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Amid US slowdown, signs of new world order
(Agencies)
Updated: 2008-06-04 08:30 "What's different this time is that the emerging market economies have been growing so rapidly that they've emerged," says Ed Yardeni, an economic forecaster at Yardeni Research in Great Neck, NY. "They've become very large." Now, these nations are accounting for more than half the world's economic growth in a given year. And, when measured in terms of the domestic purchasing power of their incomes, these countries are also approaching half of global economic output, according to IMF figures. This makes it a different world from just seven years ago, the last time the US was in a recession. Then, America's nosedive brought global GDP growth down to 2.2 percent in 2001. Considering the expectation that GDP should keep pace with population growth, that was in effect a worldwide recession. Oil prices were not a concern then. But growth in developing nations fell sharply to 3.8 percent from 5.9 percent in 2000. This year, by contrast, the IMF forecasts a recession in the US but growth well above 6 percent in developing countries -- down just a percentage point from last year. Recession or not, how the American economy fares depends partly on trends in emerging markets. One issue is cash supply. Historically, emerging economies are importers of capital. Now, "sovereign wealth funds," investment funds controlled by developing nation governments are helping US banks survive mortgage-related losses. More broadly, nearly half of US capital inflows over the past year and a quarter came from China, Brazil, Mexico, and Russia, according to Bank of America. Emerging economies are also influencing monetary policy. The Federal Reserve has been lowering interest rates to stave off a banking crisis. But rising commodity prices mean the Fed has to be ready to fight inflation with higher interest rates. Economists at Merrill Lynch predict that the current global economic cycle hinges on when monetary authorities in creditor nations -- many in the developing world -- clamp down on inflation. Other economists caution against viewing emerging economies as being in the driver's seat. "The US is still the biggest by far," says Jay Bryson of Wachovia Corp in Charlotte, NC. He predicts that inflation pressures will abate as the world feels the cooling effect of the slowdown in US and Europe. Developing nations are also trading more than ever, offsetting the US slowdown. But these trade ties are also controversial. A backlash against trade with developing nations is possible in the aftermath of the US election this fall. It's a thorny political question -- how to deal with policies that may not help every worker or that help some nations more than others. "Before, say, 1985, the United States got the majority of the gains from trade" with other nations, says Cosgrove. Since then, he reckons, "the US has a smaller share of the gains from trade." Trade remains helpful for America and the world, but the danger is that voter psychology is shifting, he says. |