The emerging-market slowdown is not the beginning of a bust. But it is a turning-point for the world economy
WHEN a champion sprinter falls short of his best speeds, it
takes a while to determine whether he is temporarily on poor form or has
permanently lost his edge. The same is true with emerging markets, the world
economy’s 21st-century sprinters. After a decade of surging growth, in which
they led a global boom and then helped pull the world economy forwards in the
face of the financial crisis, the emerging giants have slowed sharply.
China will be lucky if it manages to hit its official target
of 7.5% growth in 2013, a far cry from the double-digit rates that the country
had come to expect in the 2000s. Growth in India (around 5%), Brazil and Russia
(around 2.5%) is barely half what it was at the height of the boom.
Collectively, emerging markets may (just) match last year’s pace of 5%. That
sounds fast compared with the sluggish rich world, but it is the slowest
emerging-economy expansion in a decade, barring 2009 when the rich world
slumped.
This marks the end of the dramatic first phase of the
emerging-market era, which saw such economies jump from 38% of world output to
50% (measured at purchasing-power parity, or PPP) over the past decade. Over
the next ten years emerging economies will still rise, but more gradually. The
immediate effect of this deceleration should be manageable. But the longer-term
impact on the world economy will be profound.
Running out of puff
In the past, periods of emerging-market boom have tended to
be followed by busts (which helps explain why so few poor countries have become
rich ones). A determined pessimist can find reasons to fret today, pointing in
particular to the risks of an even more drastic deceleration in China or of a
sudden global monetary tightening. But this time a broad emerging-market bust
looks unlikely.
China is in the midst of a precarious shift from
investment-led growth to a more balanced, consumption-based model. Its
investment surge has prompted plenty of bad debt. But the central government has
the fiscal strength both to absorb losses and to stimulate the economy if
necessary. That is a luxury few emerging economies have ever had. It makes
disaster much less likely. And with rich-world economies still feeble, there is
little chance that monetary conditions will suddenly tighten. Even if they did,
most emerging economies have better defences than ever before, with flexible
exchange rates, large stashes of foreign-exchange reserves and relatively less
debt (much of it in domestic currency).
That’s the good news. The bad news is that the days of
record-breaking speed are over. China’s turbocharged investment and export
model has run out of puff. Because its population is ageing fast, the country
will have fewer workers, and because it is more prosperous, it has less room
for catch-up growth. Ten years ago China’s per person GDP measured at PPP was
8% of America’s; now it is 18%. China will keep on catching up, but at a slower
clip.
That will hold back other emerging giants. Russia’s burst of
speed was propelled by a surge in energy prices driven by Chinese growth.
Brazil sprinted ahead with the help of a boom in commodities and domestic
credit; its current combination of stubborn inflation and slow growth shows
that its underlying economic speed limit is a lot lower than most people
thought. The same is true of India, where near-double-digit annual rises in GDP
led politicians, and many investors, to confuse the potential for rapid
catch-up (a young, poor population) with its inevitability. India’s growth rate
could be pushed up again, but not without radical reforms—and almost certainly
not to the peak pace of the 2000s.
Many laps ahead
The Great Deceleration means that booming emerging economies
will no longer make up for weakness in rich countries. Without a stronger
recovery in America or Japan, or a revival in the euro area, the world economy
is unlikely to grow much faster than today’s lacklustre pace of 3%. Things will
feel rather sluggish.
It will also become increasingly clear how unusual the past
decade was. It was dominated
by the scale of China’s boom, which was peculiarly disruptive not just as a
result of the country’s immense size, but also because of its surge in exports,
thirst for commodities and build-up of foreign-exchange reserves. In future,
more balanced growth from a broader array of countries will cause smaller ripples
around the world. After China and India, the ten next-biggest emerging
economies, from Indonesia to Thailand, have a smaller combined population than
China alone. Growth will be broader and less reliant on the BRICs (as Goldman
Sachs dubbed Brazil, Russia, India and China).
Corporate strategists who assumed that emerging economies
were on a straight line of ultra-quick growth will need to revisit their
spreadsheets; in some years a rejuvenated, shale-gas-fired America may be a
sprightlier bet than some of the BRICs. But the biggest challenge will be for
politicians in the emerging world, whose performance will propel—or
retard—growth. So far China’s seem the most alert and committed to reform.
Vladimir Putin’s Russia, by contrast, is a dozy resource-based kleptocracy
whose customers are shifting to shale gas. India has demography on its side,
but both it and Brazil need to recover their reformist zeal—or disappoint the
rising middle classes who recently took to the streets in Delhi and São Paulo.
There may also be a change in the economic mood music. In
the 1990s “the Washington consensus” preached (sometimes arrogantly) economic
liberalisation and democracy to the emerging world. For the past few years,
with China surging, Wall Street crunched, Washington in gridlock and the euro
zone committing suicide, the old liberal verities have been questioned: state
capitalism and authoritarian modernisation have been in vogue. “The Beijing
consensus” provided an excuse for both autocrats and democrats to abandon liberal
reforms. The need for growth may revive interest in them, and the West may even
recover a little of its self-confidence.
Th e Economist
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