great strides since their financial crises in the late 1990s.
They account for 70% of global growth, their citizens are the dominant consumers, and their capital markets dwarf the size they once were, notes Jorge Mariscal at UBS Wealth Management.
Surely enough for Fed Chairman Jerome Powell and ECB President Mario Draghi to take notice.
Yes, but not sufficient for a change in direction by the big guys.
As individual nations, emerging markets (with the possible exception of China) just don’t exert much gravity on the major central banks.
So what’s a responsible nation to do Don’t panic, and keep patient.
The Fed is still increasing rates, but is closer to the end than the beginning.
The ECB is wrapping up its quantitative easing, though a rate increase before the middle of next year is unlikely.
With the global expansion slowing, the ECB may miss its window for an increase altogether.
The Bank of England and the Bank of Canada aren’t powerful enough to make an impact on their own.
That ought to give some succor to Indonesian Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati, who fairly complained last week that her country is doing the right thing, compared with its haphazard and violent approach during the Asian financial crisis, and nonetheless getting burned.
Stock Market
Prudent or not, emerging markets can’t avoid pain
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