97716 Global Economic Prospects A World Bank Group Flagship Report JUNE 2015 Global Economic Prospects The Global Economy in Transition © 2015 International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank 1818 H Street NW, Washington, DC 20433 Telephone: 202-473-1000; Internet: www.worldbank.org Some rights reserved 1 2 3 4 18 17 16 15 This work is a product of the staff of The World Bank with external contributions. The findings, interpretations, and con- clusions expressed in this work do not necessarily reflect the views of The World Bank, its Board of Executive Directors, or the governments they represent. The World Bank does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included in this work. The boundaries, colors, denominations, and other information shown on any map in this work do not imply any judgment on the part of The World Bank concerning the legal status of any territory or the endorsement or acceptance of such boundaries. Nothing herein shall constitute or be considered to be a limitation upon or waiver of the privileges and immunities of The World Bank, all of which are specifically reserved. Rights and Permissions This work is available under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 IGO license (CC BY 3.0 IGO) http://creativecom- mons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo. Under the Creative Commons Attribution license, you are free to copy, distribute, transmit, and adapt this work, including for commercial purposes, under the following conditions: Attribution—Please cite the work as follows: World Bank Group. 2015. Global Economic Prospects, June 2015: The Global Economy in Transition. Washington, DC: World Bank. doi: 10.1596/978-1-4648-0483-0. License: Creative Commons Attribution CC BY 3.0 IGO Translations—If you create a translation of this work, please add the following disclaimer along with the attribution: This translation was not created by The World Bank and should not be considered an official World Bank translation. The World Bank shall not be liable for any content or error in this translation. Adaptations—If you create an adaptation of this work, please add the following disclaimer along with the attribution: This is an adaptation of an original work by The World Bank. Views and opinions expressed in the adaptation are the sole responsibility of the author or authors of the adaptation and are not endorsed by The World Bank. Third-party content—The World Bank does not necessarily own each component of the content contained within the work. The World Bank therefore does not warrant that the use of any third-party-owned individual component or part contained in the work will not infringe on the rights of those third parties. The risk of claims resulting from such infringe- ment rests solely with you. If you wish to re-use a component of the work, it is your responsibility to determine whether permission is needed for that re-use and to obtain permission from the copyright owner. Examples of components can include, but are not limited to, tables, figures, or images. All queries on rights and licenses should be addressed to the Publishing and Knowledge Division, The World Bank, 1818 H Street NW, Washington, DC 20433, USA; fax: 202-522-2625; e-mail: pubrights@worldbank.org. ISBN (paper): 978-1-4648-0483-0 ISBN (electronic): 978-1-4648-0485-4 DOI: 10.1596/978-1-4648-0483-0 ISSN: 1014-8906 Cover design: Bill Pragluski (Critical Stages) The cutoff date for the data used in this report was May 20, 2015. Contents Foreword . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xiii Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xv Abbreviations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xvii Chapter 1 Global Outlook: The Global Economy in Transition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Summary and Key Messages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Recent Developments and Outlook in Major Economies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Global Trends and Spillovers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Recent Developments and Outlook in Developing Countries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Risks to the Outlook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Policy Challenges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 Boxes 1.1 Negative Interest Rates in Europe: A Glance at Their Causes and Implications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 1.2 Low Oil Prices in Perspective . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 1.3 Recent Developments in Emerging and Developing Country Labor Markets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 Special Feature 1 Hoping for the Best, Preparing for the Worst: Risks around U.S. Rate Liftoff and Policy Options. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65 How Have Growth Prospects and Policies in Advanced Countries Changed since the Taper Tantrum? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66 What Are the Major Risks around the Liftoff? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67 What Are Possible Implications of the Liftoff for Emerging Markets? . . . . . . . . . . . 70 What Are the Major Lessons for Emerging Markets from the Taper Tantrum? . . . . . 72 How Have Growth Prospects and Vulnerabilities in Emerging Markets Changed since the Taper Tantrum? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74 What Policy Options Are Available to Prepare for Risks around Liftoff? . . . . . . . . . . 76 Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78 References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85 Boxes SF1.1 Econometric Analysis of U.S. Yields and Spillovers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79 v VI CONTENTS GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 Special Feature 2 After the Commodities Boom: What Next for Low-Income Countries? . . . . . . . . . 91 A. Implications of the Recent Decline in Commodity Prices for Commodity Exporting, Low-Income Countries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93 B. Recent Developments and Near-Term Outlook in Low-Income Countries. . . . . 102 References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104 Chapter 2 Regional Outlooks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107 East Asia and Pacific . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109 Recent Developments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109 Outlook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112 Risks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113 Policy Challenges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114 Europe and Central Asia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119 Recent Developments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119 Outlook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122 Risks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 124 Policy Challenges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125 Latin America and the Caribbean. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131 Recent Developments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131 Outlook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 134 Risks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135 Policy Challenges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 136 Middle East and North Africa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 141 Recent Developments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 141 Outlook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 143 Risks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 144 Policy Challenges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 145 South Asia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 149 Recent Developments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 149 Outlook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 152 Risks and Policy Challenges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154 Sub-Saharan Africa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 157 Recent Developments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 157 Outlook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159 Risks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 161 Policy Challenges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 162 Boxes 2.1 Linkages between China and Sub-Saharan Africa. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 163 References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 171 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CONTENTS VII Statistical Appendix . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 175 Figures 1.1 Global activity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 1.2 Global trends and policy challenges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 1.3 United States . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 1.4 United Kingdom . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 1.5 Euro Area . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 1.6 Japan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 1.7 China . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 1.8 Implications of the European Central Bank’s quantitative easing for global financial conditions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 B1.1.1 Negative interest rates in Europe: Context . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 B1.1.2 Negative interest rates in Europe: Some consequences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 1.9 Implications of the European Central Bank’s quantitative easing for developing countries . . . . 20 1.10 Implications of launch of monetary tightening in the United States . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 1.11 Developing countries’ capital flows and borrowing costs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 1.12 Oil markets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 B1.2.2 Global growth and inflation around oil price declines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 B1.2.3 Financial market developments around oil price declines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 B1.2.4 The new oil map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 1.13 Oil price volatility and non-oil commodity prices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 1.14 Global trade . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 1.15 Developing and emerging-market growth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 1.16 Terms of trade effect on GDP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 1.17 Developing country currencies. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 1.18 Exchange rates and competitiveness in major emerging economies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 1.19 Inflation in developing countries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 1.20 Private debt in developing countries. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 1.21 Risk of a rough awakening . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 1.22 Emerging market credit ratings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 1.23 Risk of excessive U.S. dollar appreciation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 1.24 Risk of stagnation and deflation in the Euro Area . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 1.25 Risk of a hard landing in China . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 1.26 Monetary policy in developing countries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 1.27 Fiscal pressures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 1.28 Income convergence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 1.29 Structural reforms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48 VIII CONTENTS GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 B1.3.1 Global unemployment rate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 B1.3.2 Unemployment rate in developing and advanced economies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 B1.3.3 Regional unemployment rate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 B1.3.4 Change in employment to population ratio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 B1.3.5 Labor force participation rate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 B1.3.6 Changes in unemployment rate and GDP growth in Great Recession vs. previous recessions in developing economies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 B1.3.7 Estimates of Okun’s Law coefficients for advanced, emerging, and frontier market economies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 B1.3.8 Real GDP growth and change in unemployment rates in developing economies, 2000−14 . . . 52 B1.3.9 Estimated informal employment shares in selected countries, 2011 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 B1.3.10 Global average annual real wage growth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 B1.3.11 Real wage growth in selected developing economies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53 B1.3.12 Enterprise Survey results on key business constraints, 2013 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53 1.30 Fuel subsidies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 SF1.1 Conditions in advanced countries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67 SF1.2 Explaining movements in U.S. bond yields: monetary and real shocks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68 SF1.3 A smooth liftoff in light of past episodes? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69 SF1.4 U.S. bond yields and capital flows during the taper tantrum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70 SF1.5 Market liquidity. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71 SF1.6 Implications of monetary and real shocks on activity and financial markets in emerging markets. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72 SF1.7 Surging U.S. yields and capital inflows to emerging and developing countries . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73 SF1.8 Growth prospects in emerging and developing economies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74 SF1.9 Debt, deficits and inflation in emerging markets: Oil exporters vs. oil importers . . . . . . . . . . . 75 SF1.10 Evolution of vulnerabilities in emerging markets since the taper tantrum. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76 SF1.11 Foreign currency exposure and corporate debt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77 SF2.1 Growth in low-income countries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94 SF2.2 Trends in commodity prices, exploration and discovery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95 SF2.3 Commodity exploration, spending and discoveries in Africa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96 SF2.4 Impact on growth, production, and exports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97 SF2.5 Impact on investment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98 SF2.6 Employment and poverty. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99 SF2.7 Public sector receipts and spending . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99 SF2.8 Commodity dependence: An Achilles heel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100 SF2.9 Drivers of growth in low-income countries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102 SF2.10 Growth prospects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103 SF2.11 Vulnerabilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CONTENTS IX 2.1 East Asia and Pacific Regional growth and performance in China . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110 2.2 Key exports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111 2.3 Inflation and real exchange rates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112 2.4 Debt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113 2.5 Policy issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114 2.6 Russian Federation: Growth and oil price . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120 2.7 Selected economies, EMBI spreads . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120 2.8 Ukraine: Recent developments. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121 2.9 Selected economies: Exports by selected destinations (average 2011–14) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121 2.10 Selected economies: Remittances inflows, 2014 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122 2.11 Selected economies: Remittances inflows from Russia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122 2.12 Selected economies: Central bank policy rates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122 2.13 Selected economies: Inflation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123 2.14 Selected economies: Inflation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123 2.15 EU-Central and Southeastern Europe: Drivers of growth. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123 2.16 Selected economies: Real effective exchange rates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125 2.17 Foreign currency exposure and foreign currency vulnerability indicators, 2013 . . . . . . . . . . . 126 2.18 Unemployment, 2013 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127 2.19 Non-performing loans (NPL) ratios . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127 2.20 Net foreign liabilities, 2014 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 128 2.21 Regional GDP growth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131 2.22 Prices of key commodity exports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 132 2.23 Export shares of key commodity exports, 2013 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 132 2.24 Average annual inflation—headline and core . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133 2.25 Monthly gross capital flows to LAC region . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133 2.26a Exchange rate against U.S. dollar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 134 2.26b Real effective exchange rates, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 134 2.27 Central bank policy rates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 134 2.28 Regional medium-term growth outlook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135 2.29 Share of regional merchandise exports to the U.S., EU, and China, 2013 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135 2.30 FDI into selected countries by source country, 2012 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135 2.31 Consensus forecasts six years ahead, 2009–15 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 136 2.32 Federal Reserve Board Vulnerability Index, 2014 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 136 2.33 Overall fiscal balance as a share of GDP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137 2.34 Share oil/gas revenue in total government budget, 2013 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137 2.35 Global rankings on quality and extensiveness of infrastructure, 2014–15 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 138 2.36 Oil production. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 142 X CONTENTS GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 2.37 Oil revenues, 2014. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 142 2.38 Nominal effective exchange rates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 143 2.39 Inflation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 143 2.40 Share of exports to GCC and Euro Area countries, 2013 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 145 2.41 Public debt and deficits, 2014 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 145 2.42 Unemployment rate and employment growth, 2013 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 146 2.43 Business climate: distance to frontier . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 146 2.44 Growth in tourism arrivals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 146 2.45 India: Real GDP growth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 149 2.46 India: Industrial production and credit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 150 2.47 Export growth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 150 2.48 Goods trade balance. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 151 2.49 Exchange rates against the U.S. dollar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 151 2.50 Nominal effective exchange rates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 151 2.51 Inflation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 152 2.52 Government finances . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 152 2.53 Investment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154 2.54 India: Impaired loans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155 2.55 Non-performing loans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155 2.56 Credit growth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155 2.57 Fiscal vulnerability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 157 2.58 Commodity prices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 158 2.59 Nigerian naira . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 158 2.60 Exchange rates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159 2.61 Inflation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159 2.62 Real effective exchange rates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159 2.63 Sovereign bond spreads . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 160 2.64 Eurobond issuance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 160 2.65 GDP growth outlook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 160 B2.1.1 Growth in Sub-Saharan Africa’s trade flows, by partner, 2000–13 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 163 B2.1.2 Sub-Saharan Africa’s trade flows with China, 2013 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 164 B2.1.3 Sub-Saharan Africa’s commodity exports to major trading partners, 2013 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 164 B2.1.4 Cumulative Chinese foreign direct investment in Sub-Saharan Africa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 164 B2.1.5 Chinese and U.S. foreign direct investment in Africa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 165 B2.1.6 Chinese foreign direct investment in Africa, by sector, 2012 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 165 B2.1.7 SSA manufacturing exports to China . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 165 B2.1.8 Distribution of aid and development financing flows from China . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 165 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CONTENTS XI B2.1.9 Chinese development assistance and bilateral aid from OECD countries to Sub-Saharan Africa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 166 B2.1.10 Development assistance to Sub-Saharan Africa, 2013. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 166 B2.1.11 Bilateral aid from OECD countries to Sub-Saharan Africa, by sector, 2013 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 167 B2.1.12 Contributions to growth in gross domestic product in Sub-Saharan Africa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 167 B2.1.13 Effect of slower growth in China on South Africa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 168 Tables 1.1 The global outlook in summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 SF1.1 Studies on the effects of sudden stops . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81 SF1.2 Studies on the implications of the taper tantrum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83 SF2.1 Low-income country growth forecasts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104 2.1 East Asia and Pacific forecast summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 117 2.2 East Asia and Pacific country forecasts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 117 2.3 Europe and Central Asia forecast summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 129 2.4 Europe and Central Asia country forecasts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130 2.5 Latin America and the Caribbean forecast summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 139 2.6 Latin America and the Caribbean country forecasts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 140 2.7 Middle East and North Africa forecast summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 147 2.8 Middle East and North Africa economy forecasts. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 148 2.9 South Asia forecast summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 156 2.10 South Asia country forecasts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 156 2.11 Sub-Saharan Africa forecast summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 169 2.12 Sub-Saharan Africa country forecasts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 170 A.1 GDP growth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 177 Foreword Changes, which in the long-run steady-state, may adjust to the combination of these two shocks. be good for the global economy, can cause strain Although resilient thus far, low-income countries and even a slowdown in the short run brought about could weaken over the medium term as investment by the challenges of transition. This is the message in the resource sector slows. The benefits from low that underlies much of the June issue of the World oil prices to growth in oil importers have thus far Bank Group’s Global Economic Prospects. been slow to materialize, but some oil importers In addition to charting, as usual, our detailed out- have seen their vulnerabilities decline as inflation look for the global economy and for each of the has slowed and fiscal or current account deficits world’s developing regions, this report goes on to have narrowed, boosting their growth potential. analyze two big challenges, associated with two The global economy is expected to grow 2.8 percent transitions, currently confronting policy makers the in 2015, slightly less than forecast in January, before world over and especially in emerging economies strengthening moderately to 3.2 percent in 2016– and low-income countries: the impact of the loom- 17. Developing country growth, buffeted by falling ing monetary tightening cycle in the United States, commodity prices, the stronger dollar, and tightening and the repercussions of low commodity prices. financial conditions, has been revised downward to Global growth has yet again disappointed, especially 4.4 percent in 2015 but is expected to pick up but not surprisingly in oil exporters and some large momentum and reach 5.3 percent in 2016–17. developing countries. The reason for our short-term Risks to the outlook remain tilted to the downside, forecast being somewhat downbeat is the expected as new challenges have emerged even as preexisting strain of the transitions, even though the trends ones have become more balanced. In particular, bode well for the medium and long terms. tighter global financial conditions could combine Under the baseline scenario, the first U.S. monetary with deteriorating growth prospects, especially in policy rate increase since the global financial crisis commodity-exporting countries, to raise the possi- will dampen capital flows to developing countries bility of greater financial stress. The strengthening modestly and gradually and is not expected to cause dollar could also slow the U.S. economy more than any major turbulence. This is not to deny that the expected earlier, leading to some global strain. first rate increase will likely cause an increase in global In the current environment, there will be a premium borrowing cost, and will be accompanied by greater on structural reforms in developing countries to investor discrimination between countries based on ensure a smooth adjustment to low commodity their vulnerabilities and structural strengths. prices and gradually tightening financial conditions. Commodity-exporting developing countries may be Ambitious reform agendas will signal to investors vulnerable to shifting investor sentiment since that authorities are serious about promoting long- sharply lower oil prices from a year ago have already term growth prospects. Lower commodity prices begun to reduce activity in most of them. Under a underscore the importance of diversification in stress scenario, some countries might struggle to commodity-dependent economies. Kaushik Basu Chief Economist and Senior Vice President The World Bank xiii Acknowledgments This World Bank Group Flagship Report is a product of the Prospects Group in the Development Economics Vice Presidency. The project was managed by Ayhan Kose and Franziska Ohnsorge, under the general guidance of Kaushik Basu. Several people contributed substantively to the report. Chaudhury, Guang Zhe Chen, Marcel Chistruga, Ajai Chapter 1 (Global Outlook) was prepared by a team led by Chopra, Karl Kendrick Tiu Chua, Punam Chuhan-Pole, Franziska Ohnsorge and Marc Stocker and included Kevin Clinton, Tito Cordella, Somneuk Davading, Simon Tehmina Khan and Dana Vorisek. Box 1.1 (Negative Davies, Agim Demukaj, Shantayanan Devarajan, Alain W. Rates) was prepared by Carlos Arteta and Marc Stocker D'Hoore, Tatiana Didier, Viet Dinh, Makhtar Diop, Ndi- with contributions from Eung Ju Kim and Bryce Quillin. ame Diop, Doerte Doemeland, Bakyt Dubashov, Olga Box 1.2 (Oil Markets) was prepared by John Baffes and Emelyanova, Marianne Fay, Erik Feyen, Cornelius Fleis- Marc Stocker. Box 1.3 (Labor Markets) was prepared by chhaker, Frederico Gil Sander, Indermit S. Gill, Marcelo Bryce Quillin. The Special Feature 1 was prepared by team Giugale, Chorching Goh, Anastasia Golovach, Gloria M. led by Carlos Arteta, Ayhan Kose, Franziska Ohnsorge, Grandolini, Poonam Gupta, Gohar Gyulumyah, Kiryl and Marc Stocker and included Derek Chen, Raju Haiduk, Birgit Hansl, Zahid Hasnain, Marco Hernan¬dez, Huidrom, Ergys Islamaj, Eung Ju Kim and Tianli Zhao. Yumeka Hirano, Sandra Hlivnjak, Bert Hofman, Vivian Y. Research assistance was provided by Jiayi Zhang and Trang N. Hon, Elena Ianchovichina, Stella Illieva, Ivailo Izvorski, Nguyen. The Special Feature 2 was prepared by Tehmina Evans Jadotte, Saroj Kumar Jha, Markus Kitzmuller, Fritzi Khan (Section A) and Gerard Kambou (Section B). Chap- Koehler-Geib, Christos Kostopoulos, Auguste Tano ter 2 (Regional Outlooks) was coordinated by Franziska Kouame, Ahmed Kouchouk, Aurelien Kruse, Jean Pierre Ohnsorge. The authors were Ekaterine Vashakmadze (East Lacombe, Melanie Laloum, Daniel Lederman, Taehyun Asia and Pacific), Allen Dennis and Ekaterine Vashak- Lee, Tenzin Lhaden, Joseph Louie C. Limkin, John Lit- madze with contributions from Jungjin Lee (Europe and wack, Julio Ricardo Loayza, Rohan Longmore, Mark R. Central Asia), Derek Chen (Latin America and the Carib- Lundell, Sodeth Ly, Dorsati Madani, Sanja Madzarevic-Su- bean), Damir Cosic (Middle East and North Africa), jster, William F. Maloney, Paul Mariano, Miguel Eduardo Tehmina Khan (South Asia), and Gerard Kambou (Sub- Martin, Khalid El Massanoui, Ernesto May, Elitza Mileva, Saharan Africa). Ajai Chopra, Kevin Clinton, and David Saiyed Shabih Ali Mohib, Lilli Mottaghi, Maria Bru Munoz, Robinson provided consultancy support. Editorial review Zafer Mustafaoglu, Evgenij Najdov, Gaurav Nayyar, Anto- was provided by Mark Felsenthal and Graeme Littler. nio Nucifora, Rei Odawara, Samuel K.E. Otoo, Lucy Pan, John Baffes, Damir Cosic, and Shane Streifel provided inputs John Panzer, Catalin Pauna, Samuel Jaime Pienknagura, on commodity markets, and Eung Ju Kim and Marc Stocker Miria A. Pigato, Ruslan Piontkivsky, Catriona Mary Purf- on financial markets. Modeling and data work were produced ield, Rong Qian, Mahwish Qureshi, Mohammad Zia M. by Thi Thanh Thanh Bui, Xinghao Gong, Jungjin Lee, Trang Qureshi, Martin Rama, Luc Razafimandimby, Elliot Joseph Thi Thuy Nguyen, Kiwako Sakamoto, and Jiayi Zhang. Riordan, David Robinson, David Rosenblatt, Michele Ruta, Pablo Saavedra, Seynabou Sakho, Ilyas Sarsenov, Cristina The online publication was produced by a team including Savescu, Philip Schellekens, Sergio Schmukler, Lazar Ses- Graeme Littler, Praveen Penmetsa, Katherine Rollins, with tovic, Smriti Seth, Sudhir Shetty, Saurabh Shome, Peter technical support from Marjorie Patricia Bennington, Siegenthaler, Alex Sienaert, Karlis Smits, Nikola Spatafora, Ugendran Machakkalai and Gayathri Natrajan. Shane Streifel, Ashley Taylor, Mark Roland Thomas, Theo Indira Chand, Merrell Tuck-Primdahl, and Phil Hay David Thomas, Hans Timmer, Augusto de la Torre, Sergei managed media relations and the dissemination. Maria Ulatov, Ekaterina Ushakova, Robert Utz, Rogier J. E. Van Hazel Macadangdang, Keisha Lynn McGee, Katherine Den Brink, Ralph Van Doorn, Sona Varma, Aristomene Va- Rollins, and Ann-Marie Wildman produced the hard roudakis, Julio Velasco, Mathew Verghis, Gallina Andron- copy publication, in collaboration with Aziz Gökdemir ova Vincelette, Adrien Vogt-Schillb, Dana Vorisek, Ekat- and Patricia Katayama. erina Vostroknutova, Kei-Mu Yi, Ayberk Yilmaz, Hakan Yilmazkuday, Puri Shen Yoong, Albert Zeufack, Luan Zhao, Several reviewers offered extensive advice and comments. May Thet Zin, and Johannes Zutt. Regional projections and These included: Enrique Aldaz-Carroll, Marina Bakanova, write-ups were produced in coordination with country Kevin Barnes, Kaushik Basu, Hans Anand Beck, Kirida teams, country directors, and the offices of the regional chief Bhaopichitr, Gregor Binkert, Genevieve Boyreau, Cesar economists. Calderon, Jose Lopez Calix, Vandana Chandra, Shubham xv Abbreviations ASEAN Association of Southeast Asian Nations bbl barrel CPI Consumer Price Index EAP East Asia and Pacific ECA Europe and Central Asia ECB European Central Bank EITI Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative EM emerging market EMBI Emerging Markets Bond Index FDI foreign direct investment FOMC Federal Open Market Committee FRB Federal Reserve Board FY fiscal year GCC Gulf Cooperation Council GDP gross domestic product CDS credit default swap GEP Global Economic Prospects GST Goods and Service Tax IMF International Monetary Fund LAC Latin America and the Caribbean LIC low-income country MENA Middle East and North Africa NPL nonperforming loan OECD Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development OPEC Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries RHS right-hand side (in figures) SAR South Asia SSA Sub-Saharan Africa VAR vector auto regression VAT value added tax WDI World Development Indicators WEO World Economic Outlook xvii CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL OUTLOOK The Global Economy in Transition GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 3 Summary and Key Messages Global growth is expected to be 2.8 percent in 2015, lower than anticipated in January. Growth is expected to pick up to 3.2 percent in 2016–17, broadly in line with previous forecasts. Developing economies are facing two transi- tions. First, the widely expected tightening of monetary conditions in the United States, along with monetary expan- sion by other major central banks, has contributed to broad-based appreciation in the U.S. dollar and is exerting downward pressure on capital flows to developing countries. Many developing-country currencies have weakened against the U.S. dollar, particularly those of countries with weak growth prospects or elevated vulnerabilities. In some countries, this trend has raised concerns about balance sheet exposures in the presence of sizeable dollar-denominated liabilities. Currency depreciations have been significantly less in trade-weighted terms, partly due to a weakening euro and yen, thus offering only modest prospects for competitiveness gains to boost exports. Second, despite some pickup in the first quarter of 2015, lower oil prices are having an increasingly pronounced impact. In oil-importing countries, the benefits to activity have so far been limited, although they are helping to reduce vulnerabilities. In oil-exporting countries, lower prices are sharply reducing activity and increasing fiscal, exchange rate, or inflation- ary pressures. Risks remain tilted to the downside, with some pre-existing risks receding but new ones emerging. Global growth hit a soft patch at the start of the Shrinking current account surpluses among oil- year, but remains broadly on track to reach about exporting countries have narrowed global current 2.8 percent in 2015, somewhat below earlier fore- account imbalances. In contrast, commodity- casts, with a modest pickup in 2016–17 (Table importing countries have benefited from declining 1). However, important shifts are emerging. The vulnerabilities, as current account and fiscal bal- recovery in high-income countries is expected to ances have strengthened and inflation has fallen. gather momentum, while a broad-based slowdown Offset by country-specific headwinds, low oil prices appears to be underway in developing countries have not yet been fully reflected in stronger activity this year (Figure 1.1). Looking forward, global ac- in oil-importing countries. Compared with 2014, tivity should be supported by continued low com- growth in developing countries is expected to slow modity prices and generally still-benign financing to 4.4 percent in 2015, 0.4 percentage point less conditions, notwithstanding the expected modest than anticipated in January, before rising to 5.3 per- tightening in U.S. monetary policy. Among major cent in 2016–17. Growth prospects for low-income economies, growth in the Euro Area and Japan is countries (LICs) remain robust, above 6 percent picking up, and the United States should continue in 2015–17. Among several commodity exporters, to expand at a robust pace despite recent setbacks, the negative impact of low commodity prices is ex- while the slowdown in China is proceeding as an- pected to be offset by strong public investment. ticipated in January. High-income countries are ex- In a second transition, developing countries will pected to grow by 2 percent in 2015 and 2.3 percent be at heightened risk of depreciation amid a grad- in 2016–17. ual tightening of financial conditions, albeit from Developing countries are facing two transitions, as very accommodative levels, and moderating capital they adjust to prospects of low commodity prices flows. The announcement of quantitative easing over the medium-term and tighter financial condi- by the European Central Bank (ECB) in January, tions ahead. Oil prices appear to have found some continued monetary easing in Japan, and the pros- support, upon evidence of a sharp decrease in un- pect of an interest rate increase in the United States conventional oil production capacity in the United have been associated with a broad-based apprecia- States, but are likely to remain low. Other commod- tion of the U.S. dollar and some financial market ity prices continue to be soft, on weak demand as volatility (Figure 1.2). Currency depreciations have well as ample supplies. As a result, in commodity- been largest in developing countries with deterio- exporting countries, especially those with limited rating growth prospects—most notably commod- reserve and fiscal buffers, activity has slowed more ity exporters—and elevated external vulnerabilities. than anticipated, currencies have weakened, and Currency depreciations against the U.S. dollar have domestic and external vulnerabilities have grown. raised concerns about U.S. dollar exposures in sov- 4 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 TABLE 1.1  The global outlook summary 2012 2013 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f 2015f 2016f 2017f (percent point change from (percent change from previous year, except interest rates) January 2015 GEP) REAL GDP1 World 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.8 3.3 3.2 -0.2 0.0 0.0 High income 1.4 1.4 1.8 2.0 2.4 2.2 -0.2 0.0 0.0 United States 2.3 2.2 2.4 2.7 2.8 2.4 -0.5 -0.2 0.0 Euro Area -0.7 -0.4 0.9 1.5 1.8 1.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 Japan 1.7 1.6 0.0 1.1 1.7 1.2 -0.1 0.1 0.0 United Kingdom 0.7 1.7 2.8 2.6 2.6 2.2 -0.3 0.0 0.0 Russia 3.4 1.3 0.6 -2.7 0.7 2.5 0.2 0.6 1.4 Developing countries 4.9 5.1 4.6 4.4 5.2 5.4 -0.4 -0.1 0.0 East Asia and Pacific 7.4 7.1 6.9 6.7 6.7 6.6 0.0 0.0 -0.1 China 7.7 7.7 7.4 7.1 7.0 6.9 0.0 0.0 0.0 Indonesia 6.0 5.6 5.0 4.7 5.5 5.5 -0.5 0.0 0.0 Thailand 7.3 2.8 0.9 3.5 4.0 4.0 0.0 0.0 -0.5 Europe and Central Asia 1.9 3.7 2.4 1.8 3.4 3.6 -1.2 -0.2 -0.4 Kazakhstan 5.0 6.0 4.3 1.7 2.9 4.1 -0.1 -0.3 -0.6 Turkey 2.1 4.2 2.9 3.0 3.9 3.7 -0.5 0.2 -0.2 Romania 0.6 3.5 2.9 3.0 3.2 3.5 0.1 0.0 -0.4 Latin America and the Caribbean 2.9 2.7 0.9 0.4 2.0 2.8 -1.3 -0.9 -0.5 Brazil 1.8 2.7 0.1 -1.3 1.1 2.0 -2.3 -1.4 -0.7 Mexico 4.0 1.4 2.1 2.6 3.2 3.5 -0.7 -0.6 -0.3 Argentina 0.8 2.9 0.5 1.1 1.8 3.0 1.4 0.2 -0.1 Middle East and North Africa 1.3 0.5 2.2 2.2 3.7 3.8 -0.3 0.7 0.3 Egypt2 2.2 2.1 2.2 4.2 4.5 4.8 0.7 0.7 0.8 Iran -6.6 -1.9 3.7 1.0 2.0 2.0 0.1 1.0 -0.2 Algeria 3.3 2.8 4.1 2.6 3.9 4.0 -0.7 0.4 0.5 South Asia 5.4 6.3 6.9 7.1 7.3 7.5 1.0 0.7 0.7 India2 5.1 6.9 7.3 7.5 7.9 8.0 1.1 0.9 1.0 Pakistan2 3 3.5 4.4 5.4 6.0 3.7 4.5 1.4 -1.1 -0.4 Bangladesh2 6.0 6.1 5.6 6.3 6.7 6.7 0.1 0.2 -0.3 Sub-Saharan Africa 4.1 4.2 4.6 4.2 4.6 5.0 -0.4 -0.3 -0.1 South Africa 2.5 1.9 1.5 2.0 2.1 2.4 -0.2 -0.4 -0.3 Nigeria 4.3 5.4 6.2 4.5 5.0 5.5 -1.0 -0.8 -0.7 Angola 8.4 6.8 4.4 4.5 3.9 5.1 -0.8 -1.1 -0.1 MEMORANDUM ITEMS Real GDP World (2010 PPP weights) 3.1 3.3 3.4 3.4 3.9 4.0 -0.2 -0.1 0.0 OECD 1.2 1.3 1.7 2.1 2.4 2.1 -0.2 0.0 0.0 Non-OECD 3.8 2.6 2.2 0.9 2.4 3.2 0.0 0.0 0.3 Developing countries excluding BRICS 3.5 4.3 3.9 4.3 4.6 4.6 -0.7 -0.3 -0.5 BRICS 5.4 5.4 5.0 4.7 5.5 5.6 -0.4 0.0 0.0 Low-income countries 6.5 6.2 6.2 6.2 6.6 6.6 0.1 0.2 0.1 World trade volume4 3.1 3.3 3.6 4.4 4.9 4.9 -0.1 0.1 0.1 Oil price5 1.0 -0.9 -7.5 -39.7 9.6 5.6 -7.8 4.7 0.9 Non-oil commodity price index -8.6 -7.2 -4.6 -11.0 1.2 1.3 -9.9 1.0 1.0 Manufactures unit export value6 -1.2 -1.4 -0.2 -0.2 1.9 1.7 0.0 0.0 0.0 6–month U.S. LIBOR interest rate (percent)7 0.7 0.4 0.3 0.4 … … … … … 6–month Euro LIBOR interest rate (percent)7 0.8 0.3 0.3 0.1 … … … … … International capital flows to developing countries (% of GDP)8 Developing countries 5.0 5.9 5.4 5.1 5.0 4.8 -0.4 -0.3 … East Asia and Pacific 4.6 6.4 5.7 5.1 4.9 4.6 -0.8 -0.6 … Europe and Central Asia 8.0 7.5 5.0 5.0 5.8 6.5 -1.0 -0.4 … Latin America and the Caribbean 5.4 5.9 5.9 5.4 5.5 5.2 -0.5 -0.2 … Middle East and North Africa 1.9 2.5 2.1 2.2 2.1 2.2 0.4 0.2 … South Asia 5.7 4.5 5.8 5.8 5.6 5.5 0.5 0.3 … Sub–Saharan Africa 5.4 5.2 4.3 4.2 4.0 3.9 -0.5 -0.8 … Source: World Bank. Notes: PPP = purchasing power parity; e = estimate; f = forecast. World Bank forecasts are frequently updated based on new information and changing (global) circumstances. Consequently, projections presented here may differ from those contained in other Bank documents, even if basic assessments of countries’ prospects do not differ at any given moment in time. 1. Aggregate growth rates calculated using constant 2010 U.S. dollars GDP weights. 2. In keeping with national practice, data for Bangladesh, Egypt, India, and Pakistan are reported on a fiscal year basis in table 1.1. Aggregates that depend on these countries are calculated using data compiled on a calendar year basis. 2014 data for Bangladesh show growth in 2014-15. 3. GDP data for Pakistan are based on market prices. 4. World trade volume for goods and non-factor services. 5. Simple average of Dubai, Brent, and West Texas Intermediate. 6. Unit value index of manufactured exports from major economies, expressed in U.S. dollars. 7. The 2015f rates are the average of daily interest rates up to latest available data. 8. Balance of payments data for net capital inflows of foreign direct investment, portfolio investment, and other investment (BPM6). GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 5 ereign and corporate balance sheets in some coun- FIGURE 1.1  Global activity tries, especially those with rapid post-crisis credit The global economy is growing somewhat more slowly than expected, with disap- growth. Since trade exposures tend to be diversified, pointments in developing countries, especially in oil exporters and Brazil. Forecasts depreciations have been considerably more modest, have been revised upwards in the Euro Area and India, but downwards in the United States, Brazil and oil-exporting countries. As a result, growth in the BRICS is increas- if not negligible, in trade-weighted terms for most ingly diverging. developing countries and may not deliver significant A. Growth forecasts  igh-income countries: Contribution to B. H competitiveness gains. With the gradual tightening global growth in U.S. monetary policy likely to start later in 2015, Percent Percent World capital flows are expected to ease and overall finan- 10 High-income countries 100 Developing countries 90 cial conditions for developing countries to tighten 8 80 70 modestly. 6 60 50 percent threshold 4 50 The transitions to lower commodity prices and 2 40 weaker currencies are having diverging inflation- 0 30 20 ary consequences. In oil-importing countries and -2 10 -4 oil-exporting countries with fixed exchange rates, 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 2017 0 1980s 1990s 2000-08 2011-14 2015-17 headline inflation has generally slowed on falling  ontribution to developing C. C  merging and developing D. E energy and transport prices, although core inflation countries’ growth revisions countries: Growth has remained broadly stable (Figure 1.2). This dis- Percent Percent inflationary effect will be transitory as commodity 0.4 Oil exporters India Oil importers Brazil 10 8 2013 2014 2015 2016 prices settle around lower equilibrium levels. It will 0.2 Developing countries 6 dissipate in 2016 unless lower inflation expectations 0 4 2 become entrenched after several months of negative -0.2 0 -2 or below-target inflation. Falling inflation expec- -0.4 -4 tations would cause challenges in countries where Developing China Brazil India Federation Mexico South Africa countries Russian -0.6 inflation is already very low, especially where this 2015 2016 would heighten the risk of deflation. In contrast, in many oil-exporting countries with flexible exchange  anufacturing PMI: High-income E. M  anufacturing PMI: Emerging and F. M countries developing countries rates, the pass-through of exchange rate deprecia- Index, +50: Expansion Index, +50: Expansion tion has lifted inflation. 58 58 Low oil prices, set against the prospect of gradually 56 56 tightening global financial conditions, raises diverg- 54 54 ing policy challenges and opportunities. In many 52 52 oil-importing countries, lower inflation and shrink- 50 50 ing fiscal and external vulnerabilities have created space for central banks to cut rates to support weak 48 48 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 activity. In countries with large fuel subsidies and low energy taxation, lower oil prices also present Sources: Haver Analytics; World Bank. A. Shaded areas indicate forecasts. an opportunity for subsidy and tax reform: the fis- C. Oil importers exclude Brazil, China, and India. E. F. The red line shows the trend. The latest observation is May 2015. PMI = Purchasing Managers’ Index. cal windfall can be used to re-build buffers against future cyclical downturns, or to expand spending the growth slowdown underway is a reminder of the on infrastructure investment and poverty-reducing need for structural reforms, including to promote activities. In oil-exporting countries, in contrast, diversification beyond commodity exports. depreciation pressures and rising inflation have nar- rowed central banks’ room for maneuver. Several Low oil prices should generally benefit the poor, countries, faced with a policy dilemma, have raised since more than 70 percent of the world’s poor live policy rates, despite slowing growth, to defend ex- in oil-importing countries. In general, as food prices change rates or reduce the risks of financial instabil- respond to falling energy input costs, the majority ity. In some cases, higher rates have coincided with of poor households in low-income countries should procyclical fiscal tightening as commodity-related eventually enjoy rising real incomes since they tend revenues have fallen. In most developing countries, to be net food buyers. However, a number of oil 6 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 1.2  Global trends and policy challenges up. The beneficial effects of lower commodity prices Diverging monetary policy in major high-income countries has contributed to a broad- on activity may yet materialize more strongly than based dollar appreciation. Oil prices appear to have found a floor as unconventional currently expected. However, new risks have arisen. supplies have begun to adjust, but are expected to remain low and have helped reduce inflation pressures and current acount imbalances. Depreciations and low commodity The likelihood of disruptive exchange rate adjust- prices present monetary and fiscal policy challenges. ments in developing countries may have increased, as market expectations have continued to differ  .S. dollar and euro: Broad trade- A. U B. Oil prices and U.S. rig counts weighted currency indices from those of U.S. Federal Reserve policy makers. US$ per barrel Count In addition, U.S. growth may turn out to be more Index, Jan 2, 2013 = 100 120 U.S.$ Euro 120 1,800 fragile than anticipated and slower than expected as 115 100 1,600 a result of the broad-based dollar appreciation. 110 1,400 80 105 1,200 60 Recent Developments and 100 Brent 1,000 WTI 95 40 U.S. oil rig count (RHS) 800 90 20 600 Outlook in Major Economies Jan-13 Sep-13 Sep-14 May-13 Jan-14 May-14 Jan-15 May-15 Jul-14 Sep-14 Jan-14 May-14 Nov-14 Jan-15 Mar-15 May-15 Mar-14 Divergences across major economies will narrow in C. Inflation, median D. Global imbalances 2015-16 as growth plateaus in the United States and Year-on-year, percent Percent of world GDP strengthens in the Euro Area and Japan. Lower oil 8 High-income countries 7 Developing countries 6 prices will support consumer spending and hold infla- 6 5 tion at record lows in the short term, but these effects 5 4 4 will wane by 2016. Activity in China will continue 3 2 3 to decelerate modestly in line with expectations, with 1 2 the slowdown buffered by scaled-up monetary and fis- 0 1 cal accommodation. Sep-10 Sep-11 Sep-12 Sep-13 Sep-14 Jan-10 May-10 Jan-11 May-11 Jan-12 May-12 Jan-13 May-13 Jan-14 May-14 Jan-15 0 1983 1991 1999 2007 2015 High-income countries are expected to grow at 2.0 percent in 2015 (compared with 1.8 percent E. M  onetary policy decisions, F.  General government debt and in 2014) and 2.3 percent, on average, in 2016–17. developing countries primary balance, developing countries The expected growth pickup reflects the recovery Number of policy rate changes Percent of GDP Percent of GDP in the Euro Area, continued robust activity in the 40 35 Hikes Cuts 100 Government debt Government primary 12 United States, and increased traction from Japan’s balance (RHS) 30 80 8 monetary, fiscal, and structural policy efforts. 25 60 20 4 In the United States, activity stalled at the start of 15 40 10 20 0 the year, partly as a result of another cold winter, 5 0 -4 disruptions to port activity, sharp cutbacks in capital 0 expenditures in the oil and gas industry and residual 2007 2014 2007 2014 2007 2014 2007 2014 Oil Ex. Oil Im. Oil Ex. Oil Im. Oil Ex. Oil Im. 14-Q3 14-Q4 15-Q1 Oil Ex. Oil Im. Oil Ex. Oil Im. calendar effects. These factors are expected to dissi- pate, resulting in a rebound in activity later in 2015, Sources: World Bank; Bloomberg; Baker Hughes; International Monetary Fund. but a strong U.S. dollar will continue to weigh on A. The latest observation is June 05, 2015. B. The latest observation is May 22, 2015. exports. For example, the almost 15 percent dollar C. The latest observation is March 2015. Data for 55 high-income countries (data for 45 available in March 2015) and 120 developing countries (data for 89 available in March 2015). appreciation in trade-weighted terms between mid- D. Defined as the sum of absolute current account positions for 120 countries as a percent of global GDP. 2014 and March 2015 has been estimated to reduce E. “Oil Ex.” stands for oil-exporting countries; “Oil Im.” stands for oil-importing countries. F. Bar illustrates interquartile range. Dot shows median growth by as much as ¾ percentage point this year (Laforte and Roberts 2014). Driven predominantly by private consumption, growth should strengthen exporting countries account for a significant pro- modestly to 2.7 percent in 2015 and further to 2.8 portion of the poor population and their livelihoods percent in 2016, before slowing towards potential may come under pressure as growth slows. growth in 2017 (Figure 1.3). The unemployment Global risks to growth remain tilted to the down- rate is expected to fall to 5.2 percent by end-2015, side. Deflation risks in the Euro Area remain but below the level at the start of the previous monetary have receded as inflation expectations have picked tightening cycle in 2004 and close to estimates of GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 7 its structural level. The labor force participation rate FIGURE 1.3  United States is predicted to remain broadly unchanged at cur- As a result of sustained job creation, the unemployment rate is approaching structural rent low levels, as a return of discouraged workers levels and inflation is expected to move closer to the Federal Reserve’s target in is offset by the ongoing retirement of the sizeable 2016. This, together with broadly neutral fiscal policy and healing household balance sheets, should support above-potential growth in 2015-16. baby-boomer cohort. Sharply lower oil prices are supporting household purchasing power (especially A. Growth B. Inflation in lower-income households). While household sav- Percent Percent 4 4 ing rates initially increased, real income gains from GDP growth Potential growth Inflation Inflation target lower energy bills are expected to continue lifting 3 3 consumption in the remainder of 2015. This will 2 2 help mitigate the cuts in capital expenditures in the energy sector that will dampen private sector invest- 1 1 ment in 2015. 0 0 Overall, policy in the United States is expected to 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 remain accommodative. The fiscal stance should be broadly neutral, although unresolved discussions C. Distance to U.S. Fed policy targets D. Job creation and growth about legal caps on government borrowing and tax Distance to dual policy target 12-month cumulative change, Year-over-year and entitlement reform are potential disruptions. Percentage point 5 millions 8 percent change 6 As the economy closes in towards the employment 4 Distance to target 6 4 4 and inflation objectives of the Federal Reserve’s dual 3 Expected in 15Q4 2 2 mandate later in 2015, a very gradual monetary 2 0 0 tightening cycle is expected to begin. Long-term in- -2 Non-Farm Payrolls -2 1 -4 terest rates, however, would remain low. Falling oil -6 Latest observation -4 0 Real GDP growth (RHS) prices and a strengthening U.S. dollar have pushed -8 -6 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 1985 1991 1997 2003 2009 2015 headline inflation temporarily below zero in the first quarter of 2015. Core inflation is projected to stay below the Fed’s 2 percent target until the end of the E. Government debt and deficit F. Household and corporate debt year, but gradually increase towards it during 2016. Percent of GDP Debt Percent of GDP Percent of GDP Household Debt 110 0 The current account deficit is expected to widen 100 Deficit (RHS) -2 110 Corporate Debt 100 modestly as the real dollar appreciation increasingly 90 -4 90 -6 encourages imports and discourages exports. 80 -8 80 70 -10 The recovery in the United Kingdom remains on 60 -12 70 60 track despite mixed data in the first quarter, including 50 -14 50 40 -16 indications of weak construction and manufacturing Jan-09 Jun-09 Apr-10 Sep-10 Feb-11 Jul-11 May-12 Oct-12 Aug-13 Jan-14 Nov-09 Dec-11 Mar-13 Jun-14 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 activity. Growth is expected to average 2.6 percent in 2015, slightly lower than in 2014 (Figure 1.4). Sources: World Bank; International Monetary Fund; Congressional Budget Office (2015); Haver Analytics; Lower oil prices, robust job creation and rising wages Federal Reserve St. Louis; Bank for International Settlements. will continue to bolster consumer spending. Growth A. The Congressional Budget Office estimates and projects potential output growth by adjusting observed inputs (labor force and total factor productivity) for the influence of the business cycle. The inputs’ cyclical components should, however, gradually slow towards its potential are estimated by means of an analysis of the relationship between each input and the unemployment gap (that is, the gap between the actual unemployment rate and CBO’s estimate of the underlying long-term rate of rate by 2017, as spare capacity is absorbed. Headline unemployment). B. Inflation is the annual average change in the consumption deflator. inflation turned negative in the first quarter of 2015, C. Distance to target is equal to (π-π*)2+(μ-μ*)2] where π is inflation, π* is the target rate of inflation in due to falling energy prices, and will likely stay below percentage points, μ is the unemployment rate and μ* is the long-run average rate of unemployment (Bullard 2014). 1 percent until end-2015. As these temporary effects D. The latest observation is 2015Q1. unwind, inflation is expected to move closer to the 2 percent target rate towards the end of 2016. The Bank of England is expected to implement its first post- net public debt. Financial sector risks have shifted as crisis policy rate increase in the first half of 2016. The financial activity migrated to less-regulated nonbanks strengthening resilience of U.K. bank balance sheets since the global financial crisis. However, the Bank (Bank of England 2014) has allowed the government of England's Financial Policy Committee are now to begin to unwind its support measures and reduce monitoring risks across the whole sector. 8 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 1.4  United Kingdom on effects on the Euro Area as a whole. However, In the United Kingdom, strengthening activity—notwithstanding stabilizing housing the risk remains that a further deterioration affects prices—and shrinking bank balance sheets are allowing a reduction in net government broader Euro Area confidence. debt. Substantial slack, together with low oil prices, is expected to reduce inflation temporarily. A mix of supply and demand shocks in the after- A. Growth B. Inflation math of the crisis left lasting damage to output Percent Percent and employment across the Euro Area. Addi- 4 GDP growth Potential growth 4 Inflation Inflation target tional easing by the ECB in 2014–15, includ- 3 ing the launch in March 2015 of a quantitative 3 easing program, brought long-term interest rates 2 2 to record lows in both core and periphery coun- 1 1 tries (Box 1.1), even as concerns about Greece’s financial strains intensified. It also contributed 0 0 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 to a 10 percent depreciation of the euro in trade- weighted terms since mid-2014, which should C. Public debt and bank liabilities D. Household debt and house prices Percent of GDP Percent of GDP support activity and gradually lift headline and Index, 2010 = 100 160 100 120 core inflation from currently very low levels. In- 140 120 90 100 flation was negative in the first quarter of 2015, 100 80 but should rise gradually from mid-year onwards 80 80 Household debt 60 as the impact of declining oil prices wanes. The 60 40 40 70 House Prices (RHS) Euro Area current account surplus should reach a 20 20 Net Public Debt Excluding public sector banks 60 0 record 3.5 percent of GDP in 2015. It is driven by 0 a depreciated exchange rate, lower oil prices, weak 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 import demand and competitiveness improve- Sources: World Bank; Haver Analytics; Office for Budget Responsibility (2014); Bank for International ments in the periphery, structurally high savings in Settlements. B. Inflation is the annual average change in the consumption deflator. Germany, and depressed investment rates. C. The jump in net public debt at the end of 2008 (around £1.3 trillion) was caused by banking sector support, notably by the Royal Bank of Scotland and Lloyds Banking Group. Activity in Japan started picking up in late 2014 and was robust in the first quarter of 2015. Growth The recovery in the Euro Area has progressed more is predicted to average 1.1 percent this year, before rapidly than expected since late 2014, supported accelerating to 1.7 percent in 2016, supported by ex- by a weakening euro, declining oil prices, record- pansionary policies (Figure 1.6). Potential growth in low interest rates, and an improvement in bank Japan may be as low as 1 percent, as the working-age credit supply conditions. Euro Area growth is population shrinks. Following persistent economic now projected to reach 1.5 percent this year, in- weakness during 2014 and bolstered by a victory creasing to 1.7 percent in 2016-17 (Figure 1.5). in general elections in December 2014, the govern- The depreciation of the euro since June 2014 ment implemented a series of fiscal stimulus mea- should contribute around ½ percentage point to sures, and postponed to April 2017 a second sales growth in the Euro Area in 2015 (OECD 2015a, tax increase originally scheduled for October 2015. European Commission 2015), while lower oil This stimulus, combined with policy accommoda- prices should support consumer spending and cor- tion by the Bank of Japan, cost savings for firms porate profits. Private investment should gradually and households due to declining energy prices, an- pick up, but elevated corporate leverage, persistent nounced product and labor market reforms, and the financial fragmentation, significant slack in the la- prospect of higher earnings following spring wage bor markets of periphery countries, lingering sup- negotiations, should boost activity and confidence ply-side impediments, and weak demand continue throughout 2015. Inflation is likely to remain below to weigh on prospects for a swift recovery (Barkbu the target 2 percent through 2017. et al. 2015). Fiscal policy will be broadly neutral As structural adjustments and policy efforts this year and next, following several years of signif- to address financial vulnerabilities continue, icant consolidation efforts. The turmoil in Greece growth in China is expected to decelerate mod- is having wide-ranging repercussions for the Greek estly to 7.1 percent in 2015 and 6.9 percent by economy itself, but has had thus far limited knock- 2017 (Figure 1.7). Fixed asset investment growth GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 9 slowed to 15.2 percent in 2014, down from 19.4 FIGURE 1.5  Euro Area percent in 2013, but is still the leading driver of A modest recovery is underway. Euro Area economies have diverged since the global aggregate demand. Despite reportedly stagnat- financial crisis, with demand shocks in the core economies correlating more closely with each other, but not with those in the periphery. Import compression and improv- ing employment in industries with overcapacity ing competitiveness have turned current account deficits into surpluses; the aggre- (e.g., various metals processing and mining in- gate Euro Area surplus is widening. Substantial slack, together with low oil prices, dustries and cement), the labor market appears should keep inflation to near-zero in 2015. High government debt remains a burden. to remain tight. The ratio of job openings to job A. Growth B. Inflation seekers increased to multi-year highs, as a result Percent Percent 4 GDP growth 4 Inflation of rapid services sector growth. Inflation, which Potential growth Inflation target 3 has steadily declined since 2013, should stabilize 3 at a low level after the effect of declining energy 2 2 prices dissipates. However, producer prices are 1 1 contracting significantly, particularly in indus- 0 0 trial sectors affected by overcapacity. -1 -1 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 To support activity amid tightening regulations on trust and interbank lending, the People’s Bank of C. Correlation of demand shocks D. Current account balance China continued to ease monetary policy in early with Euro Area average 2015, lowering benchmark deposit and lending Correlation 1.2 Interquartile range Percent of GDP Euro Area Germany Spain rates, making targeted cuts in the required reserve 1 Median 8 ratio, and announcing plans to accept municipal 0.8 4 bonds as collateral for its refinancing and lending 0.6 0 operations with commercial banks. As a result, 0.4 -4 0.2 there has been a shift towards greater bank lend- 0 -8 ing. Tightening regulations on trust lending are Pre-crisis Post-crisis Pre-crisis Post-crisis -12 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 being accompanied by efforts to limit local gov- Periphery Economics Core Economics ernments’ off-balance sheet activities. In its 2015 budget, a RMB 1 trillion debt-for-bond swap was E. Employment F. Household and government debt introduced to reduce local governments’ inter- Index = 100 in 2007Q1 115 Percent of GDP 100 Household debt est burdens, and extend the maturity of existing 90 Government debt debt. In tandem with the broad-based dollar ap- 105 80 preciation, the renminbi has also appreciated in 95 Germany Spain 70 nominal effective terms by 1.7 percent since mid- Portugal Ireland 60 85 2014. Despite the associated real appreciation, Greece France and Italy (average) 50 the current account surplus is expected to remain 75 Euro Area 40 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 around 2 percent of GDP by 2017 as growth picks up in high-income countries. Narrowing interest rate differentials with the United States, Source: World Bank; Bank for International Settlements; Dealogic; Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development; European Central Bank; Central Bank Rates. fading expectations for further renminbi appre- B. Inflation is defined as the annual average change in consumption deflator. ciation, and slowing domestic growth, have led to C. Values are the correlation of each country’s demand shocks with the Euro Area average. Demand and supply shocks are identified as in Blanchard and Quah (1989) with country-specific vector autoregression increased private capital outflows, and a slowing models of unemployment rates and growth. Demand shocks are assumed to have short-term impacts, supply shocks long-term impacts. of official reserve accumulation. D. The latest observation is 2014 Q4. Growth in BRICS (except China) is soft and has increasingly diverged. Falling oil prices and contrast, growth is gradually resuming in South geopolitical sanctions have been accompanied Africa, but is held back by energy shortages, by a steep slowdown in 2014 and are expected weak investor sentiment amid policy uncertainty, to result in a contraction in the Russian Federa- and by the anticipated tightening of monetary tion in 2015. Fragile confidence, increases in ad- and fiscal policies. In India, activity is buoyed by ministered prices, and low commodity prices are stronger confidence as a reform-minded govern- expected to contribute to a recession in Brazil ment implements its agenda and lower oil prices in 2015 with a modest recovery in 2016–17. In help contain vulnerabilities. 10 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 1.6 Japan Easy but Gradually Tightening Financial A modest recovery in Japan is supported by rising consumer spending and exports, Conditions partly reflecting improved competitiveness from depreciation. Inflation is expected to pick up in 2016 as yen depreciation is passed through. Steadily rising government debt Global borrowing costs remain low, partly as a result poses risks. of monetary stimulus in the Euro Area. Quantitative A. Growth B. Inflation easing by the ECB and the nearing prospect of U.S. Percent GDP growth Percent Fed tightening have caused a broad-based apprecia- Inflation 3 Potential growth 3 Inflation target tion of the U.S. dollar and have been followed by some 2 2 volatility in global bond markets. On balance, global 1 financial conditions are expected to tighten modestly, 1 and tilt capital flows towards developing countries with 0 0 sound prospects and low vulnerabilities. -1 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 -1 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 The launch of the ECB’s quantitative easing program has helped maintain low global financing costs. With C. Exchange rate and exports D. Government debt and deficit the approaching prospect of the first post-crisis pol- Index = 100 in 2000 Percent of GDP Percent of GDP icy rate increase in the United States, the expected Debt 115 Real effective exchange rate Export market share 300 Deficit (RHS) 0 divergence in monetary policies has contributed to 105 250 -2 significant exchange rate movements, in particular -4 95 a broad-based U.S. dollar appreciation, and some 85 200 -6 -8 volatility in European and U.S. long-term interest 75 65 150 -10 rates. On balance, in light of the sizeable impact of 55 100 -12 U.S. monetary policy decisions on global financial markets, global borrowing costs are expected to rise 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 with the launch of the tightening cycle. As world Sources: World Bank; CPB World Trade Monitor; Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development; financing conditions tighten, investors are likely to International Monetary Fund. B. Inflation is defined as the annual change in the consumption deflator. increasingly discriminate based on country pros- C. An increase in the real effective exchange rate denotes an appreciation. Export market share is defined as pects and vulnerabilities. Many countries will also monthly real manufacturing exports divided by global real manufacturing imports face an added debt service burden through the rise of the U.S. dollar and borrowing costs. Global Trends and Spillovers Implications of the ECB’s quantitative easing for As a result of developments in major economies, devel- developing countries oping countries face two transitions: to tightening fi- nancial conditions which will be associated with mod- In March, the ECB launched a €1.1 trillion quanti- erating capital flows, gradually rising financing costs, tative easing program, extending until at least Sep- and heightened risks of further currency depreciation tember 2016. This has begun to feed into financial and to persistently low oil prices over the long-term. markets through multiple channels (Dahlhaus and Diverging monetary policy prospects in major econo- Vasishta 2014; Sanchez 2013). mies have already caused significant depreciations and, • Portfolio balance channel (a reduction in long- looking ahead, are expected to contribute to moderat- term sovereign bond yields, tilting investor in- ing capital flows to developing countries and gradually centives towards riskier assets). Sovereign bond tightening financial conditions. The surge in uncon- yields in the Euro Area were at record-lows ventional oil production in North America and Eu- throughout 2014. They initially declined further rope has altered oil markets and will keep oil prices low after the announcement of quantitative easing in over the long-term. The interaction between these two January, but increased in May during a bout of forces has starkly different implications for commodity financial market volatility (Figure 1.8). In some exporting and importing developing countries. It is set Euro Area countries (Austria, Belgium, Finland, against the backdrop of a trend slowdown in develop- France, Germany, the Netherlands), yields on ing country growth. sovereign debt of short maturities remain nega- tive, including as a result of increased scarcity GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 11 of highly-rated bonds eligible for the ECB’s as- FIGURE 1.7 China set purchase program. Negative rates may help The moderation in growth, especially of investment, continues as expected, buffered boost exports by leading to depreciation and by fiscal and monetary policy support. Labor markets remain tight although employ- lower borrowing cost but could have adverse ment in overcapacity industries has reportedly stagnated. International reserve accu- mulation has slowed, partly as a result of capital outflows. consequences for financial stability (Box 1). A. Growth and inflation B. Consumption and investment • Signaling channel (signaling persistently low in- Share of GDP Percent Investment terest rates in the Euro Area which encourages Real GDP growth 80 Consumption 8 4 Inflation (RHS) carry-trades and capital flows to non-Euro Area 70 countries). So far, portfolio outflows from the 7.5 60 Euro Area appear to have been disproportionately 7 3 50 40 towards U.S. assets, particularly to long-term 6.5 30 debt securities (Figure 1.9). This reallocation, be- 20 sides supporting the U.S. dollar, has appeared to 6 2 1990 1993 1996 1999 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 2017 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 help keep U.S. Treasury bond yields low.1 • Liquidity channel (reducing liquidity pre- C. Job openings and growth Employment in overcapacity sectors D.  mia and facilitating lending by liquidity- Millions Percent Employment levels, millions Job openings 25 Ferrous Metal Smelting & Pressing constrained banks). This channel has been par- 8 Job seekers 14 Chemical Materials & Products GDP growth (RHS) Non Metallic Mineral Products ticularly impaired in the Euro Area. Despite am- 7 12 20 Coal Mining & Dressing 6 ple central bank liquidity since the crisis, bank 5 10 15 8 credit has been held back by the need to rebuild 4 6 10 balance sheets, uncertain growth prospects, and a 3 2 4 5 gradual move to tighter regulatory requirements. 1 2 0 Nevertheless, bank credit to the private sector, 0 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 0 2000 2004 2008 2012 especially to non-financial corporates, has picked up (although the growth rate still remains nega- E. Consumer and producer prices F. Foreign reserves and exchange rate tive in parts of the Euro Area periphery). Year-on-year percent change Percent of GDP Index = 100 in 2000 PPI Reserves • Asset price channel (raising asset prices to lift con- 4 PPI: Mining and Quarrying PPI: Consumer Goods (RHS) 0.4 50 Nominal effective exchange rate (RHS) 150 Real effective exchange rate (RHS) 140 40 sumer wealth). Immediately following the an- 0 -4 0.0 -0.4 130 30 nouncement of quantitative easing by the ECB, -8 -12 -0.8 -1.2 120 20 110 Euro Area equity markets gained 6 percent and -16 -20 -1.6 -2.0 100 10 continued to rise steadily to reach, by early May, -24 -2.4 90 Jan-14 Sep-14 May-14 Jul-14 Nov-14 Jan-15 Mar-14 Mar-15 0 80 14 percent above end-2014 levels (Figure 1.9). 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 • Exchange rate channel (reducing the exchange value of the euro and improving the cost com- Source: World Bank; Haver Analytics. A. Annual averages. petitiveness of the Euro Area). Since ECB Presi- C. The last observation is 2015 Q1. dent Draghi’s speech at Jackson Hole in August F. The last observation is April 2015. 2014 raised prospects for quantitative easing, the euro has depreciated by more than 16 per- Although the ECB’s decision to implement quanti- cent against the U.S. dollar and 10 percent in tative easing was anticipated, markets responded to nominal effective terms.2 the announcement in January and to the first bond purchases under the program in March with a sharp 1However, euro depreciation, which partially reversed later on. very low long-term interest rates in the United States still primarily reflect prospects for low inflation and real equilibrium interest Taking into account developments during the run- rates in the United States (Hamilton et al. 2015). up to the announcement of quantitative easing, the 2Pressures have also mounted on other high-income country cur- impact on bond yields appears broadly comparable rencies. To maintain its exchange rate peg against the euro, the Danish central bank accumulated reserves amounting to 15 percent of GDP to that observed previously in the United States and in the first two months of 2015. Having already accumulated reserves the United Kingdom (ECB 2015). of 10 percent of GDP during 2014, the Swiss central bank abandoned its currency floor against the euro in mid-January and the Swiss franc The ECB’s quantitative easing program could have appreciated against the euro by 15 percent by end-March 2015 (Box 1). sizeable effects on capital flows to emerging mar- 12 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 1.8  Implications of the European Central Bank’s rowers outside of the United States, comprising both quantitative easing for global financial conditions bond and bank lending flows, grew at double digit Euro Area activity only returned to pre-crisis levels in 2014, but is expected to receive rates, whereas credit to the U.S. private sector remained a boost from the European Central Bank’s quantitative easing. This easing has helped subdued. A similar effect is expected from the ECB’s reduce bond yields (although they spiked in May), contributed to euro depreciation and capital outflows, especially into U.S. assets. However, currency and bond market volatility quantitative easing, although weakening fundamen- has increased. tals among emerging markets and greater competition A. Real GDP levels B. E  conomic surprise indices for the from U.S. issuers could dampen positive spillovers. United States and the Euro Area The ECB’s quantitative easing could shift the com- Index=100 in 2007Q1 Index, positive value = Better than consensus estimate position of capital flows to developing countries. 115 150 Economic Surprise (Euro Area 1.7 A significant share of global portfolio flows to de- United States Euro Area 100 minus U.S.) US$ per Euro (RHS) 1.6 1.5 veloping countries tends to originate in the United 110 50 0 1.4 States, while European banks provide the bulk of 105 -50 1.3 1.2 cross-border bank lending flows. A policy rate in- 100 -100 1.1 crease by the U.S. Federal Reserve will further tilt -150 1.0 capital flows to developing countries from bond and Jul-14 Aug-14 Sep-14 Jun-14 Oct-14 Nov-14 Dec-14 Jan-15 95 2007 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 equity markets into bank lending. This tendency will be reinforced by the gradual healing of Euro- pean banks’ balance sheets, notwithstanding regula- C. Central bank balance sheets  et asset purchases after the D. N announcement of quantitative tory tightening since 2008. Regions that have been Percent of GDP particularly reliant on bond and equity inflows (East Index = 100 in January 2010 400 50 Announced Asia and Pacific, Latin America) could face a slow- 350 Euro Area United States 40 Realized down in capital inflows, while capital inflows may be 300 250 Japan 30 more resilient to regions that receive predominantly 200 20 bank lending-based inflows (Central Asia, Eastern 150 100 10 Europe, Middle East and North Africa, see below). 0 50 Euro Area United States Japan (Apr 13 0 (Mar 15 - Sept (Nov-09 - Oct - Apr 16) 2010 11 12 13 14 15 16 16) 14) Implications of the launch of the U.S. monetary tightening cycle for developing countries E. 10-year government bond yields F. Volatility In the second half of 2015, the U.S. Federal Reserve Percent Index U.S. equities is expected to raise interest rates for the first time German U.K. Japan U.S. 3.6 3.2 FX (USD/Euro) U.S. Treasuries (RHS) since the 2008 financial crisis. This is likely to initi- 27 8 2.8 2.4 24 ate a gradual tightening cycle from currently record- 21 7 2 1.6 18 low interest rates. Rate increases will coincide with 15 6 1.2 12 improved growth prospects for the United States, 0.8 9 5 0.4 6 which would dampen the impact of rising financ- 0 3 4 ing costs on developing country trading partners Jan-13 Sep-13 Sep-14 May-13 Jan-14 May-14 Jan-15 May-15 Jan-14 Sep-14 May-14 Jul-14 Nov-14 Jan-15 Mar-14 Mar-15 May-15 (Special Feature 1). Some previous U.S. tightening cycles (especially Source: World Bank; Bloomberg; Haver Analytics. B. The Citigroup Economic Surprise Index is a weighted average if data surprises (actual releases versus the 1999 and 2004) were associated with a flattening of Bloomberg survey median). A positive reading suggests that economic releases have been better than expected. The indexes are calculated daily in a rolling three-month window. the yield curve (a narrowing of the spread between long and short-term interest rates). Some episodes (especially 1994 and 2004) were also followed by depreciating emerging market currencies and mod- kets. For example, quantitative easing programs in estly declining capital flows to developing coun- the United States in 2008-14 were associated with tries—if not on average across developing countries, rising equity markets, a compression of bond yields, at least for vulnerable economies (Figure 1.10). and considerable increases in demand for emerg- Many emerging market central banks responded ing market U.S. dollar-denominated bond issues with interest rate increases, especially during the (McCauley et al. 2015). U.S. dollar credit to bor- 2004 tightening cycle. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 13 BOX 1.1 Negative Interest Rates in Europe: A Glance at Their Causes and Implications A number of major central banks in Europe have set key countries at a time when global financial markets are policy rates at negative levels in order to further encourage not in crisis is unprecedented. lending by making it costly for banks to hold excess reserves This box briefly explores the causes and implications of at their central banks. Amid negative policy rates, nomi- negative interest rates and yields in Europe. It aims to nal yields on some bonds of highly-rated European govern- shed light on the following questions: ments have also dropped below zero. Explanations for the • Why are some European policy interest rates phenomenon of negative yields include very low inflation, negative? further “flight to safety” toward fixed income assets in Europe’s core, and—perhaps the main proximate cause— • What are the implications of negative policy rates the increased scarcity of highly-rated sovereign bonds eli- for sovereign bond yields? gible for the European Central Bank's asset purchase pro- • What are the implications of negative rates and gram. Negative rates may help boost exports by encouraging yields for activity and financial stability? currency depreciation and may support lending and do- • What are the implications for developing mestic demand by further easing credit conditions. At the countries? same time, they could also have some adverse consequences for financial stability through an erosion of bank profit- Why are some European policy interest rates ability, through funding problems for some non-bank fi- negative? nancial institutions, and through excessive risk-taking by In June 2014, the ECB pushed the policy interest rate investors seeking a higher rate of return. Potential implica- applied on its deposit facility below zero, with an ad- tions for developing countries include a search for yield sup- ditional cut in September 2014. (Figure B1.1.1). In porting capital inflows, which could help offset the impact February 2015, the Riksbank also cut its deposit rate of an approaching liftoff in U.S. policy interest rates. below zero. The main motivation for these decisions As an additional measure to stabilize inflation expecta- was to further ease the already accommodative mone- tions and stave off the risk of deflation, a number of tary policy stance to fight the growing threat of defla- major central banks in Europe—including the Euro- tion amid downward pressures to inflation expecta- tions in the second half of last year and into early 2015 pean Central Bank (ECB), the Danish National Bank (Figure B1.1.1).3 The SNB and DNB have also taken (DNB), the Swedish Riksbank, and the Swiss National similar actions at different points in the past, albeit for Bank (SNB)—have pushed key short-term policy rates slightly different reasons. The DNB, which maintains into negative territory. 1 Amid these movements, yields its currency within a narrow fluctuation band around on some sovereign bonds at relatively short maturities the euro, was actually the first central bank in Europe in several European countries—including Austria, to set its deposit rate below zero—in July 2012, in re- Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands, and Switzer- sponse to rising capital inflows amid heightened finan- land—have also fallen below zero. Negative interest cial stress in the Euro Area. It pushed the rate down rates have been an extremely rare phenomenon: even again to negative territory in September 2014, follow- during the Great Depression, U.S. short-term rates ing the ECB. The SNB set its deposit rate below zero were never negative, and during the height of the re- in December 2014 amid currency appreciation pres- cent global financial crisis in 2008 some U.S. Treasury sures, and pushed it further down in January 2015 bill yields only very briefly fell below zero.2 That they when it abandoned the Swiss franc’s cap against the have simultaneously appeared in several European euro. This box was prepared by Carlos Arteta and Marc Stocker, with contri- The implementation of these negative policy interest butions from Eung Ju Kim and Bryce Quillin. rates have a common element. Commercial banks nor- 1The discussion of setting policy rates below zero is not recent. For in- stance, Mankiw (2009) argued that the U.S. Federal Reserve should have 3In the ECB’s case, an ongoing contraction of its balance sheet in 2013 considered this possibility during the Great Recession and 2014 had weakened the overall transmission of low policy rates to 2Based on closing levels, U.S. 1-month and 3-month T-bill rates fell broader financing conditions. The ECB reacted with an extended program below zero between early December and mid-December of 2008. of asset purchases, as well as a negative deposit rate (ECB, 2015). 14 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 BOX 1.1 (continued) Figure B1.1.1  Negative interest rates in Europe: Context Some European central banks have pushed policy rates below zero, amid declining inflation expectations in the second half of 2014 and early 2015. Reflecting negative policy rates and increasing purchases of highly-rated sovereign bonds, some bonds now offer negative yields. Bank lending in the Euro Area is increasing, suggesting a supportive role of negative rates. A. Interest rates on excess reserves B. Inflation expectations Policy rate on excess reserves, percent 4-year ahead inflation expectations, percent 2.5 Euro Area Denmark 1.0 ECB Denmark Sweden Switzerland 2.0 0.6 Sweden Switzerland 1.5 0.2 1.0 0.5 -0.2 0.0 -0.6 -0.5 -1.0 -1.0 Jul-14 Mar-15 Jan-14 Mar-14 May-14 Nov-14 Sep-14 Jan-15 Jan-14 Apr-14 Jul-14 Oct-14 Jan-15 Apr-15 C. Two year government bond yields D. Euro Area bank lending Percent Euro, billions, 3-month rolling sum 0.2 150 0.0 100 -0.2 -0.4 50 -0.6 Germany Austria 0 -0.8 Netherland Denmark -1.0 Switzerland -50 -1.2 -100 Oct-14 Nov-14 Nov-14 Dec-14 Dec-14 Jan-15 Jan-15 Jan-15 Mar-15 Mar-15 Apr-15 Apr-15 Feb-15 Feb-15 May-15 May-15 Jan-10 Nov-10 Jul-12 Mar-14 Sep-11 May-13 Jan-15 Source: Bloomberg, World Bank. D. Euro Area bank loans to households and non-financial corporates. Last observation is for March 2015. mally hold deposits at their central bank as settlement more uncertain environment since the global financial balances for clearing payments, or to meet legal mini- crisis, and with money market interest rates at very low mum reserve requirements. Central banks normally levels, some banks have chosen to hold higher balances pay interest—a “deposit rate”—on commercial banks’ at central banks. That is, some of them have been hold- excess reserves (i.e. reserves above the minimum level). ing excess reserves because of heightened risk aversion, During normal times, banks usually minimize hold- and because the opportunity costs of hoarding re- ings in such excess reserves, because central bank de- serves—in terms of profitable lending opportunities— posit rates are below typical money market rates. In the have been quite low, given the low returns on assets and the sluggishness of economic activity.4 4In addition, unconventional monetary policies and the expansion of central bank balance sheets have significantly increased the amount of The four aforementioned central banks are now charg- banks' excess reserves. ing (instead of paying) commercial banks for their ex- GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 15 BOX 1.1 (continued) cess reserves. Negative deposit rates should provide rently set at –20 basis points. This lower yield limit is some encouragement to banks to buy alternative assets, to ensure that purchases are implemented broadly and hence to put upward pressure on prices of such across eligible bonds, and to curb speculation on future assets and further downward pressure on yields and declines in bond yields. Such speculation would en- borrowing costs. This would be transmitted through courage holders, including banks, to hoard bonds. the economy by a general easing of credit conditions. While the ECB deposit rate might establish a lower However, as is discussed below, negative policy rates bound for bond yields, rising demand and limited sup- have distinct implications for sovereign bond yields ply of highly-rated sovereign bonds could bring their and, crucially, for financial stability. yields well below that rate. In addition, since bonds can What are the implications of negative policy rates be used as collateral in repurchase agreements, they for sovereign bond yields? have additional value which could keep them attractive with materially negative yields. Policy rates provide the benchmark for short-term bor- rowing costs throughout the economy. This includes The prospects of growing imbalances between the lim- shorter-dated bonds. Thus, negative policy rates in the ited supply of eligible bonds and rising demand under Euro Area, Denmark, and Switzerland have been ac- the ECB quantitative easing program have pushed companied by negative market rates on government down yields in core Euro Area countries and, indi- bonds, particularly at the shorter end of the yield curve. rectly, in other European countries. Overall, the net For example, the 2-year bond yields on highly-rated issuance of medium- and long-term securities by all European countries such as Austria, Denmark, Ger- Euro Area debt management offices in 2015 is expected many, the Netherlands, and Switzerland have been to be around €200 billion, against total asset purchases negative during the first half of 2015, though they have of €600 billion by the ECB (Cœuré 2015). In some generally ticked up amid recent bond market volatility countries, including Germany, net issuance is expected (Figure B1.1.1.C). Besides the role of negative policy to be marginal or even negative, creating a mismatch rates, there are several potential explanations for the between effective supply and the intended scale of emergence of negative yields, particularly those beyond ECB’s purchases. the short-end of the yield curve. These include very low Investors initially held on to core-European bonds on inflation, the persistence of the international “savings expectation of further capital gains, which in itself glut,” and further “flight to safety” toward low-risk helped push yields to record low levels in April. A re- fixed income assets. In consequence, sovereign bonds versal in market sentiment in May led to an upward of certain countries in Europe that are deemed risk-free adjustment in yields. However, scarcity considerations have been in heavy demand. will likely continue to drive core-European bond mar- That said, a key reason for negative sovereign yields in kets, potentially intensifying if the share of eligible sov- core European countries appears to be technical—a re- ereign bonds trading with negative yields approach the sult of demand pressures stemming from the ECB’s lower limit for eligibility. This should keep yields at Extended Asset Purchase Program, which is in turn a exceptionally low levels, and perhaps below zero for a consequence of the design of the program. Purchases while longer. announced by the ECB, which will amount to €60 bil- Investors may hold instruments with negative returns lion per month until at least September 2016 (for a for various reasons, such as for speculative and arbi- total of €1.1 trillion), will mainly be of sovereign bonds, following a defined allocation, and strict eligi- trage reasons, institutional and regulatory require- bility criteria. These criteria prohibit purchases beyond ments, or simply for lack of alternative assets. 25 percent of the outstanding amount of individual • Speculative and arbitrage reasons. Investors may securities, 33 percent of any given issuer's debt, and of be expecting increased demand for bonds—for ex- bonds with yields below the ECB’s deposit rate, cur- ample, due to the announcement by the ECB of 16 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 BOX 1.1 (continued) bond purchases discussed earlier—and rising est rates might be negative in an environment of weak bond valuations. Alternatively, they may be ex- domestic demand.5 With inflation remaining below tar- pecting currency appreciation and rising get, they could require maintaining nominal policy rates returns when bond portfolios are converted into at or below zero, along with the implementation of un- other currencies. This might be a particularly im- conventional measures to bring longer-term rates fur- portant channel of transmission of negative yields ther down, including asset purchase programs. from the Euro Area to other European bond mar- Thus, some of the effects of negative rates are qualita- kets facing upward currency pressures as a result tively analogous to those of very low but non-negative of ECB actions, such as Switzerland, Denmark or rates. First, insofar as negative nominal rates help keep Sweden. In either case, total bond returns, ad- real interest rates below the neutral level, they can justed for expected capital gains or currency boost consumption and investment. Second, the posi- movements, could compensate investors for neg- tive cash flow effects of low or negative nominal rates ative home-currency yields. permits increases in spending by liquidity-constrained •  nstitutional and regulatory requirements. Institu- I firms and households. Third, low or negative policy tional investors often maintain portfolios with large rates may help stimulate lending, as evidenced by the government bond holdings in pursuit of stable, risk- recent pickup in credit in the Euro Area (Figure adjusted returns to meet long-term obligations. Reg- B1.1.1.D). Fourth, declines in domestic interest rates ulatory requirements on the level of risk that some from any level can trigger a depreciation of the cur- institutional investors can take or agreements with rency, as suggested by the fall of the euro vis-à-vis the stakeholders may drive these portfolio decisions. dollar amid negative German yields (B1.1.2.A), which •  ack of alternative assets. For non-bank inves- L boosts exports. Fifth, in countries concerned about tors, holdings of cash at zero return may appear to capital flow-driven appreciation pressures (e.g. Switzer- be more remunerative than a negative-yield bond. land and Denmark), they discourage capital inflows. However, the security, transactions, and storage In addition to these effects that are largely intended by costs would be prohibitive for large holdings, policy makers, negative nominal interest rates may which would result in a potentially substantially have undesirable side effects on financial stability and negative rate of return of cash. capital market functioning.6 What are the implications of negative rates and • Erosion of bank profitability. Negative rates may yields for activity and financial stability? erode bank profitability by narrowing banks’ net Broadly speaking, central banks use policy interest interest margins (the gap between commercial rates to achieve, over the medium term, a level of real banks’ lending and deposit rates), since banks may interest rates that is consistent with a rate of inflation be unwilling to pass through negative deposit rates in line with policy objectives and a level of economic to their customers to avoid the erosion of their activity close to its full potential. Such levels of real inter- customer base (Genay and Podjasek 2014, Han- noun 2015). This unwillingness is due to the fact that, for retail depositors, the costs of avoiding 5The chronically low levels of real interest rates has led some observers negative rates by substituting currency for deposits to argue that advanced economies may be facing a period of “secular stagna- is probably lower than for larger, business, and in- tion,” where the level of spending at any given level of interest rates is likely stitutional investors (McAndrews 2015). As a con- to have declined and may remain depressed (Summers 2014). 6In sequence, interest margins have recently narrowed the United States, potential disruptions to financial market func- tioning are likely a key reason why negative policy rates have never been substantially (Figure B1.1.2.B). Compressed long used as a policy option. First, money market funds operate under rules that term interest rates also reduce profit margins on make it difficult for them to pay negative interest rates. Second, the auction the standard banking maturity transformation of process for new U.S. Treasury securities does not currently permit partici- funding short-term and lending at a somewhat pants to submit bids with negative rates. Third, a decrease in the interest on reserves (IOR) rate would affect the federal funds market, reducing the longer term. However, banks can realize capital incentives for banks to borrow in this market (Keister 2011). GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 17 BOX 1.1 (continued) Figure B1.1.2  Negative interest rates in Europe: Some consequences Negative European interest rates and yields have been accompanied by euro depreciation, despite a recent retracement. But negative rates have also been associated with a significant narrowing of spreads between bank lending and deposit rates, which may erode bank profitability. Regard- ing implications for developing countries, the difference between benchmark German and developing-country bond yields has widened, which has been accompanied by an acceleration in foreign inflows to developing-country bond funds.  uro-dollar exchange rate and government bond A. E B. Net interest margin for Euro Area banks yields Percent US$ per Euro 4-week moving average, basis points 0.4 1.4 8 0.2 1.3 6 0.0 1.2 4 -0.2 1.1 2 German 2-year yield -0.4 1.0 0 Euro exchange rate (RHS) -0.6 0.9 -2 Jan-14 Apr-14 Jul-14 Oct-14 Jan-15 Apr-15 Jan-14 Apr-14 Jul-14 Oct-14 Jan-15 Apr-15  enchmark government bond yields for Germany and C. B D. Foreign portfolio flows into emerging-market bond funds emerging markets Percent US$, billions, 4-week moving average 7 1.4 6 0.8 5 0.2 4 EM sovereign bond yield 3 German 10-year government bond yield -0.4 2 -1.0 1 0 -1.6 Jan-14 Apr-14 Jul-14 Oct-14 Jan-15 Apr-15 Jan-14 Apr-14 Jul-14 Oct-14 Jan-15 Apr-15 Source: Bloomberg, Emerging Portfolio Fund Research, JPMorgan Chase, and World Bank. B. Net interest margin is proxied by the difference in borrowing and lending rate of banks without compensating for the fact that the amount of earning assets and borrowed funds may be different. gains on the sale of their government bonds to long-term liabilities, such as pensions or life insur- central banks and, in doing so, bolster their capital ance policies, offered at fixed nominal rates (Han- position and, therefore, their capacity to extend noun 2015). In particular, various European life loans (Cœuré 2015). insurance companies that have guaranteed payouts • Pressures on non-bank financial institutions. exceeding the yields on local 10-year government Under negative interest rates, some non-bank fi- bonds are likely to face significant pressures (IMF nancial institutions—especially pension and life 2015a). Insurance companies or pension funds insurance companies—may struggle to meet their might be constrained to hold government bonds by 18 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 BOX 1.1 (continued) prudential requirements, hence contributing to the cia 2010; Dell’Ariccia, Laeven, and Suarez 2013). demand glut and downward pressure on yields. Greater risk-taking could contribute to the forma- • Anomalies in the valuation of returns and pay- tion of asset bubbles, particularly in higher- ments streams. As interest rates approach zero, dividend paying stocks which may already have ex- the calculation of present values of streams of cash cessive valuations. flows becomes increasingly sensitive to the dis- • Potential need to redesign the functioning of fi- count rate.7 Indeed, the present value of any nancial transactions. The issuance of interest bear- stream can be made arbitrarily large by choosing a ing securities at negative yields may face design low enough discount rate. This becomes a conten- problems (Garbade and McAndrews 2015). Con- tious issue in the negotiation of fair value in legal tractual language surrounding the operation of settlements. As discount rates of zero or less have money and capital markets may not envision the no economic meaning, a prolonged period of nega- possibility of negative rates; thus, the latter may tive interest rates would create large ambiguities for create both legal and operational challenges. More the valuation of assets and liabilities. generally, if negative rates were to prevail for long, • Effects on money market funds. Money market they may entail the need to redesign debt securi- funds make conservative investments in cash- ties, certain operations of financial institutions, the equivalent assets, such as highly-rated short-term recalculation of payment of interest among finan- corporate or government debt, to provide investors cial agents, and other operational innovations, liquidity and capital preservation by paying a mod- whose costs may offset the benefits of negative est return. While these funds aim to avoid reduc- rates (McAndrews 2015). tions in net asset values, this objective would not be One key question is how deep negative rates must be attainable if rates in the market were negative for a for these kinds of distortions to become quantitatively substantial period.8 Disruptive reactions by disap- important. According to some observers, in an econ- pointed investors would best be avoided by clear omy like the United States, market rates (not to be understanding of the nature of these funds. That confused with deposit rates on excess reserves) staying said, the Danish experience suggests that money below –50 basis points on a sustained basis might market funds can pass through the negative rates spawn various financial innovations to circumvent without massive disruptions in the market (Huttl negative rates (Garbade and McAndrews 2012). Such 2014). adaptations would, in themselves impose an eventual • Excessive risk-taking. Bank and non-bank inves- floor, albeit somewhere below zero, on the extent to tors may be encouraged by negative rates to take which rates could fall (Svensson 2015). However, these excessive risk in their search for positive yield kinds of innovations, which uses valuable scarce re- (Hannoun 2015). This is consistent with various sources, may impose a net loss in terms of economy- studies that find a negative relation between short- wide social value. term interest rates and bank risk-taking (e.g. If they were to emerge, such financial innovations Altunbas, Gambacorta, and Marqués-Ibáñez could include new services, such as the creation of new 2010; De Nicolò, Dell’Ariccia, Laeven, and Valen- institutions to handle and store cash on behalf of oth- ers. It could also include new behavioral responses, such as making excessive tax payments to the govern- ment and earn a zero return until a refund is received 7One way to describe the problem for pension and life insurance plans from the government, thus avoiding negative rates is to say that the steep drop in discount rates implies a steep rise in the pres- (McAndrews 2015). At the extreme, if central banks ent value of their liabilities. pushed rates too far into negative territory, there is a 8Money market funds may face adverse consequences even at zero, non- risk that large sectors of the economy could become negative rates (Di Maggio and Kacperczyk. 2015). GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 19 BOX 1.1 (continued) cash-based. Under these circumstances, there could bond yield (Figure B1.1.2.C). Despite recent vola- even be discussions about the feasibility of a tax on tility, which has slightly narrowed this differential, money, a topic that has long been subject to debate in German 10-year yields are generally following the academic circles as a way to overcome the zero bound same contour as (currently negative) short-term on interest rates (Buiter and Panigirtzoglou 2003, yields. Amid interest rate differentials, foreign in- Ilgmann and Menner, 2011).9 flows into emerging market bond funds have re- The bottom line of all these factors is that, while the mained steady since the beginning of the year (Fig- benefits of negative rates are broadly similar to those of ure B1.1.2.D) very low but positive rates, they posit unique risks for  ncreased search for yield and carry trade. Negative Eu- • I financial stability. ropean rates and yields could shift investor demand What are the implications of negative rates for to higher-yielding emerging market debt and provide developing countries? additional funding opportunities for developing countries in European markets. With negative nomi- Current negative European policy rates highlight the nal interest rates in Europe, there will also be incen- asynchronous monetary policy stances in Europe and tives for increased carry trade, particularly to some the United States. This could have implications for higher-yielding developing-country currencies. real activity and the financial sector in developing countries. • Moderated effect of eventual U.S. liftoff on develop- ing-country capital flows. Outflows from European Real effects. The overall effect on developing-country sovereign to U.S. Treasury markets would have exports via exchange rate movements is likely to be likely helped contain long-term yields in the modest. The reduction in European rates has contrib- United States, in the face of the approaching lift- uted to euro depreciation against the dollar. However, off in U.S. policy rates, thus providing support to since developing-country currencies have also been de- continued capital flows to developing countries. clining against the dollar, the impact of negative rates on nominal and real effective exchange rates across de-  hifts in developing-country sources of funding. • S veloping countries may be contained.10 As a result, the Negative rates may be contributing to a gradual direct impact of negative rates on developing countries’ shift in the source of funding for some developing exports may be limited as a whole, albeit with large countries, from U.S. dollar- to euro-denominated country variations depending on specific trade expo- debt instruments, and from bond to cross-border sures and currency developments. bank lending flows, which mainly originate from European lenders. Financial effects. Negative interest rates in Europe may accelerate portfolio outflows from Europe, and In sum, negative European interest rates may provide support continued favorable financing conditions for ongoing support to capital flows to developing coun- developing countries. tries and help reduce pressures from a gradual normal- ization of U.S. monetary policy (Special Feature 1).  idened interest rate differentials. The interest rate • W However, over the medium term, unsustainably low differential between developing-country and Eu- interest rates may render some countries more vulner- ropean bond yields widened since the second half able to the eventual unwinding of exceptional stimulus of 2014, as suggested by the gap between the JP measures in Europe and to a reversal of capital flows. Morgan EMBIG Index and the German 10-year 9There have even been discussions about the costs and benefits of phas- ing out paper currency as one way to eliminate the zero bound in interest rates (Rogoff 2014). 10Chapter 1 discusses this issue at greater length. 20 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 1.9  Implications of the European Central Bank’s While there is a risk that a lift-off in U.S. policy rates quantitative easing for developing countries could lead to a sudden steepening of the U.S. yield curve with disruptive consequences for developing The ECB’s announcement of quantitative easing (QE) was followed by falling sover- eign bond yields, rising equity markets, and appreciation against the euro in emerging countries (reminiscent of the “Taper Tantrum” in markets. Similar to the cross-border credit expansion triggered by QE in the United May/June 2013, Special Feature 1), the baseline as- States, ECB QE is expected to increase portfolio flows and, especially, bank lending to developing countries. sumption remains that of a very gradual increase in U.S. long-term rates and a flatter yield curve, as ob- A. I mpact of the U.S. announcement B. I mpact of the European Central served during some previous tightening cycles and of quantitative easing on Bank’s announcement on developing emerging-market assets country financial markets as expected by financial markets now. This should Percent change Emerging Asia Percent change Emerging Asia result in only modestly tighter global financial con- Central Europe and Middle East 3 Emerging Europe Emerging Latin America Emerging Latin America ditions for developing countries later in 2015 and 2 Emerging Market Emerging Markets 4 in 2016. 1 2 0 0 As financing costs gradually rise, investors are likely -1 -2 to increasingly differentiate among country pros- -2 -4 pects and vulnerabilities. Both during the finan- -3 Exchange Rates Stock Government Exchange Markets bond yields Rates Stock Government Markets bond yields -6 Exchange Equity Bond Exchange Equity Bond cial market turmoil of May/June 2013 (the “taper Rate Returns Yields Rate Yields QE2 Annoucement Taper Tantrum OMT SMP tantrum” following the U.S. Fed’s announcement of tapering large-scale asset purchases), and during C. P  ortfolio investment from the D. B  IS-reporting banks’ cross-border the broad-based U.S. dollar appreciation since mid- Euro Area and the United States, 2013 claims, Q3 2014 2014, exchange rates depreciated sharply against US$, billions US$, billions the U.S. dollar in the more vulnerable developing 1600 3,000 Euro Area banks economies and in those with deteriorating growth 1400 2,500 1200 Euro Area U.S. U.S. banks prospects, in particular commodity exporters. Risks 2,000 1000 800 1,500 would be particularly sizable in developing countries 600 1,000 with high external and government debt; large cur- 400 200 500 rent account and fiscal deficits; heavy foreign cur- 0 All Latin Emerging Emerging Others 0 All Emerging Latin Emerging Others rency borrowing and high debt service payments; develeoping Europe America Asia developing America and Asia Europe and Caribbean elevated inflation; low reserve coverage; and poor Caribbean growth prospects.  .S. dollar credit growth to non- E. U F. Euro credit growth to non-E.U. U.S. residents and U.S. residents residents and E.U. residents Capital flows to developing countries Percent Non-US Residents Percent EU Residents Non-EU Residents Portfolio flows to developing countries remained 30 US Residents 25 30 subdued in 2015, but low bond yields, and ample 25 20 20 liquidity continued to encourage investor interest 15 15 10 in bond issuance, particularly in China and other 10 5 0 East Asian countries. On the whole, sovereign bond 5 0 -5 yields in emerging markets remained low despite -10 -5 -15 headwinds from expectations of U.S. policy tight- ening, currency depreciations and increased volatil- 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 ity in global bond markets. Sources: Bank for International Settlements; McCauley, McGuire, and Sushko (2015); World Bank; International Monetary Fund; Georgiadis and Gräb (2015); Rai and Suchanek (2014); Fratzscher, Duca, and Straub (2014). However, issuer activity has softened in Latin Amer- A. QE2 refers to quantitative easing announcement by the U.S. Federal Reserve in November 2010 Taper ica (especially Brazil) and Eastern Europe, on limited tantrum refers to the volatility following U.S. Federal Reserve remarks on May 22, 2013. “Emerging Asia” contains China; India; Indonesia; Malaysia; Philippines; Republic of Korea; Taiwan, China; and Thailand. funding needs, a shift to local debt markets, weaken- “Emerging Europe” includes Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Russian Federation, South Africa, and Turkey. “Emerging Latin America” refers to Brazil, Chile, Colombia, and Mexico. ing prospects (especially in Latin America) and rising B. SMP and OMT stand for “Securities Markets Programme” and “Outright Monetary Transactions” , two anti-crisis borrowing costs as market sentiment deteriorated. measures implemented by the ECB respectively in 2010 and 2012. “Emerging Asia” countries are China; Hong Kong SAR, China; India; Indonesia; Malaysia; Philippines; Republic of Korea; Singapore; Thailand; and Taiwan, Corporate bond spreads for emerging market oil China. “Central Europe and Middle East” includes Algeria, Israel, Morocco, Russian Federation, Turkey, and South Africa. “Emerging Latin American” countries are Argentina, Brazil, and Mexico. An increase in exchange companies also rose sharply (Figure 1.11). rates denotes an appreciation against the euro. C. Emerging Asia includes countries in East and South Asia. Record-low global interest rates over the past half- D. Emerging Asia includes countries in East and South Asia. BIS = Bank for International Settlements; Q3 = third quarter. decade have encouraged external borrowing. As a GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 21 result, private external debt has risen since 2011, FIGURE 1.10  Implications of launch of monetary whereas sovereign external debt has generally re- tightening in the United States mained moderate as sovereigns shifted towards Past episodes of first rate increases in a U.S. monetary policy tightening cycle were domestic borrowing. However, several developing often accompanied by a flattening U.S. yield curve, and currency depreciations and/ country sovereigns have issued heavily in interna- or monetary policy rate increases in emerging markets. The close correlation with emerging market borrowing costs suggests that lift-off in 2015 may increase global tional bond markets. In some countries, this has financing costs, especially for vulnerable countries. helped reduce their debt service payments. Other countries, however, may experience record-high  .S. term spreads around A. U  umber of policy changes around B. N previous U.S. tightening cycles past episodes of U.S. rate hikes spikes in payments over the next decade (Ghana, Basis points; deviations from t = 0 Number of policy changes around Jordan, Kenya, Nigeria, Zambia). 60 1994 Q1 1999 Q2 2004 Q2 2013 Q2 Feb.1994, June 1999, June 2004, and May 2013 20 40 Hikes In addition, currency risk may be rising for some 20 0 15 Cuts -20 countries, as prospects of increasingly divergent -40 -60 10 monetary policies between the United States and -80 -100 other major central banks increase the potential -120 -140 5 -160 for further appreciation of the U.S. dollar. This has -180 0 Nov-93 Dec-93 Feb-94 May-94 May-99 Jul-99 Aug-99 Sep-99 May-04 Jul-04 Apr-94 Aug-04 Sep-04 Feb-13 May-13 Jul-13 Aug-13 Jan-94 Mar-94 Mar-99 Apr-99 Jun-99 Mar-04 Apr-04 Jun-04 Mar-13 Apr-13 Jun-13 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 encouraged a shift towards euro-denominated cor- quarters porate bond issuance (to around 13 percent of the total in the first quarter of 2015).  merging markets: Nominal C. E  orrelation between U.S. term D. C effective appreciation around spread and emerging market bond Net capital inflows to developing countries are projected previous U.S. tightening cycles spreads to moderate marginally, to 5.1 percent of GDP in 2015 Percent, deviations from t = 0 Correlation coefficient Feb-94 Jun-99 Jun-04 May-13 0.5 from 5.4 percent in 2014 (Table 1.1). At the same time, 2 Non-European EM European EM a gradual shift is expected from bond financing to bank 0 0.3 lending, and from U.S. dollar to euro-denominated -2 0.1 funding (although the majority of emerging market -4 debt will remain U.S. dollar-denominated). Net capi- -0.1 tal flows are expected to recover in 2016 (in absolute -6 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 -0.3 value terms, though not relative to GDP), as the global months May 1998-May 2008 Since May 2008 economy continues to improve and country-specific  Taper Tantrum”: Emerging- E. “  il price plunge: Emerging-market F. O challenges diminish among developing countries, but market vulnerabilities and vulnerabilities and depreciation are not expected to return to pre-crisis levels. Capi- depreciation tal flows will continue to be constrained by concerns Currency depreciation against the US$, percent From end-April 2013 to end-Jan. 2014 Currency depreciation against US$, percent From June 2014 to May 2015 about private-sector debt sustainability, tighter regula- 2 10 0 0 tion, and increased competition for funding as high- -2 Regression line; R-square = 0.61 -10 income country issuance rises. Furthermore, natural -4 -20 resource-based foreign direct investment is expected -6 -30 to decline as a result of weak commodity prices and -8 -40 declining growth prospects among commodity- -10 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 -50 2012 FRB Vulnerability Index exporting countries. 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 2014 FRB Vulnerability Index 12 13 Low and volatile commodity prices Sources: Bloomberg; U.S. Federal Reserve Board; Haver Analytics; World Bank. A. Term spread denotes the difference between 10-year U.S. Treasury and 6-month T-bill yields, shown four quarters before until four quarters after the launch of each U.S. tightening cycle (t= 0). Oil prices have begun to find some support after the B. Values are for emerging and frontier markets as defined in World Bank (2015a). C. Median of nominal effective exchange rate of BRICS and MINT countries, three months before until three sharp decline in the second half of 2014, but are ex- months after the beginning (t=0) of U.S. monetary policy hikes. The Russian Federation is excluded from the pected to remain well below their 2013 levels during sample of the 1994 episode. D. U.S. term spread is defined by the difference between the 10-year Treasury rate and the 3-month T-bill rate. the next decade. Second-round effects of low oil prices Emerging market bond spread is JP Morgan's EMBIG yield spread. E. F. For the FRB vulnerability index, higher numbers = more vulnerable. Blue dots indicate net oil exporters. on other commodities, together with robust supplies and soft demand, are expected to keep prices low for most other commodities in the medium-term. 2015. A substantial capacity adjustment in the U.S. Oil prices have stabilized following the steep drop— shale oil industry (Figure 1.12) has raised prices more than 50 percent—to a six-year low in January somewhat from the January lows. The rig count— 22 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 1.11  Developing countries’ capital flows and a measure of future U.S. crude oil supplies—more borrowing costs than halved between October 2014 and April 2015, Sovereign bond yields have mostly remained low, but corporate bond yields have and major oil companies have announced sharp cut- risen sharply and portfolio flows have remained subdued. Post-crisis bond inflows backs in investment plans. Thus far, however, U.S. have raised corporate foreign currency debt, which is predominantly denominated in U.S. dollar. Some sovereigns that haved recently accessed international capital shale oil production has remained robust, albeit markets are likely to see sharp debt payment spikes. Euro-denominated bond issu- growing more slowly. It is expected to peak in later ances have picked-up since the start of quantitative easing in the Euro Area. As bank 2015. In the short-run, continued weak demand, balance sheets heal, regions that are more dependent on bank flows than bond flows may benefit. U.S. dollar appreciation, ample and rising global inventories, and unexpectedly solid production in A. Emerging-market bond yields B. F  oreign portfolio inflows to EM conflict-torn Republic of Yemen, Iraq, and Libya, assets Percent 4-week moving average, US$, millions keep oil prices below their elevated 2013 levels (IEA 6.8 Sovereign (external) Corporate (external) 4,000 Equity 2015). A recently negotiated international agree- Sovereign (local) 3,000 6.3 2,000 Bonds ment with the Islamic Republic of Iran could raise 5.8 5.3 1,000 supply further.3 Oil prices are expected to average 0 4.8 -1,000 about $58 per barrel in 2015 and remain below $70 4.3 -2,000 per barrel until 2018. 3.8 -3,000 3.3 -4,000 -5,000 The decline in oil prices since mid-2014 partly re- Jan-13 Apr-13 Jul-13 Jan-14 Apr-14 Jul-14 Jan-15 Apr-15 Oct-13 Oct-14 Jan Mar May Jul Sep Nov Jan Mar May 2014 2014 2014 2014 2014 2014 2015 2015 2015 flects a secular increase in supply as new sources of oil have been accessed. Similar to the expansion of North Sea and Mexican oil production in the mid- C. G  ross capital flows to developing D. S  hare of euro-denominated 1980s, oil production from shale extraction, and, less countries since 2011 emerging market international bond issuance so, from biofuels and Canadian oil sands expanded US$, billions Percent of total rapidly in the mid-2000s (Box 1.2). For now, these 1,800 15 € denominated EM sovereign bonds 1,600 Equity € denominated EM corporate bonds sources supply about 7 percent of the global mar- Bond 12 1,400 Bank lending ket and shale oil, the most sizeable of these sources, 1,200 9 1,000 has marginal cost in the range of $50-70 per bar- 6 800 rel. However, the production of shale oil is highly 600 3 flexible with a relatively modest fixed cost of invest- 400 200 0 ment and a short lifespan of 2.5–3 years (World Aug-14 Jan-10 Jun-10 Apr-11 Sep-11 Feb-12 Nov-10 Jul-12 Dec-12 May-13 Oct-13 Jan-15 Mar-14 0 LAC EAP ECA SAS SST MNA DEV Bank 2015b). Absent significant demand pressures, this flexibility may limit room for oil price increases above $80 per barrel in the medium- to long-term. E. E  merging-market private and F.  Emerging and frontier market As a result, oil prices are expected to return to their sovereign external debt peak annual debt service 2013 levels only in the next decade (by 2025). payments Percent of GDP Private external debt Average debt service as share of revenues, percent As oil prices have found some support and begun to 90 19 Sovereign external debt 80 Peak 2000-10 Peak, 2015-25 recover, their volatility has risen (Figure 1.13). Both 70 15 60 the realized and implied volatilities of oil prices have 50 40 increased more than three-fold since the thirty days 11 30 20 prior to OPEC’s November 27 decision to abandon 10 0 the earlier price target. The level of oil price volatil- 7 Kenya Mozambique Tanzania Bulgaria Ivory Coast Senegal Rwanda Angola Armenia Ethiopia Ghana Jordan Nigeria Vietnam Honduras Ecuador Paraguay Mongolia Venezuela Bolivia Gabon 3 1997 99 01 03 05 07 09 11 13 3Iran and the five permanent United Nations Security Council member countries plus Germany have agreed on a framework that could lead to the removal of sanctions imposed on Iran by the United States and the European Union. Until then, the easing of sanctions un- Sources: World Bank; JP Morgan; Bloomberg; International Monetary Fund World Economic Outlook; Bloomberg Emerging Market Bond Index; EFPR; Dealogic. der a deal made in November 2013 remains in place. Under that agree- A. The last observation is May 5, 2015. ment, Iran’s crude exports are capped at 1 million barrels per day. In the C. China is excluded from East Asia and Pacific. DEV = total capital flows to developing countries, excluding China. short-run, Iran’s capacity to ramp up production is limited. However, D. The last observation is April 2015. over the long-term, it could add significantly to global oil supply. Before E. Emerging countries are: Argentina, Brazil, Bulgaria, Chile, China, Colombia, Czech Republic, Dominican the current sanctions were imposed in 2013, Iran produced about 3.5 Republic, Ecuador, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Mexico, Pakistan, Panama, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Republic of Korea, República Bolivariana de Venezuela, Russian Federation, South Africa, Thailand, Turkey, million barrels per day and it currently has about 20 million barrels of Ukraine, and Uruguay. crude oil in storage. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 23 ity remains well below spikes in 1985/86, 1990/91, FIGURE 1.12  Oil markets and 2008/09. However, if sustained or amplified, it Unconventional oil supplies (Mexican and North Sea Oil in the 1990s, and shale oil, could induce uncertainty that deters investment and biofuels and Canadian sands in the 2000s) have increased global supplies. On signs of sharp investment cuts in the shale industry in 2015, oil prices appear to have found reduces employment growth, by generating costly a floor. Longer-term prospects of ample supply from unconventional, non-OPEC oil resource reallocations to and from energy-intensive production suggest that prices will likely remain low, constrained by the marginal cost activities (Guo and Kliesen 2005; Federer 1997). of unconventional sources. Weak global demand (including from China), U.S. A. Commodity price indices B. U.S. oil production and rig count dollar appreciation, and low oil prices have put Nominal index, 2010=100 Million barrels per day Count 180 Agriculture 11 1,800 pressure on non-oil commodity prices, in particular 160 Energy Oil production Rig count (RHS) 1,500 Metals and minerals those for natural gas, fertilizers, and food. 140 9 1,200 120 • Natural gas. The prices in most contracts for liq- 100 7 900 600 uefied natural gas deliveries to Asia are linked to 80 5 300 60 oil prices, though with a considerable lag. As a 40 3 0 result, liquefied natural gas prices have already Jan-07 Jan-08 Jan-09 Jan-10 Jan-11 Jan-12 Jan-13 Jan-14 Jan-15 Jan-16 Jan-17 Jan-07 Jan-08 Jan-09 Jan-10 Jan-11 Jan-12 Jan-13 Jan-14 Jan-15 declined substantially (in Japan, by more than 15 percent since June 2014) and are expected drop further. In Europe, a natural gas market C. OPEC and non-OPEC oil D. Oil production production is slowly emerging such that a smaller share of Million barrels per day Non-OPEC production Million barrels per day gas contracts is directly linked to oil prices. This 50 OPEC production Mexico and North Sea Biofuel, U.S. shale, and Canadian sands share, however, is sufficient to put downward 45 10 Others (RHS) 80 pressure on European natural gas prices.4 40 8 60 35 6 • Fertilizer. Natural gas is a key input into fertilizer 30 4 40 production. Already, fertilizer prices have fallen 25 2 20 more than 40 percent below their mid-2011 peak. 20 0 0 1984 1990 1996 2002 2008 2014 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 Following the post-2005 drop in natural gas prices in the United States (due to the shale gas boom), many fertilizer companies began moving their E. Changes in global oil production F. Marginal oil production cost, 2014 production plants to the United States. Million barrels per day, growth since 2010Q4 US$ per barrel • Food commodities. Food production is 4–5 times 4 Iran Libya 140 Thousands 120 more energy-intensive than manufacturing. En- Syria 2 Yemen 100 United States ergy, and oil in particular, is used to fuel farm ma- 0 Net changes 80 chinery, for transport of farm produce to markets, 60 40 -2 and in the highly energy-intensive production of 20 agricultural chemicals including fertilizers. Oil -4 0 2010Q1 2011Q1 2012Q1 2013Q1 2014Q1 2015Q1 Arctic Biodiesel Ethanol Ethanol Onshore Sand Offshore Deep-water Shale Total Deep-water Total Total Total Total Onshore Onshore thus constitutes a significant proportion of the RUS Europe CAN BRA USA VEN NGA IRN DZA ARE IRQ SAU cost of food production. As a result, a 45 percent decline in oil prices could generate a 10 percent Sources: World Bank; International Energy Agency; Bloomberg; International Monetary Fund; Deutsche Bank; drop in food prices (Baffes et al. 2015). In addi- Citi Research; Reuters; BP Statistical Review; U.S. Energy Information Administration; Baker Hughes. A. The last observation is April 2015. Grey area indicates forecasts. tion, recent harvests have been good, contribut- B. Oil production includes only crude oil production. ing an additional 10 percent decline in food com- C. OPEC = Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries. modity prices since end-2014.5 E. Crude oil supply for OPEC and non-OPEC producers. OPEC = Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries. 4Since a fully-functioning gas market has been developed in the Falling gas, fertilizer, and agricultural commodity United States, U.S. natural gas prices have largely de-linked from prices may dampen or amplify some of the benefits oil prices and are determined by domestic gas supply and demand of lower oil prices. For oil-importing countries that conditions. 5The weak El Niño event currently underway is expected to last depend heavily on exports of gas (Indonesia) or through the summer (NOAA 2015). Its effect on global prices is likely to agricultural goods (e.g., cotton in Benin, Burkina be limited, as most agricultural markets are well supplied. Faso, Mali, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan; grains in 24 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 Argentina and Brazil), lower oil prices may support While the Euro Area continues to account for by far energy-intensive production and consumption but the largest share of global imports, its contribution export revenues will fall. Oil-importing countries has declined steadily as an export market destina- that are also important food importers (Arab Re- tion, including in the second half of 2014. In 2015, public of Egypt, Morocco) may benefit from both however, Euro Area import demand is expected to lower oil prices and food prices to the extent that expand and support key trading partners in East- they are passed through into local prices. The com- ern Europe, North Africa, and Asia. Imports by bination of lower oil and food prices will further emerging markets, despite decelerating since 2011, weaken prospects in oil-exporting countries that remain the most dynamic contributor to global ex- also export foods (e.g., grain in Kazakhstan and the port growth at present. Russian Federation). The recent oil price plunge reduces the cost of trans- Metals and agricultural raw materials prices— port, and hence should encourage global trade among the most business cycle-sensitive commod- flows. Global trade has been estimated to rise by up ity prices—fell 15 percent between mid-2014 and to two percent for every one percent decrease in the April 2015. Since the factors that have driven all freight cost relative to the value of the shipment commodity prices down since 2011 remain in place, (Behar and Venables 2010). Since fuel accounts for non-oil commodity prices are expected to remain 40-63 percent of operating cost for a typical ship- well below their 2011 peaks throughout the forecast ment (UNCTAD 2010), falling oil prices could sig- horizon. nificantly bolster trade. Subdued and shifting global trade Global trade remains subdued, with a gradual shift of Recent Developments and import demand from emerging markets towards the Outlook in Developing United States. However, global trade may receive a small boost from the decline in oil prices as a result of Countries reduced freight costs. The income shifts caused by falling commodity prices At 3.6 percent in 2014, global trade growth con- are having increasingly pronounced effects. Many tinued to be substantially weaker than its pre-crisis commodity-importing countries have benefited from average of about 7 percent. Some recovery in global shrinking vulnerabilities: lower inflation and narrow- trade is projected over the next two years, but at a ing fiscal and external deficits. This has created room pace still significantly below pre-crisis averages, both for central banks to support activity. In most oil-export- in absolute terms and in relation to global GDP ing countries, however, activity has slowed. Currencies growth. This reflects weak import global growth as have depreciated, compelling some central banks to well as a maturing of supply chains and a shift in tighten monetary policy. Governments have cut spend- the sources of global growth from trade-intensive ing to offset falling resource revenues. investment towards government and private con- sumption (World Bank 2015a). Recent growth disappointments and outlook Since 2014, rising demand from the United States Growth in developing countries has again fallen has expanded the share of trading partner exports to short of expectations in 2014. In particular, growth the United States. Trade-intensive investment goods was revised downward in many oil exporting coun- account for a larger share of U.S. imports compared tries and in Brazil, where supply-side bottlenecks, a with other high-income country imports (Figure drought, and setbacks to investment and consumer 1.14), and this share has been increasing. Imported confidence from ongoing investigations appears to machinery, electrical and transportation goods, pre- have a stronger impact on growth than expected. Re- dominantly from China and Mexico, are notable cent softness in activity has been wide-spread, with examples. As a result, growing U.S. imports may an ongoing slowdown in China, a deepening reces- provide a boost to global manufacturing trade and sion in Russia, and contraction in Brazil and Vene- activity, even if fuel imports continue to decline in zuela dampening activity in their respective regions. the face of competition from domestic oil and gas. In several large developing countries, manufactur- GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 25 BOX 1.2 Low Oil Prices in Perspective The price of oil is expected to remain low for a considerable tions for the future structure and functioning of oil period of time and could become increasingly volatile. Past markets. This box addresses three questions: episodes of sustained oil price declines were often followed • What happened during past episodes of rapid oil by relatively weak global economic recoveries, with mul- price declines? tiple factors affecting final outcomes. The current episode has been predominantly driven by supply factors, and • How is the current episode different? could lead to changes in the structure and functioning of • What does the current episode mean for the future global oil markets. structure of oil markets? The oil price plunge since mid-2014 was caused by What happened during past episodes of rapid oil changes in underlying supply and demand conditions, price declines? amplified in the short term by a sharp appreciation of The drop in oil prices since June 2014 is the third larg- the U.S. dollar, a shift in Organization of the Petro- est among six episodes of significant declines over the leum Exporting Countries (OPEC) policy, and abating past three decades (Figure B1.2.1). Previous episodes geopolitical risks. Although the supply capacity of rela- were preceded by a period of weakening global growth, tively high-cost and flexible producers, such as the which contributed to the observed decline in price shale oil industry in the United States, is already ad- justing to this low-price environment, most of the un- derlying factors point to persisting weakness in oil FIGURE B1.2.1  Major oil price declines since prices over the medium term. 1984 The negative impact of sharply lower prices on export- The drop in oil prices in the second half of 2014 is one of six epi- sodes of significant oil price declines over the past three decades. ers has been immediate, and in some cases accentuated by financial market pressures, while the positive impact Magnitude of significant oil price drops for importers appears more diffuse and has not yet Percent 0 fully materialized. Evidence from past episodes shows that sharply declining oil prices were generally fol- -20 lowed by quite diverse global growth outcomes, point- ing to other important forces either mitigating or rein- -40 forcing the impact of declining oil prices on activity. As the current decline in oil prices has been largely driven -60 by supply factors and is expected to be persistent, the net effect for the global economy should be positive over the medium term. The distinction between supply -80 Jan-86 to Oct-90 to Oct-97 to May-01 to Jun-08 to Jul-14 to and demand factors is of key importance, as the former Jul-86 Apr-91 Apr-98 Nov-01 Dec-08 Jan-15 has much more positive and lasting effects on activity. Sources: World Bank. As a benchmark, a purely supply-driven and perma- Note: Nonconsecutive episodes in which the un-weighted average of West Texas Inter- mediate, Dubai, and Brent oil prices dropped by more than 30 percent over a six-month nent 45 percent drop in oil prices could be associated period. with a 0.7–0.8 percent increase in global gross domes- tic product (GDP) over the medium term, with the (Figure B1.2.2). Those episodes were followed by rela- effect peaking after two years. tively slow recoveries, as benefits for oil importers took The growing importance of unconventional oil produc- time to materialize and were in some cases offset by pre- tion and technological innovations has forced OPEC to vailing headwinds. Although virtually all episodes of rethink its policy and role as a swing producer to stabi- significant oil price drops since 1984 were accompanied lize prices. This changing landscape could have implica- by monetary policy loosening in the United States and some other major advanced economies, several were ac- The main authors of this box are John Baffes and Marc Stocker. companied or followed by financial market strains. 26 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 BOX 1.2 (continued) 1985–86. The 1985–86 oil price slump was the epi- 2001. The disruptions and uncertainty caused by the sode most closely associated with changing supply con- September 11 terrorist attacks in the United States in- ditions, as OPEC reverted to its production target of tensified a growth slowdown already underway as the 30 million barrels per day despite rising unconven- “dotcom” bubble deflated. Softening global activity tional oil supply from the North Sea and Mexico. and rising uncertainty were the main triggers behind a Prices dropped 60 percent from January to July 1986, sharp decline in oil prices around that period. How- leading to a prolonged period of low real oil prices dur- ever, aggressive easing in monetary policy by the Fed- ing the following two decades. Around that period, the eral Reserve and other major central banks propelled a U.S. Federal Reserve embarked on a series of interest rapid rebound in activity and lower oil prices might rate cuts to fend off slowing activity and declining in- have provided some further support. flation. The lack of improvement in global activity, de- spite these supportive conditions, was tightly con- 2008–09. A severe contraction in global demand sent nected to a period of weak growth and significant debt all commodity prices tumbling during the Great Re- problems in some large developing countries, slow cession of 2008–09. Wide-ranging central bank and growth in Japan and many European countries, and, at government interventions, together with resilient the end of 1987, the impact of a significant downward growth in major developing countries, gradually stabi- correction in U.S. and global stock markets. lized global activity. However, the recovery remained 1990–91. The oil price decline of 1990–91 reversed an sluggish, constrained by financial sector restructuring, earlier spike triggered by the first Gulf War, leaving a large asset price losses, and widespread deleveraging limited trace on the global economy. Despite being ac- pressures in high-income countries. The combined companied by monetary policy loosening, global growth impact of a rapid rebound in commodity prices and failed to strengthen significantly. Instead, it slowed in declining interest rates supporting capital flows to de- 1992 before recovering modestly in 1993, as a recession veloping countries created particularly favorable con- in Europe ran its course, the recovery in the United ditions for commodity-exporting developing countries States remained hesitant, and Japan entered a period of in 2010–12. prolonged stagnation. In advanced countries, a process How is the current episode different? of debt reduction and balance sheet restructuring; ele- vated long-term real interest rates; financial and ex- The footprint of sharply lower oil prices since mid- change rate stress, especially in Europe; and weak confi- 2014 has become increasingly visible, but has not yet dence hampered the global upturn. In contrast, growth translated into stronger global growth. Oil exporters in many developing countries was resilient, with signifi- have faced increasing headwinds, diverging monetary cant capital inflows helping commodity exporters offset policy across major reserve currencies has led to rising negative terms-of-trade effects from weakening prices. exchange rate volatility, and China has continued to 1998. A sharp decline in oil prices was associated slow down. Global growth was subdued at the start of mostly with weakening demand as a result of the 1997 2015, but is predicted to gain momentum, as the Asian crisis. The continued expansion of OPEC pro- United States emerges from a soft growth patch at the duction until mid-1998 might have played a role as start of 2015, the Euro Area continues to recover, and well (Fattouh 2007). The global recovery remained oil-importing emerging economies gather strength. tepid for most of 1998, partly as a result of financial Unlike during previous episodes of significant oil price market stress in the United States and major emerging declines, the U.S. Federal Reserve is widely expected to markets. The recovery gathered momentum only in start hiking policy rates before the end of the year, 1999–2000 when oil prices started recovering as well, while unconventional easing measures in the Euro as growth in the United States, the Euro Area, and sev- Area and Japan maintain highly accommodative con- eral large developing economies rebounded. ditions in other parts of the world. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 27 BOX 1.2 (continued) Figure B1.2.2  Global growth and inflation around oil price declines Past episodes of significant oil price declines were often preceded by global growth slowdowns and followed by relatively weak recoveries in high-income and developing countries, mostly as a result of financial market stress. U.S. monetary policy eased around most of the past episodes. A. Global growth B. U.S. monetary policy interest rates Year-on-year, percent Percent 1985-86 1991Q1 1998Q1 6 12 1986Q2 1991Q1 1998Q1 2001Q4 2008Q4 Current 2001Q4 2008Q4 2014Q4 4 10 2 8 0 6 -2 4 -4 2 -6 0 -8 -6 -4 -2 0 2 4 6 8 -8 -6 -4 -2 0 2 4 6 8 quarters quarters C. High-income countries’ growth D. High-income countries’ inflation Year-on-year, percent Year-on-year, percent 1986Q2 1991Q1 1998Q1 6 1986Q2 1991Q1 1998Q1 6 2001Q4 2008Q4 2014Q4 2001Q4 2008Q4 2014Q4 4 5 4 2 3 0 2 -2 1 -4 0 -1 -6 -8 -6 -4 -2 0 2 4 6 8 -8 -6 -4 -2 0 2 4 6 8 quarters quarters E. Developing countries’ growth F. Developing countries’ inflation Year-on-year, percent Year-on-year, percent 1986Q2 1991Q1 1998Q1 10 14 1986Q2 1991Q1 1998Q1 2001Q4 2008Q4 2014Q4 2001Q4 2008Q4 2014Q4 8 12 10 6 8 4 6 2 4 0 2 -8 -6 -4 -2 0 2 4 6 8 -8 -6 -4 -2 0 2 4 6 8 quarters quarters Sources: World Bank and Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. Note: Shaded areas indicate the period of the sharp oil price drop. A. Global growth computed on the basis of a weighted average (using 2010 US$ GDP weights) of countries for which quarterly national accounts data are available. Time “0” is the quar- ter of the trough of a significant oil price decline episode (30 percent drop over a seven-month period, which is the shaded region); −8 corresponds to 8 quarters before the trough and 8 corresponds to 8 quarters after the trough. B. Effective U.S. nominal federal funds rate. D. Consumer price index (CPI) inflation aggregated across countries using consumption weights. F. Median CPI inflation across developing countries. 28 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 BOX 1.2 (continued) Regarding the drivers of the recent crash in oil prices, a in November.1 Analysis by the International Monetary comparison with previous episodes points to a predomi- Fund (IMF 2015b) points to weak demand playing a nant role of supply factors, with important similarities more significant role in the initial phase of the decline to the 1985–86 episode. Both episodes followed periods (July to mid-October 2014), while supply factors domi- of high oil prices and a rapid expansion of non-OPEC nated in the subsequent period. Other studies, such as oil supplies—Alaska, North Sea, and Mexico in the for- Hamilton (2014), Baumeister and Kilian (2015), and mer, and U.S. shale oil, Canadian oil sands, and biofuels Badel and McGillicuddy (2015), point to varying effects in the latter. And in both crashes OPEC changed its of weakening global growth on oil prices in 2014–15.2 policy objective, from price targeting to market share. Some of these empirical investigations focus on the co- In contrast, other sharp declines were largely precipitated movement of oil prices with equity and other financial by slowing global demand or, in the case of the 1990–91 and commodity prices. The current episode has been crash, associated with the first Gulf War. The 2008–09 associated with relatively strong performance of U.S. collapse exhibited some unique characteristics. Prices dur- and global equity markets, which has been interpreted ing that period were highly correlated with equity and as evidence of a positive supply shock, reflecting expec- exchange rates, while co-movements across most com- tations of more supportive conditions for activity modity prices were twice as high compared with the his- ahead (Figure B1.2.3). Another important feature of torical average (and other crashes), highlighting the pre- the recent period of sharply declining oil prices has dominant role of deteriorating demand conditions. been the significant and broad-based appreciation of The dominant role of supply factors behind the 2014– the U.S. dollar, in contrast with the 1985–86 episode. 15 drop bodes well for its eventual impact on global A strong dollar might have accentuated the decline in activity. Estimates suggest that a purely supply-driven oil prices, contributing to lower demand in importing decline of 45 percent in oil prices could be associated countries with depreciating currencies while encourag- with a 0.7–0.8 percent increase in global GDP over the ing supply from producers. medium term (Baffes et al. 2015). What does the current episode mean for the future However, the ultimate impact on global activity re- structure of oil markets? mains uncertain. First, with a confluence of cyclical Over the medium term, oil prices are projected to re- and structural forces at work in the global economy, cover gradually from their current lows, but will re- the expected gains for growth from the drop in oil main below recent peaks and could witness more vola- prices could be lower than suggested by the standard tility. The pace of the recovery in prices will largely model simulations. These mitigating factors include depend on the speed at which supply will adjust to cur- current financial vulnerabilities, high indebtedness, rent market conditions. Given that OPEC, for now, limited room for monetary policy in major economies appears to have relinquished its role as swing producer, to be loosened further, elevated unemployment, and U.S. shale oil producers, with their relatively short pro- slowing long-term growth prospects in major oil- duction cycles and low sunk costs, may see the greatest importing economies. These factors may encourage precautionary savings by households and corporations, 1Looking at high-frequency co-movements between oil and global eq- particularly in countries still facing important crisis uity markets since mid-2014, Baffes et al. (2015) find that supply factors were the dominant factor. Adverse demand shocks (that reduce oil and eq- legacies and weak balance sheets. uity prices) peaked around end-2014, whereas favorable supply shocks kept Second, the precise contributions of the supply and de- mounting until February 2015. 2Hamilton (2014) finds that two-fifths of the oil price decline in the mand factors behind the recent oil price crash remain second half of 2014 reflected new indications of weakness in the global uncertain and subject to debate. According to Baffes et economy, while Baumeister and Kilian (2015) report that shocks to the al. (2015), supply shocks have accounted for roughly demand for oil inventories contributed to the recent oil price drop as well. Badel and McGillicuddy (2015) argue that the decline in oil prices during twice as much as demand shocks since mid-2014, par- the second half of 2014 was largely driven by negative oil-specific demand ticularly after OPEC’s decision to forgo price targeting shocks—in anticipation of expected abundant oil supply. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 29 BOX 1.2 (continued) Figure B1.2.3  Financial market developments around oil price declines The current episode has been associated with a significant appreciation of the U.S. dollar and relatively strong performance of U.S. and global equity markets. A. U.S. dollar B. U.S. stock prices Index = 1 in 0 Index = 1 in 0 1986Q2 1991Q1 1998Q1 1.2 1986Q2 1991Q1 1998Q1 1.6 2001Q4 2008Q4 2014Q4 2001Q4 2008Q4 2014Q4 1.4 1.1 1.2 1.0 1.0 0.9 0.8 0.8 0.6 -8 -6 -4 -2 0 2 4 6 8 -8 -6 -4 -2 0 2 4 6 8 quarters quarters Sources: World Bank and Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. A. Nominal effective exchange rate of the U.S. dollar against a trade-weighted basket of major currencies. An increase denotes a nominal effective appreciation. Time “0” is the quarter of the trough of a significant oil price decline episode (30 percent drop over a seven-month period, which is the shaded region); −8 corresponds to 8 quarters before the trough and 8 cor- responds to 8 quarters after the trough. B. U.S. equity market index in U.S. dollars. adjustments in the short term, but could rapidly re- trade restrictions imposed by some of the agreements store capacity as prices increase. This response could on global market conditions either encouraged the contribute to more volatility in prices, around a lower emergence of competitor products (e.g., for tin) or the equilibrium level. entry of new producers (e.g., for coffee).3 As a result, all The increasing importance of unconventional oil pro- the agreements (except crude oil) eventually collapsed. duction as an existing and prospective source of addi- A key difference between OPEC, the only surviving tional oil (Figure B1.2.4) has led to intensive debates commodity organization seeking to actively manage about the long-term role of OPEC as a cartel. markets, and the earlier commodity agreements is that Looking back, efforts to manage world commodity OPEC does not have a legal clause on how to intervene markets to achieve price objectives are not unique to when market conditions warrant. Therefore, OPEC the oil market. Several commodity agreements, often can respond flexibly to changing circumstances. negotiated among producing and consuming nations to stabilize prices, were put in place after World War II, 3First negotiated in 1954, the International Tin Agreement (ITA) col- including wheat, sugar, tin, coffee, and olive oil (Swer- lapsed in 1985. Higher tin prices under the ITA encouraged new tin pro- ling 1968). A renewed effort took place after the price ducers to enter the market and the development of a substitute product, boom in the 1970s, with the agreements typically aluminum, which gained market share by capturing the growing demand backed by the United Nations and extended to other from the beverage can producers. In 1962, coffee-producing countries ac- counting for 90 percent of global coffee output and almost all developed commodities, including cocoa and natural rubber coffee-consuming countries signed the International Coffee Agreement (Gilbert 1996). These agreements had legal clauses re- (ICA) with the objective of stabilizing world coffee prices through manda- garding the tools to manage the corresponding mar- tory export quotas. Elevated coffee prices encouraged the emergence of new producers outside ICA, such as Vietnam, which by the early 2000s had kets, which were export restrictions and inventory overtaken Colombia as the world’s second largest coffee producer after Bra- management. But over the long term, the price and zil. The cartel was dismantled in 1989 (Baffes, Lewin, and Varangis 2005). 30 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 BOX 1.2 (continued) (OPEC 2015). Efficiency gains and new oil suppliers, Figure B1.2.4  The new oil map along with disagreements among various OPEC mem- OPEC’s share of global oil supply has fallen, partly as a result of ris- bers (especially during the Iran-Iraq War and the first Gulf ing oil production from unconventional sources in the United States War), reduced the cartel’s role for the next two decades. and Canada, as well as biofuel production. These developments have redefined the global oil map with important medium-term implications. OPEC intervened actively again following the Asian fi- nancial crisis—when oil prices dropped to less than $10/ Oil sands barrel—by setting targets within price bands. OPEC’s de- (Canada) cision to forgo price targeting and favor market share in Existing Biofuels November 2014 marked a new step for the cartel. sources (Global) Conventional Conclusion (OPEC & non-OPEC) Shale oil The plunge in the price of oil in 2014–15 has left a Crude oil production (United States) large footprint on the global economy and oil mar- Unconventional (mostly Shale oil reserves kets, but has not yet translated into stronger global non-OPEC) (Argentina, China, Libya, Russian Federation) growth. Evidence from past episodes shows that sharply declining oil prices were generally followed by Arctic exploration quite diverse global growth outcomes, pointing to (Canada, Greenland, Norway, Russian other important forces either mitigating or reinforc- Federation, United States) New sources ing the impact of declining oil prices on activity. Sup- Deep sea oil exploration ply factors appear to have played a dominant role in (Brazil, Mexico, West Africa) the recent plunge in oil prices, which bodes well for its eventual impact on the global economy. However, Coal liquefaction (China, Indonesia, United States) uncertainty remains and positive effects could be mit- igated by crisis legacies or weakening long-term Source: World Bank. growth prospects in some oil-importing countries. Looking ahead, the growing importance of uncon- OPEC began playing an important role following its de- ventional oil production and technological innova- cision to impose an embargo on oil exports in 1973, and tions could lead to lower oil prices with substantial was also instrumental in tripling oil prices in 1978–79 volatility around a new equilibrium level. ing sector confidence softened in the first quarter of account for about one-third of developing country 2015 and industrial production growth slowed as GDP. Their slowdowns dampen activity in other terms of trade deteriorated or domestic production countries with close trade, finance, and remittance struggled with energy bottlenecks (Brazil, Nigeria, links. As a result, the downward revisions in the South Africa). Policy uncertainty has weighed on forecast are concentrated in the regions with large investment in some countries (Bangladesh, Turkey, commodity exporters (the eastern part of Europe Nigeria). Elsewhere, fiscal restraint, tight monetary and Central Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean, policy, or macroprudential measures are contribut- and Sub-Saharan Africa). Commodity-importing ing to the slowdown in activity (East Asia). countries face other challenges. Turkey, South Af- Growth forecasts have been revised downward for rica, and other countries that rely heavily on for- 2015 (Figure 1.15). Developing country growth is eign capital inflows could be negatively affected by now expected to slow to 4.4 percent in 2015, before rising borrowing costs as the U.S. Federal Reserve recovering somewhat by 2017, to 5.4 percent. raises policy rates. In addition, a structural growth slowdown has been underway in many developing Commodity-exporting countries, in particular, are countries as the growth in working age populations, struggling to adjust to low commodity prices. They productivity, and investment has eased. Partly as a GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 31 result of reforms to raise productivity, South Asia, FIGURE 1.13  Oil price volatility and non-oil commodity and East Asia and the Pacific should continue to prices grow quite rapidly, although at a somewhat slower On average, commodity price declines since 2011 have reversed about one-third of rate than in previous years (Chapter 2). price increases during the 2000s. Although oil prices appear to have found a floor, their volatility has risen. Low oil prices also dampen non-oil commodity prices, espe- • East Asia and Pacific. Growth is expected to cially those of natural gas (with contracts typically tied to oil prices), and fertilizers and ease to 6.7 percent in 2015 and to remain flat food (with oil-intensive production). thereafter, reflecting a continued slowdown in A. Crude oil and volatility B. Oil price volatility over time China that is only partly offset by a pickup in US$ per barrel Percent Percent OPEC abandons 8 the rest of the region. Indonesia and Malaysia 120 Brent price Volatility (RHS) 4 7 price targeting 2008 financial crisis face pressures from lower global prices of oil, 100 3 6 First Gulf War 5 gas, coal, palm oil, and rubber and softer ex- 80 2 4 ternal demand, particularly from China. Lower 3 2 60 1 energy prices will dampen oil and gas pro- 1 40 0 duction, but should support the large non-oil 0 Jul-14 Sep-14 Nov-14 Jan-15 Mar-15 May-15 Jan-85 Jan-88 Jan-91 Jan-94 Jan-97 Jan-00 Jan-03 Jan-06 Jan-09 Jan-12 Jan-15 sectors in both economies. The effects of fis- cal restraint (Malaysia, Vietnam), and tighter macroprudential policies (China, Malaysia, C. Crude oil and natural gas prices D. Commodity prices Thailand), are expected to be largely offset by US$ per barrel Index, 2010=100 Cumulative change in percent of 2001Q1, real 2010 US$ a gradual recovery of investment and manufac- 130 140 600 500 2011Q1-2015Q1 2001Q1-2011Q1 turing exports, in line with the global recovery. 120 110 130 400 300 Cumulative 2001-2015Q1 120 200 100 • Europe and Central Asia. After slowing to 2.4 100 90 110 0 -100 80 100 percent in 2014, regional growth is expected to 70 90 -200 -300 60 -400 weaken further in 2015, to 1.8 percent, before 50 Crude oil Natural gas (RHS) 80 -500 Palmoil Lead Tin Copper Rubber (Malaysia) Cocoa Soybean oil Coffee (Arabica) Soybean oil RiceGold Nickel Zinc Crude oil Banana Tobacco Tea Iron oil Soybean Natural gas Wheat Sugar Cotton Aluminum Silver Coal Maize picking up in 2016–17. In the eastern part of the 40 70 Jan-10 Jul-10 Jan-11 Jul-11 Jan-12 Jul-12 Jan-13 Jul-13 Jan-14 Jul-14 Jan-15 region (Central Asia, Eastern Europe, and South Caucasus), growth slowed particularly sharply, reflecting recessions in Russia and Ukraine, and E. Share of energy in production, 2007 F. Oil price elasticities downturns in oil-exporting economies (Azer- baijan, Kazakhstan) partly cushioned by fiscal Percent World Manufacture Agriculture Elasticity Cotton and reserve buffers. These regional headwinds High-income countries Developing countries Palm oil had significant negative spillovers to the re- Sub-Saharan Africa United States Rice gion’s many oil-importing economies through Canada EU-12 Wheat trade (Armenia, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova), China Brazil Soybeans and remittances (Armenia, Georgia, Kyrgyz India Turkey Maize Republic, Moldova, Tajikistan), which dropped 0 5 10 15 20 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 sharply from the fourth quarter of 2014. This more than offset the benefits of low oil prices, Source: World Bank staff calculations based on the Global Trade Analysis Project database; World Bank; Baffes and Etienne 2014. caused depreciation and rising inflation, and A. Volatility is the standard deviation of the oil price changes and is presented as a 30-day trailing window. compelled a number of central banks to raise B. Values are 30-day rolling standard deviation of daily oil price changes in percent. F. Elasticity estimates are based on a reduced-form, seemingly-unrelated regression estimation using annual interest rates since mid-2014 (Armenia, Geor- data for 1960-2013. According to Baffes and Etienne (2014), crude oil is the most important driver to food prices among all sectoral and macroeconomic fundamentals. An average elasticity of 0.25 implies that the 200 percent gia, Kyrgyz Republic, Moldova, Tajikistan). In increase in energy costs during the past decade could explain more than half of the food price increases. contrast, growth accelerated modestly in the western part of the region led by Hungary, the Czech Republic, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia, ployment (particularly in the Western Balkans). supported by strengthening Euro Area activity. Growth in Turkey has slowed, partly reflecting The nascent recoveries in Bosnia & Herzegovina policy uncertainty, while lower oil prices have and Serbia have been disrupted by heavy floods. helped narrow the current account deficit. Activity continues to be held back by still- • Latin America and the Caribbean. Growth in stretched balance sheets (Bulgaria, Serbia and, the region will decline to 0.4 percent in 2015, to a lesser extent, Romania), and high unem- as South America struggles with domestic 32 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 1.14  Global trade the United States lifts activity in developing Global trade growth continues to be modest, with a gradual shift towards U.S. import North and Central America, along with the demand. Trade-intensive capital equipment accounts for a sizeable share of U.S. Caribbean. imports. • Middle East and North Africa. Growth is ex- A. Global GDP and import growth B. H  igh-income countries’ pected to remain flat at 2.2 percent in 2015. contribution to global imports The expected growth rebound to 3.7 percent in Percent Percent Percent 16 World import growth World GDP growth (RHS) 8 100 2016-17 is predicated on improving external 12 6 90 80 demand, strengthening confidence that boosts 8 4 70 investments in some oil-importing countries 4 2 60 50 50% threshold (Arab Republic of Egypt, Jordan), and an as- 0 0 -4 -2 40 30 sumed gradual stabilization of security. The -8 -4 20 plunge in oil prices is a particular challenge for 10 -12 -6 0 oil-exporting countries, most of which have se- 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016 1980s 1990s 2000-08 2011-14 2015-17 vere security challenges (Iraq, Libya, Republic of Yemen) or have limited buffers (Iran, Iraq). C. Source of world import demand D. M  erchandise imports by major For oil-importing countries, the potential posi- economies and world, by product, tive effects of lower oil prices are partially offset 2013 by spillover effects from more fragile countries Index = 100 in 2000 120 United States World in the region, including through lower remit- Euro Area Japan 115 Emerging markets tances and security risks. Long standing struc- 110 China 105 United tural constraints present a chronic obstacle to 100 States faster growth in the region. Measures to ad- 95 EU27 90 dress these include policies to narrow the gap 0 50 100 85 Agricultural goods Food products Percent between private and public employment, level Textiles, clothing, footwear Minerals 80 2010 2012 2014 Fuels Raw materials Chemicals Metals the playing field between firms, and improving Machinery and transport Other education (World Bank 2015a). • South Asia. Growth is expected to firm to 7.1 Sources: World Bank; CPB Netherlands Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis; UN Comtrade database. A. Grey area indicates forecasts. percent in 2015 and 7.4 percent in 2016–17, C. The figure shows the ratio of manufacturing imports to global manufacturing exports; the trend line (solid line) buoyed by a reinvigorated reform agenda in In- is a fourth-order polynomial trend function. dia and supported by strengthening demand in high-income countries. The decline in global oil macro- and microeconomic challenges, weak prices has benefited the region, improving fiscal investor confidence, and low commodity prices. and current account balances, enabling subsidy In Brazil, activity softened in the first quarter of reforms to proceed in India, and facilitating an 2015 as confidence fell further, mainly due to a easing of monetary policy (India, Pakistan, Sri corruption scandal and increases in electricity Lanka). In India, gradual implementation of prices following a drought, while infrastructure reforms has supported business and investor bottlenecks and pro-cyclical policies continue confidence and encouraged capital inflows. to weigh on growth.  Sentiment has remained However, credit growth remains modest, re- fragile and activity slowed in Mexico as a re- flecting weak bank balance sheets (mainly sult of sharply lower oil prices, which could in public sector banks). This is holding back reduce the short-term growth dividends from credit-financed investment. energy sector reforms, a weak first quarter in • Sub-Saharan Africa. Low oil prices have the United States, and modest wage short-term considerably reduced growth in commodity- growth. However, the economy is expected to exporting countries (Angola, Nigeria), where strengthen for the remainder of 2015 on ris- softening oil sectors have also slowed activity ing exports to the United States. For 2016–17, in non-oil sectors. Although South Africa is ex- growth in the region is expected to pick up pected to be one of the main beneficiaries of to 2.4 percent, on average, as South America low oil prices, energy shortages, weak investor emerges from recession and robust growth in sentiment amid policy uncertainty, and by the GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 33 anticipated tightening of monetary and fiscal FIGURE 1.15  Developing and emerging-market growth policies continue to hold back activity. Growth Developing country growth forecasts were revised downward again, as sharply lower in the region is forecast to slow to 4.2 percent, a oil prices reduced activity in oil exporters, while the support to activity in oil-importers appears slower to materialize. Growth in low-income countries continues to be robust downward revision of 0.4 percentage point rela- as a result of strong public investment, good harvests, and, among oil-importing tive to the January 2015 forecasts. This mainly countries, improving terms of trade. reflects a reassessment of prospects in Nigeria  merging markets: Growth A. E  ow-income countries: Growth B. L and Angola, following the sharp drop in oil forecasts for 2015 forecasts for 2015 prices, and in South Africa, because of ongoing Percent June 2013 Percent June 2013 June 2014 difficulties in electricity supply. For 2016–17, 10 June 2014 June 2015 8 June 2015 8 7 growth is expected to be only marginally higher 6 6 4 5 as these challenges partially offset higher trad- 2 4 3 ing partner growth and the continued expan- 0 -2 2 1 sion in the region’s low-income countries. -4 0 Kenya Rwanda Uganda Bangladesh Comoros United Rep. LIC Brazil China Federation India Indonesia Malaysia Mexico Nigeria Turkey Tanzania, South Africa Russian Growth in low-income countries, on average, is ex- pected to remain robust in 2015 at 6.2 percent, be- fore rising to 6.6 percent, on average, in 2016–17. C. Low-income countries: D. Fraction of developing countries with In the short-run, it should be supported by infra- Growth slower growth than 1990-2008 average structure (Rwanda, Ethiopia) and mining (DRC, Percent Percent Mozambique, Tanzania) investment (partly fi- 14 12 100 nanced by China), agricultural growth (Ethiopia), 10 80 and consumer spending (Bangladesh, Uganda). 8 6 60 However, continued weaknesses in the prices of 4 40 some low-income countries’ main exports (espe- 2 0 20 cially base metals) will limit the benefits of the oil -2 0 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015-17 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 price decline (Special Feature 2). In several fragile countries (Madagascar, Mali), growth should pick up as investment rises on the back of increased polit- Source: World Bank. ical stability. Political uncertainty in Bangladesh and C. The shaded area indicates the interquartile range. Red line indicates GDP-weighted average. D. For each year, the fraction of developing countries in which growth is slower than its historical average for the natural disaster in Nepal will dampen growth in 1990-2008. For 2015-17, the average of three years is shown. 2015. However, generally solid remittance inflows should help to support consumption and, in Ne- pal, activity should rebound from a sharp decline benefits for activity have been largely offset by a wide as reconstruction efforts get underway. In Guinea, range of country-specific headwinds (see discussion Liberia, and Sierra Leone, the Ebola epidemic will in previous section). continue to constrain economic activity. For most commodity exporters, the commodity Lower commodity prices: widespread price declines since 2011, on average, reversed about adjustments a third of their increases during 2002-11. The nega- tive terms of trade shock in 2014–2015 is particu- The impact of the large real income shift from oil- larly acute for oil-exporting countries (Azerbaijan, exporting to oil-importing countries caused by the Colombia, Kazakhstan, Nigeria, Russia, Venezuela, steep oil price drop in the second half of 2014 has and to a lesser extent, Mexico) and natural gas- been amplified or mitigated (depending on country exporting countries (Bolivia, Malaysia, Figure 1.16). characteristics) by declines in most other commod- Countries reliant on export revenues from metal and ity prices. Commodity price weakness has had sig- other non-energy commodities (Argentina, Indone- nificant and immediate adverse effects on activity, sia, Peru, South Africa, Zambia) also face challenges. and on fiscal and external positions in commodity- In contrast, Brazil’s large internal market and limited exporting countries. In commodity-importing coun- trade openness dampen some of the impact of the tries, lower oil and food prices have mainly resulted terms of trade deterioration. Median growth among in reduced vulnerabilities—lower inflation and nar- commodity-exporting countries could fall 2 percent- rower current account and fiscal deficits—whereas age points per annum as they transition from peak to 34 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 trough in the commodity price cycle (Spatafora et al. ble or appreciated in trade-weighted terms. Oil-im- 2009), but real exchange rate depreciation and the porting emerging market currencies have typically use of fiscal space could cushion this impact. depreciated in trade-weighted terms by less than 3 The biggest beneficiaries from the commodity price percent, or appreciated, since mid-2014. After tak- slump are likely to be large energy-importing coun- ing into account inflation, most have appreciated in tries in Asia and Eastern Europe, most notably China, real, trade-weighted terms. Competitiveness gains India, and Turkey. The recent fall in oil prices is ex- have thus been modest, if any. However, countries pected to support consumption by raising real in- heavily reliant on exports of services such as infor- comes, easing inflation, and by improving current ac- mation technology and communications (India, count balances and reducing external vulnerabilities. Turkey) could benefit even from modest competi- Even where, as a result of subsidy reform, domestic tiveness gains since these services tend to respond fuel prices do not decline in line with global energy more strongly to real depreciation than manufactur- prices (Arab Republic of Egypt), fiscal and current ing (Eichengreen and Gupta 2013; Figure 1.18). account deficits are expected to narrow. Sharp trade-weighted depreciations in some oil- exporting countries (Colombia, Russia) and Brazil Exchange rate depreciations: brought real effective exchange rates closer to their competitiveness gains but some financial long-term averages. Commodity exporters with stability risks manufacturing industries that are already well de- veloped, diversified, and open to trade (Malaysia, Divergent monetary policies among major econo- Mexico) could stand to benefit from important mies and the prospect of higher interest rates in the competitiveness gains as a result of depreciations.6 United States, combined with sharply lower oil prices, In contrast, in Brazil, export competitiveness con- have put pressures on emerging market currencies tinues to be held back by structural bottlenecks, and caused volatility. For many developing countries, including weak infrastructure, limited openness depreciation against the U.S. dollar since the start of to trade, and a small number of exporting firms the year has been significantly more pronounced than (Canuto, Fleischhaker and Schellekens 2015). during the “taper tantrum” in May/June 2013 (Figure 1.17). The depreciation was particularly severe in oil- Inflation: lower oil prices versus depreciation exporters as their growth prospects dimmed and their credit ratings were downgraded. Some countries with In many oil-importing developing countries, plung- managed exchange rates have intervened in exchange ing oil prices have reduced inflation below inflation markets to stem depreciation (Algeria, Ghana, Nige- targets, increasing the number of countries with low ria until February 2014), and Morocco has changed or even negative inflation (Figure 1.19). The de- the composition of the currency basket underlying its cline in inflation has been stronger where oil had a currency peg away from the euro. larger weight in consumption baskets, where depre- Exchange rate depreciations—in trade-weighted ciations were modest, and where fuel subsidies and terms—may spur exports and help mitigate the other price regulations were limited. However, core domestic impact of negative terms of trade shocks. inflation has remained high in several oil-importing However, weakening currencies against the U.S. dollar could also strain balance sheets with sizeable 6The less trade-weighted depreciations are passed through to do- amounts of foreign currency debt and hinder invest- mestic prices, the more they will help competitiveness. However, ment, after several years of rapid credit growth and emerging markets, and commodity-exporting countries especially, gen- private debt build-up. For many countries, export erally experience a larger exchange rate pass-through to export prices than advanced countries, possibly because of limited pricing power on markets are considerably more diversified than the international markets (Campa and Goldberg 2005). The literature is currency composition of their external liabilities. As not unanimous on the larger exchange rate pass-through in emerging a result, the benefits of improved competitiveness markets (e.g., Ca-Zorzi, Hahn, and Sanchez 2007), perhaps because the may be outweighed by the risks from balance sheet pass-through has fallen over time (Mihaljek and Klau 2008). However, it appears more pronounced among commodity exporters like Indone- strains associated with sharp depreciations. sia, South Africa, Mexico and lower in India, Russia, Turkey, Hungary, While most developing country currencies depreci- or the Philippines (Bussière et al. 2014). ated against the U.S. dollar, many were broadly sta- GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 35 countries (Arab Republic of Egypt, Brazil, Indone- FIGURE 1.16  Terms of trade effect on GDP sia, Nicaragua, South Africa, Tunisia, Turkey). Terms of trade deterioration, following a sharp reversal of earlier commodity This disinflationary impact of lower oil prices should price gains, is causing slowdowns in commodity-exporting countries. be transitory, fading during the second half of 2015 Change in trade balance, percent of GDP and in 2016. On average, a 45 percent oil price de- 4 2012-14 2015 2016-17 Cumulated cline could be reflected in a decline in global inflation 2 of 0.7–1.2 percent in the first year, with the effect 0 -2 dissipating rapidly thereafter (Baffes et al. 2015). -4 In some countries, lower oil prices have magnified -6 downward pressures on inflation from anemic de- -8 mand or overcapacity. This is especially the case in -10 Eastern Europe and parts of East Asia. For example, India China Hungary Pakistan Russian Federation Philippines Turkey Egypt, Arab Rep. Brazil Venezuela, RB Malaysia Argentina South Africa Romania Mexico Zambia Indonesia Colombia Peru Nigeria inflation has been near-zero or below-target since well before the oil price plunge in Hungary and Bulgaria. In China, persistent deflation in producer prices suggests a build-up of overcapacity and loss Source: World Bank. Note: Impact on trade balance (% of GDP) of terms of trade changes associated with commodity of corporate pricing power, adding to balance sheet price movements. pressures of highly indebted corporates. (Azerbaijan, Columbia, Indonesia, and Kazakh- In contrast, in some oil-exporting countries (Co- stan); in others, macroprudential regulations were lombia, Nigeria, Russia) or countries struggling with tightened to contain financial stability risks after weakening investor confidence (Brazil), sharply de- several years of rapid debt buildup (Malaysia, Thai- preciating currencies, increased administered prices, land) or domestic demand pressures (Brazil). In or domestic demand pressures contributed to rising Russia, economic sanctions and higher borrowing inflation. This pass-through of recent depreciation costs contributed to a particularly sharp slowdown into inflation is expected to be short-lived in coun- in credit growth. tries with credible central banks and other institu- A protracted unwinding of earlier credit expansion tional features that help anchor inflation expecta- could severely dent growth. Past episodes of rapid tions (Taylor 2000; Gagnon and Ihrig 2004). debt buildup were typically followed by several years of weaker growth. For example, after episodes of debt Private debt buildup: weighing on domestic build-ups in excess of 30 percent of GDP over any demand five year period, median growth slowed in the sub- Since 2009, record-low interest rates and access to sequent two years by more than 2 percentage points. abundant global liquidity have contributed to size- able private debt buildups in a growing number of countries (Figure 1.20). By 2013, credit to the non- Risks to the Outlook bank corporate sector in large emerging markets Risks remain tilted to the downside, although some- had exceeded 100 percent of GDP, compared with what less so than in January. Some pre-existing risks, about 60 percent of GDP pre-crisis. The private especially of deflation in the Euro Area, have receded debt build-up was particularly large in the non- somewhat but new financial stability and growth risks financial corporate and household sectors of East have emerged. Deteriorating prospects in some devel- Asia and Latin America. Some of the debt build-up oping economies, especially commodity-exporting ones, was financed externally. As a result, private external are eroding their resilience. This, together with the pos- debt is sizeable in several developing countries, es- sibility of volatility around U.S. monetary policy nor- pecially in Europe and Central Asia. malization, is increasing the risk of financial stress. In Since 2014, credit growth has slowed sharply in addition, the broad-based dollar appreciation could many emerging market economies, weighing on slow the U.S. economy more than expected. If these domestic demand. In some cases, monetary policy downside risks were to materialize at the same time, tightened to adjust to deteriorating terms of trade the disruptions to developing country financial markets 36 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 1.17  Developing country currencies the same time as the approaching first rate increase Sharp depreciations against the U.S. dollar in several developing countries raise bal- by the U.S. Federal Reserve nears. Rising concerns ance sheet risks. Depreciations were largest in oil exporters, the Euro Area’s close about widespread emerging market credit rating trading partners, and countries with external vulnerabilities. In some countries, they were stemmed by reserve drawdowns or interest rate hikes. In trade-weighted terms, how- downgrades or bouts of financial market volatility ever, depreciations were modest, suggesting limited competitiveness gains. (such as during the “taper tantrum” in May/June 2013) would increase the risk of financial market A. Major emerging-market currencies B. D  epreciation since mid-2014 and disruptions in developing countries with high vul- deviation of the real effective exchange rate from the long-term nerabilities or weak growth prospects.7 average Although the U.S. Federal Reserve has adjusted its Percent change U.S. dollars per local currency unit, 2014 20 Reversal of undervaluation CHN ECU Increased guidance to prepare markets for monetary policy 40 Nominal effective exchange rate, 2014 THA overvaluation 10 tightening, long-term interest rates in the United NEER change, June 2014- IND EGY PAK 20 U.S. dollars per local currency unit, 2013 MAR PER IDN 0 States remain low. A significant gap between the January 2015 0 TUR CHL MYS BGR NGA ROM -20 HUN -40 -10 MEX policy rate expectations of market participants and -60 -20 Increased undervaluation COL BRA those of members of the Federal Reserve Open -80 -100 -30 RUS Reversal of overvaluation Market Committee exists over the medium-term, -40 exceeding 100 basis points for 2017 (Figure 1.21). RUS COL NGA ROM HUN MEX MYS ZAF IDN IND BRA TUR PHL CHN 80 100 120 140 160 180 REER deviation in June 2014 from long-term average The presence of such a wedge increases the risk, es- pecially around policy announcement dates, of a C. R  eal effective exchange rate level D. F  oreign currency exposure and sharp upward adjustment of market expectations and exposure to foreign investors foreign currency vulnerability indicator that is accompanied by a sudden rise in long-term interest rates and risk premia (Special Feature 1). REER deviation from 10-year average, percent Percent Foreign currency exposure ratio 120 20 Thailand 100 Foreign currency vulnerability indicator Capital flows to developing countries respond Peru 10 Romania Malaysia 80 strongly to risk appetite, and to interest rate move- 0 Indonesia Turkey Mexico 60 ments in core reserve currencies, most prominently India 40 -10 Colombia Brazil Hungary 20 the U.S. dollar (Bruno and Shin 2013; Forbes and South Africa -20 0 Warnock 2012; Fratzscher, 2011; World Bank Thailand Colombia India South Africa Indonesia Russia Zambia Turkey Jamaica Pakistan Philippines Nigeria Ghana Kazakhstan Lebanon Cambodia -30 Russia 2014b). An abrupt market reaction to a change in -40 Foreign holdings of local bonds/FX reserves, percent Fed policy could result in sudden stops in capital 0 20 40 60 80 inflows to developing countries and a reassessment of credit risk in those economies. Sources: World Bank; Moody’s Statistical Report; JP Morgan; Haver Analytics; Bloomberg. A. A decrease in the exchange rate against the U.S. dollar and a decrease in the nominal effective exchange Tightening financial conditions, a general reassess- rate denote a depreciation. Values for 2013 refer to May 2013 to January 2014; 2014 refers to June 2014 to February 2015. ment of credit and liquidity risks, and broad-based B. A decline in the nominal effective exchange rate (NEER) or real effective exchange rate (REER) denotes a U.S. dollar appreciation could amplify deteriorat- depreciation. D. Foreign currency exposure is measured as the ratio of total foreign currency deposits in the domestic banking ing prospects and rising vulnerabilities, especially in system/total deposits in the domestic banking system. The foreign currency vulnerability indicator is defined as total foreign currency deposits in the domestic banking system/(official foreign exchange reserves + foreign oil-exporting countries. Weak commodity prices— assets of domestic banks). compounded by weak global trade, prospects for tightening global financial conditions, deteriorat- and economies could be substantial. On the upside, the ing public finances, and political concerns—have benefits from lower oil and non-oil commodity prices contributed to a number of ratings downgrades in could prove stronger than currently anticipated. developing countries since 2013 (Brazil, Nigeria, Russia, South Africa, Ukraine, Venezuela). By com- parison, upgrades (Mexico, the Philippines) have Eroding credit worthiness and financial been rare. market disruptions Rising concerns about credit downgrades in a num- The steady improvement in credit ratings across ber of larger emerging market economies could emerging markets during the early 2000s, mainly for commodity-exporting countries, started revers- 7Oil-importing developing countries (Indonesia, South Africa, Tur- key) most affected by the turmoil of May/June 2013 could be less sus- ing after 2012. Emerging market credit worthiness ceptible to turmoil in future episodes as their current account and fiscal is eroding, especially in oil-exporting countries, at deficits and inflation rates have declined. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 37 cause a general reappraisal of risk assets that spreads FIGURE 1.18  Exchange rates and competitiveness in to other emerging and frontier markets. Several large major emerging economies emerging markets already struggle to maintain their Exchange rate pass-through into domestic prices and costs varies widely across credit ratings. Credit rating downgrades are typically countries. It tends to be larger in developing countries with more concentrated export structures, in particular natural resource exports. Exports of modern services in com- anticipated in credit default swap (CDS) markets, munications and information technology appear to respond more strongly than in which blunts the direct impact of the downgrade an- manufacturing. nouncement (Hull, Predescu and White 2004; Nor- den and Weber 2004). In some developing coun-  xchange rate pass-through to A. E  ize of manufacturing sector, B. S export prices 2013 tries, sovereign CDS spreads have already increased Estimates Manufacturing, value added, percent of GDP beyond those of similarly rated sovereigns (Brazil, 1.4 35 1.2 30 Kazakhstan, Turkey, South Africa; Figure 1.22). That 1.0 25 said, the risk remains that ratings downgrades trigger 0.8 20 0.6 15 a repricing, even if partially anticipated. 0.4 10 0.2 5 A reassessment of credit and liquidity risk may be 0.0 0 China Malaysia Indonesia Federation Brazil Mexico Turkey India South Africa Nigeria -0.2 accompanied by capital outflows, reserve losses, Russian Venezuela Portugal Brazil Indonesia Mexico Thailand Malaysia Philippines Hungary South Africa China Turkey sharp depreciations, and rising borrowing costs. These could strain balance sheets of corporates and, by raising nonperforming loans, those of banks. Although banking systems in most oil-exporting countries have been considered resilient to oil price C. Trade openness, 2014  eal exchange rate depreciation D. R changes in stress tests (Baffes et al. 2015), financial and export growth, by sector strains could eventually emerge if low oil prices co- Sum of export and import as percent of GDP Export growth, in percentage points, associated 70 with a 10% real exchange rate depreciation incide with tightening financial conditions, weak 60 50 2.5 growth, and currency depreciation. 40 30 2.0 20 10 1.5 Excessive U.S. dollar appreciation 0 1.0 China Mexico South Africa India Turkey Indonesia Brazil Russian Federation Nigeria 0.5 The recovery in the United States since mid-2014 0.0 has supported global growth, but has been accom- Merchandise Traditional services Modern services panied by a significant appreciation of the U.S. dol- lar (Figure 1.23). To the extent that the broad-based dollar appreciation reflects robust growth prospects in the United States compared with its trading part-  xport market concentration E. E  xport product concentration F. E ners, the dollar appreciation benefits trading part- among major emerging markets, among major emerging markets, 2013 2013 ners and helps reignite a robust global recovery. Herfindahl-Hirschman market concentration index Herfindahl-Hirschman product concentration index However, there is a risk that the dollar appreciation 0.7 0.20 0.6 is more than warranted by U.S. growth prospects, 0.5 0.15 or that it does not invigorate activity in U.S. trading 0.4 0.10 0.3 partners as expected. In this case, it could choke the 0.2 0.05 global recovery that is still quite fragile. 0.1 0.0 0.00 Brazil Turkey India Russia Turkey Brazil India Russia China Indonesia Mexico China Indonesia Mexico The impact on U.S. GDP of a sustained U.S. dol- lar appreciation could be sizeable. Based on elastici- ties derived from the Federal Reserve Board staff’s large-scale macroeconometric model (FRB/US), a 10 percent real effective appreciation of the U.S. Sources: Bussiere et al. (2014); World Bank; UN Comtrade database; Eichengreen and Gupta (2013). dollar (back to its 2002 peak) could reduce U.S. D. The figure reports the results of a model using annual data for 1980–2009 for 66 developed and developing GDP by as much as ¾ of a percentage point below countries. Traditional services include trade and transport, tourism, financial services, and insurance. Modern services refers to communications, computer information, and other related services. the baseline after two years. E. The Herfindahl-Hirschman index of market concentration is measured on a scale of 0 to 1, with a value close to 1 (0) indicating that a country’s merchandise exports go to very few (many) markets. A 1 percentage point decline in U.S. GDP over two F. The Herfindahl-Hirschman index of product concentration is measured on a scale of 0 to 1, with a value close years would have important repercussions for global to 1 (0) indicating that a country’s merchandise exports are concentrated in very few (many) sectors. 38 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 1.19  Inflation in developing countries economic prospects. In particular, it could reduce Lower oil prices have reduced inflation in many oil-importing developing countries, GDP in close trading partners in Latin America and allowing their central banks to cut policy rates to support activity. However, currency the Caribbean by up to one percentage point. Else- depreciations in oil-exporting countries have raised inflation and compelled central banks to raise policy rates. where, especially in economies that are less reliant on exports to the United States, the impact would be smaller but still negative. In addition to these trade A. M  edian inflation in developing B. I nflation in selected commodity effects, sustained dollar appreciation could weaken countries exporters sovereign, corporate, and household balance sheets Year-on-year, percent 16 Year-on-year, percent Russia Year-on-year, percent Ecuador with significant stocks of foreign-currency denomi- 20 80 14 Oil importers Oil exporters Nigeria Venezuela (RHS) Angola nated debt. 12 15 60 10 8 10 40 Stagnation in the Euro Area or Japan 6 4 2 5 20 The risk of a prolonged period of stagnation and 0 0 0 deflation in the Euro Area appears to have receded 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 as inflation expectations have risen following the ECB’s quantitative easing program. However, while quantitative easing may attenuate deflation risks, C. I nflation in oil-importing countries D. C  ore inflation in oil-importing underlying weaknesses and legacies from the global countries financial and Euro Area crises have yet to be fully Percent Latest Percent Latest resolved. Several months of negative inflation as a 40 20 30 Peak (2013/2014) Inflation target 15 Peak (2013/2014) Inflation target result of falling oil prices could yet de-anchor infla- 20 10 tion expectations. Economic and financial stress in 10 5 Greece presents a risk to the regional outlook, al- 0 0 though the exposures of other parts of the Euro Area Uganda Serbia Romania Lebanon Afghanistan Ethiopia Burundi Rwanda Malawi Hungary Bulgaria FYR Macedonia Armenia Vietnam Thailand China Morocco Jordan Tunisia India Pakistan Sri Lanka -10 China Malaysia Mexico Indonesia South Africa Turkey Nigeria Russia have diminished since 2010 (Chapter 2). SSA CEE EAP SAR While the probability of a slide into prolonged pe- riod of stagnation and deflation in the Euro Area is declining, the impact for the rest of the world could be more pronounced than that of Japan in E. Change in retail gasoline prices F.  Number of developing countries the 1990s. with low or negative inflation • Trade. The Euro Area accounts for more than Percent change since June 30, 2014 Number of countries 20 50 one-sixth of global GDP, and in excess of one- 10 0 45 Below 1 percent Below zero quarter of global trade and cross-border bank- -10 40 -20 35 ing system assets—much more than Japan’s -30 -40 30 shares in the 1990s (Figure 1.24). Developing -50 25 -60 20 countries in Eastern Europe and North Africa Brent oil price India Brazil Philippines Indonesia China Turkey South Africa Russia Mexico 15 10 rely particularly heavily on the Euro Area as an 5 export market. 0 2000 03 06 09 12 15 • Bank lending. Euro Area banks are more in- ternationalized in their lending than Japanese banks, despite sharp cuts after the global finan- cial crisis (World Bank 2015a, Dailami and Adams-Kane 2012). Should non-performing loans increase in a low-growth environment Source: World Bank; www.globalpetrolprices.com; Haver Analytics; Barclays. and erode European banks’ capital cushions, A. Hydrocarbon exporters (as proxy for oil exporters) are Algeria, Angola, Argentina, Azerbaijan, Cameroon, Cote d’Ivoire, Colombia, Chad, Ecuador, Gabon, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Libya, Malaysia, Mexico, Nigeria, (despite improved capital buffers over the past Papua New Guinea, South Africa, Sudan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Venezuela, Vietnam, and Yemen. few years), they could become more reluctant C. India’s inflation target is 4 percent by 2017. “Latest” indicates February 2015. D. “Latest” indicates March 2015. to fund lending abroad. In addition, changes F. The latest observation is March 2015. Data for 120 developing countries (data for 89 available in March 2015). in Euro Area market sentiment could gener- GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 39 ate negative international financial market FIGURE 1.20  Private debt in developing countries spillovers. Private debt rose rapidly in several developing countries over the past five years until the recent slowdown. Similar past debt buildups were followed by sharp growth A prolonged period of Euro Area stagnation—per- slowdowns. Household debt is particularly high in parts of East Asia, South Africa, haps triggered by spillovers from renewed economic and Poland; whereas corporate debt is particularly high in parts of Eastern Europe, and financial stress in its periphery—could raise East Asia, and Brazil. sovereign and corporate risk premia, as investors  redit to the non-bank corporate A. C B. External debt reassess growth prospects, and might force some sector Percent of GDP Percent of GDP countries to tighten fiscal policy yet further. Persis- 200 Advanced countries 40 Emerging countries, excluding China Emerging countries, excluding China tently high unemployment and anemic investment China China 150 30 could undermine potential longer-term growth. The effect could be even larger if, in addition, bank 100 20 lending supply contracts (Fadejeva, Feldkircher, and 50 10 Reininger 2014). Under such conditions, the mac- 0 0 roeconomic effects of a regulatory tightening de- 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2013 signed to ensure financial stability would have to be carefully monitored.8 A slowdown in the Euro Area C. Household debt D. Corporate debt would affect countries in Eastern Europe and North Percent of GDP Percent of GDP 180 Africa most immediately and strongly, through tight 80 2007 160 2007 2013 2013 140 trade, remittance, and bank links. Financial markets 60 2014 120 2014 in Latin America, where Euro Area residents ac- 40 100 80 count for a sizeable share of financial asset holdings, 20 60 40 could be dampened by Euro Area deleveraging. 0 20 0 China Hungary Indonesia India Poland Thailand Turkey South Africa Mexico China Hungary Indonesia India Poland Mexico Thailand Turkey South Africa Oil price risks Risks related to oil prices have become somewhat nternational bond issuances by E. I  rowth deceleration following F. G developing countries episodes of private debt buildups more balanced since January, with predominantly downside risks to oil prices themselves and some US$, billions, four-month moving average 20 Percent 0 Interquartile range Median upside risks to their impact. Thus far, the benefits 18 China Brazil Others -1 16 from lower oil prices for oil-importing countries have 14 -2 12 mainly been reflected in shrinking vulnerabilities 10 -3 such as lower inflation and improved external and 8 6 -4 fiscal accounts. Activity in many oil-importing coun- 4 2 -5 tries, in contrast, has disappointed. However, lower 0 -6 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 >15 >30 >50 oil prices could yet boost activity more than expected. Risks to oil prices themselves are tilted to the down- side. Security risks could be resolved unexpectedly. Sources: World Bank; Bank for International Settlements; World Development Indicators; Dealogic. A. Emerging countries (excluding China) are Czech Republic, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Mexico, Poland, Alternatively, an international agreement with Iran Republic of Korea, South Africa, Thailand, and Turkey. Values are GDP-weighted averages. could be reached and Iran could ramp up oil produc- B. Emerging countries (excluding China) are Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Hungary, Indonesia, India, Malaysia, Mexico, Nigeria, Philippines, South Africa, Thailand, Turkey, and Venezuela. Values are GDP-weighted averages. tion and exports faster than expected. Either event C. For reasons of data availability, Q1 2008 data for South Africa instead of 2007 data. would allow the release of additional oil supplies D. Brazil’s data represents private debt for lack of available data breakdown. For reasons of data availability, Q1 2008 data for South Africa is used, instead of 2007 data. into global markets. This could depress oil prices F. The figure shows the range of growth decelerations in a sample of 16 developing countries after an increase in credit to the private sector in excess of 15, 30, and 50 percentage points of GDP over the preceding five years. further and would raise global activity. However, it 8A period of stagnation could be associated with a 4 percent decline in Euro Area GDP and a 1 percent decline in global GDP, over five would also add to financial, fiscal, and external pres- years (IMF 2013b). In the highly open economies of Eastern Europe, sures in oil-exporting countries and could discour- tight bank lending and trade links mean that a 1 percent decline in Euro age exploration and development of new capacity Area real GDP could reduce real GDP by as much as 2.5 percent below in developing countries. As activity and real income baseline over two years (Fadejeva, Feldkircher, and Reininger 2014). Through remittance and trade ties, such a slowdown could reduce activ- growth slows in oil-exporting countries, their labor ity in North Africa by about 1 percent (IMF 2013c). markets and non-oil sectors may also soften. Espe- 40 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 1.21 Risk of a rough awakening cially in Gulf Cooperation Countries, this could be The gap between U.S. policy interest rate expectations of financial markets over the associated with lower remittance outflows and less next few years and the views of the Federal Reserve Open Market Committee suggests demand for foreign construction services. there may be a risk of an abrupt adjustment in the yield curve, and a reappraisal of credit risk. This could lead to a sharp decline in capital flows to developing countries. Some Conversely, although tensions between Ukraine and developing countries have more limited reserve buffers than others. Russia may be easing, security risks are mounting A. M  arket versus FOMC policy rate B. U  .S. term spreads around in the Middle East and North Africa (Chapter 2). expectations monetary policy announcements Escalating violence in oil-exporting countries could Percent 5 Market expectations FOMC-Max Term spreads (basis point) 400 Oct. 2- release Jan. 22- disrupt oil production and transport facilities, and trigger abrupt spikes in oil prices. While many oil- ECB of FOMC-Median FOMC-Low 360 TLTRO ann. of new details 4 320 QE exporting countries would benefit, the current nar- Jun.19- Dec. 18- FOMC actual taper 280 minutes 3 240 May. 22- Bernanke's Aug. 18- rowing of vulnerabilities in oil-importing countries would come to a halt. testimony Jackson 2 200 in Sep. 18- "no-taper" Hole Congress announ- speech 160 cement (Draghi) 1 120 Deeper-than-expected slowdown in China Jan-13 Jul-13 Sep-13 Jan-14 Sep-14 Mar-13 May-13 Nov-13 Mar-14 May-14 Jul-14 Nov-14 Jan-15 May-15 Mar-15 0 2015 2016 2017 Longer Run Although low-probability, China’s anticipated gradual rebalancing of drivers of growth away from  esponse of developing-country C. R  xternal debt and foreign D. E capital inflows to one standard currency reserves investment could still turn into a steep decline in deviation shock in global long- investment. The reforms that are currently being term interest rates cautiously implemented could, unintendedly, dis- Percent of developing country GDP Ratio of short-term external debt to foreign reserves, percent rupt growth. This could include a correction in real 0.2 1997 2014 200 estate markets, contraction in real estate investment 0 160 120 and construction, and a rapid unwinding of finan- -0.2 80 cial vulnerabilities (Figure 1.25). As sectors operat- -0.4 40 ing with low capacity utilization wind down their -0.6 0 activities—as part of the authorities’ reform plans— Thailand Turkey India Indonesia Philippines Mexico -0.8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 they could slide into financial distress. This could Quarters result in non-performing loans for financial inter- mediaries and other investors. Weakening of lend- E. M  edian bid-ask spread on F.  Median bid-ask spread on emerging ing institutions’ capital bases could lead to a more emerging government bonds: government bonds: local currency general tightening of credit. foreign currency Basis points Basis points In principle, the authorities have sufficient buffers 30 Median 3-month moving average 25 Median 3-month moving average to recapitalize banks and corporates. General gov- 25 20 20 ernment debt is below 60 percent of GDP (includ- 15 15 ing contingent liabilities from local government 10 10 financing vehicles). Given capital and financial sec- 5 5 tor controls, there are few low-risk savings vehicles 0 0 beyond deposits in the predominantly state-owned Jan-10 Sep-10 Jan-11 Sep-11 Jan-12 Sep-12 Jan-13 Sep-13 Jan-14 Sep-14 May-10 May-11 May-12 May-13 May-14 Jan-15 May-15 Jan-10 Sep-10 Jan-11 Sep-11 Jan-12 Sep-12 Jan-13 Sep-13 Jan-14 Sep-14 May-10 May-11 May-12 May-13 May-14 Jan-15 May-15 banking system. This facilitates intervention to sta- bilize deposits in the event of a loss of confidence. Capital controls limit large outflows abroad. Source: World Bank; Bloomberg; U.S. Federal Open Market Committee. However, to avoid the recognition of losses and the A. FOMC = Federal Open Market Committee. need for recapitalization, financial intermediaries B. Values are the spread between U.S. 30-year and 1-year government bonds. may be inclined to roll over nonperforming loans C. Global long-term interest rates are a GDP weigthed average of 10-year government bond yields in G-4 countries (United States, Euro Area, Japan and the United Kingdom). Impulse response derived from a VAR to ailing firms. This could constrain lending to pro- model linking aggregate capital inflows to developing countries (as a percent their combined GDP), to quarterly real GDP growth in both developing and G-4 countries, G-4 short-term rates, G-4 long-term rates, and the VIX ductive firms and could usher in a prolonged pe- index of implied volatility of S&P 500 options. Dotted lines indicate 90% confidence interval. riod of stagnation, as in Japan in the mid-1990s.9 E. Median bid-ask spreads for 10-year government bonds of Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Hungary, Indonesia, Korea, Lithuania, Philippines, Poland, Romania, Turkey, and South Africa. 9The drop in asset prices in Japan in 1989-91 severely weakened F. Median bid-ask spreads for 10-year government bonds of Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Hungary, Indonesia, Korea, Lithuania, Philippines, Poland, Romania, Turkey, and South Africa. the balance sheets of heavily indebted households, lending institutions, GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 41 If confidence in China’s growth prospects were to FIGURE 1.22  Emerging market credit ratings wane as high-income country growth strengthens, Credit ratings have begun to deteriorate, especially, for commodity exporters. The private capital outflows could accelerate, despite downgrades have coincided with depreciating currencies and rising credit default capital controls, triggering a tightening of domestic swap (CDS) spreads. In several countries, CDS spreads are now in line with those of lower-rated countries. financing conditions.  umber of sovereign credit rating A. N B. Average sovereign credit ratings actions, 2014–15 Policy Challenges Number of rating actions Average sovereign rating Index 50 in developing countries 45 BBB- 1000 Policy challenges in major economies 40 900 35 800 BB+ 700 30 Monetary policies are expected to remain highly ac- 25 20 BB 600 500 400 commodative, except in the United States where the 15 10 Net commodity exporters 300 BB- 200 first policy rate increase is currently projected to take 5 0 Net commodity importers 100 Commodity price, S&P (RHS) 0 place later in 2015. Fiscal consolidation is expected to Up Down Up Down Up Down Up Down B+ Jan-01 Jan-03 Jan-05 Jan-07 Jan-09 Jan-11 Jan-13 Jan-15 Latin Emerging E. Europe Emerging ease across major economies, but several have yet to put America Asia and Africa markets total in place plans to secure long-term fiscal sustainability. Structural reforms are underway in Japan and China, C.Average sovereign credit rating  redit default risk and sovereign D. C but need to be invigorated in the Euro Area and the and emerging market currency credit ratings United States. index Credit rating Index Monetary policy in the United States is expected to Current 5-year sovereign CDS spreads (basis points) 500 Average EM sovereign rating 120 BBB- EM currency index (RHS) Spreads above begin to tighten in the second half of 2015 for the 110 400 similarly rated countries first time since the 2008 financial crisis, provided 100 300 activity continues to be robust. This may unwind BB 90 pockets of excessive risk-taking in domestic credit 80 200 markets (such as high-yield bond markets and real B+ 70 100 Spreads below estate investment vehicles) that may have built up Jan-01 Jan-03 Jan-05 Jan-07 Jan-09 Jan-11 Jan-13 Jan-15 similarly rated countries 0 amidst abundant liquidity and exceptionally low in- 5 A A- BBB+ BBB 10 0 AA+ AA AA- A+ AAA 15 BBB- BB+ BB BB-22 Average credit rating of S&P and Fitch terest rates. Fiscal policy has eased to a broadly neu- tral stance in 2014–15, having weighed on activity in Sources: World Bank; Bloomberg. B. The sovereign rating is calculated based on the simple average of long-term foreign-currency credit ratings of previous years. A comprehensive long-term plan to countries by Standard & Poor’s Rating Service. The latest observation is April 2015. ensure fiscal sustainability is needed, covering health C. The sovereign rating is calculated based on the simple average of long-tern foreign-currency credit ratings of countries by Standard & Poor’s Rating Service. care cost containment, tax reform, improved quality of public spending, and adequate infrastructure in- vestment. Although important health care reforms were implemented in 2013–14 to help reduce costs fiscal policy support and growth-enhancing struc- in government health care provision and increase tural reforms. In 2015, fiscal policy is expected to risk pooling elsewhere, greater efficiency gains are be broadly neutral, although, under the Excessive needed to ensure long-term sustainability. The tax Deficit Procedure, several countries (Cyprus, system needs to be streamlined, the persistence of France, Greece, Ireland, Malta, Portugal, Slovenia, long-term unemployment reduced, and the educa- Spain) need to proceed with their fiscal consolida- tion system made more inclusive (OECD 2015a). tion plans. Activity in the European Union may also be supported by a €315 billion (2.2 percent Quantitative easing will support activity and re- of GDP) investment program (the “Juncker Plan”) duce deflation concerns in the Euro Area, but a intended to stimulate growth and create jobs. The lasting recovery needs to be secured by appropriate initiative should help better leverage the EU budget and European Investment Bank programs for greater and non-financial corporates (Koo 2011). As banks faced mounting private investment. However, long-term growth re- impaired loans, lending to sound companies contracted—partly the mains weighed down by rigid and fragmented labor, result of rolling over loans to weak companies (Caballero, Hoshi and product, and services markets, hampering produc- Kashyap 2006). Investment and consumption growth declined sharply tivity and innovation. Notwithstanding significant and persistently. 42 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 1.23  Risk of excessive U.S. dollar appreciation consolidation and structural reform efforts are un- Growth in the United States remains robust, but a further strengthening of the U.S. dollar derway. The Bank of Japan continues to implement could curtail the recovery. Spillovers from a U.S. slowdown would reduce activity else- its quantitative easing program as planned, and a where (and especially in Latin America and the Caribbean). The U.S. current account deficit is well below pre-crisis levels. further expansion remains possible later in 2015 if inflation fails to pick up significantly. Financial A. U.S. real GDP growth B. Size of U.S. economy, 2013/14 markets expect policy rates to remain at zero until Percent U.S. GDP growth Percent of global end-2018. Japanese banks and some pension funds 8 40 Average 1992-2007 Average 1980-2014 35 continue to shift their portfolios away from hold- 6 30 ings of Japanese government bonds, whose yields re- 4 25 20 main low. A search for higher yields by financial in- 2 15 stitutions could lead to balance sheet vulnerabilities. 0 10 5 Government debt sustainability is under pressure -2 0 from a fiscal deficit in excess of 7 percent of GDP -4 GDP Imports Foreign claims Stock market 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 capitalization in fiscal year 2014 and public debt at 234 percent of GDP in 2015. The planned consolidation for fiscal C. I mpact of 10 percent U.S. dollar D. U.S. current account year 2015 and beyond will, however, be challenging real effective appreciation in light of increasing outlays for social welfare and de- Percent deviation from baseline Percent of GDP fense and delays in implementing the next consump- 2 0 End of first year End of second year 1 tion tax increase. Bolstered by an election victory in 0 -1 December 2014, the government has committed to -2 speeding up its ambitious structural reform agenda. -3 -0.5 -4 -5 With inflation contained, the monetary policy inter- -6 est rate in the United Kingdom is expected to rise -7 -1 only gradually from 2016, despite diminishing slack 1981 1983 1985 1987 1989 1991 1993 1995 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 Ouput Gap Inflation Federal Funds Rate and robust domestic demand. Demand has also been Sources: World Bank; Federal Reserve Board (2014); Haver Analytics; Bank for International Settlements (BIS); strengthened by allowing automatic fiscal stabilizers World Federation of Exchanges. A. GDP = gross domestic product. to operate in recent years. However, revenue and ex- B. Values are from 2014 data for GDP and imports; Q3 2014 data for foreign claims of BIS-reporting banks; and penditure reforms are needed to meet medium-term 2013 data for stock market capitalization. C. Elasticities to U.S. dollar appreciation are from Federal Reserve Board (Laforte and Roberts, 2014; Brayton, fiscal objectives. Investments to reduce bottlenecks in Laubach and Reifschneider, 2014). infrastructure and to upgrade human capital will be key to supporting productivity improvements needed steps to strengthen bank balance sheets, enhance to sustain strong growth (IMF 2014b). supervision and contain bank-sovereign feedback China continues to implement, in several steps, the loops in bank resolution, two important elements of reforms announced in November 2013. These ef- a Euro Area banking union (financial system back- forts are being supported by selective accommoda- stops and recapitalization) remain national, thus tive monetary and fiscal policies, to prevent a sharp reducing the support available for weaker banks in growth slowdown. The central bank has repeatedly stress situation. In France and Italy, proposed re- implemented targeted measures to ease pockets of forms to improve competitiveness have been held liquidity tightness. Progress in implementing struc- up, while acute challenges faced by Greece will re- tural reforms is notable in the following areas: quire a clearer path towards fiscal sustainability. • Fiscal reforms. A revised budget law and new For the time being, the clear priority for Japan rules on local government borrowing were is for accommodative policies, to sustain growth introduced to control local government bor- and inflation momentum, coupled with growth- rowing and switch to borrowing through local enhancing reforms. Japan’s experience in the 1990s government bonds. However, local government highlights the importance of avoiding premature finances need to be brought onto a more sus- policy tightening in response to early signs of green tainable footing more broadly, addressing ex- shoots. Indeed, monetary policy remains highly ac- penditure and revenue mismatches across dif- commodative in Japan, while medium-term fiscal ferent levels of government, and reinforcing GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 43 local government revenue capacity including FIGURE 1.24  Risk of stagnation and deflation in the through a property tax. The business tax is be- Euro Area ing replaced with value-added taxation (e.g. in Given greater gross domestic product and imports, a prolonged stagnation in the Euro railways since January 2014 and in telecommu- Area could have deeper global repercussions than Japan’s decade of slow growth did nications since June 2014) and environmental in the 1990s and early 2000s. Eastern Europe and the Middle East and North Africa would be particularly affected through trade, remittances, and bank exposures. Finan- taxes have been increased. cial markets in Latin America and the Caribbean could come under pressure from Euro Area deleveraging. • Financial sector reform. The deposit rate ceiling was raised, deposit insurance was introduced A. Share of global GDP and imports Share of Euro Area in exports and B.  in May, and a Financial Consumer Protection remittances Bureau was established. Some nontraditional Percent of global Percent of total Exports to the Euro Area 45 40 banking activity was reined in, for example e- Euro Area (2014) Japan (1994) 35 Remittances from the Euro Area financing platforms. Margin requirements for 30 GIIPS (2014) 30 stock market transactions were tightened and 25 20 the Shanghai-Hong Kong Stock Market Con- 15 15 nect program facilitated some international 10 capital flows. The exchange rate band was wid- 0 5 GDP Imports Cross-border 0 ened from 1 to 2 percent. bank claims EAP ECA LAC MNA SAR SSA • Energy sector reform. New rules were issued in  hare of FDI, portfolio, and bank C. S  rowth response of a 1 percentage D. G March 2015 to separate electricity generation claims of Euro Area residents on point decline in Eurozone’s growth from distribution, and to encourage greater each region competition. Private companies will be allowed Percent of total FDI claims of Euro Percent Cumulated effect on GDP growth at the end of second year 50 Area entry. However, an independent competition Portfiolio claims of Cumulated effect on GDP growth at the end of first year Effect on GDP growth in the first quarter Euro Area 0.0 authority aimed at ensuring well-functioning 40 Bank claims of Euro -0.2 markets remains to be established. In addition, 30 Area banks -0.4 -0.6 higher fuel taxation and stricter enforcement of 20 -0.8 environmental rules have been implemented to 10 -1.0 -1.2 reduce pollution. MENA Turkey ECA Bulgaria Romania Jordan Morocco 0 • Administrative and other reforms. Administrative EAP ECA LAC MNA SAR SSA reforms were accelerated including by reducing and centralizing preconstruction approvals, and Sources: Bank for International Settlements; International Monetary Fund Coordinated Direct Investment Survey and Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey; World Bank staff estimates. court proceedings were streamlined to facilitate A. GDP = gross domestic product. contract enforcement. Pilots were initiated to C. Investment claims of Euro Area residents at end-2013 for foreign direct investment (FDI), at end-June 2014 for portfolio investment claims, and end-September 2014 for cross-border bank loans. convert land use rights into ownership shares; D. Results for the cumulated effect on GDP growth at the end of first and second years are statistically significant at the 16th-84th percentile range based on 2000 draws for ECA, MENA, Turkey, Bulgaria, Romania, and Jordan. to allow some municipal government bond is- suance; to corporatize state-owned enterprises; to operate a cap-and-trade trading system to Monetary policy challenges in developing limit carbon emissions; and to further relax the countries household registration system. Much of the reform agenda, including a broad- Against the background of soft growth and the pros- based reform of state-owned enterprises, remains to pect of rising global interest rates, falling oil prices have be implemented. Issues that need to be addressed eased monetary policy constraints in oil-importing include: implicit and explicit government guaran- countries but opened new policy dilemmas in oil-ex- tees, non-binding budget constraints, low efficiency, porting countries. and a lack of transparency and accountability Lower oil prices have eased constraints on mon- (World Bank and Development Research Center of etary policy in oil-importing countries by slowing the State Council 2014, OECD 2015b). inflation and reducing current account deficits. This has allowed central banks in a number of inflation- targeting or oil-importing countries to cut policy rates to support slowing or weak activity in 2015 44 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 1.25  Risk of a hard landing in China Shifting fiscal pressures in developing The risk remains of a hard landing, followed by a period of anemic growth, although it is countries low-probability. A hard landing could be triggered by financial distress in industries with substantial excess capacity, including steel and coal. Many oil-exporting countries are tightening fiscal A. Steel production B. S  hare of China in global coal policy, even as growth slows. Oil-importing countries, production however, have the opportunity to reform energy subsi- Index, 2005 = 100 Percent Percent of global 48 dies and taxes, and to build fiscal space. 270 China 70 47 250 Rest of the world 60 230 China in percent of global production (RHS) 46 For commodity-exporting countries with flexible 210 50 45 44 exchange rate regimes (Malaysia, Mexico, Peru, 190 40 170 43 Russia), the fiscal impact of declining commod- 150 30 42 130 20 41 ity prices has been somewhat cushioned by de- 110 90 10 40 39 preciating currencies (Figure 1.27), whereas it 70 0 38 has been more severe in commodity-exporting 2005 2008 2011 2014 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 countries (Ecuador, Iraq) with fixed exchange Sources: BP Statistical Review of World Energy June 2014; National Bureau of Statistics of China; World Bank rates. Nevertheless, many commodity-exporting Commodity Price Data (The Pink Sheet). countries have had to tighten fiscal policy despite slowing growth. This is particularly the case in countries where fiscal deficits were already large (Arab Republic of Egypt, India, Peru, Romania; Fig- before commodity price declines (Angola, Brazil, ure 1.26). In India, the introduction of formal infla- Cameroon, Ghana, Mongolia, Venezuela, Zam- tion targeting and increased central bank credibility bia), or debt levels were elevated (Ghana, Mongo- have provided additional policy space. In Eastern lia), or “rainy day” savings or stabilization funds Europe, lower oil prices have added to deflationary were of limited size (Mongolia, Nigeria). Con- pressures central banks are struggling with as policy cerned about possible credit rating downgrades, rates are at historic lows. Looking ahead, however, policymakers pursued consolidation budgets in tighter global financing conditions and moderating several oil-exporting countries (Malaysia, Nige- capital inflows may constrain room for monetary ria). However, despite recent downward revisions policy maneuvering in emerging markets, especially in some oil-exporting countries, fiscal breakeven those with a rapidly rising stock of external debt oil prices are estimated to remain at or over $90 (Turkey, South Africa). per barrel (Azerbaijan, Gabon, Kazakhstan, Nige- In commodity-exporting countries, policy tradeoffs ria) or above $120 per barrel (Angola, Ecuador). have been starkly different as central banks have had The loss in oil revenues for these countries strains to balance the need to support growth with inflation government budgets and will generally need to and balance sheet concerns resulting from deprecia- be offset by spending cuts. Unless widening fiscal tion pressures. Tightening global financial conditions deficits can be reined in and reduce the burden on over the medium term will intensify these dilemmas. tightening monetary policy, private investment could be crowded out (Angola, Gabon, Mongo- Sustained currency weakness—interacting in some lia, Nigeria, Republic of Congo). cases with supply constraints (Ghana, Mongolia) or spillovers from geopolitical risks (Central Asia and Among oil-importing countries, the drop in oil South Caucasus)—has increased inflation in oil-ex- prices could generate substantial fiscal savings, porting countries and, for foreign currency borrow- particularly where fuel prices are subsidized. Not- ers, financial stability risks. While non-concessional withstanding significant cuts in 2014 and 2015, es- external debt, which is mostly foreign currency- pecially in East and South Asia, pre-tax subsidies, denominated, is modest in most developing countries, which allow energy consumers to pay below-cost it has risen considerably since 2011 in some com- prices, are high in several developing economies modity-exporting countries (Indonesia, Mongolia). (IMF 2013a; Clements et al. 2014). Lower oil prices To contain risks from depreciation pressures, central have helped some countries deregulate local fuel banks have been compelled to raise policy rates procy- prices (Arab Republic of Egypt, India). In countries clically (Belarus, Mongolia) or to intervene in foreign with unusually low energy taxes, lower oil prices exchange markets (Mexico, Nigeria, Zambia). also make it easier for governments to raise these GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 45 taxes closer to international norms (Arab Republic FIGURE 1.26  Monetary policy in developing countries of Egypt, India, Indonesia). This would help reverse Easing inflation has allowed several central banks in oil-importing countries to cut some of the post-crisis spending increases made pos- rates. Currency depreciations and associated inflation pressures have compelled sible by rapid revenue growth. central banks of commodity exporters to raise rates. In some countries, the exchange rate risks inherent in high external debt with limited reserve coverage constrain mon- In this way, the tailwinds of low oil prices provide etary policy room to support activity. an opportunity for oil-importing countries to ei- A. Policy interest rate moves  elected countries, policy interest B. S rates ther build fiscal space, which would allow an ef- Number of policy rate changes Percent fective counter-cyclical response during the next 40 Hikes Cuts 25 35 20 2014 2015 slowdown, or to invest in critical infrastructure 30 15 or human capital (World Bank, 2015). A priority 25 10 20 5 for rebuilding fiscal space is particularly important 15 0 in countries that are vulnerable to shocks because 10 Mongolia Brazil Turkey Ghana Russian Fed. Indonesia Armenia Thailand Colombia Malaysia Mexico Korea, Rep. 5 of high levels of government debt, particularly 0 where it has risen rapidly since 2010, such as the Oil Ex. Oil Im. Oil Ex. Oil Im. Oil Ex. Oil Im. 14-Q3 14-Q4 15-Q1 10 percentage point of GDP increases in the Arab Republic of Egypt, Cabo Verde, Eritrea, Jordan,  atio of reserves to non-concessional external debt and C. R Lebanon, Pakistan, and South Sudan. On average, non-concessional debt for frontier markets however, developing country government debt- Ratio Percent of GDP Reserve to non-concessional external debt ratio to-GDP ratios declined in low-income countries 400 Non-concessional external debt (RHS) 160 or has been stable since 2010 in middle-income countries. This contrasts with the strong increase 300 100% Reserve-to-debt ratio (RHS) 120 in private debt in developing countries since 2010. Where countries have fiscal space, fiscal windfalls 200 80 from lower oil prices could be used to increase 100 40 critical investment or buffer any near-term disrup- tions from structural reforms. 0 0 Mongolia Vietnam Bolivia Kenya Jamaica Mauritius Ukraine Serbia Lebanon Romania FYR Macedonia Tunisia Ecuador Zambia Cote d'Ivoire Honduras Botswana Bangladesh Bulgaria Ghana Senegal Rwanda Reform momentum and needs in developing countries Source: World Bank; Haver Analytics. While countercyclical fiscal and monetary policies can A. Oil Ex. = oil-exporting countries; Oil Im. = oil-importing countries. help smooth the transition, the current juncture puts a premium on structural reforms that ensure a sustain- Growth in upper-middle-income countries has ac- able adjustment to a new equilibrium of low commod- counted for almost half of global growth since 2005, ity prices and gradually tightening financial condi- but may slow because of demographic factors. Over tions. Several large developing countries are gradually the past three decades, these countries have benefited implementing ambitious reform agendas, but many are from a rising share of the working age population. This lagging behind. has yielded an important “demographic dividend” for As growth in high-income countries picks up, but growth. For example, China’s demographic dividend eases steadily in developing countries, convergence has been estimated to have contributed one-quarter to of GDP per capita is expected to slow. For some the country’s per capita GDP growth during 1982– middle-income commodity exporters, the income 2000 (Cai and Wang 2005). The demographic divi- gap may well widen over the next two years (Figure dend may have accounted for two-fifths of East Asia’s 1.28). This reflects declining productivity growth as rapid growth during 1965–90 and for 1 percentage well as demographic pressures. Investment growth point of per capita GDP growth in Southeast Asia be- in developing countries has slowed from pre-crisis tween 1975–90 (Bloom, Canning, and Sevilla 2003). rates as well as the adoption of productivity-enhanc- Over the next few decades, however, the share of the ing technology (Fisher 2006). The upcoming tight- working age population in middle-income countries ening in global financial conditions might further is expected to decline and, with it, growth prospects, hold back investment growth. unless structural reforms lift productivity. 46 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 1.27  Fiscal pressures • Lower commodity prices are a reminder for Fiscal balances in oil-exporting countries have come under pressure as resource rev- commodity-exporting countries of the need to enues have fallen. In oil-importing countries, declining fuel subsidies may help reverse diversify their economies away from commodi- some government spending growth since the crisis. Still-moderate government debt in oil-exporting countries and low-income countries may begin to rise as growth slows. ties (see below). • In addition to ensuring long-term growth, some A. F  iscal breakeven prices, oil B.  Change in government expenditures reforms can support demand against the back- exporters and revenues, 2010–14 drop of cyclically slower growth. These include, US$ per barrel Percent change 350 2014 50 Ukraine especially, investments in critical infrastructure 300 Iraq 250 2015 45 and education. 200 40 Brazil Saudi Arabia • Productivity growth needs to be increased to Egypt, Arab 150 Rep. 35 100 Colombia Turkey Expenditure 50 stem the trend slowdown in developing country 30 Mexico China 0 PakistanIndia 25 growth and ensure sustained prosperity. Algeria Iraq United Arab Emirates Libya Yemen, Rep. Iran, Islamic Rep. Bahrain Saudi Arabia Oman Qatar Kuwait United Arab Malaysia Indonesia Emirates 20 Iran, Islamic Peru The pace of reform has accelerated in some ma- Rep. 15 Phillipines Nigeria 10 10 20 Revenue 30 40 Percent change 50 jor emerging-market countries in 2013–15. In 2013–14, Mexico approved a major energy reform that includes opening up deep water and shale oil  iscal balance, oil and gas C. F D. Fiscal balance, oil importers exporters fields to the private sector, increased competition Percent of GDP Percent of GDP in the telecommunications sector, widened the 2012-2014 2012-2014 15 2015-2017 8 2015-2017 tax base, and eased some employment restrictions. 5 4 China continues to gradually implement its Novem- 0 -4 ber 2013 reform agenda. India formally adopted -5 -8 inflation targeting in 2015, thus strengthening the -15 -12 credibility of the central bank; reduced barriers to Korea, Rep. Chile Pakistan India Ukraine Brazil Egypt, Arab Rep. Iran, Islamic Rep. China Philippines Peru South Africa Turkey Saudi Arabia United Arab Emirates Malaysia Colombia Russian Federation Nigeria Iraq Mexico Indonesia FDI in insurance, telecommunications, railways, and retail; eliminated diesel subsidies while raising excise duties on petroleum and diesel fuel; approved the introduction of a harmonized goods and services E. G  overnment and private debt, F.  Government debt, low-income tax; and committed to increasing public investment. developing countries countries South Africa put in place some active labor market Percent of GDP, GDP weighted Government debt, Percent of GDP, GDP weighted Government debt, low-income oil importers policies, Turkey has made progress in privatizing en- 100 160 developing oil exporters Government debt, Government debt, low-income oil exporters ergy companies, and Rwanda has reduced a range of 140 80 developing oil importers Private debt, developing oil 120 licensing and registration requirements. exporters and importers 60 100 This said, many emerging market countries fall 80 60 short of best practices for creating a business en- 40 40 vironment conducive to productivity growth (Fig- 20 20 ure 1.29). Indicators of impediments to structural 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 productivity growth—barriers to open markets and access to finance—suggest that the impedi- Sources: World Bank including World Development Indicators; International Monetary Fund including World Economic Outlook. ments are well below average (among 30 emerg- B. Blue lines are oil importers; Red lines are oil exporters. ing market economies) for Malaysia, Mexico, and South Africa, while significantly above average in Argentina, Russia, and Venezuela (Qureshi, Diaz- At the current juncture, structural reforms are par- Sanchez and Varoudakis 2015). Reducing these ticularly urgent. barriers to the level of the best-ranking emerging • Ambitious reform agendas signal to investors economies could spur productivity and increase that the authorities are proactive about ensur- resilience to external shocks. ing long-term growth prospects. This will help While reform needs are necessarily highly country- support capital inflows and investment even as specific, they fall into a few categories (G20 2014b). global financial conditions tighten. These include easing infrastructure bottlenecks, GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 47 especially in energy and transportation; improving FIGURE 1.28  Income convergence education; reforming labor markets and increasing Upper-middle-income countries have accounted for about half of global growth since female participation (Box 1.3); enhancing compe- the crisis. However, their growth prospects are deterioriating as their populations age tition and easing administrative burdens; improv- and investment, export, and productivity growth fails to return to historical average rates. ing access to private and multilateral financing, nvestment growth in developing A. I  pper-middle-income countries: B. U reducing barriers to trade and facilitating regional countries Share of working-age population integration; and reforming energy subsidies. 10 and share of global growth Such reforms could help, but may need to be Percent 2003-08 Percent Percent 15 2010-13 Share of global growth contributed by upper middle complemented by others, to shift the composition 2014-15 income countries Share of working age population in upper middle income 12 1990-08 0.5 countries (RHS) 74 of growth away from consumption (Brazil, Philip- 0.4 72 9 70 pines, Turkey), investment (China), or natural re- 0.3 68 6 sources (many commodity-exporting countries). A 3 0.2 66 64 number of developing countries provide large fuel 0 0.1 62 1990-95 1995-00 2000-05 2005-10 2010-15 2015-20 2020-25 2025-30 2030-35 2035-40 subsidies to their populations. In some cases, the -3 cost of subsidies exceeds 5 percent of GDP (IEA, EAP LAC ECA SAS SSA MNA DEV 2014). However, these subsidies often benefit mid- dle-income households more than low-income ones  rowth of exports in developing C. G  roductivity growth in developing D. P countries countries and tilt consumption and production towards en- ergy-intensive activities. Percent 20 2003-08 2010-13 Percent, GDP weighted 5 2003-08 2014-15 2010-13 • Savings on subsidies. When imposed in a 15 1990-08 4 2014-15 1990-08 non-targeted fashion, the economic benefits of 3 subsidies are concentrated on higher-income 10 2 households, as these consume more subsidized 5 1 energy than poor ones. For example, a study of 20 developing countries showed that subsidies 0 EAP LAC ECA SAS SSA MNA DEV 0 EAP LAC ECA SAS SSA MNA DEV on gasoline and LPG are strongly regressive (Arze del Granado, Coady, and Gillingham Source: United Nations Population Statistics; World Bank. 2012).11 In addition, the actual benefits in A. GDP-weighted annual averages. DEV = developing country average. Investment refers to gross fixed capital formation. terms of access to good quality, clean energy B. Values are based on the share of population age 15–64 years in the medium-fertility scenario (UN Population sources are a subject of intense debate. Ration- Prospects, 2012 revision). Share of global growth is defined as the contribution of upper-middle-income countries to 5-year growth relative to global 5-year growth. ing and shortages often accompany subsidized C. D. GDP-weighted annual averages. DEV = developing country average. forms of energy consumption. In the case of networked utilities such as electricity, power outages resulting from lack of investment may ate the depletion of natural resources. In fact, lead richer households to rely on private gen- low energy costs associated with subsidized or erators, leaving poorer households either cut low oil prices may encourage a move toward off from electricity or forced to rely on more more fossil fuel-intensive or energy-intensive expensive alternatives. production. This runs counter to broader en- vironmental goals in many countries. To offset • Incentives for energy use. Energy subsidies the medium-term incentives for increased oil can also crowd out priority public spending consumption, while at the same time build- and private investment, encourage excessive ing fiscal space, policymakers could modify energy consumption, reduce incentives for tax policies on the use of energy, especially in investment in renewable energy, and acceler- countries where fuel taxes are low. 10Drawing Falling oil prices reduce the need for fuel subsidies, groups with low labor market participation into the la- bor market could generate substantial productivity gains (Hsieh et al. and provide an opportunity for subsidy reform with 2013). limited impact on the prices paid by consumers. 11Studies reviewed by the World Bank (IEG, 2008) across develop- Such subsidy reform should lead to a comprehensive ing countries find that only 15–20 percent of subsidies benefited the poorest 40 percent of the population, a result that confirms findings and permanent shift towards more market-based by Coady (2006). fuel pricing. This should in turn prevent rising fuel 48 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 1.29  Structural reforms targeting and administrative capacity.12 An accelera- Some developing countries have initiated structural reforms as growth has slowed. How- tion of fuel subsidy is both timely and fully aligned ever, in several respects business environments remain weaker, on average, than those with G20 objectives set in the Pittsburgh summit in in advanced countries. Particular areas of reform are highly country-specific. 2009 to “rationalize and phase out over the medium A. Change in ease of doing business B. A  ggregate index of structural term inefficient fossil fuel subsidies that encourage bottlenecks, 2005–2012. wasteful consumption” (G20 2009). The resolution Distance to frontier score Distance to frontier score Malaysia South Africa was reaffirmed in St. Petersburg in 2013 and in Bris- 4 Change 2014-2015 2015 (RHS) 80 3 70 Mexico Colombia bane in 2014.13 2 Tunisia 1 60 Thailand India Subsidy reform should be combined with energy 50 0 -1 40 Turkey Indonesia tax reform. Fuel prices are low in many developing Brazil countries compared with high-income countries. Nigeria China Indonesia Mexico Brazil Turkey South Africa Russian Federation India Argentina Russian Federation Kazakhstan Ecuador For example, in several large developing countries Venezuela, R.B. in East Asia (Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand), fuel -2 -1 0 1 2 3 Index prices were well below those of high-income coun- C. E  ase of doing business by sector, D. E  ase of doing business by sector, tries in the region (Japan, Singapore; World Bank BRICS, 2015 MINT, 2015 2015d). The fall in oil prices has been such that, Distance to frontier score Distance to frontier score even after subsidy cuts, local fuel prices have fallen Brazil Russia Mexico Indonesia 100 India South Africa China High-income countries 100 Nigeria Malaysia Turkey High-income countries further. This could be offset by raising energy taxa- 80 80 tion, as has been done in India on petroleum and 60 40 60 diesel fuels in 2015. 40 20 20 Current low commodity prices are also a reminder 0 to commodity-exporting countries of the impor- Starting a Construction Trading Across Getting Electricity Contracts Paying Taxes Insolvency 0 Enforcing Dealing with Business Resolving Permits Trading Across Starting a Construction Electricity Contracts Paying Taxes Insolvency Enforcing Dealing with Business Resolving tance of diversification. Many commodity export- Borders Getting Permits Borders ers’ economies are highly concentrated in one, or a few, products. Past episodes suggest that the pace Sources: World Bank; Qureshi and Varoudakis (2014). A. The distance-to-frontier score shows the distance of each economy to the frontier, which represents the best of diversification often increases when resource rev- performance observed on each of the indicators across all economies in the Doing Business sample since 2005. An economy’s distance to the frontier is reflected on a scale from 0 to 100, where 0 represents the lowest enues begin to decline. Examples of a successful di- performance and 100 represents the frontier. versification policy include Mexico and Malaysia. B. A higher index denotes greater structural bottlenecks. C. BRICS = Brazil, Russian Federation, India, China, and South Africa. Diversification efforts could include the following D. MINT = Mexico, Indonesia, Nigeria, and Turkey. elements: • Building institutions to reduce economic volatil- ity. Resource-rich economies face the challenge subsidies when oil prices start increasing again. The of managing volatile resource revenues. Fiscal Arab Republic of Egypt, India, Indonesia, Iran, Ma- rules or well-managed stabilization funds can laysia, and Morocco implemented such reforms in help smooth revenues and stabilize government 2013–2015, removing some of the distortions and spending (Gill et al. 2014). inefficiencies associated with subsidies. Fiscal re- sources released by lower fuel subsidies could either • Changing incentives away from non-tradables (in- be saved to rebuild fiscal space lost after the global cluding from employment in the public sector). Re- financial crisis or reallocated towards better-targeted source-rich economies tend to have a significant programs to assist poor households and support share of government employment, and a size- critical infrastructure and human capital invest- able non-tradables sector, which benefits from ments. A broad spectrum of measures could provide government spending and abundantly available more effective means of supporting the poor. For example, cash transfers and near-cash transfers are 12In Mexico, cash transfers are provided in parallel with subsidies progressive in a great majority of cases—supporting accruing to lower-consumption households. Prospera, Mexico’s main lower income households more than higher income anti-poverty government cash-transfer program, has been quite success- ful in targeting the poor, in contrast to electricity subsidies. ones—in contrast to energy subsidies (Komives et 13On the request of G20 leaders, the World Bank released a report in al. 2007; Vagliasindi 2012; Figure 1.30). The ef- September 2014 providing a roadmap for transitional policies to assist the fectiveness of such measures improves with careful poor while phasing out fossil fuel subsidies (World Bank 2014c). GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 49 BOX 1.3 Recent Developments in Emerging and Developing Country Labor Markets The Great Recession had a relatively mild impact on the labor pect, employment contracted especially sharply in the coun- markets of developing countries. Since 2010 unemployment rates tries that experienced the sharpest declines in output. have generally been below pre-global financial crisis levels, and In contrast, unemployment rates in developing countries, declining. This is in stark contrast to the steep rise, and sluggish based on official statistics, show a modest one-half percentage decline, of unemployment rates in high-income economies. The point uptick in 2009, and a return to pre-crisis levels by 2011. resilience of developing-country labor markets reflects, in large The largest increases in unemployment rates and declines in part, stronger output growth during and after the crisis. As growth employment growth were in the regions with the largest out- in developing economies slows from post-crisis peaks, labor mar- put losses: Europe and Central Asia (ECA); and Latin Amer- kets may weaken. Since job creation plays a critical role in reduc- ica and Caribbean (Figures B1.3.3 and B1.3.4). This reflected ing poverty, and promoting shared prosperity, this risk heightens contractions of demand in the export markets of Western Eu- the importance of implementing reforms to support growth, and rope and the United States. Participation rates show a more of removing structural constraints on labor markets. complex pattern, generally (but not uniformly) declining dur- The 2007−09 financial crisis had a sizeable impact on global ing the global recession, and rising afterwards (with the excep- labor markets, with social and human costs: a reduction of tion of East Asia (Figure B1.3.5). In other developing regions, lifetime income, an increase in poverty, and the loss of hu- unemployment rates increased more moderately and partici- man capital (Gourinchas and Kose 2013). Though global pation rates remained near pre-crisis levels. China’s relatively unemployment rates returned to pre-crisis levels by 2014, strong growth during the peak of the Great Recession helped according to official statistics, labor markets of advanced and support developing country exports, particularly in East Asia. developing economies followed very different paths. The un- The resilience of developing economy employment com- employment rate in advanced economies increased by nearly pared to high-income economies during the Great Recession three percentage points during 2007−09; in contrast, official can be attributed to three factors: statistics show an increase of less than half a percentage point in the jobless rate in developing countries over the same pe- • Less severe contractions. The 2008–09 slowdown in riod. In advanced countries, the unemployment rate remains developing countries was not particularly severe, rela- about 1.5 percentage points above pre-crisis levels; in the tive to that of the advanced economies, or for that mat- developing world it is one-percentage point below them. ter, relative to earlier recessions in developing countries, Formal unemployment statistics cover only part of the story in developing economies, because of problems in measure- Figure B1.3.1  Global unemployment rate ment related to high levels of informality and underemploy- Global unemployment has receded towards pre-crisis levels. ment. The latter—low-income employment, under-utiliza- tion of skills, and lack of full-time job opportunities—are Percent 7.0 particularly evident (World Bank 2012). Understanding the evolution of labor market conditions in developing coun- tries is of paramount importance, as labor is the main source 6.5 of income for the poor. Unemployment or underemploy- ment are often associated with extreme poverty. Employ- 6.0 ment and wage growth are therefore critical for achieving the World Bank’s twin goals of reducing extreme poverty and promoting shared prosperity (World Bank 2013). 5.5 How resilient were labor markets in developing coun- tries during the Great Recession? 5.0 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 The global average unemployment rate rose sharply from Sources: International Monetary Fund; International Labor Organization. 2007 to 2010, reflecting steep increases in high-income Note: Weighted by size of national labor force; 2014 value is projection from IMF's World Economic Outlook. economies (Figures B1.3.1 and B1.3.2). As one would ex- The main author of this box is Bryce Quillin. 50 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 BOX 1.3 (continued) Figure B1.3.2  Unemployment rate in Figure B1.3.4  Change in employment to developing and advanced economies population ratio During the crisis, unemployment rose sharply in advanced countries, In LAC and ECA, employment rebounded strongly from less so in developing countries. employment losses in the crisis. Percent Percent Developing economies Advanced economies EAP ECA LAC MNA SAR SSA 9 2 8 1 7 0 6 -1 5 -2 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2007 2009 2011 2013 Sources: International Monetary Fund; International Labor Organization. Note: Aggregates weighted by size of national labor force. 2014 values are projections Source: International Labor Organization. from WEO, IMF. • Less sensitivity of unemployment rates to growth. Figure B1.3.3  Regional unemployment rate Unemployment rates respond less to changes in eco- The increase in unemployment rates during the crisis was most nomic activity in developing countries than in high-in- pronounced in developing countries in LAC and ECA. come countries. Historical estimates of “Okun’s Law” Percent 2000-07 Percent suggest that a 1 percentage point increase in growth is 2008 2009 associated with a smaller decline in unemployment in 16 2013 9 emerging than advanced economies; the estimated elas- Real GDP growth (2008-13 avg, RHS) ticity for frontier markets is about half that for advanced 12 6 economies (Loungani 2014, Figures B1.3.7 and B1.3.8). However, these estimates vary widely over 8 time, over countries, and over sectors (Cazes et al. 2012; 4 3 Moosa 2012; Ball, Leigh and Loungani 2013).1 For ex- ample, in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), LAC, and India, 0 0 employment in manufacturing tends to be less respon- ECA LAC EAP MNA SAR SSA sive to growth than in agriculture, construction, or ser- Source: International Labor Organization. Note: EAP stands for East Asia and Pacific, ECA stands for Europe and Central Asia, vices (World Bank 2012). LAC stands for Latin America and the Caribbean , MNA stands for Middle East and North Africa, SAR stands for South Asia, SSA stands for Sub-Saharan Africa. • Informality and measurement uncertainties. Weaker Okun coefficients may reflect the high levels of infor- mality and labor market segmentation in developing and the recovery was somewhat quicker (Figure B1.3.6). economies (UNCTAD 2012). In the absence of social As a result, in 2008–09, unemployment rates re-at- safety nets, workers may be unable to afford periods of tained pre-recession levels faster than in earlier reces- sions. The linkage between growth and unemployment 1There are two versions of Okun’s Law. The “gap” version relates that is also seen in divergences among developing regions. for every 1 percentage point increase in the unemployment rate, a country’s For example, ECA and LAC experienced the biggest GDP will be about 2 percentage points lower than its potential. The “dif- ferences” version (as originated in Okun, 1962) describes the relationship drops in both output and employment growth. between quarterly changes in unemployment and GDP. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 51 BOX 1.3 (continued) Figure B1.3.5  Labor force participation rate Figure B1.3.7  Estimates of Okun’s Law coefficients for advanced, emerging, and In the post-crisis rebound, labor force participation rates also rose in LAC and ECA. frontier market economies Percent Additional growth is associated with a smaller reduction in the 2000–07 2008 2009 2013 85 unemployment rate in emerging and frontier markets than in advanced markets. Percentage point 0.0 70 55 -0.1 40 -0.2 ECA EAP SAR AFR MNA Source: International Labor Organization. Note: Modeled ILO estimate. EAP stands for East Asia and Pacific, ECA stands for Eu- rope and Central Asia, LAC stands for Latin America and the Caribbean , MNA stands for -0.3 Middle East and North Africa, SAR stands for South Asia, SSA stands for Sub-Saharan Advanced Emerging Frontier Africa. Labor force divided by working age population of ages 15-64. Source: Furceri and Loungani (2014). Note: Bar represents the impact of an extra percentage point of GDP growth on the un- employment rate. Figure B1.3.6  Changes in unemployment rate and GDP growth in Great Recession B1.3.9). The very nature of informality makes it difficult vs. previous recessions in developing to measure (note the wide range of the estimates in Figure economies B1.3.9). In addition, by blurring the distinction between During the 2009 recession, the unemployment rate in developing employment and unemployment, it increases the margin countries rose less than in earlier recessions. for error in the unemployment data. Large-scale underem- Percent Unemployment rate, the Great Recession ployment of workers, in low-paid, low-productivity occu- 8 GDP growth, the Great Recession pations that under-utilize their skills, means that the mea- Unemployment rate, median for previous recessions from 1990 GDP growth, median for previous recessions from 1990 sured unemployment rate in developing economies cannot 4 be interpreted in the same way as that in advanced econo- mies, either as a cyclical indicator, or as a gauge of eco- nomic welfare. 0 What are the prospects for developing country labor -4 markets after the Great Recession? Moderating growth in several large developing economies -8 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 since 2010 has not yet had a large labor market impact, but some signs of weakness are emerging. Unemployment rates Source: International Labor Organization. World Bank calculations. Definition of reces- sions obtained from World Bank 2014a. in all developing regions are around or below the pre-crisis Note: The zero (“0”) represents trough and the -3 to 3 values represent years before and after the trough. Sample comprises 11 emerging market economies. average. Likewise, aggregate rates of employment growth re- main solid, although there are exceptions, such as the marked unemployment and there may be a revolving door from declines in employment growth in ECA from 2011, and the formal to informal jobs that cushions the impact of slower softening in East Asia and Latin America in 2012. The Inter- economic growth on official unemployment rates. Infor- national Labor Organization (ILO) projects that unemploy- mal employment can account for 70 percent of total em- ment rates will rise in ECA, East Asia, and South Asia in ployment in Asia and the Pacific, over 60 percent in Africa 2014, with employment growth falling short of the growth of and LAC, and over 20 percent in ECA (ILO 2014; Figure the working age population (ILO 2014). Global real wage 52 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 BOX 1.3 (continued) Figure B1.3.8  Real GDP growth and change Figure B1.3.9  Estimated informal in unemployment rates in developing employment shares in selected countries, economies, 2000−14 2011 Higher growth was associated with falling unemployment rates. Informal sectors are large in developing countries. GDP, average annual growth, percent Percent of total employment Minimum estimate Maximum estimate 12 80 10 60 8 40 6 20 4 0 Sub-Saharan Africa Asia and Pacific Middle East Latin America and the Europe and central Asia 2 Caribbean 0 -1.5 -1.0 -0.5 0.0 0.5 1.0 Unemployment rate, average annual change, percent Source: International Labor Organization; International Monetary Fund. World Bank staff calculations. Source: International Labor Organization. Note: Shaded area reflects 95 percent confidence interval. 2014 values are projections Note: Calculations based on a sample of 49 countries. from WEO, IMF. growth declined in 2013 (Figure B1.3.10). Large emerging Figure B1.3.10  Global average annual real markets (China, India, South Africa) reflected this trend wage growth (Figure B1.3.11), although the wage increase in China, of more than 7 percent, held the global rate of increase close to Since the crisis, real wage growth has declined in developing countries. 2 percent. Percent Global Global (without China) Aside from the signs of cyclical softening, labor markets in 3.5 developing countries face macroeconomic and structural 3.0 policy challenges that make them vulnerable to a global 2.5 slowdown. 2.0 • Reduced space for counter-cyclical fiscal policy. Part 1.5 of the relative resilience of emerging market economies during the Great Recession was due to the use of simu- 1.0 lative fiscal policy to support domestic demand. Many 0.5 countries, having used much of the available space, will 0.0 be unable to respond as strongly in the event of another 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 cyclical slowdown (World Bank 2015c). Source: International Labor Organization Global Wage Report 2014/15. • Structural policy weaknesses. Structural constraints Note: Weighted average of y-o-y growth in average monthly real wages in 130 countries, covering 96% of all employees. on the private sector and labor markets create risks for post-Great Recession employment prospects. The pri- vate sector is the main engine of job creation: during workers in developing countries (IFC 2013, World 1995−2005, the private sector accounted for over 90 Bank 2012). Firms, particularly SMEs, report that their percent of the jobs created in Brazil, the Philippines, growth and hiring is limited by infrastructure issues, ac- and Turkey. Small- and medium-sized enterprises cess to financing, and competition from the informal (SME) employed over 60 percent of formal sector sector caused by cumbersome labor regulations and GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 53 BOX 1.3 (continued) What policies could help address structural problems? Figure B1.3.11 Real wage growth in selected developing economies The nature of the policy challenges varies with the level of development, institutional strength, and endowments. Real wage growth has been particularly weak in LAC. However, promoting growth and addressing structural ri- Percent 2012 2013 gidities in labor and product markets will be parts of the 16 solution. The reform agenda can be described along four 12 themes (World Bank 2012). • Strong macroeconomic fundamentals. Given the uni- 8 versal importance of sustained economic growth to the creation of permanent work, an overarching priority is a 4 macroeconomic policy mix that supports steady growth. 0 • Structural policies encouraging SME development. In particular, policies should support SME develop- -4 ment, given their contribution to employment. SMEs South Africa China Mexico Ukraine Brazil in developing countries are much less successful in Source: International Labor Organization Global Wage Report 2014/15. growing into larger firms than in advanced economies: a study by IFC found that 35-year-old companies in India were typically born large, and shrunk by one fourth over their lifetimes; in Mexico they doubled in poor enforcement (Figure B1.3.12, IFC 2013). Rigid size. Yet in the United States they grew by a factor of 10 labor regulations have been correlated with increases in (IFC 2013). Reforms to broad-based infrastructure and urban poverty, fewer business start-ups, and lower pro- financial-sector policies may be required to improve ductivity growth (Djankov and Ramalho 2009; Bassa- SME access to electricity and finance. Obstacles in these nini, Nunziata, and Venn 2014; Scarpetta 2014). The two areas pose binding on constraints firms in low-in- role and size of the state is also important. In MENA, come and lower-middle income country (IFC 2013). which has the highest levels of unemployment, and the lowest labor force participation rates (particularly • Labor market reforms. A key priority is to eliminate among women), the formal private sector employs no government-created incentives for informal employ- more than 20 percent of the labor force, with state em- ment. Poorly designed regulation of formal employ- ployment exceeding 80 percent in some countries ment often results in excessive red tape on hiring, and (World Bank 2013). In addition to these policy-related risks to labor markets, de- Figure B1.3.12  Enterprise Survey results on mographic change is leading to rapid aging in many devel- key business constraints, 2013 oping countries. Over the next 15 years, the growth in the Enterprises consider labor regulations and informality key working age population will slow from 2000–15 rates, in constraints to business. some cases sharply, in every developing region. Dependency Worker Security skills ratios are already rising in Central and Eastern Europe and 8% 5% Other Political much of East Asia as a result of lower fertility and mortality instability 31% 8% rates (Galor 2012; Soares 2005; Acemoglu and Johnson Labor Business regulations 2007). Aging has broad-based policy implications, particu- Access to regulations 3% finance 46% larly for fiscal policy, and will impact labor markets by low- 16% ering labor supply and potentially lowering productivity and Informality 12% entrepreneurship (IMF 2004; World Bank forthcoming (a); Access to World Bank forthcoming (b)). These demographic pressures infrastructure 17% exacerbate existing risks to labor markets and increase the Source: Enterprise Surveys, World Bank. IFC (2013). need to pursue policies that promote formality. 54 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 BOX 1.3 (continued) high penalties on firing. In turn, these encourage infor- Countries with growing populations may be at risk �  mality, or poor enforcement. Simulations of labor mar- of a “youth bulge” that increases competition for ket models suggest that policy changes should be care- jobs, and dampens wage growth. Education pro- fully sequenced, as increasing enforcement may reduce grams can assist skills development, while business informality yet cause higher unemployment and lower environment reforms may enhance business entry welfare. Policies that first reduce costs in the formal sec- and market access. Large public sector employ- tor would help avoid this outcome (Ulyssea 2010). ment, on the other hand, may crowd out private • Country specifics. Relevant country idiosyncrasies in- sector opportunities and lead to an inefficient al- clude economic institutions, natural resource depen- location of human capital (World Bank 2013). dency, and demographics. In some regions, states are Resource-rich economies may need to focus on im- �  embroiled in conflict, or post-conflict, situations that proving human capital and institutions. Excessive hir- have large economic repercussions (World Bank 2012). ing by the public sector, or a loss of export competi- For agrarian countries, improving transportation �  tiveness due to an appreciation of real exchange rates to cities will be a high priority, as will be improving during periods of high commodity prices, may crowd productivity in agriculture. out private sector job creation (World Bank 2014). Aging economies, with growing dependency ra- �  In conflict-affected countries, the availability of �  tios, need to focus on policies that encourage jobs that provide life-long skills for ex-combatants, health. Doing so will support labor force participa- or for youths who may be drawn into violence, is tion ratios by promoting longer working lives. particularly important. Without decent employ- There would also be fiscal savings, including on ment opportunities, the risk is high that such peo- health care. Revised immigration policies may be ple will become permanently disaffected. Produc- needed to increase the size of the work force, par- tive infrastructure investments can provide such ticularly for non-traded services. employment, and help build social cohesion. labor (Callen et al. 2014). This non-tradables • Building human capital. Government invest- sector is typically characterized by low pro- ment, including in human capital, would be ductivity growth relative to the tradables sec- an effective complement to efforts to accel- tor, in particular manufacturing (Cherif and erate productivity growth in the tradables Hasanov 2014). Reforms to provide market sector (Cherif and Hasanov 2012). In devel- incentives for a transfer of resources towards oping countries, social returns to education the non-resource-based tradables sector may have been shown to be significant, and poten- tially higher than returns to physical capital be helpful in some commodity-exporting (OECD 2012; Psacharopoulos and Patrinos countries. 2004). • Encouraging export diversification. Export di- Measurable effects of reforms, in terms of growth versification is associated with higher growth and productivity, can take a long time to materi- (Lederman and Maloney 2007). Public policy alize. Even in the short-term, however, reforms can support export diversification and sophis- can have a considerable effect on activity. Poli- tication by fostering vertical diversification in cies could be implemented to ease the short-term oil, gas, and petrochemical sectors (i.e., in- transition cost, for example by assisting workers creased processing of the raw materials), and to move to new jobs and speeding up the repair horizontal diversification beyond these sec- of the capital bases of lending institutions. Some tors (Cherif and Hasanov 2014). of the possible effects on activity are as follows: GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 55 • Reforms that involve capital investment (e.g., FIGURE 1.30  Fuel subsidies to address infrastructure needs) can stimulate Fuel subsidies typically benefit high-income households more than lower-income domestic demand in the short-term. ones. In contrast, conditional cash transfers can be better targeted to low-income households. • Labor market reforms, especially those that reform social benefits, can increase the labor  istribution of subsidy benefits A. D  enefit incidence of social B. B by consumption quintile expenditures vis-à-vis electricity supply (e.g., older workers), even though in subsidy the short-run they may imply lower real in- Percent Percent of income Conditional cash comes (Blanchard and Giavazzi 2001; Krebs 50 Bottom 2 3 4 Top 1.6 transfers and Scheffel, 2013). Even if associated with 40 1.4 Electricity subsidy 1.2 short-term disruptions, labor market reforms 30 1 can be critical complements to other reforms. 20 0.8 0.6 For example, labor market flexibility can am- 10 0.4 plify growth benefits from deregulation and 0 0.2 Africa South and Other All Regions 0 product market reforms (Aghion et al. 2008). Central Regions Bottom 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Top America decile decile • Product market reforms (such as increasing competition or removing implicit and ex- Sources: Arze del Granado, Coady, and Gillingham (2012); Vagliasindi (2012). A. Values are share of the total benefit from different fuel price subsidies for households grouped by plicit subsidies) that result in unwinding ex- consumption levels. cess capacity in inefficient firms (e.g., some B. The conditional cash transfers program (previously Opportunidades, now Prospera) is a Mexican government social assistance (welfare) program founded in 2002. It was designed to target poverty by providing cash state enterprises) can cause unemployment in payments to families in exchange for regular school attendance, health clinic visits, and nutritional support. the short run, as workers are laid off, and as banks’ new lending capacity is impaired by the need to write off nonperforming loans. Badel, A., and J. McGillicuddy. 2015. “Oil Prices: Is Supply or Demand behind the Slump?” Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis. References Baffes, J. and X. Etienne. 2014. “Analyzing Food Price Trends in the Context of Engel’s Law and the Acemoglu, D., and S. Johnson. 2007. “Disease and Prebisch-Singer Hypothesis.” Paper presented at the Development: The Effect of Life Expectancy on Eco- International Conference on Food Price Volatility: nomic Growth.” Journal of Political Economy 115 (6): Causes and Consequences, Rabat, Morocco, Febru- 925-985. ary 25-26, 2014. Aghion, P., R. Burgess, S.J. Redding, and F. Zilibotti. Baffes, J., M. A. Kose, F. Ohnsorge, and M. Stocker. 2008. “The Unequal Effects of Liberalization: Evi- 2015. “The Great Plunge in Oil Prices: Causes, Con- dence from Dismantling the License Raj in India.” sequences and Policy Responses.” Policy Research American Economic Review 98 (4): 1397-1412. Note No. 1. World Bank, Washington, DC. Aksoy, A. M., and A. Isik-Dikmelik. 2008. "Are Low Baffes, J. B. Lewin, and P. Varangis. 2005. “Coffee: Food Prices Pro-Poor? Net Food Buyers and Sellers Market Setting and Policies.” In Global Agricultural in Low-Income Countries." Working Paper No. Trade and Developing Countries,” ed. M.A. Aksoy 4642. World Bank, Washington, DC. and J, Beghin. World Bank, Washington D.C. Alfaro, L., S. Kalemli-Ozcan, and V. Volosovych. Ball, L., D. Leigh, and P. Loungani. 2013. “Okun’s 2008. "Why Doesn't Capital Flow from Rich to Law: Fit at 50.” IMF Working Paper. WP/13/10. In- Poor Countries? An Empirical Investigation." The ternational Monetary Fund, Washington, DC. Review of Economics and Statistics 90 (2): 347-368. Bank of England. 2014. “Financial Stability Report Altunbas, Y., L. Gambacorta, and D. Marqués- December 2014.” Bank of England. http://www. Ibáñez. 2010, “Does Monetary Policy Affect Bank bankofengland.co.uk/publications/Documents/ Risk-Taking?” ECB Working Paper 1166. fsr/2014/fsrfull1412.pdf. Arze del Granado, F. J., D. Coady, and R. Gilling- Barkbu, B.B., S. P. Berkmen, and H. Schölermann. ham. 2012. “The Unequal Benefits of Fuel Subsidies: 2015. “Investment in the Euro Area: Why Has It A Review of Evidence for Developing Countries.” Been So Weak?” iMFdirect. February 19, 2015. World Development 40: 2234-2248. 56 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 Bassanini, A., L. Nunziata, and D. Venn. 2014. “Job Bruno, V., and H. S. Shin. 2013. “Capital Flows, Protection and Productivity.” Economic Policy 24: Cross-border Banking and Global Liquidity.” NBER 349−402. Working Paper No. 19038. National Bureau of Eco- Baumeister, C., and L. Kilian. 2015. “Understand- nomic Research. ing the Decline in the Price of Oil Since June 2014.” Buiter, W. and N. Panigirtzoglou, 2003, “Overcom- CFS Working Paper No. 501. Center for Financial ing the Zero Bound on Nominal Interest Rates with Studies, Frankfurt. Negative Interest on Currency: Gesell’s Solution,” Behar, A., and A. J. Venables. 2010. “Transport Cost The Economic Journal 113: 723-746. and International Trade.” University of Oxford De- Bullard, J. 2014. “How Far Is the FOMC From Its partment of Economic Discussion Paper No. 488. Goals?” Presentation at the Tennessee Bankers Asso- Bell, D. N. F., and D. G. Blanchflower. 2011. “The ciation Annual Meeting, June 9 2014. https://www. Crisis, Policy Reactions and Attitudes to Globaliza- stlouisfed.org/~/media/Files/PDFs/Bullard/remarks/ tion and Jobs.” Discussion Paper Series 5680, Insti- BullardTNBankersAssociationPalmBeach9June- tute for the Study of Labor, Bonn. 2014Final.pdf. Benkovskis, K., and J. Wörz. 2014. “How Does Bussière, M. S., and M. Fratzscher. 2006. "Towards Taste and Quality Impact on Import Prices?” Review a New Early Warning System of Financial Crises." of World Economics 150 (4): 665-691. Journal of International Money and Finance 25 (6): Berg, A., C. Papageorgiou, C. Pattillo, M. Schindler, 953-973. N. Spatafora, and H. Weisfeld. 2011. “Global Shocks and their Impact on Low-Income Countries: Bussière, M., S. Delle Chiaie, and T. A. Peltonen. Lessons from the Global Financial Crisis.” IMF 2014. “Exchange Rate Pass-Through in the Global Working Paper 11/27. Economy: The Role of Emerging Market Econo- mies.” IMF Economic Review 62 (1): 146-178. Blanchard, O., and D. Quah. 1989. "The Dy- namic Effects of Aggregate Demand and Supply Ca’Zorzi, M., E. Hahn, and M. Sanchez. 2007. “Ex- Disturbances." American Economic Review 79 (4): change Rate Pass-Through in Emerging Markets.” 655-673. ECB Working Paper No. 739. European Central Bank. Blanchard, O., and F. Giavazzi. 2001. “Macroeco- Caballero, R. J., T. Hoshi, and A. K. Kashyap. 2006. nomic Effects of Regulation and Deregulation in “Zombie Lending and Depressed Restructuring in Goods and Labor Markets.” NBER Working Paper Japan.” NBER Working Paper No. 12129, National No. 8120. National Bureau of Economic Research. Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge, MA. Bloom, D., D. Canning, and J. Sevilla. 2003. “The Cai, F., and D. Wang. 2005. “China’s Demographic Demographic Dividend: A New Perspective on the Transition: Implications for Growth.” In The China Economic Consequences of Population Change.” Boom and its Discontents, edited by R. Garnaut and Rand Corporation. L. Song, 34–52. Canberra: Asia Pacific Press. Bodenstein, M., L. Guerrieri, and L. Kilian. 2012. Callen, T., R. Cherif, F. Hasanov, A. Hegazy, and P. "Monetary Policy Responses to Oil Price Fluctua- tions." IMF Economic Review 60 (4): 470-504. Khandelwal. 2014. “Economic Diversification in the GCC: Past, Present, and Future.” Staff Discussion Boeri, T., P. Garibaldi, and E. R. Moen. 2012. “The Note No. 14/12 (2014). International Monetary Labor Market Consequences of Adverse Financial Fund, Washington, DC. Shocks.” Paper presented at the 13th Jacques Polak Annual Research Conference, International Mon- Campa, J. M., and L. S. Goldberg. 2005. “Exchange etary Fund, November 8-9. Rate Pass-Through into Import Prices.” Review of Brayton, F., T. Laubach, and D. Reifschneider. Economics and Statistics 87 (4): 679-690. 2014. “The FRB/US Model: A Tool for Macroeco- Canuto, O., C. Fleischhaker, and P. Schellekens. nomic Policy Analysis.” Board of Governors of the 2015. "The Curious Case of Brazil’s Closedness to Federal Reserve System, FEDS Note, April. Trade." World Bank Policy Research Working Paper No. 7228. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 57 Catão, L., and R. Chang. 2013. "Monetary Rules De Nicolò, G., G. Dell’Ariccia, L. Laeven, and F. Va- for Commodity Traders." IMF Economic Review 61 lencia. 2010. “Monetary Policy and Bank Risk Tak- (1): 52-91. ing.” Staff Position Note. International Monetary Cazes, S., S. Verick, and F. Al-Hussani. 2012. “Di- Fund, Washington, DC. verging Trends in Unemployment in the United Dell’Ariccia, G., L. Laeven, and G. Suarez. 2013. States and Europe: Evidence from Okun’s Law and “Bank Leverage and Monetary Policy's Risk-Tak- the Global Financial Crisis.” Employment Working ing.” IMF Working Paper 13/143. International Papers. International Labour Organization. Monetary Fund, Washington, DC. Cherif, R., and F. Hasanov. 2012. "Oil Exporters’ Di Maggio, M. and M. Kacperczyk. 2015, “The Un- Dilemma: How Much to Save and How Much to intended Consequences of the Zero Lower Bound Invest." World Development 52 (2013): 120-131. Policy,” Working Paper, Columbia Business School. ______. 2014. “Soaring of the Gulf Falcons: Diver- Djankov, S., and R. Ramalho. 2009. “Employment sification in the GCC Oil Exporters in Seven Propo- Laws in Developing Countries.” Journal of Compara- sitions.” Working Paper No. 14/177 (2014). Inter- tive Economics 37 (1): 3−13. national Monetary Fund, Washington, DC. Draghi, Mario. 2015. ECB and its Watchers XVI Clements, B, D. Coady, S. Fabrizio, S. Gupta, and Conference. Frankfurt am Main, 11 March 2015. B. Shang. 2014. “Energy Subsidies: How Large Are Economist Intelligence Unit. 2015. “International They and How Can They Be Reformed?” Economics Jobs Report: A Timely Assessment of International of Energy & Environmental Policy 3 (1). Labor Market Conditions.” January. Coady, D., M. El-Said, R. Gillingham, K. Kpodar, Eichengreen, B., and P. Gupta. 2013. "The Real Ex- P. Medas, and D. Newhouse. 2006. “The Magnitude change Rate and Export Growth: are Services Dif- and Distribution of Fuel Subsidies: Evidence from ferent?" World Bank Policy Research Working Paper Bolivia, Ghana, Jordan, Mali, and Sri Lanka.” IMF 6629. Working Paper Series 06/247. International Mon- etary Fund, Washington, DC. European Central Bank. 2015. “The Governing Council’s Expanded Asset Purchase Programme,” Cœuré, B. 2015. “Embarking on Public Sector As- Box 1 in Economic Bulletin Issue 1 / 2015. set Purchases.” Speech at the Second International Conference on Sovereign Bond Markets in Frank- European Commission. 2015. Winter Economic furt, March 10. Forecast: Outlook Improved but Risks Remain. Brus- sels, February 2015. Congressional Budget Office. 2015. “The Budget and Economic Outlook: 2015 to 2025, January Fadejeva, L., M. Feldkircher, and T. Reininger. 2014. 2015.” United States Congress Congressional Bud- “Spillovers from Euro Area and U.S. Credit Demand get Office. https://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/ Shocks: Comparing Emerging Europe on the Basis cbofiles/attachments/49892-Outlook2015.pdf. of a GVAR Model.” Oesterreichische Nationalbank Working Paper 198, Vienna, Austria. Dailami, M., and J. Adams-Kane. 2012. “What Does the Future Hold for the International Banking Farber, H. S. 2011. “Job Loss in the Great Recession: System?” World Bank, Washington, DC. Historical Perspective from the Displaced Workers Survey, 1984−2010.” Discussion Paper Series 5696, Dahlhaus, T., and G. Vasishta. 2014. “The Impact Institute for the Study of Labor, Bonn. of U.S. Monetary Policy Normalization on Capital Flows to Emerging-Market Economies.” Bank of Fattouh, B. 2007. “OPEC Pricing Power: The Need Canada Working Paper No. 2014-53. for a New Perspective.” Oxford Institute for Energy Studies WPM 31. Oxford, U.K. De Gregorio, J., O. Lenderretche, and C. Neilson. 2007. “Another Pass-Through Bites the Dust? Oil Ferderer, J. P. 1997. "Oil Price Volatility and the Prices and Inflation.” Central Bank of Chile Work- Macroeconomy." Journal of Macroeconomics 18 (1): ing Paper No. 417. 1-26. 58 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 Fisher, J. D. M. 2006. "The Dynamic Effects of Neu- Genay, H. and R. Podjasek. 2014. “What is the Im- tral and Investment Specific Technology Shocks." pact of a Low Interest Rate Environment on Bank Journal of Political Economy 114 (3): 413-451. Profitability?” Chicago Fed Letter 324 (July), Fed- Forbes, K. J., and F. E. Warnock. 2012. "Capital eral Reserve Bank of Chicago. Flow Waves: Surges, Stops, Flight, and Retrench- Georgiadis, G., and J. Gräb. 2015. “Global Financial ment." Journal of International Economics 88 (2): Market Impact of the Announcement of the ECB's 235-251. Extended Asset Purchase Programme.” Federal Re- Frankel, J. A. 2010. “The Natural Resource Curse: a serve Bank of Dallas Working Paper No. 232. Survey.” NBER Working Paper No. 15836. National Gilbert, C. L. 1996. “International Commodity Agree- Bureau of Economic Research. ments: An Obituary.” World Development 24: 1–19. Fratzscher, M. 2011. “Capital Flows, Push Versus Gill, I. S., I. Izvorski, W. Van Eeghen, and D. De Pull Factors and the Global Financial Crisis.” ECB Rosa. 2014. Diversified Development: Making the Working Paper No. 1364. European Central Bank. Most of Natural Resources in Eurasia. Washington, Fratzscher, M., M. Lo Duca, and R. Straub. 2013. DC: World Bank. "On the International Spillovers of U.S. Quantita- Golan, A., G. G. Judge, and D. Miller. Maximum tive Easing." DIW Berlin Discussion Paper No. Entropy Econometrics: Robust Estimation with Limited 1304. German Institute for Economic Research. Data. New York: Wiley, 1996. Furceri, D., and P. Loungani. 2014. “Growth: An Gordon, R. J. 2010. “Okun’s Law and Productiv- Essential Part of a Cure for Unemployment.” iMF- ity Innovations.” American Economic Review 100 (2): direct website post. November 19. 11-15. G20. 2014a. “Comprehensive Growth Strategy—Ja- Gourinchas, P.-O., and M. A. Kose. 2013. “Introduc- pan.” http://www.mofa.go.jp/files/000059855.pdf. tion: Labor Markets Through the Lens of the Great 2014b. “Growth Strategies: G20 Emerging Market Recession.” IMF Economic Review 61: 405−409. Economies. World Bank Staff Assessment.” G20 Guo, H. and K. L. Kliesen. 2005. “Oil Price Vola- November 7, 2014. tility and US Macroeconomic Activity.” Federal Re- Gagnon, J. E., and J. Ihrig. 2004. “Monetary Policy serve Bank of St. Louis Review 87. http://research. and Exchange Rate Pass Through.” International stlouisfed.org/publications/review/05/11/Kliesen- Journal of Finance and Economics 9 (4): 315-338. Guo.pdf. Galor, O. 2012. “The Demographic Transition: Hamilton, J.D., E. S. Harris, J. Hartzius, and K. Causes and Consequences.” Cliometrica 6:1–28. D. West. 2015. “The Equilibrium Real Funds Rate: Past, Present and Future.” Mimeo. http://econweb. Garbade, K and McAndrews, J. 2012. “If Interest ucsd.edu/~jhamilto/USMPF_2015.pdf. Rates Go Negative… Or, Be Careful What You Wish For.” Liberty Street Economics (blog). New York Hamilton, J. D. 2014. “Oil Prices as an Indicator Federal Reserve. of Global Economic Conditions.” Econbrowser. De- cember 14. ______. 2015. “Interest-Bearing Securities when In- terest Rates are Below Zero.” Liberty Street Economics Hannoun, H. 2015. “Ultra-Low or Negative Inter- (blog). New York Federal Reserve. est Rates: What They Mean for Financial Stability and Growth.” Speech at the Eurofi High-Level Semi- Gasparini, L., and L. Tornarolli. 2007. “Labour nar, Riga, April 22. Informality in Latin America and the Caribbean: Patterns and Trends from Household Survey Micro- HM Treasury. 2015. “Budget 2015, March 2015.” data.” CEDLAS Working Paper, 47. HC 1093. http://www.gov.uk/government/ publications. Gelos, R. G., R. Sahay, and G. Sandleris. 2011. "Sov- ereign Borrowing by Developing Countries: What Hsieh, C.-T., E. Hurst, C. I. Jones, and P. J. Klenow. Determines Market Access?" Journal of International 2013. “The Allocation of Talent and U.S. Economic Economics 83 (2): 243-254. Growth.” NBER Working Paper No. 18693. Na- tional Bureau of Economic Research. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 59 Hull, J., M. Predescu, and A. White. 2004. "The ______. 2015a. Global Financial Stability Report, Relationship Between Credit Default Swap Spreads, April 2015. Washington, DC: International Mon- Bond Yields, and Credit Rating Announcements." etary Fund. Journal of Banking and Finance 28 (1): 2789-2811. ______. 2015b. World Economic Outlook: Uneven Huttl, Pia. 2014. “Negative Deposit Rates: The Growth. Short- and Long-Term Factors. Washington, Danish Experience.” Bruegel (blog). Brussels. DC: International Monetary Fund. IEA. 2014. Fossil Fuel Database, Paris. International ______. 2015c. International Jobs Report. January. Energy Agency. Washington, DC: International Monetary Fund. ______. 2015. Oil Market Report March 2015. In- International Labour Office. 2014. “Global Unem- ternational Energy Agency. ployment Trends 2014: Risk of a Jobless Recovery?” IEG. 2008. Climate Change and the World Bank International Labour Organization. Group. Phase 1: An Evaluation of World Bank Win- Judge, G. G., and R. C. Mittelhammer. An Infor- Win Energy Policy Reforms. Independent Evalua- mation Theoretic Approach to Econometrics. Cam- tion Group. Washington, DC: World Bank. bridge University Press, 2011. IFC. 2013. “IFC Jobs Study: Assessing Private Sec- Jutting, J., J. Parlevliet, and T. Xenogiani. 2007. “In- tor Contributions to Job Creation and Poverty Re- formal Employment Re-loaded.” OECD Develop- duction.” International Finance Corporation. ment Centre Working Paper, 266. Organization for IIF. 2015. Heat Map of EM Vulnerabilities. Insti- Economic Cooperation and Development. tute for International Finance. https://www.iif.com/ Kannan, P., and S. Elekdag. 2009. “Incorporating publication/heat-map-em-vulnerabilities. Market Information into the Construction of the Ilgmann, C., and M. Menner, 2011, “Negative Fan Chart.” IMF Working Paper 09/178. Interna- Nominal Rates: History and Current Proposals,” tional Monetary Fund, Washington, DC. International Economics and Economic Policy 8: Keister, T. 2011. “Why Is There A Lower Bound on 383-405. Interest Rates,” Liberty Street Economics (blog). New IMF. 2004. World Economic Outlook: The Global York Federal Reserve. Demographic Transition. Washington, DC: Interna- Komives, K., V. Foster, J. Halpern, Q. Wodon, tional Monetary Fund. and R. Abdullah. 2007. “Utility Subsidies as Social ______. 2010. World Economic Outlook Rebalancing Transfers: An Empirical Evaluation of Targeting Growth. April 2010. Washington, DC: International Performance.” Development Policy Review 25 (6): Monetary Fund. 659−679. ______. 2013a. “Energy Subsidy Reform: Lessons Koo, R. C. 2011. “The World in Balance Sheet Re- and Implications.” International Monetary Fund. cession: Causes, Cure, and Politics.” Real-World Eco- nomic Review 58. ______. 2013b. “2013 Spillover Report—Analyti- cal Underpinnings and Other Background.” Policy Koopman, R., Z. Wang, and S.-J. Wei. 2014. "Trac- Paper, International Monetary Fund, Washington, ing Value-Added and Double Counting in Gross DC. Exports." American Economic Review 104 (2): 459-94. ______. 2013c. Regional Economic Outlook— Middle East and Central Asia October 2013. Wash- Krebs, T., and M. Scheffel. 2013. "Macroeconomic ington, DC: International Monetary Fund. Evaluation of Labor Market Reform in Germany." IMF Economic Review 61 (4): 664-701. ______. 2014a. “Multilateral Issues Report, 2014 Spillover Report.” Policy Paper, International Mon- Laforte, J.P. and J. Roberts. 2014. “November 2014 etary Fund, Washington, DC. update of the FRB/US model.” Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, FEDS Note, Novem- ______. 2014b. “United Kingdom—Article IV ber 21. Consultation 2014 Staff Report.” IMF Country Re- port 14/233. International Monetary Fund, Wash- ington, DC. 60 CHAPTER 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 Lederman, D., and W. Maloney. 2007. “Trade ______. 2014. OECD Economic Outlook, November Structure and Growth.” In Natural Resources: Nei- 2014. Paris: Organisation for Economic Co-opera- ther Curse nor Destiny, edited by D. Lederman and tion and Development. W. Maloney. 2007. World Bank. ______. 2015a. Going for Growth 2015. Paris: Loungani, P. 2014. “More Growth: A Simple Cure Organisation for Economic Co-operation and for Unemployment?” Presentation at Oberlin Col- Development. lege. November 3. ______. 2015b. “Economic Survey 2015 China.” Maloney, W. 2004. “Informality Revisited.” World Organisation for Economic Co-operation and De- Development 32 (7): 1159−78. velopment, Paris. Mankiw, G. 2009. “It May be Time for the Fed to Office for Budget Responsibility. 2014. Economic Go Negative,” New York Times (April 19). and Fiscal Outlook December 2014. http://www. McAndrews, J. 2015. “Negative Nominal Central gov.uk/government/publications. Bank Policy Rates: Where Is the Lower Bound?” OPEC (Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Speech at the University of Wisconsin in Madison, Countries). 2015. “Brief History.” http://www.opec. May 8. org. McCauley, R.N., P. McGuire, and V. Sushko. 2015. Psacharopoulos, G., and H. A. Patrinos. 2004. "Re- “Global Dollar Credit: Links to U.S. Monetary Pol- turns to Investment in Education: a Further Up- icy and Leverage.” BIS Working Paper No. 483. date." Education Economics 12(2): 111-134. McKinsey Global Institute. 2011. “An Economy Qureshi, Z., J. L. Diaz-Sanchez, and A. Varouda- That Works: Job Creation and America’s Future.” kis (2015). “The Post-Crisis Growth Slowdown in June 11 report. Emerging Economies and the Role of Structural Meyer, B., and M. Tasci. 2012. “An Unstable Okun’s Reforms.” Global Journal of Emerging Market Econo- Law, Not the Best Rule of Thumb.” Economic Com- mies, forthcoming. mentary, June 7. Rai, V., and L. Suchanek. 2014. “The Effect of Mihaljek, D., and M. Klau. 2008. “Exchange Rate the Federal Reserve’s Tapering Announcements on Pass-Through in Emerging Market Economies: Emerging Markets.” Working Paper No. 14-50. What Has Changed and Why?” BIS Papers 35: Reinhart, C., and K. Rogoff. 2008. “Is the 2007 U.S. 103-130. Sub-Prime Crisis So Different? An International Moosa, I. A. 2012. “A Cross-Country Comparison Historical Comparison,” NBER Working Paper No. of Okun’s Coefficient.” Journal of Comparative Eco- 13761. National Bureau of Economic Research. nomics 24 (3): 335−56. Rogoff, K. 2014. “Costs and Benefits to Phasing out Norden, L., and M. Weber. 2004. "Informational Paper Currency,” NBER Working Paper 20126. Na- Efficiency of Credit Default Swap and Stock Mar- tional Bureau of Economic Research. kets: The Impact of Credit Rating Announcements." Sanchez, M. 2013. “The Impact of Monetary Poli- Journal of Banking and Finance 28 (11): 2813-2843. cies of Advanced Countries on Emerging Markets.” Okun, A. M. 1962. “Potential GNP: Its Measure- Remarks at the 55th Annual Meeting of the National ment and Significance.” Reprinted as Cowles Foun- Association of Business Economics, San Francisco, dation Paper 190. September 9, 2013. BIS Central Bankers’ speeches. OECD. 2010. “OECD Employment Outlook Soares, R. R.. 2005. “Mortality Reductions, Educa- 2010: Moving Beyond the Jobs Crisis.” Organisa- tional Attainment, and Fertility Choice.” American tion for Economic Co-operation and Development, Economic Review 95 (3): 580−601. Paris. Spatafora, N., and I. Tytell. 2009. “Commodity ______. 2012. “Education Indicators in Focus June Terms of Trade: The History of Booms and Busts.” 2012/06.” Organisation for Economic Co-operation IMF Working Papers No. 09/205. and Development, Paris. Scarpetta, S. 2014. Employment Protection. IZA World of Labor. 12. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 1 61 Summers, L. H. 2014, “U.S. Economic Prospects: ______. 2014c. Contribution to G20 Finance Secular Stagnation, Hysteresis, and the Zero Lower Ministers and Central Bank Governors, September Bound,” Business Economics 49 (2). 2014, “Transitional Policies to Assist the Poor While Svensson, L. E. O. 2015. “Negative Interest Rates: Phasing Out Inefficient Fossil Fuel Subsidies That Helpful or Harmful?” Goldman Sachs Global Macro Encourage Wasteful Consumption,” World Bank. Research Top of Mind, No. 32, February. ______. 2014d. Diversified Development: Making Swerling, B. C. 1968. “Commodity Agreements.” the Most of Natural Resources in Eurasia. Washington, International Encyclopedia of Social Sciences. DC: World Bank. Taylor, J. 2000. “Low Inflation, Pass-Through, and ______. 2015a. Global Economic Prospects: Having the Pricing Power of Firms.” European Economic Re- Fiscal Space and Using It. January 2015. Washington, view 44: 1389-1408. DC: World Bank. Ulyssea, G. 2010. “Regulation of Entry, Labor Mar- ______. 2015b. “Commodity Markets Outlook. ket Institutions and the Informal Sector.” Journal of January 2015.” World Bank, Washington, DC. Development Economics 91 (1): 87−99. ______. 2015c. “Migration and Development Brief UNCTAD. 2010. “Oil Prices and Maritime Freight April 2015.” World Bank, Washington, DC. Rates: An Empirical Investigation.” Technical Re- ______. 2015d. “East Asia Update April 2015.” port by the UNCTAD Secretariat. UNCTAD. World Bank, Washington, DC. ______. 2012. “Development and Globalization: ______. 2015e. Global Monitoring Report Facts and Figures 2012.” United Nations Confer- 2014/2015: Ending Poverty and Sharing Prosperity. ence on Trade and Development, Geneva. Washington, DC: World Bank. Vagliasindi, M. 2012. Implementing Energy Sub- World Bank, forthcoming (a). “Golden Aging: Pros- sidy Reforms: An Overview of the Key Issues. Policy pects for Healthy, Active, and Prosperous Aging in Research Working Paper 6122, World Bank, Wash- Europe and Central Asia.” ington, DC. World Bank, forthcoming (b). “Aging in East Asia World Bank. 2012. World Development Report: Jobs. and Pacific: Capitalizing on the Demographic Washington, DC: World Bank. Transition.” ______. 2013. Jobs for Shared Prosperity: Time for World Bank and Development Research Center of Action in the Middle East and North Africa. Wash- the State Council, the People’s Republic of China. ington, DC: World Bank. 2014. Urban China: Toward Efficient, Inclusive, and ______. 2014a. Global Monitoring Report 2014. Sustainable Urbanization. World Bank, Washington, Washington, DC: World Bank. DC. ______. 2014b. Global Economic Prospects: Coping with Policy Normalization in High-Income Countries (January 2014). Washington, DC: World Bank. SPECIAL FEATURE 1 HOPING FOR THE BEST, PREPARING FOR THE WORST: Risks around U.S. Rate Liftoff and Policy Options GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 1 65 “We face a risk that longer-term interest rates will rise sharply at some point.” (Ben S. Bernanke, March 1, 2013)1 “Long-term interest rates are at very low levels, and that would appear to embody low term premiums, which can move, and can move very rapidly…” (Janet Yellen, May 6, 2015)2 The U.S. Federal Reserve is expected to begin to gradually raise policy interest rates in the near term. Given that it has been anticipated for some time and will take place against the backdrop of an ongoing U.S. recovery and highly accommodative monetary policy by other major central banks, the launch of a series of U.S. rate increases (“liftoff”) is likely to proceed smoothly. The risk remains, however, that the liftoff or subsequent rate increases could lead to abrupt changes in market expectations regarding monetary conditions that could, in turn, prompt a spike in U.S. long-term interest rates, volatility in global financial markets, and a sharp increase in borrowing cost for emerging markets—similar to the way initial discussions of U.S. monetary policy normalization triggered the “taper tantrum” of May-June 2013. If, in response to the liftoff, U.S. long-term bond yields were to jump 100 basis points (as they did during the taper tantrum), capital inflows to emerging markets could decline by 0.8–1.8 percentage points of GDP. The change in external conditions driven by the liftoff or subsequent rate increases could potentially combine with domestic factors to spark a sudden stop in capital inflows in some emerging markets, especially those where vulnerabilities have increased, where there has been uncertainty about policy direction, or where growth prospects have deteriorated significantly. In anticipation of such a risk, emerging markets should prioritize monetary, financial, and fiscal policies that reduce vulnerabilities and strengthen credibility, and struc- tural reform agendas that improve growth prospects. Introduction quent tightening cycle are expected to proceed smoothly, leading to only modest downward pres- The exceptionally accommodative monetary policy sures on capital inflows to emerging market coun- stance of major central banks since the global finan- tries (Fischer 2015). However, the “taper tantrum” cial crisis has helped support global liquidity, bolster episode of May–June 2013 is a reminder that even asset valuations, and reduce risk premia. It has been an event long anticipated by markets can surprise in instrumental in lowering long-term interest rates in its specifics and generate significant financial market the United States and other advanced economies, volatility and shifts in capital flows. and has contributed to the increase in capital in- The potential impact on capital flows to emerging flows to emerging market countries as investors and developing countries depends on both “push” search for higher yields. As a result, borrowing con- factors (global economic and financial conditions) ditions in emerging markets have remained particu- and “pull” factors (country-specific prospects, vul- larly favorable. nerabilities, and policies).4 As the U.S. economy improves, the U.S. Federal • Push factors. As growth prospects improve in ad- Reserve (Fed) is expected to begin to gradually raise vanced countries relative to emerging markets, policy interest rates in the near term, an event widely investment returns are likely to rise and ad- referred to as “liftoff”.3 The liftoff and the subse- vanced country monetary policies will become The main authors of this Special Feature are Carlos Arteta, Ayhan Kose, Franziska Ohnsorge, and Marc Stocker, with inputs from Derek point this year to take the initial step to raise the federal funds rate tar- Chen, Raju Huidrom, Ergys Islamaj, Eung Ju Kim, and Tianli Zhao. get and begin the process of normalizing monetary policy. To support Research assistance was provided by Trang Nguyen and Jiayi Zhang. taking this step, however, I will need to see continued improvement in labor market conditions, and I will need to be reasonably confident that 1Bernanke (2013b). inflation will move back to 2 percent over the medium term.” 2Yellen (2015b). 4Several recent studies have examined the links between capital 3In a recent speech, Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen (2015c) flows to emerging and developing countries and “pull” and “push” fac- articulated her position on the timing of the rate hike: “If the economy tors, including U.S. monetary policy and global risk aversion (Koepke continues to improve as I expect, I think it will be appropriate at some 2015a). 66 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 gradually less accommodative. Although posi- • Lower global interest rates. Despite a recent pick tive growth spillovers from advanced countries up, interest rates in major economies are still would support activity in emerging markets, exceptionally low, and in some cases negative higher interest rates would likely shift the rela- (Box 1.1). The low rates are accompanied by tive return differential on financial assets in fa- prospects of a significant expansion of balance vor of advanced countries. sheets by the European Central Bank (ECB) • Pull factors. While emerging markets as a group and the Bank of Japan. These monetary stimu- continue to grow faster than advanced econo- lus measures will continue to shore up global mies, prospects have softened and several emerg- liquidity and help keep interest rates low around ing market countries face significant vulnerabili- the world. ties. In some of them, uncertainty about policy • Improved activity in advanced economies, includ- direction is elevated and weighing on investor ing the United States. Since 2013, growth in ad- sentiment. These factors increase the likelihood vanced countries has picked up markedly, and is of a sudden market reappraisal of the inherent projected to reach 2 percent in 2015. In the riskiness of emerging market financial assets. United States, in particular, labor markets have This Special Feature analyzes the changes in the improved significantly since the taper tantrum push and pull factors since the taper tantrum, risks (Chapter 1), suggesting that fulfillment of the of disruptions around the liftoff, and potential im- Fed’s “full employment” mandate does not stand plications for emerging markets and possible policy in the way of a nearing liftoff (Yellen 2015c). options. Specifically, it addresses the following Going forward, a rise in U.S. long-term yields could questions: reflect either continued improvements in the U.S. • How have growth prospects and policies in economy or highly anticipated U.S. monetary pol- advanced countries changed since the taper icy changes, or both. Continued improvements in tantrum? U.S. activity (a favorable “real shock”), especially if surprising strongly and repeatedly on the upside, • What are the major risks around the liftoff? could bolster equity valuations and would reduce • What are possible implications of the liftoff for the need for the current highly accommodative emerging markets? monetary policy stance. In tandem with rising re- • What are the major lessons for emerging mar- turns on equity, bond yields could rise on market kets from the taper tantrum? expectations of nearing monetary tightening. • How have growth prospects and vulnerabilities Alternatively, financial markets could be surprised by for emerging markets changed since the taper even a modestly less accommodative stance of mone- tantrum? tary policy: it could appear as an accelerated tightening to investors if their views about the U.S. economy dif- • What policy options are available to prepare for fer from the Fed’s (an adverse “monetary shock”). Simi- risks around the liftoff? larly, if disappointing economic data were to reveal supply-side challenges to potential growth, it could lead to a faster-than-anticipated increase in (actual or How Have Growth Prospects expected) inflation. This could in turn warrant faster- and Policies in Advanced than-expected monetary policy tightening.5 A structural vector autoregression (VAR) model is Countries Changed since employed to disentangle the contribution of such real the Taper Tantrum? 5There remains considerable uncertainty on supply-side constraints Advanced country growth, monetary policy, and affecting the U.S. economy, including the underlying pace of produc- broader financial conditions are key global push fac- tivity growth (Gordon 2014; Hall 2014; Fernald and Wang 2015) and tors driving capital flows to emerging markets. The labor participation (Aaronson et al. 2014; Council of Economic Ad- visers 2014), as both have remained unusually low in the post-crisis economic and policy context in advanced countries period. Signs of emerging supply-side constraints could raise inflation has evolved notably since the taper tantrum in May- expectations, leading market participants to anticipate a faster normal- June 2013 (Figure SF1.1). ization of policy rates in the short term. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 1 67 and monetary shocks to movements in the long- FIGURE SF1.1  Conditions in advanced countries term U.S. yields: those associated with changes in Long-term interest rates remain at historic lows, especially in the Euro Area, and global U.S. growth prospects (proxied by the S&P 500 financial markets have been bolstered by exceptionally accommodative monetary policies of the European Central Bank and Bank of Japan. The recovery in advanced index), and those reflecting changes in market per- countries is gathering momentum, benefiting growth in emerging markets. In the United ceptions of U.S. monetary conditions (proxied by States, labor markets are healing as the recovery is continuing. the 10-year sovereign bond yield). The exercise as- A. Long-term interest rates B. Central bank balance sheets sumes that an adverse monetary shock (such as Percent Index = 100 in January 2010 6 perceived accelerated monetary tightening) in- G3 long-term interest rates U.S. long-term interest rates 400 Euro Area 5 350 creases yields and reduces stock prices in the 4 300 United States Japan United States, while a favorable real shock (such as 3 250 200 one reflecting better growth prospects) increases 2 150 both yields and stock prices (Matheson and Stavrev 1 100 0 50 2014; IMF 2014b; see Box SF1.1 for technical Jan-07 Jul-07 Feb-08 Aug-08 Sep-09 Apr-10 Oct-10 Aug-14 Mar-09 May-11 Nov-11 Jun-12 Dec-12 Jul-13 Jan-14 Mar-15 0 details). 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 C. GDP growth in G4 countries D. U.S. labor market conditions The results suggest that the initial increase in long- Percent Percent Index=100 in Jan 2015 term yields after May 2013 largely reflected unfa- 2.5 11 Unemployment rate 107 vorable monetary shocks: against the backdrop of 2 10 Employment level (RHS) 105 concerns about the strength of the U.S. economy, 1.5 Average since 2000 9 103 8 financial markets perceived the taper-talk as signal- 7 101 1 ing an accelerated monetary tightening (Figure 6 99 5 SF1.2). In early 2013, economic data releases sur- 0.5 4 97 prised on the downside and provided little indica- 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 0 2012 2013 2014 2015 tion that suggested sufficiently strong U.S. growth Source: Bloomberg, Haver, World Bank. momentum to warrant rising long-term bond A. Average of 10-year government bond yields of G3 countries (Euro Area, Japan, and United Kingdom) weighted by GDP. Blue bar shows the taper tantrum period in May-June 2013. The latest data point is for June 8, 2015. yields. As a result, real shocks contributed little to B. Grey area shows the forecast period. movements in 10-year U.S. bond yields. C. Aggregate GDP growth of G4 countries (United States, Euro Area, Japan, and United Kingdom) D. Blue bar shows the taper tantrum period in May–June 2013 Since the taper tantrum, however, monetary shocks, reflecting both domestic and external factors, have SF1.3).6 Such a fully anticipated normalization of turned increasingly favorable. In late 2014, they began U.S. policy rates should not trigger volatility in to push yields below May 2013 levels. Despite steadily global financial markets or sharp reversals in capital shrinking Fed asset purchases between December flows in emerging markets. 2013 and October 2014, financial conditions re- mained highly accommodative. Following ECB Presi- dent Mario Draghi’s speech in Jackson Hole in August What Are the Major Risks 2014, market speculation intensified and was eventu- ally proven right about the use of ECB’s quantitative around the Liftoff? easing. The decline in Euro Area long-term bond yields The magnitude of the market reaction during the also spilled over to U.S. long-term bond yields. At the taper tantrum of May-June 2013 underlines the same time, indications of an increasingly robust labor risks surrounding the liftoff and subsequent rate markets contributed to positive real shocks that exerted upward pressure on long-term yields. 6In previous tightening episodes, the U.S. yield curve generally flat- tened and term premia rose only modestly, if at all, during the first year of If the timing of the liftoff and the subsequent path the first rate increase (Adrian, Crump, and Moench 2013a). The particu- of policy rates are accurately reflected in market ex- larly steep 1994 tightening cycle helped stabilize medium-term inflation pectations, the normalization of U.S. policy rates expectations, reflected also in a narrowing term spread. The 2004 tight- ening cycle was accompanied by a narrowing term spread (also dubbed amid robust growth prospects for the U.S. economy the “conundrum”), partly reflecting ample global liquidity and declining will be part of a smooth transition for global finan- medium-term inflation expectations. This tightening episode—which, like cial markets. U.S. long term yields will rise only the upcoming liftoff, also started at very low U.S. policy interest rates— was the most benign for emerging market currencies and capital flows. In modestly and the U.S. yield curve will flatten contrast, term spreads initially widened during the tightening cycle that slightly, as in some earlier liftoff episodes (Figure accompanied the particularly strong recovery in 1999. 68 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE SF1.2  Explaining movements in U.S. bond tal outflows.7 Although U.S. bond yields have since yields: monetary and real shocks fallen back, long-term bond yields in emerging mar- The sudden rise in U.S. long term yields after May 2013 was mainly due to adverse kets remain above those of early 2013. monetary shocks, as markets interpreted taper talk as signaling accelerated monetary tightening. Since then, favorable financial conditions have been pushing yields down, U.S. financial markets may currently be vulnerable to offsetting upward pressure from strengthening labor markets and activity. a sharp tightening around the liftoff or subsequent A. U  .S. long-term yields and stock B. U  .S. long-term yields— tightening cycle. The term premium is exceptionally market index counterfactual low, expectations about medium-term interest rate Percent Index Percentage point change since May 21, 2013 1.2 paths diverge between market participants and Fed- 3.5 Long-term interest rate 2,300 Stock price (RHS) eral Open Market Committee (FOMC) members, 3.0 2,100 0.6 and market liquidity conditions are fragile. 2.5 1,900 0.0 • Low term premium. The term premium in the 2.0 1,700 Monetary shock Real shock United States is exceptionally compressed. 8 The 1.5 1,500 -0.6 current low U.S. term premium partly reflects May-13 Aug-13 Feb-14 May-14 Aug-14 Feb-15 Nov-13 Nov-14 May-15 May-13 Aug-13 Feb-14 May-14 Aug-14 Feb-15 Nov-13 Nov-14 May-15 modest assessment of inflation risks and strong global demand for U.S. treasuries as safe assets.9 C. Estimated monetary shocks D. Estimated real shocks Percent Percent This has been reinforced by low interest rates for 25 4 assets denominated in other reserve currencies, 15 2 which in part resulted from quantitative easing 5 programs by other major central banks (Ber- -5 0 nanke 2015). Inherent in the current low term -15 premium is the risk of a sudden widening, with -2 greater uncertainty potentially leading to a surge Aug-14 May-13 Aug-13 Feb-14 Feb-15 Nov-13 May-14 Nov-14 May-15 May-13 Aug-13 Feb-14 Aug-14 Feb-15 Nov-13 May-14 Nov-14 May-15 in long-term yields (Yellen 2015c).10 Source: Haver, World Bank estimates. A. Long-term interest rate is the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield and stock price refers to the S&P 500. • Gap between market and FOMC expectations. B. Based on estimates from the model, identifying monetary and real shocks using sign restrictions. All shocks except the shock of interest are shut down by setting them to zeros and the model is used to trace out the coun- Since 2014, expectations for the path of future terfactual long rate. The exercise is performed separately for monetary and real shocks. The orange (green) counterfactual shows how long rates would have evolved only with the estimated monetary (real) shocks. Num- policy rates among market participants have bers shown are in percentage points. C. D. These are the time series of monetary and real shocks as estimated from the VAR model. Numbers shown been considerably (currently more than 100 ba- are in cumulative percentages. The shock signs are such that whenever positive, they result in an increase in the long rate. sis points in 2017 and beyond) below those of increases that could lie ahead. The 2013 episode 7Recent studies—such as Sánchez (2013); Díez (2014); Dahlhaus was sparked by a statement that became known as and Vasishtha (2014); Ikeda, Medvedev, and Rama (2015); and Koepke (2015b)—emphasize the critical role of expectations in determining “taper talk,” when Fed Chairman Bernanke men- the scale of macroeconomic adjustments in developing countries in the tioned the possibility of the Fed slowing its asset event of a U.S. interest rate hike. They report that the large macroeco- purchases “in the next few meetings” on May 22, nomic adjustments in developing countries during the taper tantrum reflected the fact that the consequences of Fed tapering had not yet been 2013 (Bernanke 2013b). While financial markets “priced in.” In contrast, the relatively milder movements in developing- had expected such an action at some point in the country financial markets during the actual taper period (December future, they were surprised by the mention of an 2013–October 2014) suggested that markets had already adjusted their approximate timeframe. Within a couple months expectations accordingly. 8Long term interest rates can be decomposed into expectations of the initial taper talk, U.S. 10-year Treasury about the future path of real policy interest rates, inflation expecta- yields increased by 100 basis points. tions, and a term premium. The term premium is therefore the extra return required by investors to hold a longer-term bond instead of The jump in U.S. yields was quickly followed by re-investing in successive short-term securities. Typically, the term a spike in financial market volatility in emerging econ- premium is positive. 9See Williams (2015), Abrahams et al. (2015), Blanchard, Furceri, omies. Specifically, emerging market currencies depre- and Pescatori (2014), and Caballero and Farhi (2014) for details on ciated, bond spreads rose steeply, foreign portfolio in- these observations. flows to emerging-market bond and equity funds fell 10U.S. term premia are highly correlated with macroeconomic and sharply, and liquidity tightened (Figure SF1.4). This financial uncertainty, reflected in disagreement about future inflation among professional forecasters, consumer confidence, and implied forced many emerging markets to tighten monetary volatility in U.S. Treasury markets (Abrahams et al. 2015). Previous policy, intervene in currency markets, and, in some monetary policy surprises and the Federal Reserve’s large-scale asset pur- cases, introduce exceptional measures to prevent capi- chases have been important drivers of U.S. term premia in recent years. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 1 69 members of the FOMC (Figure SF1.3).11 This FIGURE SF1.3  A smooth liftoff in light of past episodes? implies a risk that market perceptions suddenly If the liftoff proceeds smoothly as expected, the term spread would remain narrow as adjust upwards. Such a change could, for exam- happened in some past episodes of first rate hikes in a tightening cycle. However, there remains a risk of a spike in long-term interest rates, especially since term premia are well ple, be triggered by a market reassessment of the below their historical average and market expectations of future interest rates are below likelihood of a protracted period of low growth those of members of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC). or inflation that would be associated with an ex- A. U.S. yield curve  .S. term spreads around B. U tended period of monetary accommodation. previous U.S. tightening cycles Percent Basis points; deviations from t = 0 • Fragile market liquidity. Several factors make li- 4 Current yield on May 26, 2015 60 Feb-94 Jun-99 Jun-04 May-13 quidity conditions more fragile than before the 3 Expected yield on Dec 31, 2015 20 global financial crisis, even in deep sovereign -20 2 bond markets in advanced countries. The vol- -60 -100 ume of primary dealer trading—which typically 1 -140 smoothes liquidity over fluctuations in other 0 -180 market participants’ demand and supply—has 1 2 3 4 5 7 9 10 12 15 20 30 Years -4 -3 -2 -1 0 Quarters 1 2 3 4 fallen relative to outstanding treasury bonds  .S. 10-year treasury term C. U  arket versus FOMC policy rate D. M (Figure SF1.5). In particular, bank’s dealer in- premium expectations ventories and market-making activities have de- Percent Percent 6 5 Market expectations FOMC-Max clined as a result of changing business models, 5 4 FOMC-Median FOMC-Low Historical average diminished bank risk appetite, and tighter regu- 4 (1961-2015) 3 3 latory requirements for liquidity and other buf- 2 2 fers (IMF 2015; Committee on the Global Fi- 1 Average since 2000 1 nancial System 2014). As a result, the role of 0 0 -1 2015 2016 2017 Longer less-regulated, non-bank market intermediaries Run 1961 1965 1969 1973 1977 1981 1985 1989 1993 1997 2001 2005 2009 2013 has increased since the global financial crisis (Blume and Keim 2012; Fender and Lewrick  ominal effective appreciation of E. N  apital inflows to developing F. C 2015). Traditionally less volatile, long-term fo- developing country currencies countries cused institutional investors such as pension Percent, deviations from t = 0 Feb-94 Jun-99 Deviations from t= 0, US$ billion Feb-94 Jun-99 and insurance funds may also have become 2 Jun-04 May-13 110 Jun-04 May-13 more procyclical in their behavior.12 While the 0 80 50 composition and behavior of private debt hold- -2 20 ers has changed, their overall share in total debt -10 -40 -4 holdings has also declined from pre-crisis levels -70 -6 -100 as central bank’s holdings of sovereign bonds -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 Quarters 1 2 3 4 increased with quantitative easing programs. Months Source: IMF, Haver Analytics, Bloomberg, Federal Reserve Bank of New York, World Bank, U.S. Fed FOMC. 11This B. Term spread denotes the difference between 10-year U.S. Treasury and 6-month T-bill yields, four quarters be- gap reflects uncertainty about prospects for policy rates over fore until four quarters after the launch of the U.S. tightening cycle (t= 0). the medium and long run (Williams 2015; Hamilton et al. 2015), with C. Term premium estimates are obtained from the model described in Adrian, Crump, and Moench (2013b). This model belongs to the affine class of term structure models which characterize yields as linear functions of a set of market participants expecting them to remain low for a considerable pricing factors. period of time while FOMC members foresee a gradual rise in coming E. The x-axis shows the number of quarters before and after t = 0, where t = 0 is February 1994, June 1999, June 2004, and May 2013. years, as post-crisis legacies and uncertainties unwind (Yellen 2015a). F. Excluding China. 12During the taper tantrum, market liquidity deteriorated rapidly in U.S. Treasury markets, as primary dealers reduced their inventories at a time when interest rate risks were re-priced more generally (Adrian Apart from the possibility of broad-based market et al. 2013). Liquidity strains spread rapidly across markets, leading to particularly large adjustments in emerging market asset prices (García- volatility, the risks around the liftoff differ in their Luna and van Rixtel 2013). Portfolio outflows were concentrated in specifics from those that materialized during the ta- the most liquid emerging markets (Eichengreen and Gupta 2014) and per tantrum. In particular, taper talk signaled a were largely driven by retail investors. In 2013, institutional investors generally maintained their exposures (World Bank 2014b). However, tightening that directly affected the long end of the institutional investors have begun to act less countercyclically and, un- yield curve, because it related to Fed purchases of der acute and persistent market stress, could contribute to a “rush to the long-term debt securities and, thus, raised the term exit” (IMF 2014a; Bank of England and Procyclicality Working Group premium. In contrast, the liftoff would be a policy 2014; Opazo, Raddatz and Schmukler 2014; Raddatz and Schmukler 2012). Through their hedging activities, they can also add to exchange move at the short end of the yield curve, with only rate pressures (IMF 2013). indirect pass-through into long-term yields. 70 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE SF1.4  U.S. bond yields and capital flows during indicators (industrial production) and financial the taper tantrum market indicators (stock prices, nominal effective Between 2012 and 2014, emerging market bond yields closely followed U.S. Treasury exchange rates, long-term bond yields) for emerging 10-year yields. The sharp rise in U.S. yields in May-June 2013 was accompanied by a markets are regressed on the monetary and real marked fall in capital inflows to developing countries and increased volatility. The volatil- ity in U.S. bond markets coincided with volatility of developing-country bond yields and shocks identified in the econometric exercise above. capital inflows. As expected, the results suggest that a U.S. yield in- A. Bond yields B. Bond yields and portfolio flows crease resulting from a favorable real shock has a Percent 10-year U.S. Treasury yields Percent Percent 10-year U.S.Treasury yields US$, billions considerably more benign impact on emerging mar- 4 Emerging market sovereign yields (RHS) 7 3.0 Emerging market portfolio flows (RHS) 10 kets than one resulting from an adverse monetary 3 6 2.5 5 shock (Figure SF1.6). An adverse U.S. monetary 2.0 0 shock is associated with falling stock prices, depreci- 2 5 1.5 -5 ating emerging market currencies, and shrinking 1 4 1.0 -10 industrial production—all consistent with capital Jan-12 Jul-12 Jan-13 Jul-13 Jan-14 Jul-14 Jan-15 Jan-12 Jul-12 Jan-13 Jul-13 Jan-14 Jul-14 Jan-15 outflows. A favorable U.S. real shock, on the other hand, results in rising stock prices and increasing C. Bond market volatility  olatility of bond yields and D. V portfolio inflows industrial production. Index 10-year U.S.Treasury yields-volatility Standard deviation Index 10-year U.S. Treasury yields Standard deviation Impact on capital flows. As they did during the Emerging market sovereign yields-volatility (RHS) Emerging market portfolio flows-volatility (RHS) 9 14 9 5 taper tantrum, there is a risk that financial market 12 7 10 7 4 participants consider the eventual liftoff and the 3 8 6 2 subsequent tightening cycle—even if “telegraphed” 5 5 4 2 1 by the Fed and expected in principle for some 3 0 3 0 time—as an accelerated tightening of monetary Jan-12 Jul-12 Jan-13 Jul-13 Jan-14 Jul-14 Jan-15 Jan-12 Jul-12 Jan-13 Jul-13 Jan-14 Jul-14 Jan-15 conditions. As in the taper tantrum, it could be Source: Bloomberg, Emerging Portfolio Fund Research, JPMorgan Chase, CBOE, and World Bank. interpreted by markets as a purely unfavorable Note: Blue bars show the taper tantrum period of May-June 2013. monetary shock, sharply raising U.S. long-term A. Based on JPMorgan EMBIG sovereign bond yield index. B. 4-week moving average of net inflows to developing-country bond and equity funds. yields. This would likely dampen capital flows to C. Volatility index for U.S. Treasury yields refers to the expected volatility of the price of 10-year U.S. Treasury note futures (CBOE’s TYVIX index). Volatility of developing-country bond yields refers to 30-day rolling standard devia- emerging markets. tion of JPMorgan EMBIG sovereign bond yield index. D. Volatility of developing-country portfolio flows refers to 12-week rolling standard deviation of net inflows to developing-country bond and equity funds. A VAR model of capital flows and financial condi- tions is used to examine the potential role of rising U.S. bond yields (Lim, Mohapatra, and Stocker What Are Possible 2014). Quarterly capital flows, including foreign di- Implications of the Liftoff for rect investment, portfolio, and bank flows, are re- gressed on global interest rates, financial market vola- Emerging Markets? tility, and growth in major advanced and emerging economies (see Box SF1.1 for technical details). The impact of increasing U.S. yields on emerging markets depends on the trigger of the increase. Ris- The results indicate that about one-third of quarterly ing U.S. yields that reflect a strengthening U.S. fluctuations in aggregate capital inflows to emerging economy would likely be associated with stronger markets since the early 2000s can be ascribed to growth in emerging markets. In contrast, rising U.S. changing global financing conditions (Figure SF1.7). yields that reflect a perception of accelerated mone- Both short-term and long-term interest rate increases tary tightening would likely be accompanied by de- in major economies tend to dampen capital flows to teriorating activity and tightening financial condi- emerging markets. In addition, a steepening yield tions and, hence, with financial market volatility in curve is often associated with higher financial mar- and capital outflows from emerging markets. ket volatility which, in turn, further reduces capital flows to emerging markets.13 Impact on activity and financial markets. A panel VAR model is employed to examine the diverging 13Higher U.S. term premia and a steepening yield curve are often impacts of different types of U.S. shocks on activity associated with higher financial market volatility and greater risk aver- and financial markets in emerging market econo- sion (Abrahams et al. 2015; Adrian, Crump, and Moench 2013b; Borio mies (see Box SF1.1 for technical details). Activity and Zhu 2012; Adrian and Shin 2011; Dell’Ariccia, Laeven and Mar- GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 1 71 If market expectations for medium-term interest FIGURE SF1.5  Market liquidity rates suddenly adjust upwards around liftoff, U.S. Shocks can trigger sharp volatility especially in illiquid markets. At the height of the yields could increase abruptly as seen during the ta- Euro Area crisis and during the taper tantrum, liquidity in some emerging bond markets dropped off sharply, driving up bid-ask spreads. With shrinking primary dealer transac- per tantrum. Significant co-movement between tions, treasury market liquidity conditions have also become more fragile. long-term interest rates across major advanced countries could contribute to the propagation of the Primary dealer treasury transactions A.  initial shock.14 Depending on the pass-through to US$, billions/unit other advanced countries’ interest rates, capital 10 flows to emerging markets could slow sharply over the following year. Should U.S. term spreads in- 8 crease by 100 basis points, the fall in capital flows to 6 emerging markets could be in the range of 0.8–1.8 percentage points of their combined GDP or a de- 4 cline between 18 and 40 percent in the level of capi- tal flows (Figure SF1.7). 2 • Full pass-through. A 100 basis-point increase in U.S. yields that is accompanied by a similarly 0 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 sharp increase in yields in the Euro Area, Japan, and the United Kingdom would trigger a sud- den increase in market volatility and a tempo- Bid-ask spread on emerging market foreign currency bonds B.  rary drop in capital inflows to emerging mar- Basis points Median 3-month moving average kets, with the decline peaking after four quarters 30 at 1.8 percentage points of GDP (correspond- 25 ing to a 40 percent dip in aggregate capital flows). The magnitude of the effect is in line 20 with the estimated impact of a 100 basis-point 15 real U.S. yield shock found by Adler, Djigbe- 10 nou, and Sosa (2014) and a 120 basis-point shock in U.S. yields on portfolio flows found by 5 Dahlhaus and Vasishtha (2014). 0 • Partial pass-through (as in taper tantrum). If Jan-10 Jan-11 Jan-12 Jan-13 Jan-14 Jan-15 Jul-10 Jul-11 Jul-12 Jul-13 Jul-14 other major economies’ yields adjust in a man- ner similar to the taper tantrum (when global Bid-ask spread on emerging market local currency bonds C.  yields increased by 70 basis points following an Basis points increase in U.S. yields of 100 basis points), cap- 25 Median 3-month moving average ital flows could fall by about 30 percent, or 1.3 percentage points of GDP. 20 • No pass-through. Should long-term yields in 15 other major economies remain broadly unaf- fected, capital flows to emerging markets would 10 fall considerably less, by about 18 percent or 5 0 Jan-10 Jan-11 Jan-12 Jan-13 Jan-14 Jan-15 Jul-10 Jul-11 Jul-12 Jul-13 Jul-14 quez 2013). Greater risk aversion and volatility, in turn, reduce capital flows to emerging countries further (Fratzscher 2012; Forbes and War- nock 2012; Bruno and Shin 2015; Lo Duca 2012; Ahmed and Zlate 2013; Bluedorn et al. 2013; Rey 2013). Source: Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Bloomberg, World Bank. 14Based on a variance decomposition, Diebold and Yilmaz (2015) Note: Blue bars show the taper tantrum of May-June 2013. suggest that long-term interest rates among non-U.S. major advanced A. Line shows primary dealer Treasury transactions divided by the Merrill Option Volatility Estimate (MOVE index) (12-week moving average). Merrill Option Volatility Estimate (MOVE) is a yield curve weighted index of the normal- economies co-move (with some lag) with U.S. long-term interest rates. ized implied volatility on 1-month Treasury options. Hunter and Simon (2005) find that bond market returns and volatility B. C. Countries include Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Hungary, Indonesia, the Republic of Korea, Lithuania, Philippines, in the United States lead those of German and Japanese bond markets. Poland, Romania, Turkey, and South Africa. Median bid-ask spreads on 10-year government bonds. 72 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE SF1.6  Implications of monetary and real shocks Under certain conditions, an abrupt increase in U.S on activity and financial markets in emerging markets .yields could lead to outright sudden stops in capital U.S. bond yield hikes caused by favorable U.S. real shocks have more benign effects flows to some emerging markets, which could take a on emerging markets than those caused by adverse U.S. monetary shocks. U.S. bond heavy economic toll.15 The sudden stops in capital yield jumps associated with real shocks tend to raise equity prices and production in emerging markets, and appreciate their currencies. Those caused by U.S. monetary flows during the 1990s and 2000s had significant shocks tend to raise bond yields in emerging markets and depreciate their currencies. economic costs (Claessens and Kose, 2014; Table A. Bond yield B. Stock price SF1.1). For example, about two-thirds of 33 sudden Basis points Percent change stop episodes through the 1990s and early 2000s 35 8.0 were associated with output collapses—contractions 30 25 6.0 in GDP of 4.4 percent from peak to trough (Calvo, 20 4.0 Izquierdo, and Talvi 2006).16 Some sectors are par- 15 2.0 ticularly vulnerable to output losses as a result of 10 0.0 sudden stops due to their reliance on debt finance, 5 0 -2.0 including construction, wholesale and retail trade, Monetary shock Real shock Monetary shock Real shock transport, and communications (Craighead and C. Nominal effective exchange rate D. Industrial production Hineline 2013). Compared with the earlier episodes, Percent change Percent change the impact of sudden stops on emerging market asset 1.6 2.5 prices could be amplified by the increasing role of 1.2 2.0 the non-bank sector and bond financing in channel- 1.5 0.8 ing liquidity to emerging markets (Shin 2013). 1.0 0.4 0.5 0.0 0.0 -0.4 -0.8 -0.5 Monetary shock Real shock What Are the Major Lessons Monetary shock Real shock for Emerging Markets from Source: Haver, Bloomberg, World Bank estimates. Note: Impulse responses after 12 months from a panel VAR model including emerging markets’ industrial produc- tion, long-term bond yields, stock prices, nominal effective exchange rates and bilateral exchange rates against the Taper Tantrum? the U.S. dollar, and inflation, with monetary and real shocks (estimated as in the previous section) as exogenous regressors. All data are monthly or monthly averages of daily data, for January 2013-March 2015 for 19 emerging markets. For comparability, the size of the U.S. real and monetary shocks is normalized such that each shock The results above pertain to emerging markets as raises developing-country bond yields by 100 basis points on impact. a group. However, tightening financial condi- A. Bond yields refer to the yields on 10-year (or nearest equivalent) government treasury bonds. B. Stock price indices are the general price indices from Haver. tions would likely put emerging markets with C. An increase denotes an appreciation. GDP-weighted average of emerging-market exchange rates. weak growth prospects, policy uncertainty, or lingering vulnerabilities under greater pressure 0.8 percentage point of GDP after a year. than their less vulnerable peers with better Quantitative easing or other monetary policy growth prospects and policies. easing by other major central banks could insu- late their markets from pass-through and re- During the taper tantrum, around 12 percent of duce the impact of rising U.S. bond yields on emerging market and developing countries expe- emerging markets. rienced sustained declines in capital inflows, es- pecially portfolio inflows (Figure SF1.7). Emerg- The magnitude of the potential decline in capital flows estimated here is both statistically and eco- nomically significant, implying considerable chal- 15Koepke (2015b) reports that Fed tightening cycles coincide with lenges for those emerging markets facing more higher incidence of financial crises particularly in the year of the first rate hike, and to a lesser extent in the prior and the following year. Es- acute vulnerabilities. However, the overall effect for colano, Kolerus, and Ngouana (2014) find the frequency of emerging emerging and developing countries remains modest market sovereign debt crises increases around episodes of U.S. mon- in view of the historical volatility of capital flows. A etary policy tightening that are associated with widening term spreads. 16Cardarelli, Elekdag, and Kose (2010), examining 109 episodes decline of 40 percent in capital inflows, or 1.8 per- of large net private capital inflows to 52 countries over 1987–2007, centage points of GDP, would be broadly equivalent report that the typical post-inflow impact on GDP growth for episodes to a decline of one standard deviation in quarterly that end abruptly is about 3 percentage points lower than during the episode, and about 1 percentage point lower than during the two years flows since the start of the 2000s (compared with before the episode. Claessens et. al. (2014) provide a comprehensive the typical definition of a sudden stop in the litera- review of the literature on financial crises, including sudden stops, in ture as a two-standard deviation shock). light of recent evidence. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 1 73 ing market currencies depreciated, bond spreads FIGURE SF1.7  Surging U.S. yields and capital inflows to jumped, foreign portfolio inflows to emerging- emerging and developing countries market bond and equity funds fell sharply, vola- Changing global financial conditions—especially U.S. yields—account for a large part of tility increased, and liquidity tightened.17 An movements in capital flows to emerging market and developing countries. A 100 basis- point rise in U.S. 10-year yields could trigger a drop in capital inflows to developing extensive literature has identified the following countries, which could lead to “sudden stops.” key factors and policy responses characterizing A. Drivers of capital inflows  lobal interest rates and capital B. G the impact of the taper tantrum (Table SF1.2). inflows • Initial impact versus longer-term impact. The Percent of variance Deviation from baseline, percentage points G4 long-term interest rates 20 taper talk initially triggered indiscriminate 15 2 Capital inflows to emerging and developing capital outflows from emerging markets. 10 1 countries (percent of GDP) Over time, greater country differentiation 5 0 emerged as capital flows returned to some 0 G4 growth equity markets market growth G4 short-term G4 long-term Volatility of Emerging- countries but not to others (Sahay et al., -1 rates rates 2014; Lavigne, Sarker, and Vasishtha 2014). -2 2015 2016 2017 • Differentiation depending on country charac-  udden stops: total capital C. S D. Sudden stops: portfolio inflows teristics and policies. Financial market disrup- inflows tions during the taper tantrum period were Percent of countries Percent of countries 1 standard deviation threshold particularly sizable in countries with weaker 40 1 standard deviation threshold 30 2 standard deviations threshold 2 standard deviations threshold macroeconomic fundamentals, larger finan- 30 cial markets, and less robust policy responses. 20 20 Large current account deficits following a pe- 10 riod of rapid real appreciation, modest inter- 10 national reserves, and weaker growth pros- 0 0 pects were associated with sharper drops in 1997 2000 2003 2006 2009 2012 1997 2000 2003 2006 2009 2012 capital inflows and disruptions in financial Source: World Bank, Bloomberg. markets. Larger and more liquid financial A. Figure shows the variance decomposition of capital inflows to developing countries after 8 quarters, according to a six-dimensional VAR model estimated over the period 2000Q1 to 2014Q4. The model links aggregate capital markets—including as a result of past capital inflows to developing countries (including foreign direct investment, portfolio investment and other investment as share of GDP), to quarterly real GDP growth in both developing and G-4 countries (United States, Euro Area, inflows—also experienced greater exchange Japan and the United Kingdom), G-4 short-term interest rates (three month money market rates), G-4 10-year government bond yields, and the VIX index of implied volatility of S&P 500 options. To compute the variance de- rate pressures, foreign reserve losses, and eq- composition, a structural identification was derived from a Cholesky decomposition on the covariance matrix, using the following order of variables: G-4 GDP growth, developing countries’ GDP growth, G-4 short-term rates, uity price drops.18 In some countries, these G-4 long-term rates, VIX and capital inflows to developing countries. Impulse responses show that a shock in G-4 impacts were mitigated by proactive policy long-term rates has a peak effect on capital flows after 4 quarters, while the impact remains significant at a 90 percent confidence interval up to 6 quarters. responses. Liquidity provision, interest rates B. The 100 basis point shock on the U.S. term spread was applied to the VAR model assuming a range of pass- through rates to Euro Area, U.K. and Japanese bond yields, from zero to 100 percent. Grey area shows the range of hikes, removal of restrictions on capital in- estimated effects on capital inflows depending on pass-through rates (the lower bound corresponds to a zero pass- through rate implying a 40 basis points shock to global bond yields, while the upper bound corresponds to a 100 flows, and, in some cases, foreign currency percent pass-through rates, or a 100 basis points shock to global bond yields). In the median case, global bond yields increase initially by 70 basis point, which corresponds to the observed pass-through rate during the taper tantrum. intervention helped stem depreciations, stock C. D. Figures show the fraction of 86 emerging and developing countries that experienced a sudden stop. The market declines, and bond yield jumps; fiscal methodology used to identify sudden stop episodes at the individual country level is based on Forbes and War- nock (2012), with the threshold being defined as a decline in flows larger than one (or two) standard deviation(s) policy announcements appeared to be less ef- around a five-year rolling mean. Blue bars show the taper tantrum period of May-June 2013. fective in mitigating the impact of short-term financial stress (Sahay et al. 2014). • Differentiation depending on asset classes. The 17Dahlhaus and Vasishtha (2014) document the modest shock to differentiation by fundamentals, financial portfolio capital flows to emerging markets during the taper tantrum market size, and policies was particularly pro- that, nevertheless, triggered significant financial market adjustment in nounced for certain types of capital outflows. some emerging markets. Díez (2014) examines the exchange rate ad- For example, cross-border bank flows to a justment in emerging markets during the taper tantrum. Lim, Mohapa- tra, and Stocker (2014) calibrate the possible impact of future policy number of emerging market economies—es- tightening to the taper tantrum. pecially in Latin America—with sizable U.S. 18For details about these observations, see Aizenman, Binici, and dollar-denominated liabilities fell especially Hutchison (2014); Chapter 3 of IMF (2014c); Avdijev and Takats sharply during the taper tantrum (Avdijev and (2014); Basu, Eichengreen, and Gupta (2014); Collyns and Koepke (2015); Díez (2014); Mishra et al. (2014); Rai and Suchanek (2014) Takats 2014; García-Lunaa and van Rixtel and Eichengreen and Gupta (2014). 2014). In contrast, FDI flows were broadly stable 74 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE SF1.8  Growth prospects in emerging and How Have Growth Prospects developing economies Since the taper tantrum in May-June 2013, growth prospects of emerging markets have and Vulnerabilities in deteriorated and credit ratings have worsened. Emerging Markets Changed A. Developing-country growth B. D  eveloping-country rating by institutional investors since the Taper Tantrum? Percent Developing Countries (excluding China) Average rating, 100 = United States Country-specific “pull” factors, including macro- Developing Countries 44 6 Average since 2000 43 economic fundamentals and policies, play an im- 5 42 portant role in determining the direction and mag- Average since 2000 (excluding China) 4 41 nitude of capital flows. Since the taper tantrum, 40 macroeconomic fundamentals in several emerging 3 39 markets have weakened, and as a result, their credit 2 2012 2013 2014 2015 38 2007 2008 2010 2012 2013 2015 ratings have on average deteriorated (Figure SF1.8). Growth prospects have dimmed for emerging mar- C. P  roductivity growth in developing D. F  raction of developing countries kets over the past five years. Specifically, growth in regions with slower growth than 1990- emerging markets has slowed steadily since 2010 2008 average and has repeatedly fallen short of expectations, in- Percent, GDP weighted 5 2003-08 Percent 100 cluding in 2015. Investment growth in emerging 4 2010-13 2014-15 80 markets has slowed from pre-crisis rates (Chapter 1990-08 60 1), and it might be further held back by the upcom- 3 40 ing tightening in global financial conditions. Export 2 20 growth is expected to remain on its weak post-crisis 1 0 trend (World Bank 2015). 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015-17 0 EAP LAC ECA SAS SSA MNA DEV Although, on average, emerging markets’ macroeco- nomic and financial vulnerabilities appear manage- Source: Haver, World Bank estimates. B. Unweighted average of 120 developing-country institutional investor ratings. Ratings are based on information able, weak growth could reduce their resilience over provided by sovereign-risk analysts at global banks and money management and securities firms. The countries are graded on a scale of zero to 100, with 100 representing the least likelihood of default. Ratings are reported in time (Figure SF1.9). Government debt levels are, on percent of the United States’ score. The blue line shows the taper tantrum period in 2013H2. average, moderate around 45 percent of GDP.19 Fis- C. GDP-weighted annual averages. DEV = developing-country average; EAP = East Asia and Pacific; ECA = Eu- rope and Central Asia; LAC = Latin America and the Caribbean; MNA = Middle East and North Africa; SAR = cal deficits, while larger than in 2007, amount to South Asia; SSA = Sub-Saharan Africa. D. For each year, the fraction of developing countries in which growth is slower than its historical average for 1990- about 4 percent of GDP but are expected to narrow 2008. For 2015-17, the average of three years is shown. in oil-importing countries as a result of declining expenditures on fuel subsidies following last year’s significant drop in oil prices. In oil-importing coun- tries, inflation has fallen, allowing central banks in (Basu, Eichengreen, and Gupta 2014), and drops some countries to reduce monetary policy rates to in equity market valuations were more uniform support growth. In contrast, fiscal and monetary across countries (Mishra et al. 2014; Rai and policy room has shrunk in oil-exporting countries as Suchanek 2014). oil revenue shortfalls weakened fiscal balances (al- Lessons from the taper tantrum episode are consis- though, on average, from near-balance) and depre- tent with those from the broader literature on sud- ciation pressures reduced reserves (although typi- den stops in capital inflows. Country-specific vul- cally from ample levels) or raised inflation. nerabilities not only increase the probability of a sudden stop, but also intensify its severity in terms of currency depreciation, private sector credit con- traction, and growth declines, and lengthen the time it takes for growth to revert to its long-term trend (see also Table SF1.1). A greater reliance on 19In frontier markets, however, government debt has increased since the global financial crisis, partly reflecting a rapid increase in bond issu- FDI and equity flows instead of debt flows and ance in global capital markets (although from low levels). In some fron- cross-border bank loans may reduce the severity of tier markets, rising government debt has been accompanied by rapidly sudden stop episodes (Levchenko and Mauro 2007). growing private sector credit (World Bank 2015). GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 1 75 However, these averages mask considerable differ- FIGURE SF1.9  Debt, deficits and inflation in emerging ences across countries (Figure SF1.10).20 markets: Oil exporters vs. oil importers • While there has been an improvement in current Fiscal positions in emerging markets have deteriorated since the crisis, but debt and deficits remain, on average, moderate. Inflation has declined in oil-importing countries, account balances among oil-importing econo- partly as a result of low oil prices. mies, deficits remain elevated for several of them. General government debt and balance A.  Foreign reserves have increased, but for some countries only modestly, and came under pressure Percent of GDP Percent of GDP in some oil-exporting countries in early 2015. 100 Government debt Government primary balance (RHS) 12 • Inflation has moderated for some oil-importing Government debt:Median Government primary 80 balance:Median(RHS) countries, but is still at or above formal or infor- 8 mal inflation targets in several of them. 60 • Private debt has edged up despite slower credit 4 growth in some countries. Public debt has in- 40 creased in some emerging markets and primary 0 20 balances have deteriorated, particularly among commodity exporters. 0 -4 2007 2014 2007 2014 2007 2014 2007 2014 • Given the pre-eminent role of the U.S. dollar as the currency denomination of cross-border Exporters Importers Exporters Importers debt, a dollar appreciation constitutes a tighten- B. Median inflation ing of global financial conditions and could Year-on-year, percent heighten risks associated with liability expo- 16 sures and dollar shortages (Borio 2014). 21 For- 14 eign currency exposures are elevated, especially Importers Exporters in several commodity exporters and frontier 12 and emerging markets that have received large 10 capital inflows since the crisis (Figure SF1.11). 8 Despite the general lack of major progress, there are 6 individual countries that have succeeded in reduc- 4 ing some of their vulnerabilities. For example, In- 2 dian financial markets fell sharply during the taper tantrum, amid macroeconomic conditions that had 0 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 weakened in prior years and had left it vulnerable to capital outflows (Basu, Eichengreen, and Gupta Source: World Bank, International Monetary Fund, Haver Analytics. 2014). The Indian economy has since shown nota- A. Bar illustrates interquartile range for developing countries. Dot shows median for developing countries. ble improvement, particularly in reducing its high B. For developing countries. Hydrocarbon exporters (as proxy for oil exporters) are Algeria, Angola, Argentina, Azerbaijan, Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Colombia, Chad, Ecuador, Gabon, Indonesia, the Islamic Republic of Iran, Iraq, current account deficit and inflation. Kazakhstan, Libya, Malaysia, Mexico, Nigeria, Papua New Guinea, South Africa, Sudan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, República Bolivariana de Venezuela, Vietnam, and the Republic of Yemen. For those countries with significant vulnerabilities, fi- nancial market volatility around the liftoff or in the sub- with other domestic pressures (for example, a large cur- sequent tightening cycle could potentially combine rent account deficit, uncertainty about policy direction, or significant deterioration of growth prospects) into a 20In addition to individual indicators of emerging market vulner- perfect storm that leads to a sudden stop. An abrupt abilities, a number of aggregate indicators have been developed, such as change in risk appetite for emerging market assets could the index of emerging market vulnerabilities used in the Federal Reserve lead to contagion effects affecting capital flows in coun- Board’s Monetary Policy Report in February 2014, the heat map index of external vulnerabilities computed by the Institute of International tries that are highly integrated in international capital Finance (2015), or Santacreu (2015). While summary indicators are markets. Such contagion may take place even if the af- useful to illustrate the evolution of aggregate vulnerabilities over time, fected countries have limited domestic vulnerabilities they tend to blur differences in sources of vulnerabilities. 21Schularick and Taylor (2012) and Bruno and Shin (2013) high- (Calvo and Reinhart 1996; Kaminsky 2008). For ex- light how currency developments interact with the role of leverage in ample, investor confidence could be dented by uncer- complex ways in building financial vulnerabilities. tainty about policy direction or deteriorating growth 76 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE SF1.10  Evolution of vulnerabilities in emerging What Policy Options Are markets since the taper tantrum Although, on average, current account balances have improved and reserve coverage Available to Prepare for increased (partly as a result of lower oil prices), there has been wide variation across countries. Private debt and inflation have, on average, increased and fiscal positions Risks around Liftoff? have deteriorated. Emerging market policy makers have several op- A. Current account B. Foreign reserves Percent of GDP Months of imports 2013H1 tions to prepare for the risks associated with the 2013H1 2014H2 9 6 30 Latest 6 months coming tightening cycle. Foremost among them are 25 3 0 20 the adoption of policies that reduce vulnerabilities 15 -3 -6 10 and the proactive pursuit of structural reform agen- 5 -9 0 das that improve growth prospects. Turkey South Africa India Brazil Thailand Indonesia Colombia China Mexico Russian Federation Malaysia Hungary Philippines All All India Colombia Brazil All Mexico Hungary Malaysia Thailand Russian Federation China South Africa Turkey Indonesia Philippines All • Monetary and financial policies. In several oil- importing countries, inflation is running at or C. Inflation D. Private debt near the top of formal or informal target bands. Percent 2013H1 Latest 6 months Percent of GDP For central banks in these countries, buttressing 11 250 2013H1 2014H2 200 monetary policy credibility may be a priority. 7 150 100 Elsewhere, for example in oil-exporting coun- 3 50 0 tries where growth has softened but inflation -1 has been driven up by depreciation, banks with Brazil India China Malaysia Hungary Thailand South Africa Russian Federation Turkey Indonesia Mexico All All All India Brazil Turkey Russian Federation South Africa Hungary Indonesia Mexico Philippines Thailand Colombia China Malaysia All high foreign currency vulnerabilities or heavy reliance on short-term debt may merit close E. General government debt F. Primary balance monitoring or tighter prudential requirements. Percent of GDP Percent of GDP 100 2013 2015 3 2 2013 2015 • Fiscal policy. Although emerging market sover- 80 60 1 0 eign debt is significantly less than in the early 40 20 -1 -2 2000s, fiscal deficits widened rapidly in the after- 0 -3 -4 math of the global financial crisis and have yet to Hungary India Brazil Malaysia Thailand Colombia Mexico All South Africa China Philippines Turkey Indonesia Russian Federation All All India Malaysia Colombia Brazil Mexico South Africa Russian Federation Indonesia China Thailand Turkey Hungary Philippines All return to pre-crisis levels. Over the medium-term, several emerging markets need to improve their fiscal positions (World Bank 2015). Many oil-ex- Source: Bank for International Settlements, Haver Analytics, World Bank, IMF. A. “All” refers to the un-weighted average among all listed countries. porting countries are already tightening fiscal pol- B. Foreign reserves include gold. C. Inflation is the 6-month average of the annual average consumer price inflation. icy, even as growth slows. Although this exacer- D. Private debt is defined as the sum of private non-financial sector debt and household debt. F. Primary balance excludes net interest payments. bates growth slowdowns, it will help preserve buffers that could be used if risks around the liftoff prospects. This could turn a manageable slowdown in materialize. Oil-importing countries that benefit capital inflows as part of a broader emerging market re- from savings on lower energy subsidies or higher trenchment around the liftoff into a sudden stop in in- energy taxes could seize the opportunity to build flows and translate into a sharp decline in activity. Even fiscal buffers to regain policy space for effective fis- countries that are not directly exposed to global financial cal stimulus that may be needed in the future. market shocks could be affected through intraregional • Structural reforms. Given the limited room for spillovers from their larger, financially more integrated fiscal and monetary policy adjustment to reduce neighbors. Whereas within-regional financial exposures vulnerabilities, the proactive pursuit of struc- often tend to be limited, trade, remittance, and direct tural reforms that improve long-term growth investment links are strong in some regions.22 prospects are an integral part of preparing for the liftoff. Although the benefits of reforms take 22In some cases, official financing could be an additional channel for time to materialize, decisive moves to imple- transmission of fiscal stress (e.g.; from República Bolivariana de Venezuela ment ambitious reform agendas signal to inves- through the PetroCaribe arrangement or from Gulf Cooperation Coun- tors that growth prospects are improving (Kose cil countries to countries in the Middle East and North Africa through budget support; IMF 2014b). There can also be strong contagion effects et al. 2010). In investors’ differentiated views, from intraregional volatility of capital flows (Lee, Park, and Byun 2013). this could make the difference between capital GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 1 77 outflows and inflows. In addition to raising FIGURE SF1.11  Foreign currency exposure and long-term growth, some reforms—especially corporate debt those requiring investment in infrastructure Foreign currency exposures in a number of emerging markets remain high, render- projects—can support cyclically weak demand. ing them vulnerable to sharp movements in their currencies. Corporate debt has also increased in many countries. Should risks around the liftoff materialize, emerging Foreign currency exposure in emerging markets A.  markets need to resort to policy measures to allevi- Percent ate short-term financial stress. These include, most 40 2007 2013 Change 07-13 importantly, exchange rate flexibility, targeted mea- 30 sures to ensure market functioning, and measures to 20 restore confidence. Many of these measures ap- peared to help countries effectively respond to the 10 taper tantrum (World Bank 2014a).23 0 • Exchange rate flexibility. In a significant difference -10 Venezuela, RB Thailand India Pakistan Vietnam Argentina Hungary Russian Federation South Africa Philippines Indonesia Egypt, Arab Rep. Turkey to the 1990s, most emerging markets now main- tain flexible exchange rate regimes. Allowing ex- change rates to adjust will be an important buffer to external shocks in many emerging markets Corporate debt of emerging markets B.  with limited currency mismatches on corporate Percent of GDP and household balance sheets and credible mac- 120 Emerging market (excluding China) Emerging market roeconomic policies (Davies et al. 2014). 100 • Interest rate increases. Emerging markets con- cerned about the balance sheet effects of sizable 80 depreciations may wish to raise monetary policy 60 interest rates to stem depreciations. This has been done, to varying degrees, in past U.S. tightening 40 episodes (Chapter 1). The effectiveness of an in- 20 terest rate hike in stemming depreciation pres- sures rests on the credibility of the monetary 0 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 policy framework (Eichengreen and Rose 2003). Corporate debt of selected emerging markets C.  • Targeted support measures. If financial stress Percent of GDP threatens financial stability, for example be- 175 2007 2014 Change 07-14 cause of large foreign currency liabilities, in- 145 tervention in foreign currency markets through 115 the use of international reserve or swap market 85 operations may be necessary. Liquidity provi- 55 sion in local capital markets may be required 25 to preserve orderly market conditions. The re- -5 moval of capital inflow restrictions or—as a India Thailand Mexico South Africa Czech Republic Hungary China Poland Turkey Indonesia complement to sound macroeconomic poli- cies, financial supervision and regulation, and strong institutions—the imposition of tempo- Source: Bank for International Settlements, Moody’s, World Bank. rary controls on certain outflows might tem- A. Foreign currency exposure is measured as the ratio of total foreign currency deposits in the domestic banking system to total deposits in the domestic banking system. Latest available data for 2013. per net outflows (IMF 2014d). B. GDP-weighted average. List of emerging markets includes China, Czech Republic, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Mexico, Poland, South Africa, Thailand, and Turkey. C. The 2007 data of South Africa’s corporate debt is not available and thus replaced by 2008Q1 data. • Measures to restore confidence. Reforms to im- 23A rich literature examines policy responses to financial stress and prove the credibility of monetary, fiscal, and emphasizes various tradeoffs (Frankel and Wei 2004; Claessens et. al. regulatory policies through changes in the gov- 2014; Forbes and Klein 2015). ernance of associated policy institutions may 78 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 help convince investors of a commitment to ing conditions in market liquidity all heighten sustainable macroeconomic and financial poli- risks to U.S. financial markets. If the risks around cies. Credible commitments to structural re- the liftoff and subsequent tightening steps mate- forms could enhance investors’ perceptions of rialize, U.S. interest rates could increase sharply. long-term growth prospects. This could in turn lead to greater financial mar- International policy coordination could poten- ket volatility and could significantly reduce capi- tially help limit the risks of financial turmoil around tal flows to emerging market countries. liftoff and, if they materialize, help emerging market Emerging markets have become more resilient countries navigate them, and, in turn, avoid spill- since the early 2000s: fewer have fixed exchange backs to advanced countries (Sahay et al. 2014). rates; most have sounder fiscal positions and bet- Policy coordination could range from heightened ter monetary policy frameworks; and the extent efforts by advanced country central banks to engage of liability dollarization has declined (Kose and in clear and effective communication to the inter- Prasad 2010; Davies et al. 2014). Nevertheless, nalization by central banks of the spillover effects of the taper tantrum is a reminder that emerging their policies, although the latter may be difficult to market currencies could depreciate sharply, local operationalize (Rajan 2014).24 More broadly speak- borrowing costs rise steeply, and balance sheets ing, there may be scope for enhanced global and come under pressure. regional safety nets, including through multilateral During the taper tantrum episode, a jump in U.S. institutions and regional risk-sharing arrangements, long-term interest rates led, initially, to financial to support emerging markets during periods of fi- stress across the entire spectrum of emerging mar- nancial stress (Carstens 2015). ket assets. Over time, differentiation among countries increased based on country-specific vul- nerabilities, policies, and growth prospects. Since Conclusion the episode, growth prospects have weakened and vulnerabilities remain in some emerging market As the Fed readies for its first policy rate hike countries, heightening the risks of another simi- after almost a decade, financial conditions are on lar shock. Unless appropriate policy measures are the cusp of becoming more challenging for in place, the sudden realization of risks around emerging market countries. Most likely, the lift- the liftoff could potentially spark a “perfect off will proceed smoothly given that the U.S. re- storm” in some emerging market economies, in covery appears well entrenched and financial particular those that need to adjust to the pros- markets are being bolstered by highly accommo- pects of persistently low commodity prices and dative monetary policies in other major advanced tighter financial conditions, or that face domestic countries. If the liftoff takes place in line with policy uncertainty against the backdrop of linger- market expectations, U.S. long-term yields will ing vulnerabilities and weaker growth. likely remain well contained, the term premium will remain narrow, and movements in capital In anticipation of the risks surrounding the liftoff, flows to emerging countries will be modest. emerging market countries should prioritize mone- tary and fiscal policies that reduce vulnerabilities However, as evidenced during the taper tantrum and strengthen policy credibility, and structural episode, there is a risk that if market expectations policy agendas that improve growth prospects. In adjust in a disorderly fashion, financial market the event that risks materialize, exchange rate flexi- volatility could spill over to emerging markets. bility could buffer shocks in some countries but Specifically, low U.S. term premia, diverging may need to be complemented by monetary policy views between markets and Fed policy makers measures and targeted interventions to support or- about the future path of interest rates, and chang- derly market functioning. International policy coor- dination could reduce the likelihood that these risks 24An example of coordination is the introduction of liquidity swap materialize and could alleviate their impact on lines by the Fed to other (mostly advanced country) central banks in the 2008–09 global financial crisis (Fischer 2014). Dudley (2014) pres- emerging markets. While emerging economies may ents a discussion of the impact of U.S. monetary policies on emerging hope for the best from the eventual liftoff of the economies and summary of policy lessons from the taper tantrum. U.S. policy rates, they need to prepare for the worst. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 1 79 BOX SF1.1 Econometric analysis of U.S. yields and spillovers This box briefly describes the main features of the three model) as exogenous regressors. The panel VAR in- econometric models used to analyze the role of mone- cludes six variables for emerging markets: long-term tary and real shocks in explaining movements in U.S. bond yields, stock prices, nominal effective exchange yields, the spillovers of such shocks for emerging mar- rates, bilateral exchange rate with the dollar, industrial kets, and the impact of a sudden increase in U.S. yields production, and inflation. The list of countries is: on capital flows to emerging market and developing Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, the Czech Repub- countries. lic, Israel, Mexico, Poland, South Africa, Turkey, India, Contribution of monetary and real shocks to Indonesia, the Russian Federation, China, the Republic U.S. long-term yields of Korea, Malaysia, the Philippines, Saudi Arabia, and Thailand.d All data are monthly or monthly averages of To analyze the drivers of moves in U.S. yields, the first daily data for January 2013–March 2015. Spillovers are econometric model uses a structural vector auto- then evaluated by tracing out the impulse responses of regression (SVAR) framework with sign restrictions to these variables due to adverse monetary U.S. shocks decompose daily movements in yields during January and favorable U.S. real shocks. The size of the U.S. 2013-March 2015 into two components: one reflecting shocks is normalized such that developing-country real U.S. growth shocks and another reflecting U.S. bond yields increase by 100 basis points on impact. monetary shocks.a The SVAR follows a similar approach as Matheson and Stavrev (2014) and the International Spillovers from U.S. financial conditions to Monetary Fund (2014b) based on three U.S. variables: capital flows long-term interest rates, stock prices, and the nominal The effects of moves in U.S. yields on aggregate capital effective exchange rate.b For reasons of data availability, inflows to emerging markets and developing countries other economic data (e.g. inflation expectations) that are modeled using a VAR model, based on Lim, Mo- may also be important drivers of the long-term interest hapatra, and Stocker (2014). This model links quarterly rate are excluded from the model. The sign restrictions aggregate capital inflows (including foreign direct in- assume that an adverse “monetary” shock (such as an vestment, portfolio investment, and other investment) unexpected real or perceived policy tightening) in- to 86 emerging and developing countries (from BPM6 creases yields and reduces stock prices in the United balance of payment data, expressed in percent of gross States, while a favorable “real” shock (such as reflecting domestic product [GDP]) to real GDP growth in both better growth prospects) increases both yields and stock emerging market and developing countries and G-4 prices.c The shocks identified using these restrictions countries (the United States, the Euro Area, Japan, and naturally reflect market perceptions of monetary policy the United Kingdom), G-4 short-term interest rates and growth. (GDP-weighted average of three month money market Spillovers from U.S. monetary and real shocks to rates for G-4 countries), G-4 long-term interest rates activity and financial markets (GDP-weighted average of 10-year government bond yields for G-4 countries), and the VIX index of implied To assess the spillovers from the shocks driving U.S. volatility of S&P 500 options. This captures the re- yields on emerging markets, a panel VAR model is sponse of capital flows to external shocks, and their ­ estimated for emerging market country variables, with propagation through global uncertainty and growth ef- monetary and real shocks (estimated as in the above fects. The feedback between global interest rates and investors’ risk appetite is captured by incorporating in aDaily (rather than monthly) data is used to ensure that U.S. shocks, in the model the VIX index of implied stock market vola- particular monetary shocks that reflect Fed announcements, and their near immediate effects on stock prices are well identified. tility, which is often used as proxy of risk aversion and bThe nominal effective exchange rate is added on technical grounds, deleveraging pressures (Adrian and Shin 2010 and to ensure that the two identified shocks are orthogonal while also ensuring 2012), with significant repercussions for capital flows to that the sign restrictions are satisfied. The results are broadly in line with Matheson and Stavrev (2014) who leave out a third variable. cSign restrictions are imposed on stock prices and yields. Responses of dTo avoid spurious results, the sample is restricted to large emerging exchange rates are unrestricted and turn out to be statistically insignificant. markets that are highly integrated into global financial markets. 80 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 BOX SF1.1 (continued) developing countries (Rey 2013; Bruno and Shin 2013; quarters and remaining significant at a 90 percent confi- Forbes and Warnock 2012). dence interval up to 6 quarters. To compute impulse responses, the covariance matrix is For robustness, a similar VAR model was computed for derived from a Cholesky decomposition. The Cholesky portfolio flows (balance of payment data), with the im- decomposition is based on the following order of vari- pact of an interest rate shock estimated to be of similar ables (from least to most “endogenous”): G-4 GDP magnitude, but peaking earlier and with wider confi- growth, emerging markets’ GDP growth, G-4 short- dence intervals given greater volatility in quarterly term rates, G-4 long-term rates, VIX, and capital inflows portfolio flows. A 100 basis-point shock to the U.S. to emerging markets. Overall, the impact of a 25 basis- term spread is applied to the model, assuming a range points (one standard deviation) shock in long-term in- of pass-through effects on Euro Area, U.K., and Japa- terest rate across G-4 economies is estimated to reduce nese long-term yields (from zero to 100 percent). In aggregate capital flows to emerging and developing the median case, global bond yields increase by 70 countries by 0.45 percent of their combined GDP (10 basis points on impact, roughly comparable to the percent drop in flows), with the effect peaking after 4 pass-through rate observed during the taper tantrum. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 1 81 TABLE SF1.1 Studies on the effects of sudden stops Authors Country/data Methodology Objectives and results Becker and 167 countries/ Event study; “Expected” output cost of sudden stops, based on conditional and uncondi- Mauro (2006) annual, multivariate tional probability of sudden stop. 1970–2001 probit Cost of sudden stops on median output growth is 1.5% per year for emerg- •   ing markets. •  Cost of sudden stops are not significant for developing economies Bordo, Cavallo 20 emerging Panel treatment Impact of sudden stops on trend growth and output gap. and Meissner markets/annual, regression Sudden stops associated with financial crises widen the output gap, but not •   (2010) 1880–1913 trend growth. Growth appears to resume quickly. Sudden stops not accompanied by financial crises reduce trend growth. •   Calderón and 99 countries/ Event study Probability of inflow- versus outflow-driven sudden stops and their effects on Kubota (2013) quarterly, output and credit. 1975–2010 Negative effects of capital outflows-driven shocks are less than those of •   inflows-driven shocks. Calvo, Izquierdo 32 developed Event study; Effects of current account reversals on growth and real exchange rate. and Mejía (2004) and emerging panel probit Sudden stops in emerging markets are accompanied by large real exchange •   economies/ rate devaluations. quarterly and However, the same is not the case in developed countries. •   annual, 1990–2001 Calvo, Izquierdo 110 countries/an- Event study; Characteristics and probability of systemic sudden stops. and Mejía (2008) nual, 1990–2004 probit panel They are accompanied by large real exchange rate fluctuations. •   regressions They occur in different countries at the same time, suggesting external •   shocks as causes. High leverage of tradables absorption and high domestic liability dollariza- •   tion increases the probability of these events. Calvo and Non-empirical Case study; Effects of sudden stops in real economy and policy analysis. Reinhart (2000) policy analysis event study • Sudden stops cause output losses and real exchange rate devaluation via (a) drop in aggregate demand due to nominal rigidities (Keynesian channel), and (b) an increase in non-performing loans due to decrease in the relative price of non-tradables and a surge in ex-post interest rate faced by domes- tic producers (Fisherian channel). (Partial) dollarization and higher short-term flows increase costs by increas- •   ing non-performing loans. Sudden stops likely trigger banking crises (but not necessarily currency •   crises). Flexible exchange rates help by avoiding compression in non-tradables •   prices. Full dollarization recommended by authors. •   Caner, 43 developed Panel regression Effect of sudden stops on GDP growth. Koehler-Geib and and developing Following sudden stops, GDP growth falls by 4-5 percent. •   Vincelette (2009) countries/annual, 1993–2006s Catao (2007) 16 countries/ Case study; Link between sudden stops and currency crashes. annual, event study; Not all sudden stops triggered depreciations or currency crises. •   1870–1913 panel regressions Interesting results because of the time period, during which countries in •   sample were pegged to gold and international spreads were much lower than in the past few decades. Currency crashes were likely not the result of external factors but domestic •   frictions, like lobbying linked to the export sector. Cavallo et al. 63 developing Event-based, Changes in GDP and real effective exchange rates in the 10 quarters before (2015) and developed time series and after sudden stop. countries/ regression; Differentiation between sudden stops in net inflows, gross inflows, gross •   quarterly, pooled regression outflows, and combinations. 1980–2012 Sudden stops in net flows that coincide with sharp reductions in gross •   inflows are associated with larger drops in output compared to those that coincide with sharp declines in gross outflows. The effects of sudden stops on real exchange rates are not robust. •   82 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 TABLE SF1.1 Studies on the effects of sudden stops (continued) Authors Country/data Methodology Objectives and results Cowan and 45 developed Panel (cross- Impact of sudden stops on industrial production. Raddatz (2013) and developing industry, For average industry, industrial production declines 5%. •   countries/annual, cross-country) Production in industries that depend on external finance declines by more, •   1975–2003 regression especially in less developed economies. Contractions are larger in industries with small comparative advantage. •   The contraction after sudden stops is largest for industries that produce •   durable goods, especially in less financially-developed countries. This suggests that financial frictions due to sudden stops affect the observed cyclical behavior of durable goods. High international reserves reduce production contractions. •   Expansionary monetary policy dampens the impact of sudden stops in •   industry production in emerging and less financially-developed economies. Edwards (2004) 157 countries/ Simultaneous Probability of current account reversal and effects of current account reversal annual, regression on growth. 1970–2001 Current account reversals are closely related to sudden stops. •   Current reversals reduce GDP growth by 1.8–5.1%. •   Effects depend on trade openness and exchange rate regime. •   Gallego and Brazil, Chile, Panel (cross- Impact of sudden stops on job creation and destruction. Tessada (2012) Colombia, sector, cross- After sudden stops, job creation tends to decrease more in sectors depen- •   Mexico/annual, country) dent on external finance. 1978–2001 regression After sudden stops, job destruction is higher in sectors with greater liquidity •   needs. Guidotti, 122 countries/ Event study Impact of sudden stops on GDP deviation from trend depending on current Sturzenegger annual, account adjustment. and Villar (2004) 1974–2002 Current account adjustment of more than 2 percentage points of GDP is •   associated with GDP falling 1.8% below trend. Current account adjustment of less than 2 percentage points of GDP is •   associated with GDP falling 0.8% below trend Hutchison and 24 emerging Panel regression Investigates the effect of crises/sudden stops on GDP growth. Noy (2006) markets/annual, It includes currency and sudden stop dummies on growth regressions. •   1975–1997 Sudden stops are associated with 6–8% decrease in GDP growth. •   The effects are short-lived and disappear after the second year. •   Hutchison, Noy, 66 emerging Panel regression Output costs of sudden stops depending on monetary and fiscal policy. and Wang (2010) developing Monetary and fiscal policy tightening during sudden stops exacerbates •   economies/ output losses (deviation of output from trend). annual, Discretionary fiscal policy is associated with lower output costs (deviation in •   1980–2003 output from trend), whereas expansionary monetary policy has no effect. Ortiz et al. (2009) 31 emerging Event study; Costs of systemic sudden stops and fiscal/monetary policy markets/ cross-country Output falls 7.2% on average from peak to trough. •   quarterly, regression Significant variation in output change across country-episodes (lowest: •   1990–2006 –20%; highest: +6.6%) and fiscal and monetary response. Countries that tightened monetary and fiscal policy during sudden stops •   experience larger contractions in output. Rothenberg and 24 Emerging Event study Impact of sudden stop on GDP growth and its components and quarter-on- Warnock (2011) Markets/ quarter exchange rate movements against the U.S. dollar. quarterly, After a “true sudden stop” (drop in inflows is greater than drop in outflows), •   1989–2005 GDP growth falls sharply (even below zero in a couple of quarters); the exchange rate depreciates as much as 40%. After a “sudden flight” (drop in outflows greater than drop in inflows), GDP •   growth falls (from 5-6% to 2-3%) but does not fall below zero; the exchange rate depreciates around 10%. Investment and, to a lesser degree, imports are the most affected compo- •   nents of GDP. Zhao et al. (2014) 85 countries/ Event study; logit Impact of sudden stops on probability of currency crises. annual, regressions Low trade openness, shallow financial markets and current account imbal- •   1980–2012 ances increase the probability that sudden stops will be followed by cur- rency crises. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 1 83 TABLE SF1.2 Studies on the implications of the taper tantrum Authors Country/data Methodology Objectives and results Avdjiev and Both industrial Linear regression: Drivers of cross-sectional variation in the slowdown of cross-border bank Takáts (2014) countries event study lending during the taper tantrum. and emerging The slowdown of cross-border bank lending during the taper tantrum de- •   countries/ pended on both the lender’s banking system and the conditions of quarterly borrower emerging markets. A rising credit default swap (CDS) spread in lender’s banking system during •   the taper tantrum is associated with a more pronounced slowdown in cross- border bank lending. A higher current account balance of a borrower emerging market is as- •   sociated with a milder slowdown in cross-border bank lending during the tapering. A higher share of cross-border bank lending denominated in U.S. dollars •   is associated with a more pronounced slowdown in cross-border bank lend- ing. Aizenman, Binici, Emerging Panel regression Impact of announcements by senior Fed officials on financial markets in and Hutchison markets/daily emerging economies. (2014) Emerging market asset prices respond most to statements from Fed •   Chairman Bernanke and much less to statements from other Fed officials. Exchange rates (and, to a lesser extent, equity prices and CDS spreads) of •   a group of countries with solid macro fundamentals were initially more ad- versely affected by taper talk than those in the fragile group. This reflected greater financial market development. However, the cumulative effects of taper talk after a month appear to be •   quite similar for both robust and fragile emerging markets. More financially developed emerging economies (according to a classifica- •   tion based on the 2012 value of the World Economic Forum’s Financial Development Index, which considers factors related to financial develop- ment, intermediation, and access to financial services) were more impacted by taper talk. A plausible interpretation is that more financially developed economies are more exposed, at least in the short term, to external news announcements. Basu, India/daily, Case study; Response of Indian financial markets to taper talk. Eichengreen, and weekly, and linear regression India was adversely impacted because it had received large capital flows in •   Gupta (2014) monthly prior years and had large and liquid financial markets that were a convenient target for investors seeking to rebalance away from emerging markets. India’s macroeconomic conditions had weakened in prior years, which •   rendered the economy vulnerable to capital outflows and limited the policy room for maneuver. These results suggest putting in place a medium-term policy framework •   that limits vulnerabilities in advance, while maximizing the policy space for responding to shocks. Elements of such a framework include a sound fiscal balance, sustainable current account deficit, and environment conducive to investment. India should also continue to encourage stable longer-term capital flows and •   discourage volatile short-term flows, hold a larger stock of reserves, avoid excessive appreciation of the exchange rate through interventions with the use of reserves and macro prudential policy, and prepare banks and firms to handle greater exchange rate volatility. Dahlhaus and 23 emerging Vector auto­ Impact of U.S. monetary policy normalization on portfolio flows to major Vasishtha (2014) countries/weekly regression (VAR) emerging market economies. and monthly A shock corresponding to an increase in spreads of 120 basis points (bps) •   is associated with a decline in aggregate capital flows to GDP by 0.5% on impact. The cumulative effect of a policy normalization shock (an increase of •   120 bps) on aggregate capital flows is –1.24 percent of GDP after 3 months. The cumulative effect of a policy normalization shock (an increase of •   120 bps) on aggregate capital flows is –1.83 percent of GDP after one year. 84 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 TABLE SF1.2 Studies on the implications of the taper tantrum (continued) Authors Country/data Methodology Objectives and results Díez (2014) 49 emerging Case study; Emerging markets’ financial market responses to taper talk versus actual countries/ cross-country tapering. monthly regression ­ Emerging markets generally experienced a significantly larger depreciation •   analysis in nominal exchange rates during the taper talk period in the summer of 2013 than during the actual beginning of the taper period from December 2013 to January 2014. The average depreciation was 3% during the taper talk period, and 1.5% during the beginning of the actual taper period. More- over, among those countries that experienced noticeable depreciation, the averages were 6.6 % during the taper talk period and 3% during the actual taper period. Current account deficits and real exchange rate appreciation were key •   factors in explaining the observed cross-country differences in adjustment across the various emerging markets. For seven emerging markets—Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, Russia, South •   Africa, and Turkey—12 variables are examined for early warning signals of a potential crisis period, defined as a sharp drop in the country’s exchange rate and/or a sharp drop in its international reserves. No strong evidence predicting a crisis in the near future is reported. Eichengreen and 53 emerging Cross-country Which countries were most affected by the taper talk and why. Gupta (2014) countries/ linear regression Emerging markets that experienced real exchange rate appreciation and •   monthly widening current account deficits during the prior period of quantitative easing saw the sharpest impact. A more important determinant of the differential impact was the size of •   country’s financial market: countries with larger financial markets experi- enced more pressure on the exchange rate, foreign reserves, and equity prices. This is interpreted as showing that investors are better able to rebal- ance their portfolios when the target country has a relatively large and liquid financial market. García-Luna and Emerging Case study; Impact of taper talk on cross-border credit for emerging markets. van Rixtel (2013) countries/ ­descriptive Cross-border credit to a large number of emerging market economies with •   quarterly statistics sizable U.S. dollar-denominated liabilities fell in the second quarter of 2013. Latin American countries were most affected. The drop was largest for Brazil •   (with a ratio of U.S. dollar liabilities to exports of 99%), but was also quite sharp for Chile (50%), Mexico (20%), and Peru (50%). In other regions, cross-border credit to India and Russian Federation •   contracted as well. In contrast, cross-border credit to Turkey and several emerging Asian economies increased, most notably to Taiwan, China, and Indonesia. Lavigne, Sarker, Emerging Case study; Impact of measures related to U.S. quantitative easing (including taper talk) on and Vasishtha markets/weekly descriptive capital flows. (2014) and quarterly ­statistics Taper talk in 2013 had a disruptive impact on capital flows to emerging mar- •   kets; however, after the initial impact subsided, there is some evidence that markets discriminated among countries according to fundamentals. Lim, Mohapatra, 60 developing Vector autore- Gross financial inflows to developing countries between 2000 and 2013, with a and Stocker countries/ gression (VAR) particular focus on the potential effects of quantitative easing policies. (2014) quarterly In a scenario of normalization of unconventional monetary policy over the •   course of 2014–16, simulation results show that capital flows to developing countries could contract by 0.6 percentage point of GDP by the end of 2016. Meinusch and United States/ Vector auto­ Extent to which changing expectations about the timing of the exit from Tillmann (2015) daily (from regression (VAR) quantitative easing impact asset prices. Twitter) Shocks to expectations of tapering affect interest rates, exchange rates, and •   asset prices. Given a positive shock to expectations of early tapering (proxied by a 5% •   increase of Twitter users foreseeing an early tapering), the long-term interest rate rises 3 bps at impact and peaks at 4 bps after 6 days. Mishra et al. 21 emerging Linear regression, Market reaction to taper talk and its relationship to economic fundamentals (2014) markets/daily event study. and financial structures. Countries with stronger economic fundamentals, deeper financial markets, •   and a tighter macro prudential policy stance in the run-up to the tapering announcements experienced smaller currency depreciations and smaller increases in government bond yields. There was less cross-country differentiation in the response of stock •   markets based on fundamentals. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 1 85 TABLE SF1.2 Studies on the implications of the taper tantrum (continued) Authors Country/data Methodology Objectives and results Park and Um Korea, Rep./daily High-frequency Effect of U.S unconventional monetary policy (including tapering) on Korean (2015) event-study bond markets. approach ­ One-day increase of U.S. Treasury yields after the taper announcement were •   9 bps for 5-year treasury yields and 6.7 bps for 20-year treasury yields. Taper talk had no statistically significant impact on the Korea, Rep. bond •   yields. Taper talk triggered capital outflows from Korea, Rep. For example, taper •   talk reduced Korea, Rep.'s foreign net investment by $193 million. Rai and 19 emerging Case study; Impact of taper talk on financial markets and capital flows for 19 emerging Suchanek (2014) countries/ linear regression markets. two-day window Emerging markets with strong fundamentals (e.g., stronger growth and cur- •   around Fed rent account position, lower debt, and higher growth in business confidence announcement and productivity), experienced more favorable responses to Fed communi- dates cations on tapering. Initially, countries with less capital account openness experienced more •   favorable responses to tapering, but this result diminished in subsequent tapering announcements. Sahay et al. Emerging Case study; Policy lessons from taper talk (2014) markets/daily, descriptive The Fed’s monetary policy announcements were strongly correlated with •   monthly, and statistics movements in asset prices and capital inflows in emerging markets, with the quarterly effects being largest during the phase of unconventional monetary policy (post-2008) and when tapering was first discussed. On impact, asset prices and capital flows were hit indiscriminately across •   countries, but over time there was greater differentiation among emerging markets. Good macroeconomic fundamentals helped dampen market reactions to •   U.S. monetary policy shocks. Elevated current account deficits, high infla- tion, weak growth prospects, and relatively low reserves were important factors affecting market reaction. Where vulnerabilities existed, emerging markets that acted early and deci- •   sively generally fared better. Clear and effective communication by advanced-economy central banks •   concerning exit from unconventional monetary support is important to reduce the risk of excessive market volatility. The international community has an important role to play to safeguard global financial stability, such as efforts to cooperate with regional financial arrangements, enhance cross-border cooperation between central banks and regulators, and establish stronger global financial safety net, including through adequate IMF resources. References Adrian, T., R. Crump, and E. Moench. 2013a. “Do Treasury Term Premia Rise around Monetary Tight- Aaronson, S., T. Cajner, B. Fallick, F. Galbis-Reig, enings?” Liberty Street Economics (blog), April 15. C. Smith, and W. Wascher. 2014. “Labor Force Par- http://libertystreeteconomics.newyorkfed.org/. ticipation: Recent Developments and Future Pros- ______. 2013b. “Pricing the Term Structure with pects.” Brookings Papers on Economic Activity. Linear Regressions.” Journal of Financial Economics Brookings Institution, Washington, DC. 110 (1): 110–38. Abrahams, M., T. Adrian, R. K. Crump, and E. Mo- Adrian, T., M. Fleming, J. Goldberg, M. Lewis, F. ench. 2015. “Decomposing Real and Nominal Yield Natalucci, and J. Wu. 2013. “Dealer Balance Sheet Curves.” Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Staff Capacity and Market Liquidity during the 2013 Reports, No. 570. Selloff in Fixed-Income Markets.” Liberty Street Eco- Adler, G., M.-L. Djigbenou, and S. Sosa. 2014. nomics (blog), October 16. http://libertystreeteco- “Global Financial Shocks and Foreign Asset Repa- nomics.newyorkfed.org/. triation: Do Local Investors Play a Stabilizing Role? Adrian, T., and H. S. Shin. 2010. “Liquidity and IMF Working Paper 14/60. International Mone- diation 19: Leverage,” Journal of Financial Interme­ tary Fund, Washington, DC. 418-37. 86 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 ______. 2011. “Financial Intermediaries and Mon- Blanchard, O., D. Furceri, and A. Pescatori. 2014. etary Economics.” In Vol. 3 of Handbook of Mone- “A Prolonged Period of Low Real Interest Rates?” In tary Economics, 601–50. San Diego, CA: Elsevier. Secular Stagnation: Facts, Causes and Cures, edited ______. 2012. “Pro-cyclical Leverage and Value-at- by Coen Teulings and Richard Baldwin. London: Risk.” Federal Reserve Bank of New York Staff Re- Centre for Economic Policy Research. ports, No. 338. Bluedorn, J. C., R. Duttagupta, J. Guajardo, and P. Ahmed, S. and A. Zlate. 2013. "Capital Flows to Topalova. 2013. “Capital Flows Are Fickle: Any- Emerging Market Economies: A Brave New World?" time, Anywhere.” IMF Working Paper No. 13/183, International Finance Discussion Papers 1081, International Monetary Fund, Washington, DC. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. Blume, M. E., and D. B. Keim. 2012. “Institutional Washington, DC. Investors and Stock Market Liquidity: Trends and Aizenman, J., M. Binici, and M. M. Hutchison. Relationships.” Working Paper, the Wharton 2014. “The Transmission of Federal Reserve Taper- School, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. ing News to Emerging Financial Markets.” NBER Bordo, M. D., A. F. Cavallo, and C. F. Meissner. Working Paper No. 19980, National Bureau of 2010. “Sudden Stops: Determinants and Output Economic Research, Cambridge, MA. Effects in the First Era of Globalization, 1880- Avdijev, S., and E. Takáts. 2014. “Cross-Border 1913.” Journal of Development Economics 91 (2): Bank Lending During the Taper Tantrum: The Role 227-41. of Emerging Market Fundamentals.” BIS Quarterly Borio, C. 2014. “The International Monetary and Review (September): 49-60. Financial System: Its Achilles Heel and What to Do Bank of England and the Procyclicality Working about It.” BIS Working Papers No. 456, Bank for Group. 2014. “Procyclicality and Structural Trends International Settlements, Basel. in Investment Allocation by Insurance Companies Borio, C., and H. Zhu. 2012. “Capital Regulation, and Pension Funds.” Bank of England and Procycli- Risk-taking and Monetary Policy: A Missing Link cality Working Group Discussion Paper. London. in the Transmission Mechanism?” Journal of Finan- Basu, K., B. Eichengreen, and P. Gupta. 2014. cial Stability 8(1): 236–51. “From Tapering to Tightening: The Impact of the Bruno, V., and H. S. Shin. 2013. “Capital Flows, Fed’s Exit on India.” Policy Research Working Paper Cross-Border Banking and Global Liquidity.” 7071, World Bank, Washington, DC. NBER Working Paper No. 19038, National Bureau Becker, T. I., and P. Mauro. 2006. “Output Drops of Economic Research, Cambridge, MA. and the Shocks That Matter.” Working Paper 06/172, ______. 2015. “Capital Flows and the Risk-Taking International Monetary Fund, Washington, DC. Channel of Monetary Policy.” Journal of Monetary Bernanke, B. 2013a. “Long-Term Interest Rates.” Economics 71 (1): 119-32. Speech at the Annual Monetary/ Macroeconomics Caballero, R. J., and E. Farhi. 2014. “On the Role Conference, “The Past and Future of Monetary Pol- of Safe Asset Shortages in Secular Stagnation.” In icy,” sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of San Secular Stagnation: Facts, Causes and Cures, edited Francisco, San Francisco, March 1. by Coen Teulings and Richard Baldwin. London: ______. 2013b. Comments after “The Economic Centre for Economic Policy Research. Outlook,” testimony before the Joint Economic Calderón, C., and M. Kubota. 2013. “Sudden Committee, U.S. Congress, Washington, DC, May Stops: Are Global and Local Investors Alike?” Jour- 22. http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CHRG- nal of International Economics 89 (1): 122-42 113shrg81472/pdf/CHRG-113shrg81472.pdf. Calvo, G., A. Izquierdo, and L. F. Mejía. 2004. “On ______. 2015. “Why Are Interest Rates so Low, the Empirics of Sudden Stops: the Relevance of Bal- Part 4: Term Premiums?” Ben Bernanke’s Blog. ance-sheet Effects.” NBER Working Paper No. http://www.brookings.edu/blogs/ben-bernanke. 10520, National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge, MA. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 1 87 ______. 2008. “Systemic Sudden Stops: The Rele- Claessens, S., M. A. Kose, L. Laeven, and F. Valen- vance of Balance-Sheet Effects And Financial Inte- cia. 2014. Financial Crises: Causes, Consequences, gration.” NBER Working Paper No. 14026, Na- and Policy Responses. Washington, DC: International tional Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge, Monetary Fund. MA. Collyns, C., and R. Koepke. 2015. “Which EMs Calvo, G. A., A. Izquierdo, and E. Talvi. 2006. “Sud- Would Suffer from a Risk Shock?” Memo, Insti- den Stops and Phoenix Miracles in Emerging Mar- tute of International Finance, Washington, DC. kets.” American Economic Review 96 (2): 405–10. Committee on the Global Financial System. 2014. Calvo, S., and C. Reinhart. 1996. “Capital Flows to “Market-Making and Proprietary Trading: Industry Latin America: Is There Evidence of Contagion Ef- Trends, Drivers and Policy Implications.” CGFS Pa- fects?” Policy Research Working Paper 1619, World pers No 52, Bank for International Settlements, Bank, Washington, DC. Basel. ______. 2000. “When Capital Inflows Come to a Council of Economic Advisers. 2014. “The Labor Sudden Stop: Consequences and Policy Options.” Force Participation Rate since 2007: Causes and In Reforming the International Monetary and Finan- Policy Implications.” Council of Economic Advis- cial System, edited by P. Kenen and A. Swoboda. ers, Washington, DC. Washington, DC: International Monetary Fund. Cowan, K., and C. Raddatz. 2013. “Sudden Stops Caner, M., F. Koehler-Geib, and G. A. Vincelette. and Financial Frictions: Evidence from Industry- 2009. “When Do Sudden Stops Really Hurt?” Pol- Level Data.” Journal of International Money Finance icy Research Working Paper 5021, World Bank, 32: 99-128. Washington, DC. Craighead, W. D., and D. R. Hineline. 2013. “Cur- Cardarelli, R., S. Elekdag, and M. A. Kose. 2010. rent Account Reversals and Structural Change in “Capital Inflows: Macroeconomic Implications and Developing and Industrialized Countries.” Wes- Policy Responses.” Economic Systems 34 (4): leyan Economics Working Papers 2013-001, Wes- 333–56. leyan University Department of Economics, Mid- Carstens, A. 2015. “Challenges for Emerging Econ- dleton, CT. omies in the Face of Unconventional Monetary Dahlhaus, T., and G. Vasishtha. 2014. “The Im- Policies in Advanced Economies.” Stavros Niarchos pact of U.S. Monetary Policy Normalization of Foundation Lecture, Peterson Institute for Interna- Capital Flows to Emerging-Market Economies.” tional Economics, April 20. Working Paper 2014-53, Bank of Canada, Ottawa. Catao, L. A. V. 2007. “Sudden Stops and Currency Davies, G., M. Obstfeld, A. M. Taylor, and D. Wil- Drops: A Historical Look.” In The Decline of Latin son. 2014. “Will Emerging Market Jitters Morph American Economies: Growth, Institutions and Crises, into a Crisis?” Fulcrum Research Paper. https:// edited by Sebastian Edwards, Gerardo Esquivel, and www.fulcrumasset.com/assets/2/1608_document. Graciela Marquez. Chicago: University of Chicago pdf?1398878033. Press. Dell’Ariccia, G., L. Laeven, and R. Marquez. 2013. Cavallo, E., A. Powell, M. Pedemonte, and P. “Monetary Policy, Leverage, and Bank Risk-Tak- Tavella. 2015. “A New Taxonomy of Sudden Stops: ing.” Journal of Economic Theory, forthcoming. Which Sudden Stops should Countries be Most Diebold, F. X., and Yilmaz, K. 2015. Financial Con- Concerned About?” Journal of International Money nectedness: A Network Approach to Measurement and Finance 51: 47-70. and Monitoring. Oxford, U.K.: Oxford University Claessens, S., and M. A. Kose. 2014. “Financial Press. Crises: Explanations, Types and Implications.” In Díez, F. J. 2014. “The Emerging Market Economies Financial Crises: Causes, Consequences, and Policy in Times of Taper-Talk and Actual Tapering.” Cur- Responses, edited by S. Claessens, M. A. Kose, L. rent Policy Perspectives No. 14-6, Federal Reserve Laeven, and F. Valencia, 3-60. Washington, DC: In- Bank of Boston. ternational Monetary Fund. 88 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 Dudley, W. 2014. “U.S. Monetary Policy and Forbes, K. J., and F. E. Warnock. 2012. “Capital Emerging Market Economies.” Speech at the Flow Waves: Surges, Stops, Flight, and Retrench- Roundtable Discussion in Honor of Terrence ment.” Journal of International Economics 88 (2): Checki, “Three Decades of Crises: What Have We 235-51. Learned?” Federal Reserve Bank of New York, New Frankel, J., and S. Wei. 2004. “Managing Macro- York, March 27. economic Crises.” NBER Working Paper No. Edwards, S., 2004. “Thirty Years of Current Ac- 10907, National Bureau of Economic Research, count Imbalances, Current Account Reversals and Cambridge, MA. Sudden Stops.” IMF Staff Papers 51(0): 1-49. Inter- Fratzscher, M., 2012. “Capital Flows, Push versus national Monetary Fund, Washington, DC. Pull Factors and the Global Financial Crisis.” Jour- Eichengreen, B., and P. Gupta. 2014. “Tapering nal of International Economics 88 (2): 341-56. Talk: The Impact of Expectations of Reduced Fed- Gallego, F., and J. Tessada. 2012. “Sudden Stops eral Reserve Security Purchases on Emerging Mar- and Reallocation: Evidence from Labor Market kets.” Policy Research Working Paper 6754. World Flows in Latin America.” Journal of Development Bank, Washington, DC. Economics 97 (2): 257–68. Eichengreen, B., and A. Rose. 2003. “Does It Pay to García-Luna, P., and A. van Rixtel. 2013. “Emerg- Defend against a Speculative Attack?” In Managing ing Markets and Talk of Tapering.” BIS Quarterly Currency Crises in Emerging Markets, edited by M. Review (December): 16–17. Dooley and J. Frankel. Chicago: University of Chi- cago Press. Gordon, R. J. 2014. “The Demise of U.S. Economic Growth: Restatement, Rebuttal, and Reflections.” Escolano, J., C. Kolerus, and C. L. Ngouana. NBER Working Paper No. 19895, National Bureau “Global Monetary Tightening: Emerging Markets of Economic Research, Cambridge, MA. Debt Dynamics and Fiscal Crises.” IMF Working Paper No. 14/215, International Monetary Fund, Guidotti, P., F. Sturzenegger, and A. Villar. 2004. Washington, DC. “On the Consequences of Sudden Stops.” Economia 4 (2): 171–214. Fender, I., and U. Lewrick. 2015. “Shifting Tides – Market Liquidity and Market-Making in Fixed In- Hall, R. E. 2014. “Quantifying the Lasting Harm to come Instruments.” BIS Quarterly Review (March): the U.S. Economy from the Financial Crisis.” In 97–109. NBER Macroeconomics Annual 2014, Volume. 29, edited by J. Parker and M. Woodford. Fernald, J. and B. Wang. 2015. “The Recent Rise and Fall of Rapid Productivity Growth.” Economic Hamilton, J. D., E. S. Harris, J. Hatzius, and K. D. Letter 2015-04, Federal Reserve Bank of San West. 2015. “The Equilibrium Real Funds Rate: Francisco. Past, Present, and Future.” Working Paper, Univer- sity of California, San Diego. Fischer, S. 2014. “The Federal Reserve and the Global Economy.” Speech at the 2014 Annual Hunter, D. M., and D. P. Simon. 2005. “A Condi- Meetings of the International Monetary Fund and tional Assessment of the Relationships between the the World Bank Group, Washington, DC. October Major World Bond Markets.” European Financial 11. Management 11 (4): 463–82. ______. 2015. “The Federal Reserve and the Global Hutchison, M., and I. Noy. 2006. “Sudden Stops Economy.” Speech at the conference held in honor and the Mexican Wave: Currency Crises, Capital of Professor Haim Ben-Shahar, former president of Flow Reversals and Output Loss in Emerging Mar- Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Is- kets.” Journal of Development Economics 79 (1): rael, May 26. 225–48. Forbes, K. J., and M. W. Klein. 2015. “Pick Your Hutchison, M. M., I. Noy, and L. Wang. 2010. Poison: The Choices and Consequences of Policy “Fiscal and Monetary Policies and the Cost of Sud- Responses to Crises.” IMF Economic Review 63: den Stops.” Journal of International Money and Fi- 197-237. nance 29: 973–87. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 1 89 Ikeda, Y., D. Medvedev, and M. Rama. 2015. ume 5, edited by D. Rodrik and M. R. Rosenzweig, “Advanced-Country Policies and Emerging-Market 4283–362. Oxford, U.K.: North-Holland. Currencies: The Impact of U.S. Tapering on India’s Lavigne, R., S. Sarker, and G. Vasishtha. 2014. Rupee.” Policy Research Working Paper 7219, “Spillover Effects of Quantitative Easing on Emerg- World Bank, Washington, DC. ing-Market Economies.” Bank of Canada Review Institute of International Finance. 2015. “Heat (Autumn): 23–33. Map of EM Vulnerabilities.” (May). Levchenko, A., and P. Mauro. 2007. “Do Some IMF. 2013. Global Financial Stability Report: Transi- Forms of Financial Flows Protect from Sudden tion Challenges to Stability (October). Washington, Stops?” World Bank Economic Review 21 (3): DC: International Monetary Fund. 389-411. ______. 2014a. Global Financial Stability Report: Lee, H., C. Park, and H. Byun. 2013. “Do Conta- Risk Taking, Liquidity, and Shadow Banking: Curb- gion Effects Exist in Capital Flow Volatility?” Jour- ing Excess While Promoting Growth (October). nal of the Japanese and International Economies 30: Washington, DC: International Monetary Fund. 76–95. ______. 2014b. “IMF Multilateral Policy Issue Re- Lim, J., S. Mohapatra, and M. Stocker. 2014. “Tin- port: 2014 Spillover Report.” Washington, DC: In- ker, Taper, QE, Bye? The Effect of Quantitative Eas- ternational Monetary Fund. ing on Financial Flows to Developing Countries.” ______. 2014c. Regional Economic Outlook: Policy Research Working Paper 6820, World Bank, Western Hemisphere (April). Washington, DC: In- Washington, DC. ternational Monetary Fund. Lo Duca, M. 2012. “Modeling the Time Varying ______. 2014d. The Liberalization and Manage- Determinants of Portfolio Flows to Emerging Mar- ment of Capital Flows: An Institutional View. kets.” Working Paper Series 1468, European Cen- Washington, DC: International Monetary Fund. tral Bank, Frankfurt. ______. 2015. Global Financial Stability Report: Matheson, T. and E. Stavrev. 2014. “News and Navigating Monetary Policy Challenges and Manag- Monetary Shocks at a High Frequency: A Simple ing Risks (January). Washington, DC: International Approach.” IMF Working Paper No. 14/167, Inter- Monetary Fund. national Monetary Fund, Washington, DC. Kaminsky, G. 2008. “Crises and Sudden Stops: Evi- Meinusch, A., and P. Tillmann. 2015. “Quantitative dence from International Bond and Syndicated- Easing and Tapering Uncertainty: Evidence from Loan Markets.” NBER Working Paper No. 14249, Twitter.” Joint Discussion Paper Series in Econom- National Bureau of Economic Research, Cam- ics, No. 09-2015, University of Marburg, Marburg, bridge, MA. Germany. Koepke, R. 2015a. “What Drives Capital Flows to Mishra, P., K. Moriyama, P. N’Diaye, and L. Nguye. Emerging Markets? A Survey of Empirical Litera- 2014. “Impact of Fed Tapering Announcements on ture.” IIF Working Paper, Institute of International Emerging Markets.” IMF Working Paper WP/14/109, Finance, Washington, DC. International Monetary Fund, Washington, DC. ______. 2015b. “Fed Policy Expectations and Port- Opazo, L., C. Raddatz, and S. Schmukler. 2014. folio Flows to Emerging Markets.” IIF Working “Institutional Investors and Long-Term Investment: Paper, Institute of International Finance, Washing- Evidence from Chile.” Policy Research Working Pa- ton, DC. per 6922, World Bank, Washington, DC. Kose, M. A., and E. Prasad. 2010. Emerging Mar- Ortiz, A., Ottonello, P., Sturzenegger, F., Talvi, E., kets: Resilience and Growth Amid Global Turmoil. 2009. “Monetary and Fiscal Policies in a sudden Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press. Stop: Is Tighter Brighter?” In Dealing with an Inter- national Credit Crunch: Policy Responses to Sudden Kose, M. A., E. Prasad, K. Rogoff, and S. Wei. Stops in Latin America, edited by E. Cavallo and A. 2010. “Financial Globalization and Economic Poli- Izquierdo, 23–73. Washington, DC: Inter-Ameri- cies.” In Handbook of Development Economics, Vol- can Development Bank. 90 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 1 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 Park, K. Y., and J. Y. Um. 2015. “Spillover Effects of Shin, H. 2013: “The Second Phase of Global Li- U.S. Unconventional Monetary Policy on Korean quidity and Its Impact on Emerging Economies.” Bond Markets: Evidence from High-Frequency Speech at the Asia Economic Policy Conference, Data.” Working Paper, Yonsei University, Seoul, sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of San Fran- South Korea. cisco, November 3–5. Raddatz, C., and S. Schmukler. 2012. “On the In- Williams, J. C. 2015. “The Decline in the Natural ternational Transmission of Shocks: Micro-Evidence Rate of Interest.” Federal Reserve Bank of San Fran- from Mutual Fund Portfolios.” Journal of Interna- cisco, manuscript based on the presentation for the tional Economics 88: 357–74. NABE panel “The Outlook for the U.S. and Global Rai, V., and L. Suchanek. 2014. “The Effect of the Economy: Headwinds, Tailwinds and Whirlwinds,” Federal Reserve’s Tapering Announcements on January 3. Emerging Markets.” Bank of Canada Working Pa- World Bank. 2014a. Global Economic Prospects: per, Bank of Canada, Ottawa. Coping with Policy Normalization in High-Income Rajan, R. 2014. “Concerns about Competitive Countries (January). Washington, DC: World Bank. Monetary Easing.” Speech at Bank of Japan, Tokyo, ______. 2014b. “Financial Market Outlook” (Feb- May 30. ruary). World Bank, Washington, DC. Rey, H. 2013. “Dilemma not Trilemma: The Global ______. 2015. Global Economic Prospects: Having Financial Cycle and Monetary Policy Indepen- Fiscal Space and Using It (January). Washington, dence.” In Proceedings of the Federal Reserve Bank DC: World Bank. of Kansas City Economic Symposium at Jackson Yellen, J. 2015a. “Normalizing Monetary Policy: Hole. Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. Prospects and Perspectives”. Speech at “The New Rothenberg, A., and F. Warnock. 2011. “Sudden Normal Monetary Policy,” a research conference Flight and True Sudden Stops.” Review of Interna- sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of San Fran- tional Economics 19 (3): 509-24. cisco, San Francisco, March 27. Sahay, R., V. B. Arora, A. V. Arvanitis, H. Faruqee, ______. 2015b. Comments after speech at “Finance P. N’Diaye, and T. M. Griffoli. 2014. “Emerging and Society,” a conference sponsored by Institute Market Volatility: Lessons from the Taper Tan- for New Economic Thinking, Washington, DC, trum.” IMF Staff Discussion Notes No. 14/9, Inter- May 6. Available at http://www.bloomberg.com/ national Monetary Fund, Washington, DC. n e w s / a r t i c l e s / 2 0 1 5 - 0 5 - 0 6 / Sánchez, M. 2013. “The Impact of Monetary Poli- yellen-s-focus-on-term-premium-getting-noticed- cies of Advanced Countries on Emerging Markets.” in-bond-market. Remarks at the 55th Annual Meeting of the Na- ______. 2015c. “The Outlook for the Economy.” tional Association of Business Economists, San Speech at the Providence Chamber of Commerce, Francisco, September 9. Providence, Rhode Island, May 22. Santacreu, A. M. 2015. “The Economic Fundamen- Zhao, Y., J. de Haan, B. Scholtens, and H. Yang. tals of Emerging Market Volatility.” Economic Syn- 2014. “Sudden Stops and Currency Crashes.” Re- opses (January), Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. view of International Economics 22 (4): 660-85. Schularick, M., and A. M. Taylor. 2012. “Credit Booms Gone Bust: Monetary Policy, Leverage Cy- cles, and Financial Crises, 1870-2008.” American Economic Review 102 (2): 1029-61. SPECIAL FEATURE 2 AFTER THE COMMODITIES BOOMWHAT NEXT FOR LOWINCOME COUNTRIES? GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 2 93 Growth in low-income countries has accelerated significantly since the early 2000s to its fastest pace in several decades. For commodity exporters, the improvement has been underpinned by rising global commodity prices and a surge in resource exploration and investment. The first section of this Special Feature explores the role of the com- modity boom over the past decade in metal and mineral exporting low-income countries, and analyzes what the recent decline in commodity prices may imply for growth in these economies. The second part takes a look at recent economic developments and prospects for near-term growth in low-income countries. In non-commodity exporting countries, growth will continue to benefit from strong domestic demand. For commodity exporters, however, the medium-term outlook has become increasingly challenging as the importance of the natural resource sector in driv- ing growth diminishes. The ability of these economies to navigate the headwinds will hinge on how well they have invested the dividends from the past commodity boom, and on the successes of structural reforms in supporting other sources of growth. A. Implications of the Recent nomic stability. However, for many of today’s LICs located in Sub-Saharan Africa and some in Central Decline in Commodity Prices and South Asia (Myanmar and Tajikistan), rapid for Commodity-Exporting growth was driven by rising commodity prices and rising demand from China (World Bank 2015a). Low-Income Countries In addition rising commodity prices also spurred in- Economic activity in low-income countries (LICs) vestment in commodity exploration and produc- began to surge in the early 2000s.1 Investment- and tion. Between 2000 and 2012, investment spending export-driven growth averaged 6.2 percent per year by global oil, gas, and base-metal mining companies during 2000-14, double the pace of the previous rose five-fold to record highs. Counting investment three decades (Figure SF2.1). Among metal and in other mined products, total investment in 2011– mineral exporting LICs (which account for almost 12 amounted to over $1 trillion. 3 In Africa, which two-thirds of current LICs), the improvement was is home to most commodity-exporting LICs, min- even more marked, with growth quadrupling dur- ing investment alone amounted to $100 billion in ing the 2000s compared with the previous decade.2 2011.4 Less is known about the scale of investment A number of factors contributed to the improve- that flowed into agriculture, but private sector in- ment, including better policy environments, a de- vestment increased in agribusiness, in the develop- crease in conflicts, and improvements in macroeco- ment of value chains, and in farmland in Africa (FAO 2012). An estimate of foreign direct invest- ment in agriculture and agribusiness in developing The authors of this Special Feature are Tehmina S. Khan (Section A) countries for 2006/07 suggests that it was a small and Gerard Kambou (Section B). 1As of 1 July 2014, low-income economies are defined as those with fraction of that in mining.5 For reasons of data avail- a gross national income (GNI) per capita, calculated using the World ability, the focus in this Feature is on the role of Bank Atlas method, of $1,045 or less in 2013; between $1,045 but energy and mining booms in the LICs. less than $12,746 for middle income; and $12,746 or more for high income. Countries currently defined as low-income include Afghani- stan, Bangladesh, Benin, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cambodia, Central African Republic, Chad, Comoros, Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, Democratic Republic of Congo, Eritrea, Ethiopia, The Gambia, 3Exploration and production spending by oil and gas companies Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Haiti, Kenya, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, quintupled to $500 billion in 2012. Investment in base metal min- Mali, Mozambique, Myanmar, Nepal, Niger, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, ing rose by a similar magnitude to reach $120 billion in 2012. If Somalia, Tajikistan, Tanzania, Togo, Uganda, and Zimbabwe. investments in other mined products, such as coal, iron ore, precious 2The definition of current metal and mineral commodity exporting metals, diamonds, and uranium is included, total mining investment low-income countries is based on that in World Bank (2015a), which is much larger. Figures are not available for 2012, but total mining defines these as countries where commodities comprise more than a investment (base and other metals) is estimated at $676 billion in quarter of total exports. These include for mining exporters Benin, 2011 (ICMM 2012). Burkina Faso, Eritrea, Guinea, Liberia, Mali, Niger, Sierra Leone, So- 4This amounts to 15 percent of global mining investment. The malia and Zimbabwe; and for oil and gas exporters Chad, Myanmar, figure includes North Africa, so actual investments in LIC countries in and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Countries that have recently Sub-Saharan Africa are much lower. See ICMM Report (2012). started or are expected to start producing over the medium term due to 5Total foreign direct investment in agriculture and agribusiness recent discoveries include Kenya, Madagascar, Mozambique, Tanzania, in developing countries was estimated at $13 billion in 2006/07, with and Uganda. Africa receiving $1 billion (World Bank 2013). 94 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE SF2.1 Growth in low-income countries formed country prospects. For instance, since 2000, Growth in low-income countries doubled during the 2000s, compared with the average 120 “giant” oil and gas fields have been discovered for the previous three decades. For many, particularly those in Sub-Saharan Africa, world-wide, located in seven clusters.6 Two of these faster growth was underpinned by a sharp increase in global commodity prices, a boon for commodity exporters. clusters are in Africa, mostly offshore East and West Africa. In Tanzania alone there have been 13 giant A. LICs: GDP growth B. Commodity-exporting LICs: Growth oil and gas discoveries (alongside other major finds in Kenya, Madagascar, Mozambique, Uganda), and Percent Percent 8 GDP Growth 12 six in West Africa in the Gulf of Guinea. Another 7 8 6 4 major frontier for giant oil and gas fields has emerged 5 0 in the Krishna and Rakhine basins in the Bay of 4 -4 3 -8 1990s 2000-07 Bengal in South Asia (Bai and Xu 2014, Basu et al. 2 Average for period 2009-14 1 -12 2010; Figure SF2.2).7 GIN MOZ MDG GIN GMB TZA ZWE ZWE NER TCD MMR ERI BDI LBR TJK RWA DRC SLE CAR TGO 0 -1 Other This section takes a closer look at the role of the Oil and gas Metal ore mining 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 exporters exporters exporters commodities boom in spurring faster growth in LICs over the past decade and a half, with a particu- lar focus on current and prospective metal and min- C. Global commodity prices D. Commodity-exporting LICs: eral commodity exporting countries. Specifically it Terms of trade effect on GDP asks the following questions: Annual price indices, 2010=100 Forecasts Change in trade balances, 2000–11, as percent of 2010 GDP • Why did commodity exploration and invest- 160 Agriculture 80 140 Base Metals 60 ment surge in LICs in the 2000s? Energy 40 120 Precious Metals 20 100 0 • What was the impact on metal and mineral 80 -20 -40 commodity exporting LICs? 60 Eritrea Niger Burundi Tajikistan Liberia Myanmar Gambia, The Mozambique Zimbabwe Sierra Leone Tanzania Madagascar C. African Rep. Rwanda Guinea Togo Congo, Dem. Rep. Chad 40 • What are the implications of the recent fall in 20 commodity prices? 0 198019851990199520002005201020152020 Why did commodity exploration and investment surge in LICs in the 2000s? E. “Giant” oil and gas discoveries: F. LICs: oil and gas and mining Major clusters, 2000-09a exports The surge in investment and exploration in com- Number of giant oil and gas fields discovered Percent of total exports modities in Africa was sparked by rising commodity 28 120 30 25 100 2013 prices and demand, changes in industry structure 80 2000 20 19 and funding, and a global shift in the location of 60 15 13 40 10 9 8 6 5 20 mining toward to developing countries. These exter- 5 3 0 nal tailwinds were coupled with better domestic Tajikistan Congo, Dem. Rep. Myanmar Gambia, The Tanzania Togo Rwanda C. African Rep. Eritrea Liberia Mozambique Guinea Chad Madagascar Burundi DRC Liberia Guinea Zimbabwe Sierra Leone Zimbabwe 0 policies at home, which made investment and ex- Central Asia Middle East Offshore Brazil Gulf of Mexico Offshore East Offshore West (Bay of Bengal) Northwest Shelf Rakhine Basin of Australia Africa Africa ploration more attractive (Arbache and Page 2009). Petroleum and Metal ore Other natural gas mining Higher commodity prices. Starting in the early 2000s, rising commodity demand underpinned a Source: World Bank, World Development Indicators. synchronized increase in prices of all major com- E. "Giant" fields are conventional fields with recoverable reserves of 500 million barrels of oil equivalent or more (Bai and Xu, 2014). modity groups. Between 2000 and 2010, base metal and energy prices rose by more than 160 percent, The growing importance of the natural resource sec- tor was reflected in a rising share of exports com- 6“Giant” fields are conventional fields with recoverable reserves pared to a decade earlier. Oil and gas exports ac- of 500 million barrels of oil equivalent or more. Despite the increas- counted for a much larger share of exports (more ing importance of unconventional shale oil and gas fields, current and future oil and gas supply is dominated by conventional giant fields (Bai than 10 percent) in five LICs; metal ore exports in and Xu 2014). nine LICs; and other mining exports in two LICs. 7The 120 giant fields discovered since 2000 are estimated to hold “proved plus probable” reserves of 248.62 billion barrels of oil equiva- For several LICs, the 2000s also marked a decade of lent. Tanzania in East Africa alone accounts for 6.8 percent of these discoveries, with several major finds that trans- reserves (Bai and Xu 2014). GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 2 95 precious metal prices by over 300 percent, and FIGURE SF2.2 Trends in commodity prices, exploration prices of agricultural and other raw materials com- and discovery modities increased by 103 and 43 percent, respec- The commodity price rise also triggered a surge in global spending on mining explo- tively (Figure SF2.1C). ration and capital expenditures on oil and gas exploration and production, which rose to historical highs. With exploration spending increasing in low income countries, The boom, which came after a long period of several have emerged as major frontiers for metal and oil and gas discoveries, with weak or declining prices and cost-cutting in the significant finds in (offshore) East and West Africa and the Bay of Bengal. Globally, lead times from disovery to production in mining are higher in developing than in mining industry, increased returns in the mining advanced countries. and oil and gas industries.8 This stimulated a A. Global crude oil exploration and B. Global mining exploration steep increase in industry spending on mining production, and mining capital expenditures expenditures and production investments (Figure SF2.2). US$, billions US$, billions US$, billions Percent Global mining exploration expenditures also rose 600 140 35 2000 2012 Percent increase (RHS) 1600 Crude oil exploration & production to an all-time high, more than ten-fold 2000 lev- 500 spending Base metal companies capital 120 30 1400 1200 els. Out of this, mining exploration spending for 400 expenditures (RHS) 100 25 1000 80 20 Africa rose fifteen-fold to reach 15 percent of 300 800 60 15 global exploration spending.9 200 40 10 600 400 100 5 Higher prices increased the profitability of in- 20 200 0 0 0 0 vestments in poorly accessible or high produc- 1990 1994 1998 2002 2006 2010 World Africa tion-cost environments.10 In Uganda, for in- C. Advanced economy share of D. Time from discovery to stance, oil discoveries of a commercial scale were global production production first made in 2006. As a landlocked country, Percent Number of years Uganda’s oil is difficult to access and challenging 55 Copper Gold 25 to process and transport.11 Nevertheless, explo- 50 20 ration investments and well appraisals went 45 15 10 ahead, lifting the value of estimated oil reserves 40 5 from initial estimates of less than 500 million 35 Oil Gas 0 barrels to 3.5 billion barrels in 2014 (US EIA 30 Australia, Canada, United Former Soviet Union, E. Rest of the world 2014). States, and Europe and 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 Chile China New sources of funding. Global mining and oil and Source: World Bank, World Development Indicators, Bloomberg, MinEx Consulting, Bai and Xu (2014), IEA, gas production has been dominated by large transna- Basu et. al. (2010) tional companies; however, the structure of the in- dustry has changed over the past decade. Junior deposits (UNECA 2011; Gelb, Kaiser and Vinuela companies have emerged as risk takers at the fore- 2012).12 Spending by junior companies is primarily front of exploration, whereas larger developers and driven by the availability of funding and they are operators have entered projects after the discovery of likely to have benefited from easy global financing conditions in recent years (Schodde 2013). 8Average In addition, China has emerged as a major source of annual returns for the top ten global mining companies are estimated to have risen from $3 billion in 2005 to just under $8 bil- exploration and development finance in Africa, lion in 2010 (UNECA 2011). Returns in the oil and gas sector are even broadening choices for governments in the region larger, since country conditions matter less, transportation (including (Box 2.1). In Eritrea for instance, a $60 million loan in unprocessed form) is easier, and the sector is less dependent on the sometimes unreliable infrastructure such as roads, railways and power in 2007 from China’s Import-Export Bank was crit- stations (UNECA 2013). ical for an investment agreement (and financing for 9Mining exploration expenditures in Africa rose to an estimated a 30 percent investment stake) with the Canadian $4.5 billion in 2012, up from just $0.3 billion in 2000 (UNECA 2011; Schodde 2014). mining operator developing the Bisha mine.13 10In addition to lower production cost, tax burdens have also been lower. The share of resource profits accruing to mining companies (rath- er than governments) in Africa is estimated to have been much larger than in other regions. This reflects the relatively limited (or recently 12The share of global mining output of the largest ten companies initiated) government participation in mining and the general absence amounts to over a third of the total (Raw Materials Group, cited from of special resource profits taxes (UNECA 2011). UNECA 2011). 11Uganda’s oil is of waxy constituency and needs heavy refining be- 13Mukumbira, R. (2007). “Eritrea signs Bisha gold/base metals fore further use (Gelb, Kaiser, and Vinuela 2012). mining agreement with Nevsun.” Published on Mineweb. http://www 96 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE SF2.3 Commodity exploration, spending and creasingly shifted from advanced countries towards discoveries in Africa developing countries, notably frontier regions such Africa has attracted a significant share of mining exploration investments reflecting the as Africa and the Arctic (ICMM 2012). fact that it is still a relatively unexplored region, with discoveries occurring close to the surface. In addition, decreasing conflict and improving low-income country policy envi- In mining, exploration in Sub-Saharan Africa was ronments improved the investment climate. particularly attractive because of the region’s rela- tively unexplored potential and low cost. The value A. Global mining exploration B. Average depth of cover for of known sub-soil assets per square kilometer in expenditures by region, 2012 discoveries, 2012 the region is estimated to be barely a quarter of Percent of total Meters Latin America 21 250 Excluding South Africa, 204 that in advanced economies (World Bank 2006, 15 200 the depth of cover falls Sub-Saharan Africa China 14 from 55 to 12 meters 2010). The cost of exploration was lower than else- 150 122 Australia 13 100 74 68 82 98 where, in part because African discoveries are oc- Canada 13 United States 7 50 55 32 curring closer to the surface than anywhere else 0 12 Pacific/South East Asia 6 except Latin America (Figure SF2.3). Africa had United States Western world Latin America Australia Canada Africa Western world Southeast Asia Rest of the Former Soviet Union & E. Europe 6 the largest discoveries per dollar of exploration cost average Pacific/ Rest of the world 3 Western Europe 2 during 2003–12: it accounted for 22 percent of 0 5 10 15 20 25 discoveries but only 15 percent of global explora- tion expenditures (Schodde 2013). Improved investment climate. The improvement C. Mineral exploration spending and D. Policy potential index discoveries, 2003-12 in the business climate was underpinned by several factors. Percent of world total, 2003–12 Policy Potential Index (100= best) 30 100 25 Exploration spending Discoveries 2006/2007 • An easing of conflict or internal political ten- 80 2010/2011 20 60 sions (Central African Republic, Democratic 15 10 40 Republic of Congo, Eritrea, Myanmar, and 5 20 0 Rwanda) provided greater political stability. 0 United States Southeast Asia Africa Latin America Western Canada Rest of the Australia Europe Tanzania Guinea (Conakry) Western Australia Madagascar Niger Mali Burkina Faso United States Zimbabwe Canada (Alberta) • Debt relief eased fiscal deficits and reduced debt Congo, Dem Rep. (average) world Pacific/ burdens (World Bank 2015b; IMF 2014a). • Economies also grew healthier, with increased growth and declining inflation, helped by Source: World Bank, MinEx Consulting, Fraser Institute Annual Survey of Mining Companies (2011). A. B. C. “Rest of World” includes Middle East, South West Asia (including India and Pakistan) and Mongolia. improvements in policy (Eritrea, Myanmar, D. The Policy Potential index is a composite index, ranging from 1 (worst) to 100 (best) that measures the ef- Rwanda). fects on exploration of government policies, including uncertainty regarding administration, interpretation and enforecement of existing regulations, environmental regulations, taxation, infrastructure, socieconomic agree- ments, political stability, labor issues, geological database and security (Fraser Insitute, 2011). The improvement in the business climate in several metal and mineral exporting countries is reflected in mining company assessments of how government policies affect exploration investment (Fraser Insti- Secular shift of global production to developing tute 2011). countries. Higher commodity prices reinforced longer-term global trends underway since the 1980s. Anecdotal evidence suggests that where policy mak- Easily accessible mineral and oil and gas deposits in ers have been keen to develop their mineral resources, the United States and Europe have shrunk. Techno- lead times between discovery and production have logical innovations have allowed extraction in previ- been shorter than in countries with less-conducive ously inaccessible or less-developed regions (includ- policy environments.14 A few examples, of both ing deep-water). The development of large bulk shorter and longer lead times, illustrate this point. shipping carriers has facilitated the transportation of • Eritrea: eight years from discovery to production. bulk commodities such as iron-ore coal and bauxite Following the end of a border conflict with (ICMM 2012; Lusty and Gunn 2015). As a result, Ethiopia in 2000, gold and base metal deposits the location of production and exploration has in- 14In general, the lead time between discovery and production in .mineweb.com/archive/eritrea-signs-bisha-goldbase-metals-mining mining tends to be long (e.g. up to 10 years for gold and 17 years for -agreement-with-nevsun/ copper), especially in developing countries (Schodde 2103). GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 2 97 were discovered at Bisha in 2003. Mine con- FIGURE SF2.4 Impact on growth, production, and struction began in 2008 and was completed by exports 2010. Gold production started in 2011, transi- The acceleration in growth in commodity exporting low income countries has been tioning to commercial copper production in broad based. The large positive terms of trade shock between 2000 and 2011 was 2013 (Economist Intelligence Unit 2013). reflected in surging exports and a signficant increase in the production of commodi- ties. With imports also rising, partly reflecting mine development capital goods, cur- • Myanmar: two years from new law to active explo- rent account deficits widened in some countries. Rising commodity sector revenues boosted public sector receipts. ration. Following the settlement of a maritime boundary dispute with Bangladesh in 2012, A. Commodity-exporting LICs: B. Commodity-exporting LICs: Distribution of growth Terms of trade Myanmar reformed its foreign direct invest- Number of countries Change in terms of trade, 2000-11, percent ment law and provided greater revenue incen- 9 1990s 150 2000-07 120 tives for international company investments in 8 2009-14 90 7 60 2012. It has since issued oil and gas exploration 6 30 5 0 licenses for 20 blocks in the Rakhine Basin in 4 -30 2014, where giant gas discovery was first made -60 3 Eritrea Comoros Mozambique Benin Zimbabwe Nepal Haiti Gambia, The Niger Guinea-Bissau Burkina Faso Kenya Burundi Togo Togo Bangladesh Cambodia Tanzania Madagascar Sierra Leone Uganda Rwanda Guinea Ethiopia Congo, Dem. Rep. 2 in 2002 . Bangladesh, in contrast, has been sig- 1 nificantly slower in inviting exploration bids, 0 <0 0 to 2 2 to 4 4 to 6 6 to 8 8 to 10 >10 with only five offshore blocks allocated for ex- Average GDP growth rate, percent ploration in 2014. C. LICs: Primary sector exports D. Africa: Value of commodity • Uganda: at least a decade from discovery to pro- production duction. In Uganda, internal disputes over taxes Exports, US$, billions Petroleum and natural gas Constant 2010 US$, billions Percent 2000 and the viability of building a refinery for oil 40 Metal ores Coal 35 2010 Increase 2000-10 (RHS) 200 30 reserves discovered in 2006 have significantly Agriculture, forestry, fishing, and mining 9.3 25 150 30 20 delayed the award of production licenses and, 7.8 15 100 10 consequently, production.15 Production start 20 2.1 5 50 dates have been pushed from 2016, as initially 10 0 0 Copper Iron ore Oil Gas Mining total Coal Food 17.3 planned, to 2018, or later. 0 • Guinea: at least two decades from exploration to 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 production. Simandou, a remote mountainous E. Commodity-exporting LICs: F. Commodity-exporting LICs: area in Guinea, is the world’s largest known un- Current account deficits Government revenues tapped deposit of high-grade iron-ore, with an Percent of GDP Percent of GDP estimated mine life of 40 years.16 Exploration 10 Change 2001-07, 30 20 5 percentage points rights were first granted in 1997 to Rio Tinto. 0 2007 10 0 However, with the mine subject to protracted -5 -10 -10 Change 2000–14, percentage points international legal disputes since 2008, produc- -20 2014 -15 -30 tion is not expected to start until at least 2019.17 Guinea Niger Gambia, The Tajikistan Guinea-Bissau Kenya Burkina Faso Benin Mali Uganda Tanzania Mozambique Cameroon Liberia C. African Rep. Burundi Ethiopia Sierra Leone Rwanda Togo Eritrea Malawi Congo, Dem. Rep. TZA GMB MOZ GIN ERI SLE CAF RWA TGO LBR TJK UGA TCD MMR DRC Metal ore and Oil and gas mining exporters exporters Source: World Bank, Comtrade, UNECA (2013). What was the impact of the boom on metal and mineral commodity exporting LIC 15http://www.independent.co.ug/cover-story/9694-uganda-oil- economies? now-for-2020 16Project development costs are estimated at $20-$30 billion, in- cluding rail lines needed to provide port access. The commodity boom boosted investment and ex- 17These started with the government decision in 2008 to revoke Rio ports, and resulted in a broad-based improvement Tinto’s rights to mine half of the blocks it had been awarded, assigning in growth. Rising revenues from the commodity them instead to another company, which in turn sold a portion on to Vale, another international miner. Rio Tinto had to pay $700 million sector meanwhile enabled increases in growth- in 2011 to secure the remainder of its concession. Although a new gov- enhancing government investment (Figure SF2.4). ernment is investigating the award of past contracts, the ongoing legal This led to increased employment and incomes, dispute has continued to delay production. 98 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE SF2.5 Impact on investment umented, including for Africa (Deaton and Miller Investment growth accelerated significantly in LICs relative to previous decades, 1996, Awel 2012, Raddatz 2007).18 Model simula- reflected in a rising share of GDP. In some resource rich countries, cumulative mining tions of a 10 percent shock to commodity prices investments between 2000 and 2011 amounted to over 20 percent of GDP. result in an approximately 1 percent increase in A. LICs: Investment growth B. LICs: Contribution to GDP growth GDP per capita in Africa (Raddatz 2007). Overall Percent Percentage points growth impacts from terms-of-trade improvements 20 10 Investment 8 Net exports and increasing commodity exports to China have 15 Investment growth Private consumption 6 Government consumption also proven to be significant in a number of com- 10 GDP growth (percent) 4 modity-producing countries in Africa (Busse 5 Average for period 2 et al. 2014). 0 0 -5 Output and exports: Between 2000 and 2010, -2 -10 -4 commodity production in Africa increased by about 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 1970s 1980s 1990s 2000s 2010-14 one-quarter, albeit with considerable variation C. LICs: Investment, 2014 D. Cumulative investments in across different metals and hydrocarbons (UNECA mining, 2000–11 2013). Separate data is not available for global LIC Percent of GDP Change relative to average level in 2000-03 Percent of GDP Percent of GDP output; however exports can be used as a proxy for 60 Level in 2014 30 120 500 production given the limited domestic use. Metal 100 Lower estimate 400 40 20 80 Upper estimate 60 300 and hydrocarbon exports of LICs rose fifteen-fold 20 10 200 0 0 40 during 2000–13 (Figure SF2.5); and the contribu- 20 100 -20 -10 0 0 tion of exports to growth doubled over this period. Benin Tajikistan Afghanistan Burkina Faso Guinea-Bissau Mali Cambodia Burundi Kenya Comoros Mozambique Haiti C. African Rep. Sierra Leone Bangladesh Nepal Myanmar Gambia, The Niger Malawi Togo Tanzania Madagascar Uganda Cameroon Rwanda Ethiopia Congo, Dem. Rep. Niger Burkina Faso Tanzania Zambia Ghana Mozambique Congo, Dem. Rep Namibia Sierra Leone Mauritania Guinea Liberia (RHS) Investment. Investment growth accelerated sharply (Figure SF2.5), with its contribution to growth ris- ing from less than one-fifth in the 1990s to over one- E. Selected metal and mineral exporting countries: FDI inflows half over the past decade. Mining investment was Quarterly FDI inflows, US$, billions particularly substantial in 2000–11 in several LICs; 4.0 cumulative spending over this period amounted to 3.5 Uganda Tanzania more than 20 percent of 2010 GDP in the Demo- Tajikistan Mozambique cratic Republic of Congo, Sierra Leone, Mozam- 3.0 Myanmar Madagascar 2.5 bique, and Guinea (McMahon and Tracy 2012), in 2.0 some countries reflecting substantial FDI inflows. 1.5 Rising revenues from the mineral sector also lifted 1.0 public investment spending, especially spending on 0.5 energy and transport infrastructure for accessing ex- 0.0 port markets (IMF 2014a, 2014b). 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 Jobs and consumption and gains in poverty re- Source: WDI, McMahon and Moreira (2012), World Bank, IFS. duction. Although natural resource sectors tend to D. Comprises investment in both mining construction and exploration. be capital intensive, the rapid growth of mining activity—more so than oil and gas—has been an which encouraged consumption spending. How- important source of job creation. For instance, ever, on the negative side, it tended to cause an ap- greenfield FDI into natural resource sectors in Af- preciation of real exchange rate, and hence a loss of rica overall created some 600,000 jobs between competitiveness for non-resource based activity (the 2003 and 2012, of which 400,000 were in mining. Dutch Disease syndrome). For every million U.S. dollars of investment, the Terms of trade: A marked improvement occurred in mining sector is estimated to have generated three the terms of trade of commodity exporters, with im- jobs – about ten times as many in the oil and gas plied improvements in trade balances estimated at sector (UNECA 2013). The opening of new mines over 50 percent of GDP in some countries (Figure 18For example, see Go et. al. (2013); Izquierdo, Romero and Talvi SF2.1.D). The expansionary growth impacts from (2008); De Gregorio and Labbé (2011); Céspedes and Velasco (2012) commodity based terms-of trade shocks is well doc- and Cavalcanti et al. (2015) GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 2 99 has brought structural shifts in local employment, FIGURE SF2.6 Employment and poverty raising employment and non-seasonal work op- Widespread artisanal and small scale mining in Sub-Saharan Africa is likely to portunities for women that tend to last beyond the have helped support private consumption. Poverty rates have fallen in commodity- exporting LICs, but overall rates remain extremely high. life of the mine (Kotsadam and Tolonen 2015). In addition, for every mining job, there 0.5 to 3 ad- A. Commodity-exporting LICs: Artisanal B. Commodity-exporting LICs: ditional jobs in supporting activities; (McMahon and small scale-mining Extreme poverty rates and Tracy 2012; McMahon and Remy 2001; Kap- Thousands Thousands Percent 1,600 10,000 2000 or earliest 2012 or latest stein and Kim 2011). Number of dependents (RHS) 8,000 100 1,200 80 6,000 It should also be noted that mining activity in 800 Number of artisanal and small-scale miners 4,000 60 40 many Sub-Saharan LICs includes wide-spread di- 400 2,000 20 0 0 0 rect local employment by artisanal and small-scale Congo, Dem.… Gambia, The Tanzania C. African Rep. Tajikistan Sierra Leone Madagascar Chad Burundi Niger Togo Mozambique Rwanda Liberia Burkina Faso Guinea Mali Uganda Sierra Leone C. African Rep. Madagascar Zimbabwe Tanzania Chad Liberia Eritrea Mozambique Niger Ethiopia mining operations, as well those of international corporations (Figure SF2.6, UNECA 2011). This has helped support incomes, private consumption and welfare in the area. For instance, the opening Source: UNECA (2011). World Development Indicators of a new large-scale mine is found to changes eco- B. Extreme poverty rates are the share of the population living on $1.25 or less per day (PPP-adjusted, 2005 U.S. dollars). nomic outcomes, such as access to employment and cash earning, with evidence pointing to in- creased household expenditure on housing and en- FIGURE SF2.7 Public sector receipts and spending ergy, and lower infant mortality (Chuhan-Pole et. Government revenues in commodity exporting LICs have been bolstered by rising al. 2014). That said, although sustained growth receipts from the mineral sector. Prior to the global financial crisis, most countries and rising demand for non-tradable services have appeared to have contained spending pressures. Since then however, spending has increased significantly as a share of GDP in some countries. contributed to a decline in poverty rates, at 43 per- cent, the average poverty headcount in resource A. Commodity-exporting LICs: B. Commodity-exporting LICs: exporters remains high (Figure SF2.6). Government revenues Government spending Real exchange rate appreciation and Dutch Dis- Percent of GDP Percent of GDP 30 80 ease. In oil-exporting LICs in the CFA franc 20 60 2000 2007 2014 10 zone, rapid growth of natural resource sectors has 0 40 been associated with real appreciations, and -10 Change, 2000-07 -20 Change, 2009-14 20 weakened competitiveness of other tradables ac- -30 2014 0 tivity (Trevino 2011). For example, real exchange GMB TZA GIN MOZ ERI CAF RWA LBR TGO TJK SLE UGA MMR TCD DRC TZA GMB GIN MOZ ERI CAR SLE TGO RWA TJK LBR UGA TCD MMR DRC rate appreciation in African economies associated Metal ore and Oil and gas Metal ore and mining Oil and gas mining exporters exporters exporters exporters with rising exports to and investment flows from China, may have hampered industrial diversifica- Source: World Bank, IMF. tion (Guillaumont Jeanneney and Hua 2015) and buoyed activity in non-tradable services sectors. In several African commodity-exporting coun- Cyclicality of fiscal policies. Compared with ear- tries, services sector growth is stronger than in lier commodity price booms, macroeconomic poli- countries with similar per capita income levels cies in Sub-Saharan Africa were less procyclical, (Timmer et. al. 2012). during much of the 2000s (World Bank 2009). Shrinkage of agriculture, growth of informal Whereas during the commodities boom in the urban sectors. Despite the expansion of extrac- 1980s, government expenditure growth in coun- tive industries, agriculture still employs the ma- tries dependent on primary commodities outpaced jority of workers in commodity-exporting low GDP growth, between 2000 and 2007 it was income countries. Although there has been a sig- broadly in line or even significantly less (Eritrea, nificant shift out of agriculture, exiting workers Guinea, Mozambique, Sierra Leone; Figure SF2.7). have been mainly absorbed by informal and low Since 2007 however, government spending has in- productivity urban service sectors (McMillan and creased faster than GDP in some commodity ex- Harttgen 2014). porters. In part this reflects fiscal stimulus employed 100 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 by some (Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda) in the after- nearly 40 percent, and between 10–20 percent in the math of the global crisis and greater spending on Democratic Republic of Congo, Guinea, Liberia growth-enhancing infrastructure spending.19 and Sierra Leone (World Bank 2015a). This sets back growth, as export and commodity-related fiscal What are the implications of the recent fall in revenues fall.20 These negative effects will be likely be commodity prices? reinforced by rising volatility in commodity terms of trade (Blattman et. al. 2007, Cavalcanti et al. 2012). Given heavy dependence on commodities for export Indications are that volatility in prices, particularly earnings and fiscal revenues, commodity exporting base metals and oil, is also increasing (World Bank LICs are especially vulnerable to commodity price 2015a, 2015d). movements. Since their peak in February 2011, en- ergy and metals prices have declined sharply (see The fall in commodity prices complicates the task of Chapter 1). Prices of copper, iron ore, and oil have macroeconomic management, as pressures on public declined by 38–63 percent reflecting oversupplied sector balance sheets and exchange rates mount in markets and weaker global demand, including from several LICs at a time when growth is slowing (see China. The deterioration in the terms of trade since following section). Although many commodity- 2011 has been large (Figure SF2.8). Since 2014, the exporting LICs have made progress in enhancing terms of trade decline in Chad has amounted to transparency in the resource sector—eleven are com- pliant with the Extractive Industries Transparency 19Kasekende Initiative (EITI) standards—only nine have fiscal et al. (2010). rules or stabilization funds in place to act as buffers FIGURE SF2.8 Commodity dependence: An Achilles heel to cope with adverse shocks (IMF 2013). Revenue dependence on the commodity sector, meanwhile, The terms of trade shock since 2011 associated with the decline in commodity prices has been large. With a substantial share of fiscal revenues derived from the extractive remains high. If governments are forced to scale back sector, fiscal pressures have increased. The number of oil rigs has begun to decline, spending on social services and critical public infra- suggesting that oil and gas investment is beginning to slow. Manufacturing sectors remain small in most, suggestive of Dutch Disease effect. structure projects as resource-revenues fall, gains in poverty reduction could be lost, and prospects for A. Commodity exporting LICs: Terms B. Commodity exporting LICs: future growth could be damaged by growing infra- of trade since 2012 Growth-enhancing expenditures structure deficiencies and bottlenecks. Change in terms of trade from maximum Percent of GDP value in 2010–12 vs. 2014, percent 20 25 2000 or earliest available Over the medium term, persistently low commod- 20 2013 or latest available 10 15 ity prices may reduce the attractiveness of mining 0 -10 10 and oil and gas investment. Mining investment is 5 -20 0 highly cyclical and, after discovery, mining and en- -30 Uganda Gambia, The Benin Sierra Leone Guinea-Bissau Guinea Niger Madagascar Togo Liberia Rwanda Tanzania Mozambique Malawi Burundi C. African Republic Congo, Dem. Rep. ergy projects typically require several years (and Mali Guinea Tanzania Burkina Faso Uganda Guinea-Bissau Burundi Ethiopia Sierra Leone Madagascar Benin Kenya Malawi Gambia, The Comoros Cambodia Rwanda Zimbabwe Haiti Mozambiqe Eritrea South Africa Togo Nepal Bangladesh sometimes decades) to be developed to production. Since 1980, there have been four major “boom-and- bust” cycles in metal prices, with spending declin- ing, on average, by 45 percent during the downturn. C. Rig counts D. Commodity exporting LICs: Size With the industry now entering what may be a fifth of manufacturing down-cycle (Schodde 2013) and given the signs of Number of rig counts Number of rig counts Percent of GDP 500 180 20 2000 oversupply for some commodities (especially, oil 160 16 2013 or latest and iron ore), companies may wait several years un- 400 140 33 12 120 8 300 100 4 20Separate research for Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) 80 200 0 60 region suggest that the average LAC economy will grow at a signifi- Eritrea Tajikistan Mozambique Zimbabwe Sierra Leone Liberia Niger C. African Rep. Myanmar Tanzania Burundi Chad Rwanda Madagascar Togo Congo, Dem. Rep. 100 40 South America Africa (RHS) cantly slower pace even in a context of high but non-increasing com- 20 0 0 modity prices. More precisely, if prices were to remain stable at their 2013 average levels, average annual GDP growth over the medium term 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 (2014–19) would be almost 1 percentage point lower than in 2012–13 and more than 1½ percentage points lower than over 2003–11. If com- Source: World Bank, IMF (2013), Baker Hughes Incorporated,various Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative modity prices were to evolve as implied by commodity futures as of (EITI) reports early 2014, average output growth would be even lower, by roughly another ¾ of a percentage point (Gruss 2014). GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 2 101 til the next upswing in prices to resume investment. been unduly inflated. It is difficult therefore to see In addition, in a riskier environment, with interest how other sectors could, over the medium term, rate increases in the United States on the horizon, fully pick up the slack left by declining exports and the rising financing cost for smaller exploration investment spending. companies could curtail their ability to carry out ex- ploration. Rising financing costs and low commod- Conclusion and policy recommendations ity prices may sharply curtail exploration and devel- opment activity. The commodity boom has been pivotal in raising growth, exports and investment in metals and min- Sharp commodity price declines have disrupted erals in commodity-producing LICs. However, im- new foreign investments and in some cases produc- provements in poverty reduction, and in higher pro- tion in extractive-based industries. The number of ductivity employment, are less clear. Looking ahead, oil rigs—for on-land oil drilling—has already de- the sheer size of recent commodity discoveries in clined from its peak in the fourth quarter of last some countries will continue to bode well for long year, by 15 percent in South America, and 11 per- term growth prospects in some countries, notably in cent in Africa. In Sierra Leone, falling iron ore East Africa. However, over the medium term, the prices have lowered profits and reduced the market global economic environment will be less favorable value of the iron ore companies operating in the to growth in commodity-exporting LICs than it has country (the collapsed London Mining and African been over the past decade and a half. Prospects are Minerals). This has led not only to lower foreign for a protracted adjustment to lower and more vola- investments in the sector but also to the shutdown of operations in Tonkolili (the second largest iron tile commodity prices, weaker demand for exports, ore mine in Africa and one of the largest magnetite and reduced resource investment and production in deposits in the world). In Sub-Saharan Africa, proj- the next few years. ects considered to be most at risk include the ex- The ability to navigate these headwinds will cru- pensive ultra-deepwater and pre-salt projects in cially depend on the extent to which policymakers West Africa, and the liquefied natural gas projects have saved the windfalls from the commodity boom in East Africa (BMI 2015). over the past decade, or used them for growth- As rents decline, country specific factors will likely enhancing investments (Gill et al. 2014). Among become more important, including changes in do- countries that are highly dependent on natural re- mestic mineral policy regimes. For example, new source sectors, those with low policy and reserve mining taxes, or tighter ownership and exploitation buffers, and large fiscal or current account deficits, rules, or delays in licenses will add to production face potentially disruptive adjustments. In other costs (Guinea, Uganda, Zimbabwe). In some re- countries, with more diversified economies, such as gions rising conflict or security risks are an increas- Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda, the emergence of a ingly serious issue (e.g., Mali). A decline in resource- large, vibrant, middle-class should help to support related investment is likely to be associated with private consumption (McKinsey 2011). declining investment in auxiliary projects, especially Going forward, policy will continue to play a criti- transport infrastructure. cal role. Policies that improve the conditions to do Finally, Dutch Disease associated with the commod- business and ease supply side and infrastructure ity boom means that, for many commodity-export- constraints will increase the return on capital in ing LICs, shifting growth away from a shrinking both the resource and the non-resource sectors. Pol- natural resource sector may prove hard. Rising infra- icy makers should refrain from trying to offset head- structure investment in some countries in East Af- winds from the turn in the commodity cycle with rica, assisted by growing investment and aid flows demand stimulus that would also deplete buffers. from China, could offset some of the headwinds Instead, in the interests of more stable growth in the from slowing commodity sectors (see Box 2.1). future, they should focus on structural reforms that However, for many LICs, non-resource tradable sec- support the non-commodity sectors. This would in- tors have atrophied to a point where they will be dif- clude building infrastructure, and sound institu- ficult to revive, and in some cases service sectors have tions (Gill et al. 2014). Evidence for Africa shows that better institutions encourage low inflation, as 102 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE SF2.9 Drivers of growth in low-income countries metals.21 Several commodity-exporting LICs have Although several low-income countries are heavily dependent on the natural resource limited buffers to absorb this deterioration. Oil- sector for exports and fiscal revenues, many low-income country economies have large importing LICs, on the other hand, are expected to agricultural sectors and receive significant remittance inflows. benefit from shrinking vulnerabilities as current ac- A. LICs: Commodity exports, 2013 B. LICs: Commodity revenues, latest count balances improve on falling oil import costs. available Political uncertainty has mounted in some LICs. Percent of total exports Percent Percent 100 Energy 20 Percent of GDP 80 Elections are scheduled for October 2015 in Tanza- Percent of government revenues (RHS) 80 Metals Agricultural 15 60 nia and Afghanistan. Afghanistan is in the midst of 60 40 10 40 a political and security transition, partly related to 20 5 20 the withdrawal of U.S. troops, which is taking a toll 0 0 0 on the economy. Bangladesh is experiencing signifi- Burundi Liberia Myanmar Guinea-Bissau Mozambique Kenya Ethiopia Sierra Leone Tanzania Gambia, The Niger Benin Chad Rwanda Uganda Togo Malawi Congo, Dem. Rep. Mozambique Sierra Leone Togo Tanzania Burkina Faso Madagascar* Mali Niger Liberia Afghanistan* Guinea Congo, Dem. Rep. Chad cant supply chain disruptions related to political unrest. This is weighing on garment exports, which make up 80 percent of total exports, and is contrib- uting to the emergence of a current account deficit. C. Remittances, 2014 D. LICs: Agriculture, 2012 Percent of GDP Percent of GDP Exchange rates have come increasingly under pres- 50 40 35 sure, in commodity-exporting and -importing 40 30 30 25 countries alike. This has reflected partly the broad- 20 20 15 based strengthening of the U.S. dollar since mid- 10 10 0 5 2014, and partly a reassessment of country risks and 0 vulnerabilities.22 The currencies of metal-exporting Mali Kenya Benin Uganda Rwanda Afghanistan Guinea-Bissau Gambia, The Tajikistan Niger Bangladesh Togo Liberia Comoros Haiti Nepal Guinea Zimbabwe Uganda Malawi Tanzania Tajikistan Bangladesh Mozambique Rwanda Nepal countries and the currencies of countries with large current account or fiscal deficits (Tanzania, Kenya), have depreciated particularly sharply against the Source: WDI, Comtrade, World Bank, IMF, various Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) reports B. Extractive industry sector payments (taxes, royalties, dividends) to the government from EITI reports from U.S. dollar. 2011–2013. Depreciations partly offset the disinflationary im- pact of lower oil prices. Cheaper fuel helped lower well as FDI inflows, and output growth stability inflation and improve current account deficits (Ke- (Ahmed and Suardi, 2009; Poelhekke and van der nya) and fiscal deficits (Bangladesh) in some net-oil Ploeg, 2013). importing LICs in the first quarter of 2015. In sev- eral countries, inflation moved back within (Bangla- desh, Kenya) or towards (Malawi) target ranges, B. Recent Developments allowing central banks to keep interest rates on hold or to raise them at a slower pace than otherwise. In and Near-Term Outlook in other countries, however, inflation increased as a re- Low-Income Countries sult of currency depreciation (Haiti, Tajikistan, Tan- zania, Uganda). Thus far, large agricultural sectors, remittances, For 2015–17, growth in LICs, on average, is ex- and public investment have cushioned the impact pected to remain above 6 percent, reflecting con- of sharply weaker terms of trade in commodity- tinuing strong output growth in several large LICs, exporting LICs (Figure SF2.9, World Bank 2015a, supported by sustained investment in public infra- 2015b). Growth in LICs was flat in 2014, but is structure (Ethiopia) and mining (Democratic Re- expected to pick up in 2015 and remain robust dur- public of Congo). Consumer spending should be ing 2016–17 (Figure SF2.10). Declining commod- ity prices, however, are likely to increasingly put 21Countries with oil, gas, and metals exports in excess of 5 percent pressure on fiscal and current account balances of of total exports include Ethiopia, Kenya, Madagascar, Mozambique, LICs that rely heavily on exports of energy and Nepal, Niger, Rwanda, Uganda, Zimbabwe. 22The depreciations in LICs in the CFA franc zone reflected their currencies’ peg to the euro. Low-income CFA franc zone countries in- clude Benin, Burkina Faso, Central African Republic, Chad, Guinea- Bissau, Mali, Niger, and Togo. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 2 103 boosted (Bangladesh, Uganda), by growth in remit- FIGURE SF2.10 Growth prospects tances, even if this growth is down from 2014 Growth should remain supported by resilient remittances, public investment, and strong (Bangladesh). harvests. However, risks remain on the downside. Despite lower commodity prices, the forecast is for A. LICs: Growth prospects B. LICs: Exchange rate depreciation against the U.S. dollar, mid-2014 mining output to rise in a number of countries as to March 2015 past investments come on stream (e.g., gold and Percent Percent 9 35 copper in Democratic Republic of Congo, coal in 8 30 25 Mozambique) and other mining investments pro- 7 20 6 ceed, albeit at a slower pace (Mozambique, Tanza- 5 15 10 nia). Several governments are prioritizing infrastruc- 4 5 3 0 ture projects, including in the energy sector, in some 2 -5 Guinea Madagascar Uganda Tanzania Malawi Kenya Sierra Leone Comoros CFA Franc zone The Gambia Ethiopia Mozambique Haiti DRC Eritrea Burundi Nepal Bangladesh Rwanda LIC oil and metal exporters 1 LIC others as part of recent regional agreements to upgrade re- 0 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 gional energy grids (Kenya, Rwanda). Elsewhere, heavy government infrastructure investment is sup- ported by Chinese financing (Côte d’Ivoire and Source: IMF World Economic Outlook, IMF staff reports, World Bank, Haver Analytics. Ethiopia; BMI 2015). In several fragile countries (Madagascar, Malawi, FIGURE SF2.11 Vulnerabilities Mali), growth should pick up as investment rises on Risks are increasingly on the downside. Government spending has risen sharply in some the back of increased political stability. Rising political countries, and deficits may prove hard to finance. Current account deficits are large in uncertainty will, however, dampen growth somewhat some countries and reserve buffers low. in Bangladesh in the near-term, although domestic de- A. Fiscal deficits, 2014 B. LICs: Current account deficits, 2014 mand should remain supported by resilient remit- Percent of GDP Percent of GDP 0 10 tances. In Nepal, strong remittance inflows should -2 0 -4 help support domestic demand and post-earthquake -6 -10 -8 reconstruction. Recovering activity in Guinea, Liberia, -10 -20 -30 and Sierra Leone as the effects of the Ebola crisis wane -12 -40 -14 should also help to support growth in these countries. Gambia, The Cambodia Guinea-Bissau Kenya Chad Mali Sierra Leone Myanmar Haiti Mozambique Zimbabwe Guinea Bangladesh Niger Burundi DRC Tajikistan Uganda Togo Rwanda Tanzania Benin Burkina Faso Cameroon Eritrea Nepal Liberia Ethiopia Malawi Afghanistan Cameroon Guinea Mali Tanzania Eritrea Gambia, The Kenya Malawi Uganda Sierra Leone Mozambique Haiti Togo Niger Liberia Myanmar Chad Rwanda Burundi Bangladesh Risks to the outlook The outlook is subject to significant and increasing C. LICs: International reserves, 2014 downside risks. Months of imports 7 • A further decline in commodity prices would 6 5 sharply lower revenue in oil-exporting coun- 4 tries, requiring them to undertake deeper fiscal 3 adjustments, with sharper expenditure cuts. It 2 may prompt some commodity extraction com- 1 panies to delay or even cancel planned invest- 0 Liberia Gambia, The Kenya Tanzania Burundi Myanmar Mozambique Togo Sierra Leone Malawi Ethiopia Uganda Rwanda Congo, Dem. Chad ments in 2015 (Guinea, Mozambique, Tanza- Rep. nia, Uganda). Given the importance of artisanal and small-scale mining in LICs, domestic pri- vate consumption may also prove weaker than Source: World Bank, IMF expected in the baseline. Note: Reserve buffers are from latest publicly available IMF staff reports. B. DRC denotes Democratic Republic of Congo. • Lower oil prices would also cause a more pro- • Conflict could intensify again in fragile states tracted recession than anticipated in Russia and (e.g., al-Shabab in Kenya, or insurgencies in dampen growth in Tajikistan through lower re- Mali). mittances and exports. • A sudden adjustment of market expectations to the upcoming tightening of monetary policy in the United States could put pressures on capital 104 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 account inflows, and exchange rates, and on debt government spending has reduced fiscal space. As a service costs of countries that have tapped inter- result, several now have large twin deficits, with fiscal national capital markets since the crisis (Tanza- and current account deficits in excess of 5 percent of nia, Kenya, Rwanda, Mozambique, Ethiopia). GDP (Guinea, Kenya, Mozambique, Niger). LICs continued to have limited buffers to absorb stresses should risks materialize. Current account deficits, and government borrowing requirements References are large in many LICs (Figure SF2.11). Reserve cov- Ahmed, A., and S. Suardi. 2009. “Macroeconomic erage of imports in several countries is below three Volatility, Trade and Financial Liberalization in Af- months of imports (Chad, Ethiopia, Democratic rica.” World Development Review, 37 (10). Republic of Congo). Notwithstanding the spending restraint applied by commodity-exporting LICs un- til 2007, the sharp post-global crisis expansion in TABLE SF2.1 Low-income country growth forecasts (Real GDP growth at market prices in percent, unless indicated otherwise) 00-10a 2011 2012 2013 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f Low-income country 5.7 6.1 6.5 6.2 6.2 6.2 6.6 6.6 Afghanistan 12.8 6.1 14.4 3.7 2.0 2.5 5.0 5.1 Bangladeshb 6.1 6.5 6.0 6.1 5.6 6.3 6.7 6.7 Benin 3.9 3.3 5.4 5.6 5.5 4.6 4.6 4.7 Burkina Faso 6.0 4.2 9.5 6.5 4.5 5.0 6.2 6.5 Burundi 3.3 4.2 4.0 4.6 4.7 4.8 5.0 5.2 Cambodia 8.0 7.1 7.3 7.4 7.0 6.9 6.9 6.8 Chad 10.7 0.1 8.9 4.0 7.3 9.0 4.7 5.6 Comoros 2.9 2.6 3.0 3.5 3.2 3.4 3.7 3.8 Congo, Dem. Rep. 4.7 6.9 7.1 8.5 9.0 8.0 8.5 9.0 Eritrea 0.9 8.7 7.0 1.3 2.0 1.5 2.0 2.2 Ethiopiab 8.6 11.2 8.6 10.5 10.3 9.5 10.5 8.5 Gambia, The 4.6 -4.3 5.9 4.8 -0.2 3.0 5.1 6.1 Guinea 2.6 3.9 3.9 2.3 0.4 -0.3 2.3 2.5 Guinea-Bissau 2.5 9.0 -2.2 0.3 2.5 4.2 3.9 4.0 Haiti 0.1 5.5 2.9 4.2 2.7 1.7 3.2 3.1 Kenya 4.4 6.1 4.5 5.7 5.3 6.0 6.6 6.5 Madagascar 2.6 1.5 3.0 2.4 3.0 4.6 4.8 5.0 Malawi 4.5 4.3 1.9 5.0 5.7 5.1 5.6 5.9 Mali 5.7 2.7 0.0 1.7 6.8 5.6 5.1 5.2 Mozambique 7.7 7.4 7.1 7.4 7.4 7.2 7.3 7.3 Myanmar 10.3 5.9 7.3 8.3 8.5 8.5 8.2 8.0 Nepalbc 3.9 3.4 4.9 3.8 5.5 4.2 4.5 5.5 Niger 4.6 2.3 11.0 4.1 6.2 4.5 5.5 7.7 Rwanda 7.9 7.9 8.8 4.7 7.0 7.0 7.0 7.5 Sierra Leone 8.9 6.0 15.2 20.1 6.0 -12.8 8.4 8.9 Tajikistan 8.3 7.4 7.5 7.4 6.7 3.2 4.4 5.2 Tanzania 7.0 6.4 6.9 7.0 7.2 7.2 7.1 7.1 Togo 2.0 4.9 5.9 5.1 5.5 5.1 4.9 4.7 Uganda 7.8 4.7 3.6 4.8 5.2 5.5 5.7 5.8 Zimbabwe -4.7 11.9 10.6 4.5 3.2 1.0 2.5 3.5 Source: World Bank. World Bank forecasts are frequently updated based on new information and changing (global) circumstances. Consequently, projections presented here may differ from those contained in other Bank documents, even if basic assessments of countries’ prospects do not significantly differ at any given moment in time. Central African Rep., Korea, Dem Rep., Liberia, and Somalia are not forecasted owing to data limitations. a. GDP growth rates over intervals are compound average over the period. b. GDP growth based on fiscal year data. c. Nepal forecasts are preliminary. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 2 105 Arbache, J.S., and J. Page. 2009. “How Fragile Is Af- Economist Intelligence Unit. 2013. “Copper Expan- rica’s Recent Growth?” Journal of African Economies. sion Project at Bisha is Completed.” http://country. Bai, G, and Y. Xu. 2014. “Giant Fields Retain Dom- eiu.com/article.aspx?articleid=1390623723. inance in the Reserves Growth.” Oil and Gas Journal FAO, 2012. Proceedings of a Technical Workshop 122 (2). on Policies for Promoting Investment in Agriculture, Basu, P., R. Verma, R. Paul, and K. Viswanath. 2010. 12–13 December 2012. FAO, Rome. http://www. “Deep Waters of Rakhine Basin - A New Frontier.” fao.org/fileadmin/user_upload/tcsp/docs/work- 8th Biannual International Conference and Exposi- shop%20final.pdf tion on Petroleum Geophysics. Hyderabad, India. Fraser Institute. 2011. “Annual Survey of Mining http://www.spgindia.org/2010/160.pdf. Companies.” Blattman, C., J. Hwang, and J. G. Williamson. Gelb, A., K. Kaiser, and L. Vinuela. 2012. “How 2007. “Winners and Losers in the Commodity Lot- Much Does Natural Resource Extraction Really Di- tery: The Impact of Terms of Trade Growth and minish National Wealth? The Implications of Dis- Volatility in the Periphery 1870-1939.” Journal of covery.” Working Paper No. 290, Center for Global Development Economics 82 (1): 156-179. Development, Washington, DC. BMI Research. 2015. “After the Commodity Boom: Gill, I. S., I. Izvorski, W. Van Eeghen, and D. De The New Growth Path.” Economic Analysis. A Fitch Rosa. 2014. Diversified Development: Making the Group Company. Most of Natural Resources in Eurasia. Washington, Busse, M., C. Erdogan, and H. Muehlen. 2014. DC: World Bank. “China's Impact on Africa - the Role of Trade, FDI Go, D. S., S. Robinson, K. Thierfelder, and R. H. and Aid.” IEE Working Papers 206. Institut fuer Utz. 2013.”Dutch Disease and Spending Strategies Entwicklungsforschung und Entwicklungspolitik, in a Resource-Rich Low-Income Country: The Case Ruhr-Universitaet Bochum. of Niger.” World Bank Policy Research Working Pa- Cavalcanti, T. V. d. V., K. Mohaddes, and M. Raissi. per No. 6691. 2014. “Commodity Price Volatility and the Sources ICMM. 2012. “Trends in the Mining and Metals of Growth.” Journal of Applied Econometrics. Industry.” InBrief Publication. Céspedes, L.F., and A. Velasco. 2012. “Macroeco- IMF. 2013. Fiscal Rules Dataset. International Mon- nomic Performance During Commodity Price etary Fund. Booms and Busts,” NBER Working Papers 18569. ______. 2014a. “Macroeconomic Developments in Chuhan-Pole, P., A. L. Dabalen, A. Kotsadam; A. Low-Income Developing Countries.” IMF Policy Sanoh, and A. K. Tolonen. 2015. “The Local Socio- Paper. September 18, 2014. economic Effects of Gold Mining: Evidence from ______. 2014b. “Public Expenditure Reform: Mak- Ghana.” Policy Research Working Paper; No. WPS ing Difficult Choices.” Fiscal Monitor. 7250. Washington, DC. Izquierdo, A., R. Romero, and E. Talvi, 2008, De Gregorio, J., and F. Labbé. 2011. “Copper, the “Booms and Busts in Latin America: The Role of Ex- Real Exchange Rate and Macroeconomic Fluctua- ternal Factors,” Research Department Publications tions in Chile,” Working Papers Central Bank of 4569. Washington, DC: Inter-American Develop- Chile 640. ment Bank. Gruss, B. 2014. “After the Boom–Commodity Prices Guillaumont Jeanneney, S., and P. Hua. 2015. “Chi- and Economic Growth in Latin America and the Ca- na's African Financial Engagement, Real Exchange ribbean.” IMF Working Paper WP/14/154. Rates and Trade between China and Africa.” Journal Deaton, A., and R. Miller. 1996. “International of African Economies 24 (1): 1-25. Commodity Prices, Macroeconomic Performance Kapstein, E., and R. Kim. 2011. “The Socio-Eco- and Politics in Sub-Saharan Africa,” Journal of Afri- nomic Impact of Newmont Ghana Gold Limited,” can Economies 5 (3). Stratcomm Africa, Haarlem. 106 S P E C I A L F E AT U R E 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 Kasekende, L., Z. Brixova, and L. Ndikumana. The Economist. 2014. “Crying Foul in Guinea.” Ar- 2010. “Africa: Africa’s Counter-Cyclical Policy Re- ticle published December 18, 2014. sponses to the Crisis,” Journal of Globalization and Timmer, M. P., G.J. de Vries, and K. de Vries. 2014. Development 1 (1). “Patterns of Structural Change in Developing Coun- Kotsadam A. and A. Tolonen. 2015. “African Min- tries.” GGDC research memorandum 149. Univer- ing, Gender, and Local Employment.” World Bank sity of Groningen. Available at http://www.ggdc.net/ Policy Research Working Paper 7251, April 2015. publications/memorandum/gd149.pdf. Lusty, P.A.J., and A. G. Gunn. 2015. “Challenges to Trevino, J. 2011. “Oil-Price Boom and Real Ex- Global Mineral Resource Security and Options for change Rate Appreciation: Is There Dutch Disease in Future Supply.” Geological Society, London, Special the CEMAC.” IMF Working Paper. WP/11/268. Publications Vol. 393, Issue 1. UNECA. 2011. “Minerals and Africa’s Develop- McKinsey. 2010. “Lions on the Move: The Progress ment: The International Study Groups Report on and Potential of African Economies”. McKinsey Africa’s Mineral Regimes.” Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Global Institute. ______. 2013. “African Economic Outlook: Struc- McMahon, G., and B. Tracy. 2012. “Firm and Sec- tural Transformation and Natural Resources. Special tor Level Mining Benefits in Zambia.” Mimeo, Oil, Thematic Edition,” published jointly by UNECA, Gas and Mining Department. World Bank, Wash- AFDB, OECD, UNDP and European ington, DC. Commission. McMahon, G., and F. Remy (eds.). 2001. “Large US EIA. 2013. “Uganda Country Analysis Note.” Mines and the Community. Socioeconomic and En- US Energy Information Administration. http:// vironmental Effects in Latin America, Canada and www.eia.gov/countries/country-data.cfm?fips=ug. Spain,” published jointly by the International Devel- World Bank. 2006. Where Is the Wealth of Nations? opment Research Center, Ottawa, and the World Measuring Capital for the 21st Century. Washington, Bank, Washington, DC. DC: World Bank. McMillan, M. S., and K. Harttgen. 2014. “What Is ______. 2009. Global Economic Prospects: Commodi- Driving the ‘Africa Growth Miracle’?” NBER Work- ties at the Crossroads. Washington, DC: World Bank. ing Paper No. 20077, April 2014. ______. 2010. The Changing Wealth of Nations: Mukumbira, R. 2007. “Eritrea Signs Bisha Gold/Base Measuring Sustainable Development in the Millen- Metals Mining Agreement with Nevsun.” Published nium. Washington, DC: World Bank. on Mineweb. http://www.mineweb.com/archive/ eritrea-signs-bisha-goldbase-metals-mining-agree- ______. 2015a. Africa Pulse. April 2015. Vol. 11. ment-with-nevsun. Washington, DC: World Bank. Naoussi, C. F., and F. Tripier. 2013. “Trend Shocks ______. 2015b. Global Economic Prospects: Having and Economic Development.” Journal of Develop- Fiscal Space and Using It. January 2015. Washington, ment Economics 103: 29–42. DC: World Bank. Poelhekke, S., and Frederick van der Ploeg. 2013. ______. 2015c. “Migration and Development Brief- “Do Natural Resources Attract Non-resource FDI?” ing.” April 2015. World Bank, Washington, DC. The Review of Economics and Statistics 95 (3). ______. 2015d. “Commodity Markets Outlook. Raddatz, C. 2007. “Are External Shocks Responsible April 2015.” Washington, DC: World Bank. for the Instability of Output in Low-income coun- Wall Street Journal. 2015. “Guinea’s Simandou Auc- tries?” Journal of Development Economics 84 (1). tion to Test Appetite for Iron Ore.” Published Febru- Schodde, R. 2013. “The Impact of Commodity ary 11, 2015. Prices and Other Factors on the Level of Explora- Villoria, N. 2009. “China's Growth and the Agricul- tion.” MinEx Consulting Presentation. tural Exports of Sub-Saharan Southern Africa.” Eu- Schodde, R. 2014. “Key Issues Affecting the Time ropean Journal of Development Research. 21. Delay Between Discovery and Development.” MinEx Consulting Presentation. CHAPTER 2 REGIONAL OUTLOOKS EAST ASIA and PACIFIC Regional growth is expected to ease further to 6.7 percent in 2015 and remain flat thereafter. This reflects a con- tinued slowdown in China that is offset by a pickup in the rest of the region. As a net hydrocarbon importer, the region is expected to benefit from low fuel prices. In 2015, headwinds from tighter fiscal policy (Malaysia, Viet- nam) and macroprudential regulation (China, Malaysia, and Thailand) are expected to be largely offset by gradual recovery of investment and manufacturing exports associated with a global recovery and continued low financing cost. Softer commodity prices have affected commodity exporting countries like the Lao People’s Demo- cratic Republic and Indornesia. Risks to this outlook remain tilted to the downside. Policy makers, especially in economies with a high share of U.S. dollar-denominated debt, will find it increasingly challenging to balance the needs of supporting growth and preserving export competitiveness against maintaining financial stability amidst an appreciating U.S. dollar and prospects of rising U.S. interest rates. Recent Developments cators of manufacturing activity point to further weakness. The size of stimulus programs to support Growth in the East Asia and Pacific (EAP) region activity has gradually declined. Policy support has slowed, as expected, by 0.2 percentage points to 6.9 become more cautious and increasingly imple- percent in 2014 (Figure 2.1 and Table 2.1). Fiscal mented by conventional tools—monetary policy and macroprudential policy tightening in the major easing, through targeted cuts in required reserve ra- regional economies, political problems in Thailand, tios and in policy rates, and fiscal support for infra- monetary tightening and election-related uncer- structure projects. Low fuel prices and stronger tainty in Indonesia, and budget execution bottle- global demand provided a boost, offsetting some of necks in the Philippines (World Bank 2015a) con- tributed to weaker economic activity. Investment the weakness in investment. The on-going shift continued to ease from the credit-fueled high rates from industry to services (including private services) of the post-crisis years. The main offset to these neg- continues to support dynamic job creation and ro- atives came from consumption, on the back of tight bust consumption growth.1 While low oil prices labor markets and accommodative monetary poli- have reduced inflation, core inflation remained sta- cies. Rising exports to recovering high-income ble in the first quarter of 2015, reflecting robust pri- countries, especially to the United States, are pro- vate consumption and policy easing. viding additional support. China’s current account surplus remains at around In China—where policy measures guided a gradual 1.8 percent of GDP, helped by a sustained improve- decline of growth to 7.4 percent in 2014—eco- ment in terms of trade. However, net capital inflows nomic activity continues to slow in 2015, although have reversed. Since the second quarter of 2014, continued policy easing has moderated the decelera- portfolio and other capital outflows have increased tion. Investment remains constrained by overcapac- sharply and were only partially offset by record high ity in heavy industries, an on-going decline in the FDI inflows into the services sector. Capital out- housing sector, and regulatory tightening of non- traditional lending. Data on industrial prices, im- 1From 2007 through 2012, private enterprises and household busi- ports (particularly of commodities), and lead indi- nesses added a total of 41.5 million jobs in the services sector, more than four times the jobs that state-owned firms added during this pe- The main author of this section is Ekaterine Vashakmadze. riod (Rutkowski 2015). 109 110 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 2.1 East Asia and Pacific: Regional growth and (iv) capital flight related to the ongoing anti- performance in China graft campaign. Growth in East Asia and Pacific region slowed by a modest 0.2 percentage points to Foreign-currency reserves declined by an estimated 6.9 percent in 2014, as expected, largely because on a continued slowdown in China. China’s growth decelerated further in the first quarter of 2015. Beyond China, growth US$263 billion (7 percent of total) between June in the first quarter of 2015 slowed in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand reflecting con- 2014 and March 2015. This was largely driven by tinued adjustment to lower commodity prices, weak external demand, and still weak valuation effects (about 2/3 of the decline).3 Not- confidence in Thailand. withstanding this decline, China’s foreign exchange A. Real GDP growth B. Selected countries: Real GDP growth reserves remain solid (about 38 percent of GDP and Percent change, year-on-year Percent, quarterly change, saar 24 times monthly imports). The renminbi depreci- 16 2013 2014 12 14 12 2015-17 (average) 2001-12 (average) 10 2014Q3 2014Q4 2015Q1 ated sharply in mid-March against the U.S. dollar, 10 8 8 after several months of steady appreciation. This sig- 6 6 4 naled the PBC’s intention to deter speculators who 2 4 0 2 had been betting on one-way appreciation of the EAP China Lao PDR Vietnam EAP (excl. China) Malaysia Cambodia Mongolia Indonesia Philippines Papua New Guinea Thailand Solomon Islands 0 Chinese currency. Nevertheless, in real effective China Malaysia Philippines Indonesia Thailand terms, the renminbi has appreciated by around 6 percent since end-2014, and by 27.4 percent since 2010. C. China: Stock price and REER D. China: Balance of payments indices (2010=100), and EMBI Despite the slowdown in China, economic activity spreads elsewhere in the region accelerated sharply in the Index 2010 = 100 Stock Market Index Basis points Percent of GDP last quarter of 2014, partly helped by lower fuel 180 350 10 Capital Account, FA & Net Errors & Omissions REER Index EMBI spreads (RHS) Current Account 300 8 Reserves prices and more accommodative policies. For 2014 160 250 6 as a whole, growth was 4.7 percent, in line with the 140 4 120 200 2 Global Economic Prospects (GEP) projection in 150 0 100 -2 January 2015, but nevertheless lower than in 2013 100 80 50 -4 -6 (5.2 percent). Domestic demand, especially con- sumption, remains the main driver of regional 2012 Q1 2012 Q2 2012 Q3 2012 Q4 2013 Q1 2013 Q2 2013 Q3 2013 Q4 2014 Q1 2014 Q2 2014 Q3 2014 Q4 60 0 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 growth. Lower fuel prices, dynamic capital and la- bor markets, robust inflows of remittances and capi- Sources: World Bank, Haver, CEIC, IMF IFS, J.P. Morgan, Bloomberg. tal, and accommodative monetary policies boosted C. J.P. Morgan Emerging Market Bond Index global sovereign spreads. growth. Implementation of large public projects provided additional support to growth in Malaysia and the Philippines in the last quarter of 2014 flows have been driven by changing domestic and (World Bank 2015b), but investment in general re- external conditions. These include: mains much weaker than in earlier periods. (i) a move toward two-way exchange-rate fluc- Low oil prices, tighter macrofinancial policies, and tuations and receding expectations of per- stronger exports, have contributed to improving cur- sistent renminbi appreciation;2 rent account balances, except in commodity-export- ing countries (Figure 2.2). Current account surpluses (ii) a narrowing interest rate differential to the continue to widen, especially in the Philippines and United States as a result of domestic policy Thailand. In contrast, earlier large surpluses have un- easing and expectations of policy tightening wound in fuel-exporting Malaysia. In Indonesia, the by the Fed, and greater volatility in cross- current account remains in deficit as the economy border flows; adjusts to a 40 percent drop in the prices of key ex- (iii) improved global growth prospects, in con- port commodities from their 2011 peaks (World trast to weakening growth and a housing Bank 2015c). In Indonesia, and Mongolia, external price correction in China; and possibly financing requirements remain elevated as a result of 2Corporations are increasingly holding on to their foreign currency 3Related to the weakening of non-US$ currencies (including euro proceeds (both onshore and offshore) and hedging their foreign cur- and yen depreciation, which account for about 40 percent of China’s rency exposures. foreign exchange reserves) (Miner 2015). GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 C H A P T E R 2 | E AS T AS I A A N D PAC I F I C 111 persistent fiscal and sizeable current account defi- FIGURE 2.2 Key exports cits.4 However, reserve coverage of imports and EAP countries are the world’s largest producers of palm oil, rice and natural rubber and short-term debt remains solid in most countries in have significant global market shares in other commodities. Some are heavily depen- dent on exports of a few commodities. Except for Indonesia and Malaysia, all are net fuel the region. importers. The largest trading partner is Japan, followed by China and the United States. Headline inflation (core inflation plus food and en- ergy costs) has dropped to very low levels in several A. Share of EAP countries B. Commodity share in total exports, countries (Malaysia and Thailand, Figure 2.3). How- commodity exports in global 2013 exports, 2013 ever, there is little risk of deflation, except perhaps in Percent of global exports Percent of total exports Mineral fuels & oils Thailand where the core and headline rates are well 90 Thailand Philippines Palm oil 80 below the official target rate. In contrast to other 70 Vietnam Myanmar 100 Ores, slag and ash Rice 60 Malaysia Indonesia 80 countries in the region, the high rate of inflation in 50 40 China 60 Rubber Wood 30 Indonesia remains a challenge for policymakers. 20 10 40 0 20 The majority of regional currencies depreciated Natural rubber Copper Palm oil Rice Wood Other Tin Coal Gas 0 Nickel Aluminium Thailand PNG Mongolia Indonesia Malaysia Myanmar Lao PDR Fiji Vietnam Timor Leste Philippines against the U.S. dollar, but appreciated against the euro and yen and in real effective terms, affecting export competitiveness. Those countries with exter- nal debt above 50 percent of GDP and deteriorating terms of trade (Malaysia, Mongolia, and Papua New C. Export market destinations, 2013 D. Fuel trade balance, 2013 Guinea) saw their currencies depreciate strongly over Percent of total export market Share of GDP Dev. ASEAN & Pacifics Japan & NIEs 5 the past 18 months.5 The strengthening U.S. dollar China EU USA 0 creates significant balance-sheet pressures for corpo- 100% -5 80% EAP average rations with large dollar-denominated liabilities. -10 60% With the notable exception of Malaysia, capital 40% -15 -20 flows to the region have rebounded in 2015, reflect- 20% -25 ing quantitative easing in the Euro Area, and linger- 0% MYS IDN MNG LAO PLW WSM FJI VNM PNG CHN VUT THA SLB PHK FSM KHM TON TUV KIR Malaysia China Indonesia Philippines Thailand ing demand for higher-yielding, emerging markets debt.6 Malaysia is at risk of further portfolio out- Sources: UN Comtrade, World Bank. B. Includes coal and petroleum gases. flows due to a narrowing current account surplus C. NIE are Newly Industrialized Economies. Dev. ASEAN (Cambodia, Indonesia, Lao PDR, Malaysia, Myanmar, because of declining fuel prices, sizable short-term Philippines, Thailand, Vietnam) and Pacifics (Fiji, PNG, East-Timor, other smaller Island States; here also includes Australia and New Zealand). bank external debt, and significant foreign holdings D. Includes hydrocarbons and coal. Excludes Timor-Leste, which has large positive fuel trade balance. of local-currency denominated government debt. Credit growth in the region appeared to recover, but the pace remains far below earlier elevated levels (Fig- was particularly marked in the non-financial corpo- ure 2.4). Borrowing has slowed, reflecting tighter rate sector and increasingly driven by bond financ- lending policy in Indonesia and stricter prudential ing—a shift away from more traditional bank bor- measures in Malaysia. Domestic debt-to-GDP ratios rowing. Although emerging and developing countries (across all sectors) exceed pre-crisis levels in several of the region have increasingly relied on domestic countries, and are above 150 percent in China, Ma- credit markets for finance, private external debt ex- laysia, and Thailand. The post-crisis debt build-up ceeds 30 percent of GDP in Lao PDR, Papua New Guinea, and Mongolia.7 4In Malaysia, external financing requirement is related to the short- Most countries made efforts to reduce fiscal deficits term debt refinancing needs. in 2014. Fiscal balances improved particularly in 5External debt includes non-resident holdings of locally-denomi- Malaysia (to 3.4 percent of GDP in 2014, from 6.7 nated debt securities. In Malaysia total external debt, including non- resident holdings of local currency denominated debt was estimated at percent in 2009), Lao PDR (to 4.3 percent of GDP 69.6 percent of GDP at end-2014, while debt to GDP ratio excluding in 2014, from 6 percent in 2013), and the Philip- non-resident holdings stood at 34.3 percent of GDP. pines. Despite reforms to rationalize fuel subsidies 6Quantitative easing in Japan has significantly less impact on cross- and raise fuel taxes, deficits continued to rise in Indo- border capital flows due to its inward orientated nature. 7 In Mongolia, a sizeable share of external debt represents intra- nesia, largely because of weak revenue. In Mongolia company debt. and Vietnam, fiscal deficits remain elevated, whereas 112 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 2.3 Inflation and real exchange rates fuel prices, but the impact will vary across countries, Lower oil prices have reduced headline inflation but core inflation has remained stable reflecting the magnitude of net fuel imports, energy and, in Indonesia, elevated. In real trade-weighted terms, most currencies have appreci- intensity of production, and the share of oil and gas ated against the U.S. dollar, while strong capital inflows into the region. in energy consumption. A. Headline inflation B. Core inflation In China, growth is projected to moderate to 7.1 per- Percent, year-on-year Percent, year-on-year China 10 China Indonesia Thailand 6 Indonesia cent in 2015 and 6.9 percent in 2017, reflecting pol- Malaysia Vietnam Philipines 8 5 Thailand icy efforts to achieve a more sustainable growth path. 6 Continuing measures to contain local government 4 4 2 3 debt, curb shadow banking, and tackle excess capac- 0 2 ity may reduce investment and industrial output. -2 1 Measures aimed at curbing energy consumption and 2013M04 2013M08 2013M12 2014M04 2014M08 2014M12 2015M04 0 reducing pollution may have the same effect. Low oil 2010 2011 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 prices will soften the impact of these reforms, and targeted policy measures are expected to be applied as C. Selected countries: Real effective D. Gross capital inflows exchange rates needed to ensure a gradual slowdown. Index, Jan 2010 = 100 In the region excluding China, the forecast is for China Indonesia US$, billions Equity issue 130 Thailand Malaysia Bond issue Vietnam Philippines 120 Bank lending growth to reach 4.9 percent in 2015 and 5.4 percent 120 110 100 in 2017, driven by the large ASEAN economies 80 100 (Table 2.2). 60 90 40 • In Indonesia, which continues to adjust to 80 70 20 lower commodity prices, growth will moderate further to 4.7 percent in 2015 before picking 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 0 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 up to 5.5 percent in 2016-17, supported by a Sources: Haver, IMF IFS, BIS, World Bank WDI, Dealogic. B. Excludes food and energy prices. recovery of investment and stronger exports. C. CPI-deflated real effective exchange rates. An increase denotes an appreciation. • In Thailand, real GDP growth is projected at 3.5 percent in 2015, with exports picking up slightly. However, domestic demand will remain weak, Cambodia and Lao PDR are making progress toward despite increased social stability. Growth is ex- debt reduction, despite declining donor grants. In Pa- pected to strengthen in 2016-17 to 4 percent, as cific Island countries, fiscal positions generally im- commodity prices remain low and the recovery proved, reflecting strong revenues from taxes on tour- in high-income economies strengthens. ism and from donor grants. Across the region, tax revenue collection remains relatively low. Govern- • In Malaysia, growth will likely slow to 4.7 per- ment spending in several countries (especially Indo- cent in 2015, as low oil prices dampen invest- nesia and Malaysia) have tended to be correlated with ment in the oil and gas sector and credit growth commodity-related exports (Figure 2.5) reflecting continues to slow. In addition, private con- also the earlier relatively large fuel subsidies. sumption will moderate as a result of the intro- duction of the Goods and Services Tax (GST, a value-added tax) in April 2015 (World Bank 2015d). Capital expenditures in the oil and gas Outlook sector, a key driver of strong investment growth Regional growth is expected to ease to 6.7 percent in in the past three years, will be delayed by lower 2015 and remain stable thereafter. The continued oil prices. An acceleration in growth to 5 per- slowdown in China should be gradually offset by a cent is expected in 2016-17, as some normaliza- pickup in the rest of the region, which is benefiting tion occurs. from the strengthening recovery in advanced coun- • In Vietnam, GDP growth is forecast at 6 per- tries, low energy prices, improved political stability, cent in 2015, rising gradually to 6.5 percent in and ample liquidity in global financial markets de- 2017 on the back of continued strong perfor- spite an expected gradual tightening in the United mance of the manufacturing sector, exports, States. EAP countries will mostly benefit from low and foreign investment. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 C H A P T E R 2 | E AS T AS I A A N D PAC I F I C 113 • Growth in the Philippines is projected to re- FIGURE 2.4 Debt main strong, benefitting from a recovery in Ja- Despite a recent slowdown, debt remains significantly above 2007 levels and in China, pan and from low fuel prices. Malaysia, and Thailand more than 150 percent of GDP. A modest share of non-financial corporate and household debt is denominated in U.S. dollars. Growth will decelerate in several smaller economies due to low oil prices and measures to unwind financial A. Real growth of bank credit B. Foreign currency exposure and foreign currency vulnerability vulnerabilities. In Mongolia, weak world prices for indicators, 2013 copper and coal will reduce mining production. In Percent, year-on-year Percent 50 Indonesia Thailand Foreign currency exposure Cambodia, growth will remain slightly below 7 per- Malaysia Philippines Foreign currency vulnerability indicator 40 120 cent in 2015–17, reflecting weaker prices for agricul- China Vietnam 100 30 tural commodities and slower improvements in crop 20 80 60 yields, constrained garment exports amid real currency 10 40 appreciation and competition from new entrants, and 0 20 0 concerns whether the recent rapid growth in tourism -10 Vietnam Indonesia Mongolia Cambodia Philippines 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 will continue. In Lao PDR, growth will ease to 6.4 percent in 2015 due to lower public spending and ef- forts to reduce credit growth, and recover to 7 percent C. Selected countries: Total D. Selected countries: Household, over the medium term, led by electricity exports, with domestic and external debt, 2013 non-financial corporate, and mining production remaining flat. government debt Percent of GDP External Percent of GDP Growth in the smaller Pacific Island countries will be 300 Domestic 270 Household 250 Change during 07-13 Non-financial corporate supported by rising trade, tourism, and remittances, 200 220 General government 150 and generally positive country-specific develop- 100 170 50 ments. In Papua New Guinea, however, growth will 0 120 decline sharply after a temporary 16 percent spike in -50 70 Malaysia China Thailand Vietnam Fiji Lao PDR Indonesia Solomon Islands Mongolia Cambodia Papua New Guinea Philippines 2015. The economic gains from liquefied natural gas 20 (LNG) exports, which began in May 2014 and in- 2007 2014 2007 2014 2007 2014 2007 2014 2007 2014 -30 creased rapidly, will more than offset the completion IndonesiaPhilippines Thailand Malaysia China of LNG-related construction work. In Timor-Leste, Sources: Moody’s Statistical Handbook. Haver, IMF IFS, BIS, World Bank WDI, Debt database, McKinsey. B. Foreign currency exposure is measured as total foreign currency deposits in the domestic banking system/ government spending is expected to help non-oil total deposits in the domestic banking system. Foreign currency vulnerability indicator is defined as (total foreign growth to gradually strengthen to 7 percent by 2017, currency deposits in the domestic banking system)/(official foreign exchange reserves + foreign assets of domestic banks). while low prices dampen oil output. C. Includes both public and private-sector debt. Includes local currency denominated debt held by foreigners (large part of external debt in Malaysia). Ratios for Malaysia will improve with the rebased GDP. In Mongolia, a large share of external debt represents intra-company debt. Risks Low fuel prices, if sustained, present an upside risk for the regional outlook. Risks, both external and internal to the region, re- Financial market volatility or sharply tightening main tilted to the downside, but less so than in Jan- financing conditions pose significant risk to the uary. Although the probability is low, the risk of a outlook. This may take the form of asynchro- hard landing in China remains. Since the region’s nous monetary policy tightening in major econ- economies are very open, they are vulnerable to omies, or geopolitical risks. Abrupt increases in trading partner slowdowns and large exchange rate bond yields and exchange rate volatility could shifts, including further U.S. dollar appreciation. result, as investors reassess growth prospects and policies. Debt stands at high levels in several countries. Although it remains predominantly 8 Debt levels in China, Malaysia, and Thailand are now at the local currency-denominated, corporations have level of some advanced economies (averaging 280 percent of GDP, compared with 121 percent for developing countries). Credit is vi- borrowed large amounts in foreign currencies. tal for economic activity and high levels of debt in the EAP region High debt stocks expose countries to risks from largely reflect financial deepening and better demographic and growth rising borrowing costs, or credit shut-offs.8 Ex- prospects than in other developing regions. However, policies should change rate adjustments may cause balance sheet remain focused on maintaining prudent frameworks and financial sta- bility objectives given a very rapid build-up of debt in the region and strains in some countries. The combination of the previous boom-bust episodes. high debt levels and currency mismatches creates 114 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 2.5 Policy issues Finally, as the surge in China’s stock market con- Across the region, tax revenue collection remains low by advanced country standards, tinues, the financial and economic consequences and dependence on commodity/fuel related exports cause procyclical fiscal pressures from a possible correction will increase. Should in several countries (e.g. Indonesia, Malaysia). it materialize, a sharp slowdown in China could A. Tax revenue, 2014 B. Ease of Doing Business: Distance usher in a prolonged period of slow growth as the to frontier score, 2015 economy heals, and would have regional and Percent of GDP 40 Index global spillovers (World Bank, 2014a). A one- OECD average 80 35 30 time 1 percentage point decrease in China’s U.S. 60 25 20 growth relative to the baseline (a 2 percentage 15 40 10 point decrease in investment growth) would re- 5 20 0 duce growth in the region by approximately 0.2 0 Thailand China Vietnam Malaysia Lao PDR Cambodia Indonesia Philippines percentage points (World Bank, 2014a). The im- Thailand Malaysia Vietnam China Indonesia Cambodia Lao PDR pact would vary across countries, with commod- ity exporters with less diversified economies and Source: WDI. OECD. IMF, Fiscal Monitor, WEO. World Bank. Doing Business indicators. B. The distance to frontier score aids in assessing the absolute level of regulatory performance and how it regional supply chain economies affected the improves over time. This measure shows the distance of each economy to the “frontier,” which represents the best performance observed on each of the indicators across all economies in the Doing Business sample most (Ahuja and Nabar, 2012). Nevertheless, since 2005. This allows users both to see the gap between a particular economy’s performance and the best performance at any point in time and to assess the absolute change in the economy’s regulatory environment China is in a strong fiscal position with policy over time as measured by Doing Business. An economy’s distance to frontier is reflected on a scale from 0 to 100, where 0 represents the lowest performance and 100 represents the frontier. For example, a score of 75 in buffers that appear adequate to contain risk re- DB 2014 means an economy was 25 percentage points away from the frontier constructed from the best per- formances across all economies and across time. A score of 80 in DB 2015 would indicate the economy is lated to financial sector distress. improving. In this way the distance to frontier measure complements the annual ease of doing business rank- ing, which compares economies with one another at a point in time. Policy Challenges systemic risk and the possibility of sharp in- In China, the key policy challenge is to put growth creases in country risk premiums. on a sustainable path, while improving financial sta- A weaker-than-expected recovery in high-income bility. The authorities have initiated several programs countries, especially in the United States, the to implement the comprehensive structural reform Euro Area, Japan, and the Newly Industrialized agenda announced in November 2013 (World Bank, Economies would weaken global and regional 2014a). The objective is to increase the role of mar- trade and impair the region’s exports. High-in- kets and to facilitate resource reallocation to sectors come country exports account for about 60 per- with high returns. The key policy challenge is to shift cent (Thailand) to 90 percent of the region’s growth towards more sustainable sources in the me- exports. dium-term, while avoiding a sharp slowdown, or fi- A sharp slowdown in China, while unlikely, nancial distress, in the short-term. A couple of areas would have spillover effects on regional trading stand out as candidates for early action: partners and commodity exporters. A hard land- • fiscal reforms to place local government finances ing could originate from: on a more solid footing and facilitate a shift • a steep decline in property prices that forces from investment to consumption; and developers and banks to deleverage quickly • financial sector reforms to improve resource al- and investment in real estate to contract location, strengthen market discipline, and sharply; contain a further buildup of financial sector • a sharp slowdown in infrastructure invest- vulnerabilities. ment following the implementation of the Next in line would be reform of state-owned enter- local government debt framework; prises, land ownership, and labor markets. Such • bankruptcies in primary and heavy indus- changes would help maintain growth and lift em- tries (now suffering from overcapacity); or ployment (World Bank and Development Research • a decline in shadow banking activity that Center of the State Council, the People’s Republic causes a sharp cutback in credit availability. of China, 2014). GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 C H A P T E R 2 | E AS T AS I A A N D PAC I F I C 115 The authorities have made some progress in imple- (Myanmar). The Pacific Island countries face signifi- menting their comprehensive reform agenda. In- cant medium-term fiscal sustainability challenges. creasingly, the business tax is being replaced with Monetary and exchange rate policies have to adjust value-added taxation (e.g. in railways from January to soft commodity prices and to the likelihood of 2014; in telecommunications from June 2014), en- somewhat tighter global financial conditions (Indo- vironmental taxes have been increased, and the in- nesia, Mongolia, Papua New Guinea). Strong regu- troduction of a reformed national property tax is lation and supervision to protect financial stability planned (Lam and Wingende 2015). A revised bud- may also require proactive use of macroprudential get law and new rules on local borrowing were in- policies to moderate the effects of the financial cycle troduced to swap local government debt into lower- on asset prices, credit, and aggregate demand (IMF cost government bonds. Pilot property tax systems 2015a). In Malaysia, the GST, introduced in April, have been rolled out in a few cities. The deposit rate will broaden the base of federal revenues and diver- ceiling was raised and deposit insurance (a prerequi- sify it away from volatile oil and gas revenues. The site for further interest rate liberalization) was intro- vast majority of the budget subsidies have been elim- duced on May 1, 2015. The exchange rate band was inated. Policies should focus on building the mecha- widened from 1 to 2 percent, and the Shanghai- nisms to avoid re-introducing subsidies when oil Hong Kong Stock Connect program is promoting prices go up. In Indonesia, moderate fiscal consoli- some international capital flows. Specifics of gradual dation should be underpinned by a broadened tax reforms to the hukou system were announced, in- base. In Thailand, fiscal support may be appropriate cluding the granting of some social benefits to some in the short-term to boost the economy. However, 100 million migrant workers over the next seven support measures should be framed within a me- years and a relaxation of residency requirements in dium-term fiscal plan to strengthen revenue, in- smaller towns.9 A pilot program was started under crease investment, and bolster fiscal institutions. which farmers can turn their land-use rights into shares in farming enterprises or cooperative societ- Across the region, structural reforms are required to ies. This pilot is part of a series of reforms to priva- mitigate the effects of slowing productivity growth, tize the land rights to protect farmers’ interests. The and aging populations. Development of human process of documenting farmers’ land use rights has capital and physical infrastructure remains a key been initiated. China accelerated administative re- medium-term priority. In Thailand, for example, re- form, including by streamlining and centralizing forms to state enterprises, rice and rubber price-sup- preconstruction approvals, and simplifying court port schemes, infrastructure procurement, and tax proceedings to facilitate contract enforcement. administration and expenditures would improve transparency, investor confidence, and fiscal sustain- Falling world fuel prices create an opportunity to ability. For hydrocarbon producers like Indonesia eliminate fuel subsidies, which have strained public and Malaysia, the decline in fuel prices underscores finances and weakened current accounts in both the need to enhance fiscal institutions to better fuel exporters and importers. Energy taxes should manage volatile natural-resource rents. Further- also be reformed for the same purposes. Recent more, the accumulation of foreign assets during steps to reduce such distortions have gathered mo- good times can prevent currencies from appreciat- mentum, which now needs to be sustained. Broad- ing to the point that non-energy activities become ening the revenue base and improving the effective- non-competitive. Other measures to promote eco- ness of public spending remains a priority across nomic diversification include ensuring high-quality much of the region. In most large economies, ex- education, increasing the integration and depth of penditures could be rationalized to focus on effec- domestic financial markets, providing infrastructure tive productivity-enhancing or poverty-reducing to remove bottlenecks, and creating competition re- programs. Some countries have no option but to gimes that remove special privileges for established consolidate to control a buildup of debt (Mongolia, sectors or enterprises. Energy importers have an op- Lao PDR, Vietnam) or safeguard fiscal buffers portunity to enact efficiency-promoting changes. Finally, a more supportive trade and investment cli- 9A hukou is a record in the system of household registration mate would expand the export base, stimulate job required by law in China. creation, and raise potential growth. 116 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 Increasing competitiveness in services through fur- ever, progress has been modest so far, and ASEAN ther regional integration will be necessary for remains among the most restrictive regions in the ASEAN economies to sustain growth in the long world with respect to trade in services. Correcting run. Recognizing this, the ASEAN members have this will require a focus on promoting regulatory co- committed to liberalizing and integrating their ser- operation and coordination through harmonization vices markets, in the context of the formation of the or mutual recognition, together with the develop- ASEAN Economic Community at end-2015. How- ment of regulatory capacity (World Bank 2015b). GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 C H A P T E R 2 | E AS T AS I A A N D PAC I F I C 117 TABLE 2.1 East Asia and Pacific forecast summary (Annual percent change unless indicated otherwise) 00-10a 2011 2012 2013 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f GDP at market pricesb 9.0 8.3 7.4 7.1 6.9 6.7 6.7 6.6 (Average including countries with full national accounts and balance of payments data only)c GDP at market pricesc 9.0 8.3 7.4 7.1 6.9 6.7 6.7 6.6 GDP per capita (units in US$) 8.2 7.6 6.7 6.5 6.2 6.1 6.1 6.1 PPP GDP 8.8 8.1 7.3 7.0 6.7 6.6 6.6 6.5 Private consumption 6.7 9.1 7.7 6.7 6.8 7.4 7.6 7.6 Public consumption 8.4 8.9 8.3 7.9 6.5 7.4 7.5 7.4 Fixed investment 11.9 8.6 9.4 8.7 6.7 6.7 6.8 6.7 Exports, GNFSd 11.5 9.8 5.8 7.4 6.5 7.7 7.3 7.0 Imports, GNFSd 11.3 11.2 7.4 8.7 6.6 8.3 8.1 8.3 Net exports, contribution to growth 0.4 –0.1 –0.3 –0.2 0.1 0.0 –0.1 –0.3 Consumer prices (annual average) 2.6 5.6 2.8 3.0 2.6 … … … Fiscal balance (percent of GDP) –1.6 0.2 –0.3 –1.3 -2.3 -2.5 –2.5 –2.5 Memo items: GDP East Asia excluding China 5.1 4.8 6.3 5.2 4.7 4.9 5.4 5.4 China 10.5 9.3 7.7 7.7 7.4 7.1 7.0 6.9 Indonesia 5.3 6.2 6.0 5.6 5.0 4.7 5.5 5.5 Thailand 4.5 0.8 7.3 2.8 0.9 3.5 4.0 4.0 Source: World Bank. World Bank forecasts are frequently updated based on new information and changing (global) circumstances. Consequently, projections presented here may differ from those contained in other Bank documents, even if basic assessments of countries’ prospects do not differ at any given moment in time. a. Growth rates over intervals are compound weighted averages; average growth contributions, ratios and deflators are calculated as simple averages of the annual weighted averages for the region. b. GDP at market prices and expenditure components are measured in constant 2010 U.S. dollars. c. Sub-region aggregate excludes Fiji, Myanmar and Timor-Leste, for which data limitations prevent the forecasting of GDP components or Balance of Payments details. d. Exports and imports of goods and non-factor services (GNFS). TABLE 2.2 East Asia and Pacific country forecasts (Real GDP growth at market prices in percent, unless indicated otherwise) 00-10a 2011 2012 2013 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f Cambodia 8.0 7.1 7.3 7.4 7.0 6.9 6.9 6.8 China 10.5 9.3 7.7 7.7 7.4 7.1 7.0 6.9 Fiji 1.6 2.7 1.7 4.6 3.8 2.5 2.4 2.6 Indonesia 5.3 6.2 6.0 5.6 5.0 4.7 5.5 5.5 Lao PDR 7.1 8.0 8.0 8.5 7.5 6.4 7.0 7.0 Malaysia 4.4 5.3 5.5 4.7 6.0 4.7 5.0 5.1 Mongolia 6.5 17.5 12.4 11.6 7.8 4.4 4.2 3.9 Myanmar 10.3 5.9 7.3 8.3 8.5 8.5 8.2 8.0 Philippines 4.8 3.7 6.8 7.2 6.1 6.5 6.5 6.3 Papua New Guineab 3.5 10.7 8.1 5.5 7.5 16.0 5.0 2.4 Solomon Islands 2.9 10.7 4.9 3.0 0.1 3.5 3.5 3.5 Thailand 4.5 0.8 7.3 2.8 0.9 3.5 4.0 4.0 Timor-Lestec 4.3 14.7 7.8 5.4 6.6 6.8 6.9 7.0 Vietnam 6.8 6.2 5.2 5.5 6.0 6.0 6.2 6.5 Source: World Bank. World Bank forecasts are frequently updated based on new information and changing (global) circumstances. Consequently, projections presented here may differ from those contained in other Bank documents, even if basic assessments of countries’ prospects do not significantly differ at any given moment in time. Samoa; Tuvalu; Kiribati; Democratic People’s Republic of Korea; Marshall Islands; Micronesia, Federated States; N. Mariana Islands; Palau; and Tonga are not forecast owing to data limitations. a. GDP growth rates over intervals are compound average; current account balance shares are simple averages over the period. b. The start of production at Papua New Guinea Liquefied Natural Gas (PNG-LNG) is expected to boost GDP growth to 16 percent and shift the current account to a surplus in 2015. c. Non-oil GDP. Timor-Leste’s total GDP, including the oil economy, is roughly four times the non-oil economy, and highly volatile, sensitive to changes in global oil prices and local production levels. EUROPE and CENTRAL ASIA Regional growth is expected to decelerate to 1.8 percent in 2015 from an already weak 2.4 percent in 2014. Plunging oil prices and geopolitical tensions, and related spillovers, including from the Russian Federation, are only partly offset by a moderate recovery in the Euro Area and the benefits from low fuel prices to net fuel import- ers. Recently, confidence has improved slightly, reflecting the stabilization of oil prices, the peace agreement reached in Ukraine, and policy measures implemented in several economies. Assuming a marginal recovery of oil prices in 2016-17, continued implementation of stabilization measures, and no major deterioration in geopolitical ten- sions, growth is expected to strengthen to an average of 3.5 percent in 2016-17. Key risks include a deepening recession in the Russian Federation and Ukraine, declining oil prices, and abrupt tightening of global financial conditions. Recent Developments 54 percent of Russia’s exports) and the adverse im- pact of sanctions amid an ongoing trend growth After slowing to 2.4 percent in 2014 from 3.7 per- slowdown related to structural bottlenecks (Figure cent in 2013, regional growth weakened further in 2.6). A plunge in export revenues, a sharp devalua- early 2015. This reflected spillovers from the oil tion of the ruble, and trade restrictions on food im- price decline and geopolitical tensions, which more ports in Russia lifted inflation into double-digits. than offset the benefits from the moderate recovery The contraction of real incomes and purchasing in the Euro Area. In the eastern part of the region power weighed on consumer spending, which had (Eastern Europe, South Caucasus, and Central been the single largest contributor to growth since Asia), growth slowed sharply to 1.5 percent in 2014 2012.2 Investment also shrank on falling business (one-fifth of the average in 2000–10), reflecting re- confidence, tightened financing conditions, and re- cessions in the Russian Federation and Ukraine, and stricted access to international capital markets as a downturns in oil-exporting economies. In contrast, result of sanctions. growth accelerated modestly in the western part of Decisive policy actions and resources from the Re- the region, supported by tailwinds from the recover- serve Fund have cushioned the contraction in Rus- ing Euro Area.1 sia in 2015 (World Bank 2015f ), but resulted in Growth in Russia continued to slide in 2015 (a 1.9 significantly eroded buffers. Key stabilization policy percent contraction 2015Q1), following a modest measures included the switch to the free-float on 0.6 percent expansion in 2014. This reflected the November 10, 2014, a policy rate hike in December impact of sharply lower oil prices (oil accounts for 2014 which helped to bolster confidence in cur- rency markets, and the swift bank recapitalization The main authors of this section are Ekaterine Vashakmadze and Allen program in December 2014.3 Trade and current ac- Dennis with contributions from Jungjin Lee. 1The eastern part of the region comprises Eastern Europe (Belarus, count balances improved, helped by the weaker ru- Moldova, and Ukraine), South Caucasus (Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia), and Central Asia (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyz Republic, Tajikistan, 2The share of consumption in GDP increased from 62.3 percent in Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan). The western part of the region includes 2001 to 83.3 percent in 2014. Central and Southeastern Europe (Bulgaria, Hungary, and Romania) 3Net capital outflows from Russia slowed to US$32.6 billion in the and the Western Balkans (Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Former first quarter of 2015, compared to US$77.4 billion in 2014Q4, and Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia), and Turkey. US$48 billion in 2014Q1. 119 120 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 2.6 Russian Federation: Growth and oil price financed from the country’s oil fund.4 This reflects A sharp decline in oil prices and the impact of sanctions have dampened activity in the combination of falling oil prices (crude petro- Russia. leum oil accounts for about 70 percent of exports), Percent US$ per barrel recession in Russia (exports to Russia accounted for 2 120 around 7 percent of exports in 2010–14), declining confidence and lower capital inflows. Unlike Russia, 0 100 Kazakhstan relied heavily on foreign exchange re- serves to defend the exchange rate peg after a 19 -2 80 percent devaluation implemented in February 2014. 2015 growth forecast This was done to mitigate depreciation-induced in- (consensus forecast) -4 Growth (YTD, y/y) 60 flation, and to buffer corporate and household bal- Oil Price (RHS) ance sheets with large liabilities denominated in -6 40 U.S. dollars. Despite weaker domestic demand and May-14 Sep-14 Jan-15 May-15 slower import growth, the current account surplus Source: World Bank and Consensus Forecasts. has narrowed, as a result of the sharp drop in com- modity exports. Fiscal balances have deteriorated significantly. A 3 percent deficit is projected in FIGURE 2.7 Selected economies, EMBI spreads 2015, largely reflecting lower revenues from oil ex- ports (World Bank 2015g). Spreads eased from De- Confidence has improved and spreads eased on a peace agreement in Ukraine, stabi- lization of oil prices and policy actions. cember 2014 peaks, but as of April 2015 are higher than in Russia. Basis points Basis points 800 Russian Federation Kazakhstan Ukraine (RHS) 5000 In Azerbaijan, growth decelerated to 2.8 percent in 2014, reflecting low oil prices, interruptions in oil 4000 600 sector output, and a sharp deceleration of non-oil 3000 GDP growth due to declining public investment. 400 2000 Both current account and fiscal surpluses declined 200 sharply. The current account surplus is projected to 1000 decline to 3.9 percent of GDP in 2015, from 14.1 0 0 percent in 2014, despite a 34 percent devaluation of Jul-14 Oct-14 Apr-14 Apr-15 Jan-14 Jan-15 the manat in February 2015. Source: Bloomberg; J.P. Morgan; Haver. In Ukraine, output contracted by 6.8 percent in Note: J.P. Morgan Emerging Market Bond Index global sovereign spreads. 2014, reflecting a deep decline in the conflict-af- fected East and a moderate recession in the rest of the country. Exports fell sharply, as exports to Russia ble, related decline in imports and expansion of ex- (one-quarter of exports in 2010–14) dropped by ports, despite a 34 percent decline in the nominal one-third. Despite a drawdown of official reserves to value of oil exports. Beginning in February, the ru- 1.6 months of imports (January 2015), the exchange ble and asset prices recovered some of their earlier rate of the hryvnia against the U.S. dollar tripled be- losses, monthly inflation eased, and interest rate tween end-December 2013 and end-February 2015. spreads declined to their October 2014 levels (Fig- Depreciation and administered price increases con- ure 2.7). The fiscal deficit is projected to increase to tributed to an increase in inflation to 60.9 percent in 3.5 percent of GDP in 2015, from 1.3 percent in April 2015 (Figure 2.8). Banks have come under 2014, even though proposed amendments to the considerable stress, facing worsening asset quality 2015 federal budget imply some consolidation of (with nonperforming loans exceeding 30 percent of expenditures, and could severely deplete the Reserve Fund (currently equal to 4.7 percent of GDP). 4Additional fiscal resources—amounting to about 7 percent of In Kazakhstan, growth declined to 4.3 percent in GDP, to be implemented over the period 2015-19, from the oil fund 2014, half of the average rate in 2000-10, and con- and international financial institutions—have been allocated to cushion tinued to ease in 2015, despite fiscal stimulus mostly the impact of lower oil prices on activity in the medium term. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 C H A P T E R 2 | E U R O P E A N D C E N T R A L AS I A 121 total loans), weakening profitability and large de- FIGURE 2.8 Ukraine: Recent developments posit withdrawals amounting to one-quarter of de- Despite a drawdown of official reserves, the hryvnia depreciated sharply and inflation posits (12 percent of GDP) since January 2014.5 spiked above 45 percent. Following the ceasefire agreement signed in Febru- Percent, US$, billions US$ per Hryvnia ary, the IMF approved a four-year support program 80 0.14 for Ukraine in March 2015.6 This, together with the 0.12 immediate disbursement of the first US$5 billion 60 Inflation (y/y, %) tranche in March, led to stabilization of Ukrainian Foreign Reserves (EOP, US$, billions) 0.10 40 Exchange rate (RHS) hryvnia and easing of spreads from their February 0.08 peaks.7 20 0.06 Almost all economies in the region, have been nega- 0 tively affected by the spillovers from the recession in 0.04 Russia and Ukraine, weakening confidence related -20 0.02 to the on-going geopolitical tensions, and growth Apr-12 Apr-13 Apr-14 Apr-15 slowdown in oil-exporting Azerbaijan and Kazakh- Source: World Bank and Haver Analytics. stan, to various degrees. Only Uzbekistan and Turk- menistan, two relatively closed, resource-rich econ- omies with strong buffers and linkages with the East FIGURE 2.9 Selected economies: Exports by selected and South East Asia regions, were reportedly less destinations (average 2011–14) affected by the commodity price declines and re- Almost all economies in the region have been affected by spillovers from oil exporters gional headwinds. In the eastern part of the region, in the region through trade. these regional headwinds had significant negative Percent of total exports Russia (Services) 60 Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan (Goods) repercussions on the region’s oil-importing econo- Selected Europe (Goods) China (Goods) mies through trade, investment, and remittances United States (Goods) 40 Russia (Goods) (Figures 2.9, 2.10, and 2.11), which more than off- set the benefits of low oil prices. Activity weakened and exchange rate pressures increased in Armenia, 20 Belarus, Georgia, the Kyrgyz Republic, Moldova, and Tajikistan. Exports slowed in Armenia, Belarus, 0 Turkey Kyrgyz Rep. Tajikistan Serbia Belarus Armenia Ukraine Moldova Georgia Montenegro Uzbekistan and Georgia, as did remittance flows to Georgia, the Kyrgyz Republic, Moldova, and Tajikistan. With most imports invoiced in U.S. dollars, and foreign exchange receipts in rubles, the slide of the ruble Source: World Bank; IMF; Bank of Russia. and the strengthening of the U.S. dollar triggered a Note: Average does not capture the structural shifts (e.g. in Georgia, Moldova, Ukraine). Selected Europe includes ten largest European importers including Germany, France, UK, Italy, Belgium, Spain, Switzerland, Austria and deterioration in the terms of trade. The resulting de- Sweden. preciation of local currencies raised inflation in sev- eral countries, despite lower oil prices. Central banks have responded to depreciation pressures 2.12 and 2.13) further dampening domestic de- with interest rate hikes (Armenia, Belarus, the Kyr- mand and activity. gyz Republic, Moldova, and Tajikistan; see Figures In the western part of the region, a stronger-than- expected recovery in the Euro Area offset other head- winds, reflecting closer integration with the Euro 5Estimates of nonperforming loans vary significantly from 19 per- Area. Growth accelerated to 2.8 percent in 2014 cent of total loans (WDI, National bank of Ukraine, IMF Financial from 2.4 percent in 2013, led by Hungary and sev- Stability Indicators) to 40 percent (pre-2008 definition). eral high-income countries (Czech Republic, Poland, 6The IMF estimated as part of the Extended Fund Facility (EFF) program that Ukraine faces a financing gap of about US$40 billion the Slovak Republic and Slovenia). The nascent re- (one-third of 2014 GDP) for 2015-18 and identifies sources to meet covery has reflected a pick-up in consumer and busi- the financing gap (IMF 2015b). ness confidence and has been supported by lower 7Despite this improvement, Ukrainian spreads are still among the highest globally. fuel and food prices, and accommodative policies. 122 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 2.10 Selected economies: Remittances inflows, Headline inflation has fallen to near zero in several 2014 countries thanks to lower energy prices (Figure Several smaller oil-importing countries have been affected by spillovers from oil export- 2.14). With output well below potential levels, core ers through falling remittances. inflation also remains generally low. The recovery has Percent of GDP Remittance inflow from the EU and ROW been uneven across the sub-region, held back by 50 legacies of the global financial crisis, especially still- Remittance inflow from Russia 40 stretched balance sheets (Bulgaria, Serbia and to a 30 lesser extent Romania). Investment has remained 20 subdued, as high corporate debt overhangs, non- performing loans, and weak demand have continued 10 to constrain lending to the corporate sector, not- 0 withstanding lower interest rates. The Former Yugo- Bosnia & Tajikistan Kyrgyz Rep. Serbia Moldova Armenia Montenegro Georgia Albania Ukraine Uzbekistan Herz. slav Republic of Macedonia has performed relatively better than its neighbors over the past few years, thanks to foreign direct investments in its free tech- Source: World Bank; national central banks, and national statistic agencies. nological zones, and public investment stimulus. For some economies in the region, investor confidence FIGURE 2.11 Selected economies: Remittances inflows has also been dented by the conflict between Russia from Russia and Ukraine, and economic and financial stress in Greece. The contribution from net exports has been Remittances slowed sharply in the last quarter of 2014. weak, despite the better than expected recovery in Percent change Uzbekistan Ukraine Moldova Tajikistan the Euro Area (Figure 2.15). This reflects stronger Armenia Kyrgyz Republic 30 competitive pressures from the economies that have undergone sharp devaluations and a contraction in 0 exports to Russia. Country-specific factors, such as a banking sector turmoil in Bulgaria in mid-2014, the after-effects of floods in Serbia, and high unemploy- -30 ment in the Western Balkan economies, account for the weakness in economic activity. -60 Turkey’s economy has slowed, gaining little support 13Q4 14Q1 14Q2 14Q3 14Q4 from lower oil prices and tailwinds from the global Source: World Bank; Central Bank of Russia. recovery. Softer-than-expected activity reflects tighter macroprudential measures and policy uncertainty, compounded by weak investor confidence as re- FIGURE 2.12 Selected economies: Central bank policy flected in widening five-year credit default swaps rates spreads, rising yields of 10-year Turkish government Local currencies in the affected economies came under pressure, prompting central bonds, and capital outflows (World Bank 2015h). banks to hike interest rates. Inflation declined from its mid-2014 peak in line Percentage point End-2013 Latest 30 with the decline in oil prices, but remains above- target as a result of capacity constraints and deprecia- 20 tion. Weak domestic demand, low oil prices, and resilient exports have improved the current account 10 balance. However, vulnerabilities remain, especially the large share of the current account deficit (still 0 above 5 percent of GDP) financed by volatile portfo- Tajikistan Kazakhstan Kyrgyz Rep. Serbia Romania Ukraine Belarus Moldova Armenia Georgia Hungary Federation Uzbekistan Azerbaijan Russian lio flows. Source: Central Bank News. Note: "Latest" values are policy rates as of May 26, 2015. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 C H A P T E R 2 | E U R O P E A N D C E N T R A L AS I A 123 Outlook FIGURE 2.13 Selected economies: Inflation Inflation spiked, reflecting sharp depreciation of local currencies. The outlook for the region has deteriorated mark- Percent, year-on-year Range (last 3 years) Latest edly, with growth in developing Europe and Central 15 Asia expected to drop to 1.8 percent in 2015 despite the on-going global recovery. The main factors are 10 spillovers from low oil prices, geopolitical tensions, and 5 recessions in Russia and Ukraine (World Bank 2015i). Assuming slightly stronger oil prices in 2016–17 0 (World Bank 2015j), effective macroeconomic and growth-stabilizing policy actions, and no further dete- -5 Kyrgyz Rep. Tajikistan Kazakhstan Armenia Moldova Georgia Azerbaijan rioration of the geopolitical climate, regional growth is expected to strengthen to an average 3.5 percent in 2016–17. Source: World Bank and Haver Analytics. In Russia, a contraction in economic activity by 2.7 Note: “Latest” values are for April 2015 except for Kyrgyz Rep. (March) and Tajikistan (February). percent this year is expected to be followed by a modest recovery in 2016, supported by policies FIGURE 2.14 Selected economies: Inflation which will continue to facilitate the adjustment of In the western part of the region, more closely integrated with the Euro Area, inflation fell the economy to a new low oil price environment. sharply with lower oil prices. Growth should strengthen to 2.5 percent in 2017 as Percent, year-on-year Range (last 3 years) Latest 15 investment recovers. However, it will remain below potential, at about half of the average in 2000–10, 10 held back by remaining structural bottlenecks. This 5 outlook is highly uncertain and assumes a modest recovery in oil prices and no major deterioration in 0 geopolitical tensions. For the other oil exporters in -5 the region, prospects also remain closely tied to oil Bosnia& Herz. Serbia Hungary Romania Montenegro FYR Macedonia Bulgaria Kosovo Albania prices. The modest strengthening of prices expected over the forecast horizon should gradually support activity in these economies. In Kazakhstan, growth is projected to decline to 1.7 percent in 2015 as pro- Source: World Bank and Haver Analytics. duction delays in the Kashagan oil field persist, but Note: “Latest” values are for April 2015 except for Montenegro (February). strengthen to an average of 3.5 percent in 2016–17. Lower oil prices are expected to result in a current FIGURE 2.15 EU-Central and Southeastern Europe: account deficit in 2015, for the first time since Drivers of growth 2009. In South Caucasus and Central Asia (includ- The recovery in the western part of ECA was helped by a pick-up in consumer and ing Kazakhstan), growth is expected to bottom out business confidence. in 2015 and gradually strengthen to 2.9 percent and Percent Export volume (RHS) Percent 20 Industrial production 50 4.9 percent in 2016-17, respectively, as conditions Retail sales in the regions normalize. Ukraine’s economy is projected to contract by 7.5 10 25 percent in 2015. The prospects for a recovery in 2016–17 are highly uncertain, hinging upon a con- tinued ceasefire and eventual peaceful resolution of 0 0 the conflict in the East, a closing of the large financ- ing gap, and continued implementation of the re- form agenda under the IMF program. The conflict -10 -25 Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-14 Mar-15 has destroyed or damaged sizeable parts of the pro- duction and export base in the eastern regions of Source: World Bank and Haver Analytics. Note: The figure reflects growth rates of 3 month moving averages. Weighted average of available series for Alba- Ukraine, disrupted trade and investment links, and nia, Bulgaria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Hungary, Kosovo, FYR Macedonia, Montenegro, Romania, and Serbia. 124 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 reduced medium-term potential growth. Domestic Fiscal policy is expected to remain accommoda- demand will be dampened by fiscal consolidation tive until June. Private spending is expected to measures, including cuts in pensions and utility recover after the June elections, assuming that subsidies. Some price and structural reforms—in- political uncertainty is resolved. Soft fuel prices cluding sizable energy tariff increases, bank restruc- and robust exports will contribute to a further turing, governance reforms of state-owned enter- reduction in Turkey’s trade deficit. External fi- prises, and legal changes aimed at combating nancing requirements are expected to decline by corruption and strengthening the rule of law—are US$20 billion (to about US$200 billion) in underway. They are necessary for restoring macro- 2015. Maturing external debt totaling US$166 economic stability, boosting investor confidence, billion in 2015 will be rolled over. and anchoring inflation expectations but are likely to weigh on growth in the short-term. The western part of the region is expected to see Risks growth remaining flat in 2015 (2.8 percent). While a significant improvement from the previ- The risks for the region remain tilted to the down- ous two years, it remains below the region’s po- side. Key risks include further declines in oil prices, tential and is insufficient to significantly reduce escalation of geopolitical tensions, and abrupt tight- high and persistent unemployment. Activity is ening of global financial conditions. A weaker-than- projected to strengthen gradually to 3.3 percent expected global recovery and unfavorable resolution in 2016–17. Domestic demand is expected to of problems between Greece and its creditors pres- continue to recover, as household real disposable ent additional risks to the outlook. incomes rise, energy cost remains low, and low Should oil prices decline or geopolitical tensions in inflation allows further monetary policy rate the region escalate, the consequence could be a cuts. As activity in the Euro Area gains momen- deeper recession in the Russian Federation in 2015 tum, exports are expected to pick up. Some which could also extend to 2016, growth slowdown countries in the region should also benefit sub- in other major oil exporters, and a delayed recovery stantially from EU structural funds (Croatia, Ro- in Ukraine—and a sharp slowdown in regional mania, and Slovenia). Nonetheless, at least over growth. Policy changes related to the establishment the short term, high non-performing loans of the Eurasian Economic Union, specifically the (NPLs) and a heavy debt burden, will continue restrictions on migrant workers to the Russian Fed- to limit credit growth. Elevated government debt eration from non-member states may lead to a sig- will limit room for fiscal support to growth (Al- nificant number of labor migrants returning to Ta- bania, Croatia, Hungary, FYR Macedonia, Mon- jikistan and Uzbekistan. Net energy exporters in the tenegro, and Serbia). The nature and impact of region would struggle to adjust to further falls in oil these financial constraints varies considerably prices. For the region’s oil importers, the windfall to across countries. In Bulgaria, for example, the ef- households via higher disposable incomes and to fects of the 2014 domestic banking turmoil lin- firms via lower production costs would accelerate ger. Growth in the Western Balkans is expected the tailwinds of a recovery, but this will not fully to be a modest 1.5 percent in 2015 (up from 0.4 offset the opposing forces. percent in 2014), as a pick-up in net exports is expected to offset slowing investment and con- Any faltering in the global economic recovery, espe- sumption. The Western Balkans remain weighed cially in the Euro Area, would pose risk to the re- down by the lack of new credit and non-per- gion’s predicted expansion (Chapter 1). It would forming loans are the highest in the ECA region impact exports and undermine business confidence. (above 16 percent). With investment already constrained by deep- rooted structural factors (including high NPLs, ele- In Turkey, activity is expected to be subdued in vated debt, and weak competitiveness), domestic the first half of 2015, but growth is projected at 3 percent in 2015. Households and corporations demand alone will be insufficient to bolster growth. are expected to postpone spending due to policy A disorderly adjustment in global financial markets uncertainty and in advance of the June elections. to the anticipated tightening of U.S. monetary pol- GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 C H A P T E R 2 | E U R O P E A N D C E N T R A L AS I A 125 icy could disrupt financial markets in the region. forest fires) with increased frequency. In addition to the Turkey and other economies in Central Asia remain impact on crops and livestock, the changing seasonal- particularly exposed as their economies are relatively ity of river flows undermines hydropower production, more reliant on dollar inflows than those in the a particularly important sector in Albania. Central and South Eastern Europe region, which carry more euro or Swiss franc liabilities on their balance sheets. Policy Challenges Economic and financial stress in Greece presents an additional risk to the regional outlook, although the Monetary policy challenges exposures of other parts of the Euro Area have di- minished since 2010. Foreign bank exposures to Spillovers from the plunge in oil prices and geo- Greek sovereign and non-sovereign debt have de- political tensions have complicated monetary clined sharply. The ECB’s quantitative easing pro- policies in the eastern part of the region, but gram, which began in March, has shielded sovereign eased monetary policy constraints in the west. bonds in other peripheral countries from contagion In two relatively large oil-exporting economies of risks. Several new institutional mechanisms could the region, Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan, policy help contain contagion.8 Finally, the Euro Area has flexibility has been constrained by elevated infla- emerged from recession, with recoveries gathering tion and balance sheet concerns (Figures 2.16 strength in Spain, Portugal, and (especially) Ireland. and 2.17). Efforts to stem currency depreciations There are pockets of vulnerabilities among develop- in these countries resulted in some losses of re- ing countries, however. Banking systems in Albania, serves and slow external adjustments (current ac- Bulgaria, FYR Macedonia, Romania, and Serbia re- count balances are expected to deteriorate in main vulnerable to contagion through sizeable local both countries in 2015). Russia, where external subsidiaries of Greek banks. In Bulgaria and Alba- pressures were stronger, allowed greater exchange nia, for example, a respective 23 percent and 18 per- rate flexibility. This facilitated current account cent of banking assets are held by Greek banks, pre- adjustments, but contributed to higher inflation senting risks of spillovers from potential banking and increased financial stability risks because of system stress in Greece. Bulgaria’s exposure to the large share of foreign currency-denominated Greece through trade has declined over the past few debt. In general, such debt has risen considerably years, but is still significant. Exports to Greece de- in the region since 2011 and poses a significant clined from 4.1 percent of GDP in 2008 to 3.6 per- cent of GDP in 2014, the highest share of any coun- try in the ECA region.9 Albania receives remittances FIGURE 2.16 Selected economies: Real effective from Greece equivalent to 3.7 percent of its GDP. exchange rates Recent floods in Bosnia and Serbia, which destroyed Exchange rates helped absorb external shocks in Russia, but policy flexibility has been about 15 percent of Bosnia’s output and 2 percent of constrained by elevated inflation and balance sheet concerns in other oil-exporting Serbia’s, point to the wider vulnerabilities unfavorable economies, particularly Kazakhstan. weather conditions pose to the region. Many of the Index (Jan. 2014=100) countries in the region are facing warmer tempera- 150 Russian Federation Germany Kazakhstan Azerbaijan tures, a changing hydrology, and more extreme cli- 125 matic conditions (droughts, floods, heat waves and 100 8The €500 billion European Stability Mechanism may serve as a buf- fer to mitigate short-term volatility and pressures on periphery banks and 75 sovereign debt issuers; the new bank resolution system could help insulate sovereign debt issuers from banking system stress; the new single supervisory system and the 2014 asset quality review have improved confidence in Euro 50 Jul-14 Oct-14 Apr-14 Apr-15 Jan-14 Jan-15 Area banks and removed uncertainties about Greek debt holding. 9Germany has replaced Greece as Bulgaria’s main export destination, with exports to Germany accounting for 6.3 percent of GDP. Greece is now the fifth largest export destination for Bulgaria’s exports after Germany, Tur- Source: World Bank and Haver Analytics. key, Italy, and Romania. Note: Decline denotes depreciation. 126 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 2.17 Foreign currency exposure and foreign Almost all oil-exporting countries in the region have currency vulnerability indicators, 2013 significant buffers in the form of foreign assets. This In oil-importing economies, high dollarization constrains policy flexibility. has allowed them to avoid steep spending cuts, de- spite significant loss in oil revenues, or implement Percent Foreign currency exposure countercyclical expenditure increases. Fiscal break- 100 Foreign currency vulnerability indicator even oil prices are estimated to remain at or over 80 US$90 per barrel (Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan), and 60 considerably above the US$58–64 projected for 40 2015-16 to cover government spending, which has 20 increased in recent years in response to rising social 0 pressures and infrastructure development goals. As a result of the oil price decline, all countries in the Bosnia & Turkey Kazakhstan Serbia Romania Ukraine Albania Georgia Armenia Lithuania Hungary Moldova Federation Azerbaijan Russian Herz. region are expected to run fiscal deficits in 2015 ex- cept Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. With buffers eroding rapidly, and lower oil prices expected to per- Sources: Moody’s Statistical Handbook. Note: Foreign currency exposure is measured as total foreign currency deposits in the domestic banking system/ sist for a prolonged period, most countries will need total deposits in the domestic banking system. Foreign currency vulnerability indicator is defined as (total foreign to re-assess medium-term spending plans and will currency deposits in the domestic banking system)/ (official foreign exchange reserves + foreign assets of domes- tic banks). Belarus’s dollarization was 62.2, its dollarization vulnerability 193.7 in 2013. Alternative estimates show need to adjust gradually to the new realities in the dollarization in Azerbaijan at 50%, in Kazakhstan around 55%, in Georgia above 60%, and in Armenia above 70 percent. The World Bank team estimates dollarization vulnerability in Belarus at 82.6% on the net basis. global oil market (IMF 2015c). Oil-importers with close economic ties to oil ex- challenges to policy makers. Tightening global fi- porters may need to tighten fiscal policy in the me- nancial conditions over the medium term will in- dium-term to ensure the sustainability of high gov- tensify these challenges. With commodity prices ernment or quasi-government debt, despite slowing expected to remain low, diversification will benefit growth (Armenia, Georgia, Kyrgyz Republic, and from greater exchange rate flexibility and stricter Moldova). In contrast, for oil-importers not affected macroprudential regulations will help contain risks by the regional spillovers, the fall in oil prices could related to private sector balance sheets. generate substantial fiscal savings: In this way, the In contrast, in the western part of the region, low tailwinds of low oil prices provide an opportunity oil prices contributed to lower inflation and im- for these countries to either build fiscal space, which proved trade and current account deficits, and would allow an effective counter-cyclical response eased constraints on monetary policy. In many during the next cyclical slowdown, or to invest in countries in Europe (Hungary, Croatia, FYR critical infrastructure or human capital. Macedonia, Montenegro, and Slovenia), lower Structural reforms oil prices have added to the deflationary pres- sures. Central banks in a number of countries cut As growth in high-income countries picks up, con- policy rates to support activity in 2015 (Hun- vergence of GDP per capita between high-income gary, Romania, Serbia, and Turkey). Interest rate and developing countries of the region is expected cuts in oil-importing countries (especially those to slow. Sustained lower oil prices will reduce real with a rapidly rising stock of external debt such incomes and purchasing power in many oil-export- as Turkey), however, may have to end once the ing economies and the economies closely linked to gradual normalization of U.S. monetary policy them. Unemployment in oil-importers, particularly gets under way. in the Western Balkans, remains high (Figure 2.18). To accelerate growth and job creation, and to avoid Need to reassess fiscal policies a significant widening of the income gap, requires Many economies affected by regional spillovers re- stepping up the implementation of structural re- laxed fiscal policies to avoid sharp slowdowns. Oil- forms in the entire region. importing countries not affected by the regional Many countries in the ECA region remain well be- spillovers took the opportunity to reform energy low the frontier of best practices with regard to creat- taxes, and to build fiscal space. ing a business environment conducive to productiv- GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 C H A P T E R 2 | E U R O P E A N D C E N T R A L AS I A 127 ity growth. Barriers to open markets and access to FIGURE 2.18 Unemployment, 2013 finance are well above-average in Azerbaijan, the Despite the nascent recovery, output remains below potential and unemployment rates Kyrgyz Republic, and Ukraine (World Bank 2015k). high in the western part of the region. Reducing these barriers would spur productivity and Percent of labor force increase resilience to external shocks. While reform 30 needs are country specific, they fall into a few cate- 20 gories. These include shifting the composition of 10 growth away from consumption (Georgia, Turkey, 0 Tajikistan Bulgaria Kyrgyz Rep. Poland Slovak Rep. Croatia Armenia Moldova FYR Macedonia Ukraine Belarus Kazakhstan Hungary Azerbaijan Serbia Kosovo Turkmenistan Uzbekistan Romania Turkey Czech Rep. Slovenia Georgia Albania Bosnia & Herz. Russian Federation Montenegro and Ukraine), or natural resources (Azerbaijan, Ka- zakhstan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan); easing infrastructure bottlenecks; improving education; re- forming labor markets; enhancing competition and easing administrative burdens; improving access to Eastern Central Central High- South Western Europe Asia & SE income Cauca- Balkans private and multilateral financing; reducing barriers Europe ECA sus to trade and facilitating regional integration; and re- forming energy subsidies. Source: World Bank. Haver Analytics. Eurostat. Kosovo Agency of Statistics. Note: Informal sector (often large) may not be included in the data. ILO definition. May differ from the official esti- mates, particularly for Belarus. A cross cutting theme for the region is the need for a comprehensive financial sector reforms to clean up bank balance sheets. Although bank capital and FIGURE 2.19 Non-performing loans (NPL) ratios provisioning are above regulatory minimums, high Comprehensive financial sector reforms are needed to strengthen bank balance non-performing loans (Figures 2.19) continue to sheets. weigh on growth—despite recent improvements in Percent of total loans Hungary and Romania—by reducing the profit- 40 NPL ratio 2014 NPL ratio max 2009-2014 ability of banks and constraining new lending for 30 productive activities. High foreign liabilities pose additional risks to the banking sector (Figure 20 2.20). This could result in significant contingent 10 liabilities to the public sector (IMF 2015d). Mea- 0 sures to improve bank balance sheets could include Kazakhstan Tajikistan Serbia Bosnia & Herz. Ukraine Montenegro Hungary Romania Albania Bulgaria Azerbaijan Moldova Macedonia better collateral enforcement, fostering more out- FYR of-court debt restructuring, strengthening insol- vency frameworks, and clearing bottlenecks in overloaded court systems. Source: IMF, Financial Soundness Indicators. Current low commodity prices are also a reminder Note: Alternative estimates (using strict definitions) for Ukraine assess nonperforming loans at around 32 percent of total loans in 2014. to commodity-exporting countries of the impor- tance of diversification. Diversification efforts could include efforts to build institutions that reduce eco- In Ukraine, which faces extraordinary challenges, nomic volatility, change incentives away from non- the reform agenda should focus on governance re- tradables, encourage export diversification, and forms, including anti-corruption and judicial mea- build human capital (see Chapter 1 for additional sures, deregulation and tax administration reforms, discussion). and reforms of state-owned enterprises to improve Some reforms can take a long time to feed into corporate governance and reduce fiscal risks. Broader higher productivity and sustained growth. However, energy sector reforms will increase energy efficiency some reforms can have a considerable effect on eco- and foster energy independence. nomic activity even in the short term. For example, Finally, recent floods in Bosnia and Serbia, which policies can ease short-term transition costs by as- destroyed about 15 percent of Bosnia’s output and 2 sisting workers to move to new jobs, or they can percent of Serbia’s, point to the wider vulnerabilities speed up the repair of capital bases of lending insti- unfavorable weather conditions pose to the region. tutions (see Chapter 1 for additional discussion). Many of the countries in the region are facing 128 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 2.20 Net foreign liabilities, 2014 warmer temperatures, a changing hydrology, and High foreign liabilities pose risks to the banking sector. more extreme climatic conditions (droughts, floods, Percent of GDP heat waves, forest fires, earthquakes), some of them 120 with increased frequency. In addition to the impact on crops and livestock, the changing seasonality of 80 river flows undermines hydropower production, a particularly important sector in Albania, the Kyrgyz 40 Republic, and Tajikistan. Planning for extreme weather events will help to support preparedness for a variety of other emergencies. 0 Bosnia& Herz. Serbia Kyrgyz Rep. Hungary Romania Georgia Bulgaria Armenia Moldova FYR Macedonia Ukraine Albania Source: World Bank and IMF International Financial Statistics. Note: Latest data available for Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Kyrgyz Republic, Romania, Serbia, and Ukraine is for 2013. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 C H A P T E R 2 | E U R O P E A N D C E N T R A L AS I A 129 TABLE 2.3 Europe and Central Asia forecast summary (Annual percent change unless indicated otherwise) 00-10a 2011 2012 2013 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f Developing ECA, GDP at market pricesb 4.6 6.1 1.9 3.7 2.4 1.8 3.4 3.6 Developing ECA, GDP at market prices, excl. Ukraine 4.6 6.2 2.1 4.1 3.2 2.6 3.5 3.7 (Average including countries with full national accounts and balance of payments data only) Developing ECA, GDP at market prices 4.6 6.2 1.9 3.7 2.4 1.8 3.3 3.6 GDP per capita (units in US$) 4.1 5.4 1.2 3.0 1.7 1.2 2.7 3.0 PPP GDP 4.8 5.9 2.0 3.6 2.2 1.5 3.3 3.6 Private consumption 5.2 7.0 2.3 5.1 2.1 2.4 3.5 3.8 Public consumption 3.1 2.7 4.1 3.8 4.3 3.9 3.5 3.7 Fixed investment 6.1 10.2 –0.7 1.4 1.8 0.1 2.6 3.1 Exports, GNFSc 5.9 8.4 4.7 2.0 3.0 4.3 5.0 5.0 Imports, GNFSc 6.6 11.0 2.3 4.7 1.5 4.6 5.6 6.4 Net exports, contribution to growth –0.3 –1.2 0.8 –1.1 0.5 –0.2 –0.4 –0.7 Consumer prices (annual average) 13.9 8.2 8.7 6.2 7.3 … … … Fiscal balance (percent of GDP) –4.3 0.7 –0.6 –1.2 –1.8 –2.2 –1.7 –1.5 Memo items: GDP   Broader geographic regiond 4.6 4.8 2.2 2.2 1.8 0.3 2.3 3.1 EU, Central and Southeastern Europe, West Balkans, 3.7 4.9 1.0 2.4 2.8 2.8 3.3 3.4 and Turkeye EU-Central and Southeastern Europe 3.5 2.8 0.4 1.2 2.8 2.8 3.0 3.2 Eastern Europef 5.1 5.6 0.6 0.6 –4.1 –6.1 1.1 2.4 Western Balkansg 3.8 1.9 –0.3 2.5 0.4 1.5 2.5 2.9 South Caucasush 12.0 1.8 3.5 5.1 3.2 1.5 2.7 3.1 Central Asial 8.2 8.1 5.9 6.8 5.5 3.4 4.4 5.4 Russian Federation 5.1 4.3 3.4 1.3 0.6 –2.7 0.7 2.5 Turkey 3.9 8.8 2.1 4.2 2.9 3.0 3.9 3.7 Ukraine 4.3 5.5 0.2 0.0 –6.8 –7.5 2.0 3.0 Source: World Bank. World Bank forecasts are frequently updated based on new information and changing (global) circumstances. Consequently, projections presented here may differ from those contained in other Bank documents, even if basic assessments of countries’ prospects do not differ at any given moment in time. a. Growth rates over intervals are compound weighted averages; average growth contributions, ratios and deflators are calculated as simple averages of the annual weighted averages for the region. b. GDP at market prices and expenditure components are measured in constant 2010 U.S. dollars. c. Exports and imports of goods and non-factor services (GNFS). d. Broader geographic region includes developing ECA and 6 recently transitioned high-income countries (Croatia, Czech Republic, Poland, Russian Federation, Slovak Republic, and Slovenia.) e. EU: Croatia, Czech Republic, Poland, Slovak Republic, Slovenia. Central and Southeastern Europe: Bulgaria, Hungary, Romania. f. Eastern Europe: Belarus, Moldova, Ukraine. g. Western Balkans: Albania: Bosnia and Herzegovina; FYR Macedonia; Montenegro; Serbia. h. South Caucasus: Armenia; Azerbaijan; Georgia. l. Central Asia: Kazakhstan, Kyrgyz Republic, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan. 130 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 TABLE 2.4 Europe and Central Asia country forecasts (Real GDP growth at market prices in percent, unless indicated otherwise) 00–10a 2011 2012 2013 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f Albania 5.2 2.5 1.6 1.4 1.9 3.0 3.5 3.5 Armenia 7.9 4.7 7.2 3.5 3.4 0.8 2.7 3.0 Azerbaijan 14.9 0.1 2.2 5.8 2.8 1.5 2.6 2.7 Belarus 7.4 5.5 1.7 1.0 1.6 –3.5 –1.0 1.0 Bosnia and Herzegovina 4.0 1.0 –1.1 2.5 0.4 2.0 2.3 2.9 Bulgaria 4.0 2.0 0.5 1.1 1.7 1.1 2.0 2.7 Georgia 6.2 7.2 6.2 3.3 4.8 2.0 3.0 5.0 Hungary 2.1 1.8 –1.5 1.5 3.6 2.4 2.5 2.7 Kazakhstan 8.3 7.5 5.0 6.0 4.3 1.7 2.9 4.1 Kosovo 6.1 4.4 2.8 3.4 2.5 3.0 3.5 3.7 Kyrgyz Republic 4.1 6.0 –0.1 10.9 3.6 1.7 3.2 4.0 FYR Macedonia 1.6 2.3 –0.5 2.7 3.5 3.5 3.8 4.0 Moldova 5.1 6.8 –0.7 9.4 4.6 –2.0 1.5 4.0 Montenegro 3.6 3.2 –2.5 3.3 1.5 3.4 2.9 2.9 Romania 4.1 1.1 0.6 3.5 2.9 3.0 3.2 3.5 Serbia 3.6 1.4 –1.0 2.6 –1.8 –0.5 1.5 2.0 Tajikistan 8.3 7.4 7.5 7.4 6.7 3.2 4.4 5.2 Turkey 3.9 8.8 2.1 4.2 2.9 3.0 3.9 3.7 Turkmenistan 13.6 14.7 11.1 10.2 10.3 8.0 9.0 9.0 Ukraine 4.3 5.5 0.2 0.0 –6.8 –7.5 2.0 3.0 Uzbekistan 6.9 8.3 8.2 8.0 8.1 7.6 7.8 8.0 00–10a 2011 2012 2013 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f Recently transitioned to high-income countriesb                 Croatia 2.5 –0.3 –2.2 –0.9 –0.4 0.5 1.2 1.5 Czech Republic 3.2 2.0 –0.8 –0.7 2.0 2.4 2.5 2.8 Poland 3.8 4.8 1.8 1.7 3.4 3.6 3.6 3.6 Russian Federation 5.1 4.3 3.4 1.3 0.6 –2.7 0.7 2.5 Slovak Republic 4.8 2.7 1.6 1.4 2.4 2.4 2.7 3.2 Slovenia 2.7 0.6 –2.6 –1.0 2.6 1.7 2.5 2.0 Source: World Bank. World Bank forecasts are frequently updated based on new information and changing (global) circumstances. Consequently, projections presented here may differ from those contained in other Bank documents, even if basic assessments of countries’ prospects do not significantly differ at any given moment in time. a. GDP growth rates over intervals are compound average; current account balance shares are simple averages over the period. b. The recently high–income countries are based on World Bank’s reclassification from 2004 to 2014. LATIN AMERICA and THE CARIBBEAN Facing lower prices for oil and other commodities, challenging domestic business climates and widespread droughts, growth in Latin America and the Caribbean slowed to 0.9 percent in 2014. South America, deeply affected by the oil price decline, was also impacted by domestic macroeconomic challenges among its largest economies. In contrast, developing Central and North America, along with the Caribbean, benefited from the strengthening United States, and saw an acceleration of activity. The ongoing recovery among advanced countries is expected to support external demand in the medium-term, lifting growth to an average of 1.7 percent in 2015–17. A deeper and more protracted decline in commodity prices, or a slower-than-expected recovery of the Euro Area, represent major downside risks. Recent Developments FIGURE 2.21 Regional GDP growth Growth slowed in 2014, with divergence among sub-regions. Amidst deteriorating terms of trade, challenging do- Percent 2013 2014 mestic business climates and widespread droughts, 8 growth in Latin America and the Caribbean slowed 6 to 0.9 percent in 2014 from 2.7 percent in 2013— 4 the slowest in 13 years apart from the Great Reces- sion of 2009. There were marked differences among 2 the sub-regions: almost no growth in South America 0 contrasted with robust expansion in developing Mexico Latin America & the Brazil South America Central & North The Caribbean Dominican Republic America Central and North America and the Caribbean (Fig- Caribbean ure 2.21). This divergence partly reflected the more extensive trade exposure of Central and North America and the Caribbean to the United States, compared to the heavy reliance of South America on Source: World Bank. commodity exports (Figures 2.22 and 2.23). Prices of key commodities for the region (oil, soy beans, tracted. In Argentina, modest growth was led by gold, copper, and maize) declined through the sec- government consumption, while double-digit infla- ond half of 2014, and remained soft in the first half tion rates weighed on private consumption, and of 2015. Domestic demand growth weakened. An weak soy bean prices dented export earnings. A sov- increase in net exports largely reflected weak imports, ereign rating downgrade dampened investor confi- although a bumper soy harvest in Argentina, strong dence. Despite the tourism receipts and capital in- gas exports from Bolivia, and large gold shipments vestments associated with the FIFA World Cup, from the Dominican Republic were positive factors. Brazil, the region’s largest economy, stagnated. Po- In addition to the weakened terms of trade resulting litical uncertainty surrounding the presidential elec- from lower commodity prices, domestic macroeco- tion, a corruption scandal, large fiscal deficits, Chi- nomic challenges also contributed significantly to na’s slowdown, accelerating inflation, monetary the slowdown in South America, as several large tightening and lower prices of key exports (iron ore economies slowed down markedly, or even con- and soy) all contributed to denting consumer and investor confidence. An extended drought led to The main author of this section is Derek Chen. further uncertainty surrounding water and electric- 131 132 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 2.22 Prices of key commodity exports growth increased from 3.8 percent in 2013 to Weakness in commodity prices from 2014 carried over to 2015. 5.5 percent in 2014. Percent change, year-on-year Despite the drop in world energy and food 10 2014 2015 2016 prices, inflation remained high in some of the 0 large economies of South America. Annual infla- -10 tion reached about 65 percent in República Boli- -20 variana de Venezuela in the second half of 2014. -30 In Argentina, annual inflation was 15.8 percent -40 as of April 2015. In Brazil, both headline and core inflation have risen as a result of several fac- -50 tors: depreciation of the real, increases in regu- Wheat Copper Gold Crude Oil Soybeans Iron Ore lated prices, a tight labor market, and a pro- longed drought that has led to a potential energy shortage as water at hydroelectric dams reaches Source: World Bank. low levels. A sharp depreciation also contributed to an increase in inflation in Colombia, where it FIGURE 2.23 Export shares of key commodity exports, has breached the central bank’s upper target 2013 limit. Core inflation rose in most countries (ex- cept in Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, Commodities constitute significant shares of exports. Mexico, and Paraguay). However, partly due to Percent 100 falling oil and food prices, headline inflation has 80 declined across the region, especially in oil-im- 60 porting countries (Figure 2.24). On average, 40 compared to rates in 2014, headline inflation 20 rates in developing Central and North America 0 have fallen by a third, while those in the Carib- Peru (copper) Venezuela, R.B. Bolivia (gas) Brazil (iron ore) Brazil (soy) Ecuador (oil) Belize (oil) Colombia (oil) Republic (gold) bean have nearly halved. Dominican (oil) After a robust first half of 2014, overall gross capital flows to the region weakened after July (Figure 2.25). International bond issuance con- Source: Economist Intelligence Unit. tinues to dominate these inflows. In contrast, eq- uity flows remain small, while bank lending has been volatile, especially in recent months. De- ity supplies. In República Bolivariana de Venezuela, spite the weakening in overall flows, interna- where oil constitutes more than 90 percent of ex- tional bond issuance by regional debtors still ports, and around half of government revenue, ac- reached a new record in 2014, 10 percent above tivity contracted yet again as a result of the oil price 2013 levels, as investors pursued yields, amidst plunge. The challenging business climate includes ample global liquidity. Governments, oil and gas rampant inflation; a disorderly currency market firms, and financial institutions accounted for with an overvalued official rate and dearth of foreign the majority of issues. A surge in sovereign issu- exchange; and pervasive price controls, which have ance to cover 2015 budgets (Chile, Colombia, created widespread shortages of consumer items and Mexico, and Peru) outweighed the negative im- intermediate goods. pact of Argentina’s credit rating downgrade to In contrast, growth in developing Central and selective default in July. Issuance slowed in the North America accelerated to 2.4 percent. Led fourth quarter and early 2015 on concerns sur- by Mexico, the sub-region saw stronger exports rounding a corruption scandal in Brazil, the first supported by U.S. demand that continues to post-crisis interest rate increase in the United gather momentum. Record-high tourism and ro- States and the financial risks to Latin American bust mining exports lifted the Dominican Re- borrowers from an appreciating U.S. dollar (EIU, public and other Caribbean economies, where 2015). U.S. dollar-denominated transactions GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 C H A P T E R 2 | L AT I N A M E R I CA A N D T H E CA R I B B E A N 133 continued to account for the vast majority of to- FIGURE 2.24 Average annual inflation—headline and core tal issuance, posing exchange rate risks from U.S. Headline inflation edged down in 2015, especially among oil importers. dollar appreciation. Percent, year-on-year Many international banks have been reluctant to Headline-H1 2014 Headline-H2 2014 Headline-YTD H1 2015 Core-H1 2014 lend during the balance sheet restructuring of 9 Core-H2 2014 Core-YTD H1 2015 8 recent years. In 2015, however, cross-border 7 6 bank lending appears to be gaining some ground, 5 4 with more attractive pricing and terms for bor- 3 2 rowers. At a 10-year low in 2014, equity issu- 1 0 ance volumes are likely to remain weak going -1 Mexico Panama Brazil Bolivia Colombia Ecuador El Salvador Jamaica Peru Nicaragua Guatemala Honduras Costa Rica Paraguay Dominican Rep. forward, as many of uncertainties that affected the region persist, notably sharply lower oil prices, which undercut prospects for regional energy producers. Most currencies in the region depreciated in nomi- Source: Haver Analytics, World Bank. Note: Core inflation excludes volatile food and energy prices. nal terms against the U.S. dollar. Nominal deprecia- tions were particularly persistent in Argentina, Bra- zil, and Peru where soft commodity prices and/or FIGURE 2.25 Monthly gross capital flows to LAC region challenging business environments have weakened Regional capital inflows weakened after July 2014. the growth outlook (Figure 2.26). However, rela- US$, billions tively high inflation rates in in a number of coun- 30 Bank lending Bond Equity tries across the region caused their currencies to ap- 25 preciate in real terms in 2014. In an effort to stem depreciations, a number of 20 large central banks intervened in the foreign ex- 15 change market. República Bolivariana de Venezu- ela attempted to maintain the exchange rate of 10 the bolivar to the U.S. dollar through controls, 5 which have led to shortages of imports, growing unofficial markets for foreign exchange, and mul- 0 Jan-13 Jun-13 Nov-13 Apr-14 Sep-14 Feb-15 tiple exchange rates. Since August 2013 until re- cently, the Brazilian central bank was using local Source: Dealogic. currency swaps in the foreign-exchange markets to stem depreciation. The Bank of Mexico began cits narrow. Mexico expects to increase revenues in March selling up to $52 million dollars a day. from gasoline sales taxes. With oil income ac- The move is in addition to the automatic auction counting for around 17 percent of total fiscal rev- introduced last December of $200 million a day enue, Colombia has announced government in the event of a depreciation of the peso/dollar spending cuts and tax increases to offset revenue exchange rate by more than 1.5 percent in a day. shortfalls.1 In their 2015 budgets, Ecuador and This was accompanied by several monetary policy Mexico have effected spending cuts in response to rate hikes in Brazil and Colombia since mid-2014 the decline in hydrocarbons-related revenues. Ecua- (Figure 2.27). In contrast, easing inflation and dor will also undertake sizeable external borrowing, modest depreciations have provided some central along with new taxes and import tariffs, in an effort banks room to lower policy rates in support of to sustain planned investment. growth (Guatemala, Honduras, and Peru). In the wake of decreased oil revenues and in- 1Colombia’s creased fiscal pressures, oil exporters have been proposed tax increases pertain to the extensions of the wealth tax and the debit transaction tax that expired at end-2014. In compelled to implement a procyclical fiscal tight- addition, a commission has been established to recommend additional ening, whereas oil-importers have seen their defi- tax reforms. 134 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 2.26a Exchange rate against U.S. dollar Outlook Depreciation against the U.S. dollar intensified in the second half of 2014. Despite a strengthening recovery in the advanced Percent change over period 10 economies, growth in the LAC region is expected H1 2014 H2 2014 YTD 2015 5 weaken further to 0.4 percent in 2015. Low com- 0 modity prices, tepid investment growth in challeng- -5 ing business environments, and fiscal consolidation -10 are the main negative factors. As economic activity in -15 the United States, the Euro Area, and Japan picks up, -20 Mexico commodity prices gradually strengthen, and investor Cost Rica Bolivia El Savador Haiti Nicaragua Jamaica Peru Colombia Brazil Argentina Dominican Rep. Guatemala Honduras Paraguay sentiment improves on better policies, growth is ex- pected to rebound to 2.0 percent in 2016, and to 2.8 percent in 2017 (Figure 2.28). However, there is a divergence among the sub-regions, with prospects for Source: Haver Analytics Central and North America and the Caribbean being Note: Local currency spot exchange rates (increase denotes appreciation) relatively brighter than in South America. South America is projected to contract in 2015 as FIGURE 2.26b Real effective exchange rates low commodity prices are expected to persist, fiscal Most regional currencies appreciated in real effective terms. consolidation remains a priority, and investor confi- dence continues to be dampened. In Brazil, in par- Percent change over period 45 ticular, output will contract as investment slumps in H1 2014 H2 2014 YTD H1 2015 part due investigations surrounding a corruption 30 scandal, concerns with inflation and fiscal sustain- 15 ability, and slowing infrastructure investment. Inad- 0 equate infrastructure remains a key bottleneck for production. The baseline projects a gradual recovery -15 in 2016 and 2017 on the following assumptions: St. Lucia Mexico Venezuela, RB Bolivia Belize Dominica Grenada St. Vincent Ecuador Colombia Brazil Costa Rica Dominican Rep. Paraguay Nicaragua Guyana the government implements fiscal reform to attain a more sustainable budget, inflation is brought down to within the targeted band, and investor confidence returns in response. With the already weak eco- Source: Haver Analytics and IMF Note: Increase denotes appreciation. nomic environment exacerbated by continued low oil prices, economic activity in República Bolivari- ana de Venezuela will most likely continue contract- FIGURE 2.27 Central bank policy rates ing in 2015 and 2016, before recovering in 2017. With some exceptions, regional central banks eased to support growth. However, this hinges on the country making neces- Percentage sary macroeconomic adjustments such as undertak- points Brazil Colombia ing additional currency devaluations and lifting im- 14 Costa Rica Dominican Republic Guatemala Honduras port restrictions so that production chains can be Mexico Peru 12 Paraguay re-established. Argentina will see modest growth 10 this year, but economic activity is expected to pick up in 2016 and 2017 on a stronger macroeconomic 8 environment and regained access to international 6 capital markets. More generally across South Amer- 4 ica, broadly stabilized prices of oil and other com- modities, renewed investor confidence, and slowing 2 fiscal consolidation should raise growth to 1.5 per- Jul-14 Mar-14 Nov-14 Mar-15 Jan-14 May-14 Sep-14 Jan-15 May-15 cent in 2016, and to around 2.5 percent in 2017. Developing Central and North America is expected Source: Haver Analytics. to expand 2.8 percent in 2015, picking up to 3.5 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 C H A P T E R 2 | L AT I N A M E R I CA A N D T H E CA R I B B E A N 135 percent in 2016–17 on higher export demand from FIGURE 2.28 Regional medium-term growth outlook the United States. In Mexico, as the reforms ap- Regional growth is projected to strengthen from 2016 onwards. proved in 2013–14 are implemented and gain trac- tion, investment should strengthen, and offset the Percent 6 2014 2015 2016 2017 drag from lower oil prices. Mitigating weak domes- tic demand growth, stronger external demand and 4 continued tourism growth are expected to support growth in the Caribbean of about 3.7 percent in 2 2016–17, while being mitigated by stronger exter- nal demand and continued tourism growth, which 0 saw record highs in 2014. -2 U.S. growth is critical for LAC growth (IMF Latin America & South America Developing Caribbean the Caribbean Central & North 2007). Around 40 percent of the region’s merchan- America dise exports in 2013 were shipped to the United Source: World Bank. States and, for a large majority of LAC economies, the United States is the among the five largest ex- port destinations (Figure 2.29). The United States also remains one the main investors in Latin FIGURE 2.29 Share of regional merchandise exports to America (ECLAC 2012). In 2012, United States the U.S., EU, and China, 2013 transnationals accounted for around 20 percent of The U.S. remains a key regional export destination. FDI flows to the region (Figure 2.30). As a result Percent of total exports U.S. EU China Others of this close trade and financial integration, the 100 business cycles of the United States and that of the 80 LAC region, especially Central America, tend to 60 move together (Roache 2008). The growing mo- 40 mentum of the U.S. economy lifts prospects for the 20 region. 0 Mexico Panama El Salvador Ecuador LAC Region Venezuela, RB Colombia Belize Suriname St. Lucia Brazil Bolivia Antigua & Barbuda Grenada Haiti Jamaica Peru Argentina Dominica Dominican Rep. Guatemala Nicaragua St. Vct. & Gren. Costa Rica Honduras Guyana Paraguay Despite some moderation, growth prospects are still robust for a number of economies in the medium- term. Peru, for example, suffered a slowdown in 2014 due to weak copper and gold prices, but is expected to see a solid rebound in 2015 and further Source: IMF Direction of Trade. strengthening in 2016, on stimulus measures and the gradual implementation of new infrastructure and mining projects. Bolivia faces a medium-term FIGURE 2.30 FDI into selected countries by source slowing, reflecting weaker energy and commodity country, 2012 prices. However, growth will be robust in coming The U.S. accounts for a significant share of FDI into LAC. years thanks to public investment projects and Bra- zilian and Argentinian demand for natural gas. Cap- Percent of total FDI U.S. E.U. LAC Others 100 ital infrastructure projects, including investment in 80 the private ports system, will lift Panama’s growth rates among the highest in the region. 60 40 20 Risks 0 Mexico Argentina Brazil Colombia Dominican The balance of risks in LAC leans heavily towards Republic the downside. The downside risks, which are both external and internal to the region, include the following. Source: UNCTAD. 136 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 2.31 Consensus forecasts six years ahead, several countries (Figure 2.31), with Mexico being 2009–15 an exception. If capital outflows and a reassessment Six-year-ahead growth projections for selected LAC countries have been declining. were to trigger a further sharp depreciation of local Percent currencies against the U.S. dollar, borrowers’ bal- 7 Brazil Mexico Colombia Peru ance sheets could be strained, since much region’s debt is denominated in U.S. dollars2. LAC coun- 6 tries show elevated levels of vulnerability to a U.S. 5 interest rate increase (Figure 2.32). Lower commodity prices. Although a boost for oil 4 importers, the recent slump in oil prices, if pro- 3 longed, will also pose significant challenges for oil exporters in the region. Spillovers from weaker ac- 2 tivity in the region’s oil-exporting countries would 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 mitigate some of the benefits from lower oil prices Source: Consensus Forecasts. in oil-importing countries. Similarly, larger-than- expected declines in commodity prices will further FIGURE 2.32 Federal Reserve Board Vulnerability Index, deteriorate terms of trade, dent export earnings and 2014 worsen current account balances of regional com- modity exporters. FDI into commodity sectors will LAC countries show elevated levels of vulnerability. also be affected. Index 14 Slower-than-expected recovery in the Euro Area. 12 Although there are indications of a broad-based re- 10 covery in the Euro Area, it is still fragile. Euro Area 8 6 growth is projected to remain subdued in the me- 4 dium term, and is subject to significant downside 2 risks from financing stress in Greece, and from geo- 0 political tensions surrounding Ukraine. For several Mexico Thailand Brazil Colombia Philippines China Turkey South Africa Chile Indonesia Malaysia Korea, Rep. India Federation Russian countries, the Euro Area accounts for a significant share of exports, remittances, tourism, and FDI (Figures 2.29 and 2.30). Source: U.S. Federal Reserve Board. Hard landing in China. China has become a key source of FDI, financing, and trade for Latin Amer- Insufficient macroeconomic adjustment among ica (World Bank 2015k). China is expected to de- the largest economies. The return to economic ex- celerate gradually to a more sustainable long-term pansion is predicated on the implementation of growth path. Although a low-probability scenario, macroeconomic policy adjustments among the re- there is a risk that financial vulnerabilities could gion’s largest economies. Insufficient progress on cause growth to slow more sharply than expected. A this front would weigh on growth in these countries sharp slowdown in China would likely reduce FDI as well as prospects at the regional level. into the region, as well as global demand and prices Financial Volatility. Monetary policy tightening in for several commodities that are key export products the United States, expected to begin later in 2015, for Latin American countries. This would further has the potential to attract capital flows away from deteriorate terms-of-trade and erode export earn- Latin America, as investors re-evaluate country-spe- ings of regional commodity exporters. cific, long-term growth prospects and risks. Me- dium-term growth prospects have deteriorated in Policy Challenges 2IDB Policy makers face several challenges: a nearing in- 2015 shows that the U.S. dollar remains the preferred cur- rency of financing for regional economies and this preference has not terest rate increase in the United States, uncertainty been sensitive to dollar-euro spreads. surrounding the fragile recoveries in the Eurozone GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 C H A P T E R 2 | L AT I N A M E R I CA A N D T H E CA R I B B E A N 137 and Japan, less rapid growth in China, and adjust- FIGURE 2.33 Overall fiscal balance as a share of GDP ment to lower commodity prices and more broadly Fiscal balances have deteriorated. the end to the commodity super-cycle. Percent of GDP 2007 2014 Change While there are cyclical elements to the ongoing slowdown in the region, the key concern for the re- 5 gion is how it adapts to the end of the double tail- 0 wind era when China’s economy was surging and -5 commodity prices were booming (World Bank. -10 2015l). Currently, with the slowdown in China and -15 lower commodity prices, both expected to be sus- Mexico Panama Venezuela, R.B. Colombia Brazil Bolivia El Salvador Jamaica Argentina Peru Ecuador Guatemala Nicaragua Dominican Rep. Haiti Paraguay Honduras Costa Rica tained at least in the medium-term, the region needs to find new sources of growth and address longer- term structural impediments that are holding back potential growth. Most countries have limited room to support Source: IMF World Economic Outlook April 2015, Paraguay Ministry of Finance Note: General government net lending/borrowing. growth with countercyclical fiscal and monetary policies. Fiscal deficits and fiscal space have deteri- orated and remain considerably weaker than before FIGURE 2.34 Share oil/gas revenue in total government the Great Recession (Figure 2.33, World Bank. budget, 2013 2015k). The deterioration has been most pro- Oil and gas revenues account of significant shares of government revenues nounced in countries where commodity-based rev- Percent enues account for large shares of total revenues 40 (Figure 2.34). This limits room for fiscal stimulus to support activity. Similarly, the effectiveness of 30 expansionary monetary policies has weakened in recent years (IDB 2013; Aastveit et al. 2013). Fur- 20 ther, given that the less conducive global condi- tions are expected to hold in the medium-term, fiscal and monetary tools are only appropriate to 10 smooth the transition to the new lower equilib- rium, rather than to change it. In this regard, ex- 0 Bolivia Colombia Mexico change rate flexibility has helped and could further help some countries, such as commodity exporters, Source: Latest IMF staff reports. adjust to the new equilibrium. Structural reform measures are therefore needed to enhance long- term economic prospects. high worker turnover, a less-educated and less- Sound reforms could promote development, more trained workforce, the likelihood of illegal practices, efficient labor markets, and social equity. Priority and reduced access to credit (Busso, Madrigal, and areas are education, product market competition, Pagés 2012). Thus, measures to reduce informality, tax systems, and regulatory frameworks. Financial through improved incentives to move into formal sector reform could help improve financial stability, activity, could lift growth. while at the same time increasing the flow of savings The region also suffers from a significant gap in the into productive investment (IDB 2013). quantity and quality of infrastructure services, with Labor market reform could reduce economic distor- low investment in this sector, resulting in low inter- tions, such as inefficient allocation of labor, and national rankings among regional economies (Fig- raise productivity. It could also encourage a shift ure 2.35). While public-private partnerships do not from informal employment and activity into for- necessarily increase aggregate investment, they may mally organized structures. Informality is associated offer a way to enhance existing regulatory or institu- with a high proportion of small, less-efficient firms, tional arrangements (IDB 2013). International ex- 138 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 2.35 Global rankings on quality and perience suggests that increases in domestic savings extensiveness of infrastructure, 2014–15 together with improvements in regulatory institu- Regional economies suffer from a gap in the quantity and quality of tions could yield benefits in terms of infrastructure infrastructure. provision and growth (Engel, Fischer, and Galetovic Ranking 2013). To enhance investment rates, countries could 140 120 deepen long-term domestic savings by streamlining 100 regulations of financial institutions that serve resi- 80 60 dents. Similarly, pension, social security, and tax 40 reform could have major impacts on savings levels 20 (IDB 2013). 0 Panama Mexico El Salvador Suriname Venezuela, R.B. Brazil Colombia Bolivia Guatemala Costa Rica Jamaica Peru Argentina Dominican Rep. Nicaragua Guyana Paraguay Haiti LAC average Honduras Source: World Economic Forum (2014). Note: Rankings out of 144 economies. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 C H A P T E R 2 | L AT I N A M E R I CA A N D T H E CA R I B B E A N 139 TABLE 2.5 Latin America and the Caribbean forecast summary (Annual percent change unless indicated otherwise) 00-10a 2011 2012 2013 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f GDP at market pricesb 3.3 4.7 2.9 2.7 0.9 0.4 2.0 2.8 (Average including countries with full national accounts and balance of payments data only)c GDP at market pricesc 3.3 4.7 2.9 2.7 0.9 0.4 2.0 2.8 GDP per capita 1.9 3.0 1.4 1.5 –0.2 –0.7 1.0 1.8 PPP GDP 3.2 4.4 2.7 2.8 1.2 0.8 2.3 2.9 Private consumption 3.6 5.1 4.1 3.2 1.1 0.2 1.8 2.3 Public consumption 3.3 3.0 4.1 2.8 2.1 0.0 –0.1 1.5 Fixed investment 4.8 7.9 1.7 2.4 –1.6 –2.7 2.3 3.7 Exports, GNFSd 2.8 6.9 3.1 1.0 1.7 4.0 4.9 5.3 Imports, GNFSd 5.7 11.2 4.6 3.3 1.1 1.0 3.2 3.9 Net exports, contribution to growth –0.4 –0.9 –0.3 –0.5 0.1 0.6 0.3 0.3 Consumer prices (annual average) 7.0 7.5 6.7 9.8 14.7 … … … Fiscal balance (percent of GDP) –2.6 –3.1 –3.6 –3.7 –5.7 –5.7 –5.5 –5.1 Memo items: GDP   Broader geographic region 3.3 4.8 3.0 2.8 1.0 0.5 2.1 2.8 (incl. recently high income countries)e South America f 3.7 4.9 2.5 3.0 0.3 –0.6 1.5 2.5 Developing Central and North Americag 2.0 4.2 4.1 1.8 2.4 2.8 3.4 3.6 Caribbeanh 3.4 2.8 2.0 3.8 5.5 4.2 4.1 3.2 Brazil 3.6 3.9 1.8 2.7 0.1 –1.3 1.1 2.0 Mexico 1.8 4.0 4.0 1.4 2.1 2.6 3.2 3.5 Argentinai 3.8 8.4 0.8 2.9 0.5 1.1 1.8 3.0 Source: World Bank. World Bank forecasts are frequently updated based on new information and changing (global) circumstances. Consequently, projections presented here may differ from those contained in other Bank documents, even if basic assessments of countries’ prospects do not differ at any given moment in time. a. Growth rates over intervals are compound weighted averages; average growth contributions, ratios and deflators are calculated as simple averages of the annual weighted averages for the region. b. GDP at market prices and expenditure components are measured in constant 2010 U.S. dollars. c. Sub-region aggregate excludes Cuba, Grenada, and Suriname, for which data limitations prevent the forecasting of GDP components or Balance of Payments details. d. Exports and imports of goods and non-factor services (GNFS). e. Recently high-income countries include Chile, Trinidad and Tobago, and Uruguay. f. South America: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Paraguay, Peru, Venezuela g. Developing Central & North America: Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, El Salvador. h. Caribbean: Belize, Dominica, Dominican Republic, Haiti, Jamaica, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines. i. Preliminary for long-term average. Data was recently rebased; missing data up to 2003 was spliced with the earlier data. 140 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 TABLE 2.6 Latin America and the Caribbean country forecasts (Real GDP growth at market prices in percent, unless indicated otherwise) 00-10a 2011 2012 2013 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f Argentinab 3.8 8.4 0.8 2.9 0.5 1.1 1.8 3.0 Belize 4.0 2.1 3.8 1.5 3.6 2.5 2.6 2.7 Bolivia 3.8 5.2 5.2 6.8 5.3 4.8 4.2 4.1 Brazil 3.6 3.9 1.8 2.7 0.1 –1.3 1.1 2.0 Colombia 4.1 6.6 4.0 4.9 4.6 3.5 3.9 4.2 Costa Rica 4.4 4.5 5.2 3.4 3.5 3.4 4.2 4.4 Dominica 2.6 0.2 –1.4 –0.9 1.5 1.3 1.5 1.6 Dominican Republic 4.9 2.9 2.6 4.8 7.3 5.2 4.8 3.4 Ecuador 4.1 7.8 5.2 4.6 3.8 1.9 3.0 4.2 El Salvador 1.9 2.2 1.9 1.7 2.0 2.2 2.5 2.6 Guatemala 3.3 4.2 3.0 3.7 4.2 4.0 3.9 3.9 Guyana 2.4 5.4 4.8 5.2 3.6 3.7 3.8 4.0 Haiti 0.1 5.5 2.9 4.2 2.7 1.7 3.2 3.1 Honduras 4.1 3.8 4.1 2.8 3.1 2.9 3.3 3.5 Jamaica 0.5 1.7 -0.6 0.6 0.4 1.5 2.2 2.5 Mexico 1.8 4.0 4.0 1.4 2.1 2.6 3.2 3.5 Nicaraguab 2.8 5.7 5.0 4.6 4.7 4.2 4.3 4.2 Panama 6.3 10.9 10.8 8.4 6.2 6.2 6.4 6.5 Paraguay 3.4 4.3 –1.2 14.2 4.4 4.2 4.1 4.1 Perub, c 5.6 6.5 6.0 5.8 2.4 3.9 5.0 5.0 St. Lucia 1.8 1.2 –1.6 –0.4 –1.0 –0.6 0.8 1.4 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 3.5 –0.5 1.2 1.7 1.5 2.6 2.9 3.4 Venezuela, RB 3.1 4.2 5.6 1.3 –4.0 –5.1 –1.0 1.1 Source: World Bank. World Bank forecasts are frequently updated based on new information and changing (global) circumstances. Consequently, projections presented here may differ from those contained in other Bank documents, even if basic assessments of countries’ prospects do not significantly differ at any given moment in time. Cuba, Grenada, St. Kitts and Nevis, are not forecast owing to data limitations. a. GDP growth rates over intervals are compound average. b. Preliminary for long-term average. Data was recently rebased; missing earlier data was spliced with the previous series. c. Incorporates country data through May 20, 2015. 00-10a 2011 2012 2013 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f Recently transitioned to high-income countriesb                 Chile 4.1 5.8 5.5 4.2 1.9 2.9 3.3 3.5 Trinidad and Tobago 5.7 –2.6 1.2 1.6 0.8 1.8 2.0 2.2 Uruguay 2.9 7.3 3.7 4.4 3.5 2.6 3.1 3.2 Source: World Bank. World Bank forecasts are frequently updated based on new information and changing (global) circumstances. Consequently, projections presented here may differ from those contained in other Bank documents, even if basic assessments of countries’ prospects do not significantly differ at any given moment in time. Cuba, Grenada, St. Kitts and Nevis, are not forecast owing to data limitations. a. GDP growth rates over intervals are compound average. b. The recently high-income countries are based on World Bank’s country reclassification from 2004 to 2015. MIDDLE EAST and NORTH AFRICA After an easing in tensions in early 2014, the Middle East and North Africa region is again experiencing major— and increasing—security challenges. In addition, since mid-2014, it is also adjusting to the oil price drop. This is a particular challenge for oil-exporting countries, many of which also face severe security issues. For oil-importing countries, the potential positive effect of lower oil prices is partially offset by spillovers from within the region, in- cluding through lower remittances and security problems, and by long-standing constraints on growth potential. Growth is expected to average about 2.2 percent in the developing countries of the region in 2015, and to pick up modestly in 2016-17. Risks remain tilted to the downside, more so than in other regions. Policy makers face the challenges of adjusting to lower oil prices and coping with security risks in the short-run, and bolstering growth, employment, and fiscal positions in the long-run. Recent Developments Lebanese security personnel. In Tunisia, terrorist at- tacks have targeted tourists. Regional growth rebounded to 2.2 percent in 2014 Growth in the region’s oil-exporting developing (from 0.5 percent in 2013) due to some easing in countries2 averaged 1.9 percent in 2014, a recovery security risks (the Arab Republic of Egypt and Leba- from the 0.8 percent contraction in 2013. Oil pro- non); strong, credit-fueled domestic demand growth duction stabilized at around 8.2 million barrels (Algeria); public investment and sanctions relief un- per day (mbd) towards the end of 2014—25 per- der two interim nuclear agreements (the Islamic Re- cent below the pre-Arab Spring average (Figure public of Iran); and a rebound in oil production in 2.37)—but has since fallen again. Libya was hit some oil-exporting countries (Libya, Iraq, and the hard in the latest quarter as its oil infrastructure Islamic Republic of Iran).1 came under attack; production fell from 0.7 mbd In the first half of 2015, security challenges intensi- in 2014Q4 to 0.3 mbd in 2015Q1. The Islamic fied in oil-producing developing countries. Rebel Republic of Iran remains under sanctions, with a forces toppled the government in the Republic of cap on oil exports of 1.1 mbd. This limit may be Yemen, prompting aerial intervention by Saudi Ara- eased if the international negotiations on Iran’s bia. Various rebel groups, most notoriously the mili- nuclear program are successful. The Islamic Re- tant group the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant public of Iran would then contribute an addi- (ISIL), advanced into new territory in the Syrian tional 0.7–1.0 mbd to an already oversupplied Arab Republic. Conflicting factions in Libya have market, keeping prices low, potentially, for a con- targeted oil installations to seize or destroy revenue siderable period. streams. Associates of ISIL joined fighting in Yemen Iraq, Libya, and the Republic of Yemen rely heav- and Libya. ISIL fighters are reportedly massing at ily on the oil sector for government revenues the Syrian border with Lebanon and clashing with (Figure 2.36). As a result of security challenges and falling oil prices, they suffered large revenue declines and widening fiscal deficits. This led to The main author of this section is Franziska Ohnsorge with contri- sharp cuts spending and difficulties maintaining butions from Damir Cosic. 1This chapter covers low- and middle-income countries of the Middle East and North Africa region while high-income Gulf Coopera- 2Developing oil-exporting countries are: Algeria, the Islamic Re- tion Council (GCC) countries are excluded. The developing countries public of Iran, Iraq, Libya, and the Republic of Yemen. Syrian Arab are further divided into two groups: oil-importers and oil-exporters. Republic is excluded due to data limitations. 141 142 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 2.36 Oil production tion. In Lebanon, a mid-year lull in violence, rapid Oil production is rising modestly in high income oil exporting countries. credit growth, and an inflow of refugees supported domestic demand (World Bank 2014c; Ianchovi- Millions barrels per day china and Ivanic 2014). In Jordan, growth picked 12 2014 2015Q1 up slightly to 3.1 percent. Disruptions to transport 10 routes limited the expansion, as did capacity con- 8 straints as Jordan absorbed a large inflow of refugees 6 from Syria that began in 2013. In contrast, growth slowed sharply in Morocco to 2.6 percent due to a 4 contraction in agricultural output after a bumper 2 crop in the previous year and weak exports to the 0 Euro Area. Yemen, Oman Libya Qatar Kuwait Iraq Iran, United Saudi Rep. Islamic Arab Arabia Growth momentum appeared to be faltering in sev- Rep. Emirates eral oil-importing economies in early 2015. In Source: International Energy Agency. Egypt, fragile export growth and higher costs of in- puts (after a step depreciation in January) have held back industrial production and dented confidence. FIGURE 2.37 Oil revenues, 2014 In Tunisia, tourist arrivals weakened even before the Fiscal revenues are highly dependent on oil. terrorist attacks in March. In contrast, on somewhat Percent of total revenues improved security, industrial production and tour- 100 ism in Lebanon (especially from Arab countries) ap- 90 80 pears to have expanded in January and February. 70 60 The impact of trade-weighted U.S. dollar apprecia- 50 tion since mid-2014 on exchange rates and inflation 40 30 differed depending on country circumstances, in- 20 cluding the exchange rate regime. Both oil-import- 10 0 ing as well as oil-exporting countries continued to Syrian Yemen, Rep. Algeria Iraq Libya face depreciation pressures. To maintain competi- Arab Republic tiveness, central banks in Algeria, Egypt, Morocco, and Tunisia allowed their currencies to depreciate by Source: IMF (2014a and b); IMF (2013a and b); IMF (2010). Note: For Syria, data is for 2010. 4-8 percent against the U.S. dollar in the first three months of 2015. In trade-weighted terms, their ex- change rates depreciated modestly. In contrast, pegs basic state functions. In the Republic of Yemen, against the U.S. dollar in Iraq, Jordan, and Lebanon growth continued to be positive in 2014, but in caused a significant trade-weighted appreciation Iraq, the economic disruptions of the ISIL insur- gency, and flat government expenditures, contrib- (Figure 2.38). uted to a contraction in 2014. Algeria saw strong Currency depreciations and the prevalence of ad- domestic demand and activity in non-oil sectors, ministered fuel prices have limited the impact of partly as a result of double-digit credit growth. lower global food and energy prices on domestic Growth in oil-importing developing countries was consumer prices (Figure 2.39). As a result, inflation broadly flat at 2.8 percent in 2014.3 Growth in has remained elevated in Algeria, Egypt, and Tuni- Egypt (on calendar year basis), Lebanon and Jordan sia, and increased in Morocco. In contrast, in Leba- picked up in 2014. In Egypt, the economy benefited non, Jordan, and Iraq, which maintain exchange from a rebound in tourism, public spending, and a rate pegs against the appreciating U.S. dollar, infla- return of confidence, as a result of political stabiliza- tion slid to near-zero (Jordan) or has turned nega- tive (Lebanon, Iraq). 3Developing Fiscal deficits widened markedly in 2014 in oil- oil-importing countries are: Djibouti, the Arab Re- public of Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, Tunisia, and West Bank exporting developing countries, but narrowed mar- and Gaza. ginally in oil-importing ones. For oil exporters, GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA 143 sharp oil revenue losses and rapid spending growth FIGURE 2.38 Nominal effective exchange rates on public sector wages and subsidies have widened Exchange rates have appreciations in countries with exchange rates pegged to the deficits to 5.2 percent of GDP from 2.7 percent of U.S. dollar. GDP in 2013. In oil-importing countries, fiscal bal- Percent change, Dec. 2014– Apr. 2015 ances have improved somewhat, as spending pres- 13 sures from subsidies eased with falling oil prices, and 11 as fuel and food subsidies were cut. Despite this im- 9 7 provement, fiscal deficits in oil-importing countries 5 remain high at around 10 percent of GDP in 2014, 3 and government debt around 90 percent of GDP. 1 Egypt has financed its deficit with loans from the -1 Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), while Jordan -3 Lebanon Iraq Tunisia Iran, Morocco Algeria Egypt, and Tunisia have relied on official assistance. Islamic Arab Rep. Rep. Lower commodity prices have helped narrow cur- rent account deficits of oil importers by 1–2 per- Source: World Bank Global Economic Monitor, JPMorgan. Note: A negative number denotes a nominal effective depreciation. centage points of GDP, while current account bal- ances declined in oil exporters. Despite intensified fighting in Libya, and tightened migrant regulation FIGURE 2.39 Inflation in Saudi Arabia, remittance receipts grew 8 percent Depreciation has helped reduced inflation in countries with fixed exchange rates. in 2014. This partly reflects a rebound of remit- Percent, year-on-year tances from GCC countries to Egypt, as political 20 Jun-14 Apr-15 uncertainty in Egypt has settled. 15 Countries that regularly tap international financial 10 markets (Egypt, Lebanon, Jordan, Morocco, and Tu- nisia) continued to receive capital inflows, with at 5 times strong domestic and foreign investor demand 0 (Lebanon and Tunisia). Bank lending was particu- larly robust in the energy sectors of Egypt and -5 Djibouti Algeria Egypt, Iran, Iraq Jordan LebanonMorocco Tunisia Jordan, amid improving growth prospects and ex- Arab Islamic pectations of medium-term oil price increases. Inter- Rep. Rep. national banks were also active in Lebanon’s sover- Source: World Bank. eign bond issuance. in oil-importing countries, which are facing various Outlook headwinds of their own. For 2016–17, growth is ex- pected to rebound to 3.7 percent on improving ex- Much will depend on developments in the security ternal demand, strengthening confidence in some situation, and—partly linked—to global oil prices. oil-importing countries, and the assumed gradual The baseline scenario assumes that the security situ- stabilization of security. ation in the region will remain fragile during 2015, Political, social, and security stabilization in Egypt is and improve only gradually afterwards. Security expected to lift investor sentiment in the energy, concerns will dampen the outlook not only in the transport (including investment related to the Suez affected countries, but also neighboring countries Canal expansion), and tradable goods sectors. As a where security risks will discourage tourism and re- result, growth is expected to rise to 4.5 percent in duce remittances because of the return of migrants. 2015–17, on average. Elsewhere, economic gains Growth has been revised downward and is expected will be supported by public infrastructure invest- to remain flat at 2.2 percent in 2015. Lower oil ment (Jordan), additional consumption demand prices have been a setback to oil-exporting countries from a large refugee population (Lebanon), and a that are already struggling with security risks, but return to normal agricultural output and successful they have so far failed to significantly lift prospects diversification reform efforts (Morocco). Additional 144 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 positive factors include higher real household in- Iraq). Still-robust growth in GCC countries, comes from low oil prices and rising external de- driven by government spending that benefits sec- mand as the Euro Area recovery gains traction. Re- tors that heavily employ migrants, as well as silient, albeit slowing, remittance growth is also strengthening Euro Area growth, will raise remit- expected to support activity. Improving investor tance inflows especially in Egypt, Jordan, Tunisia, confidence should attract capital inflows, especially and Yemen. into Egypt and Lebanon. Official financing is ex- pected to remain robust, both to finance budgets in Egypt and Lebanon and to support refugee needs Risks across the region. In Tunisia, however, the attacks in March are expected to set back tourism; growth is Risks remain tilted to the downside—more so than expected to remain weak at 2.6 percent in 2015. in other regions—as a result of security challenges. The key risks remain an escalation of violence and Due to continued security challenges and low oil oil price volatility. prices, growth is expected to nudge downwards in oil-exporting countries to 1.1 percent on aver- Security risks loom large across the whole region. age in 2015. However, as oil prices stabilize and Violence could escalate in countries that are cur- recover and security concerns gradually ease, rently experiencing conflict, and could spread to growth is expected to rebound to 3.3 in 2017. In neighboring countries, as demonstrated in the ter- Iraq, an agreement between the central govern- rorist attacks in Tunisia. Even if violence does not ment and that of the Kurdish region is expected permanently disrupt economic activity, it could dis- to allow for an expansion in oil production. For rupt or sever transport links that are critical for the the Islamic Republic of Iran the baseline scenario small, open economies in the region (Ianchovichina assumes sanctions relief in line with the interim and Ivanic 2014). Activity in the tourism sector steps taken so far. In Libya, the baseline scenario would contract and domestic and external investor assumes that oil output will expand very gradu- confidence would weaken. This would especially ally amid a challenging security situation. If, dampen FDI in non-natural resource sectors. Al- though FDI in the natural resource sector tends to however, a comprehensive political agreement is be less sensitive to security risks, it may also decline reached, oil exports could quickly resume and if oil prices fall further, or do not gradually recover GDP rebound by more than 50 percent in 2016. as currently expected (Burger, Ianchovichina, and The decline in oil prices will have major, and en- Rijkers 2015; Witte et al. 2015). during, effects on fiscal and external positions in If violence damages oil installations and disrupts oil oil-exporting and oil-importing countries alike. production on a large scale, oil prices could spike Exporters will continue to rein in spending in a sharply for an extended period. The economic dis- (procyclical) effort to offset sharp falls in oil rev- ruption would outweigh any benefit from higher oil enues. Nevertheless, their fiscal deficits are ex- prices for the region as a whole, although some oil- pected to widen to 8.2 percent of GDP in 2015. exporting countries unaffected by the disruption In contrast, deficits in oil importers should nar- may benefit. Oil-importing countries, however, row to about 8.7 percent of GDP in 2015, as a would see spikes in inflation, fiscal and external result of lower costs of fuel subsidies. By 2017, pressures. These could be accompanied by sharp improving growth and adjustment measures slowdowns or reversals in capital inflows. Since vir- should help narrow deficits for both oil-import- tually all countries in the region (except the Islamic ing and -exporting countries by an average of Republic of Iran) have current account deficits in about 6 percent of GDP. excess of 5 percent of GDP, a disruption or reversal Current account balances are expected to im- of capital inflows could cause large exchange rate prove in oil-importing countries and deteriorate pressures. Conversely, a further fall in oil prices in oil-exporting countries. In some oil-exporting would intensify the external and fiscal pressures cur- countries, however, where new oil production is rently faced by oil exporters, while growth in oil im- expected to be available for export, current ac- porters could continue to be held back by structural count balances are expected to improve (Algeria, impediments to growth. Long-standing problems, GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA 145 including high unemployment, especially among FIGURE 2.40 Share of exports to GCC and Euro Area youth and women, and the poor quality of basic ser- countries, 2013 vices, such as education and health, remain unsolved The slowdown in oil-exporters in the region dampens activity in trading partners. (World Bank 2015k). EU GCC Percent One significant upside risk is a possible perma- 80 nent agreement between the Islamic Republic of 70 Iran and the international community. If signed 60 50 and implemented, economic recovery in that 40 country would be substantial, with growth rates 30 in excess of 6 percent per year in the latter part 20 of the forecast period. This would raise the re- 10 gional growth rate by 2–2.5 percentage points 0 per year as well. Tunisia Algeria Lebanon Jordan Yemen, Rep. The GCC countries and the Euro Area are the Source: UN Comtrade. region’s largest trading partners and the outlook Note: The GCC includes Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Oman, Saudi Arabia, and United Arab Emirates. is subject to downside risks to growth in both (Figure 2.40). In GCC countries, low oil prices FIGURE 2.41 Public debt and deficits, 2014 may induce a slowdown in government spending Debt and deficits remain elevated in oil-importing countries. in areas where many migrant workers (e.g. con- Percent of GDP Percent of GDP struction) or a broad-based reduction in import Public Debt (RHS) Fiscal Deficit 0 160 demand amid slowing growth. Although the re- -2 -4 120 covery appears to be strengthening in Europe, it -6 is fragile and could be derailed. As the euro de- -8 80 -10 preciates with quantitative easing of the ECB, -12 40 -14 countries with U.S. dollar pegs are especially vul- -16 0 Oman Iraq Egypt, Arab Algeria Tunisia Saudi Arabia Lebanon Morocco Djibouti Jordan Yemen, Rep. Iran, Islamic nerable to losing competitiveness and growth Rep. Rep. momentum (Iraq, Jordan, and Lebanon). Source: World Bank, IMF Policy Challenges Policy makers face a dual challenge: adjusting to Fragile security in Iraq, Libya, Syria, and the Repub- lower oil prices and dealing with security risks in the lic of Yemen is causing sizeable refugee flows. For short run, and bolstering growth and employment example, Lebanon’s population has increased by 19 in the long run. Fixed or heavily managed exchange- percent and Jordan’s by 8 percent since 2013 (Abdih and Geginat 2014). The need to provide basic ser- rate regimes, and the large role played by govern- vices to the refugees is placing pressures on govern- ments in these economies, make economic adjust- ment budgets in Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, and Tuni- ment more difficult. sia—all countries with substantial fiscal financing In countries with some exchange-rate flexibility, needs, government debt, and fiscal deficits (Figure central banks are often caught between the desire to 2.41). Fulfilling government functions while main- stem depreciation to preserve financial stability (or taining sustainable fiscal balances will require new contain inflation), versus the need to support weak revenues and/or streamlining inefficient expendi- activity (Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia) or a nascent tures, including fuel and food subsidies. recovery after several years of low growth (Egypt). Fiscal deficits, although declining in the forecast pe- This trade-off is of particular concern in countries riod, are expected to remain high in oil importing where inflation is expected to remain high, as recent countries of the region in the medium-term. In par- currency depreciation passes through to prices ticular, there is a need to ensure that the fiscal wind- (Algeria, Egypt, and Tunisia). fall from lower oil prices is channeled to efficient, 146 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 2.42 Unemployment rate and employment growth-enhancing public investment, or towards growth, 2013 debt reduction, as warranted. In the past, this wind- fall was spent on higher current spending, namely Unemployment remains high and above the developing country average. salaries and subsidies. In addition, these fiscal wind- Percent 20 falls could also be used to tackle difficult reforms Unemployment rate Employment growth where some upfront expenditures may be required, 15 for example on cash transfers to mitigate reform 10 costs or recapitalization of financial sectors. Average= 5.4 5 Unemployment remains high across the region de- 0 spite some easing in Algeria, Egypt, and Jordan (Fig- -5 ure 2.42). As a result of an uncertain political and security situation in several countries, there has been -10 Algeria Egypt, Arab Jordan Morocco Tunisia little progress in structural reforms. Yet these remain Rep. critical to generating job-rich growth in a difficult Source: Haver Analytics. environment. Labor market reforms need to tilt in- Note: The orange line is the weighted average unemployment rate of all developing countries in 2013. centives away from public employment; reforms to level the playing field and increase competition be- tween firms are needed; and a significant strength- FIGURE 2.43 Business climate: distance to frontier ening in institutional quality is required (World Bank 2015k, Figure 2.43). The business environment remains challenging in most MENA countries. Another long-term challenge is that the develop- Index 80 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 ment model that dominated in the region—where 70 the state provided free health and education, subsi- 60 50 dies for food and fuel, and jobs in the public sec- 40 30 tor—has reached its limits. While this model deliv- 20 ered high school enrollment rates, basic health care 10 0 and public sector jobs, it failed to provide quality Iran, Islamic Rep. Egypt, Arab Rep. Iraq Algeria Tunisia West Bank and Jordan Lebanon Morocco Libya Yemen, Rep. education, health care, or jobs in the private sector Gaza (Devarajan and Mottaghi 2015). To generate pri- vate-sector jobs and quality public services, a new development model is needed in which the state fa- cilitates competition in domestic markets in order Source: Doing Business 2015, World Bank. to generate private sector jobs, and organizes public services in ways that enable citizens to hold officials accountable. FIGURE 2.44 Growth in tourism arrivals Tourism a key service export, remains weak. Percent, year-over-year, 4-quarter moving average 30 20 10 0 -10 -20 -30 Jordan Lebanon Morocco Tunisia -40 Egypt, Arab Rep. 2010Q3 2010Q4 2011Q1 2011Q2 2011Q3 2011Q4 2012Q1 2012Q2 2012Q3 2012Q4 2013Q1 2013Q2 2013Q3 2013Q4 2014Q1 2014Q2 2014Q3 2014Q4 Source: UN World Tourism Report. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA 147 TABLE 2.7 Middle East and North Africa forecast summary (Annual percent change unless indicated otherwise) 00-10a 2011 2012 2013 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f GDP at market prices, developing economiesb,c 4.5 -0.1 1.3 0.5 2.2 2.2 3.7 3.8 GDP at market prices, geographic regionb 4.6 3.5 3.7 2.6 3.0 3.0 3.6 3.8 (Average including economies with full national accounts and balance of payments data only)d GDP at market prices, developing countriesc,d 4.8 2.6 -1.1 0.9 3.3 2.4 3.3 3.5 GDP per capita (units in US$) 3.1 1.1 -2.6 -0.5 1.8 1.0 2.0 2.2 PPP GDPe 4.8 2.5 -1.0 1.0 3.3 2.5 3.4 3.6 Private consumption 4.7 4.7 3.3 3.0 3.4 3.5 3.5 3.5 Public consumption 3.2 2.5 2.4 1.5 5.1 3.7 2.9 2.9 Fixed investment 7.0 0.1 -8.0 -1.1 1.1 2.4 6.8 4.2 Exports, GNFSf 5.3 1.4 -5.0 -0.2 1.8 4.6 4.8 5.1 Imports, GNFSf 8.2 0.4 1.3 -1.9 3.7 5.3 6.2 6.7 Net exports, contribution to growth -0.6 0.3 -2.0 0.6 -0.7 -0.4 -0.7 -0.8 Consumer prices (annual average) 7.1 12.0 13.8 19.2 10.9 … … … Fiscal balance (percent of GDP)g 0.1 -4.0 -3.8 -5.9 -7.2 -8.3 -6.4 -5.6 Memo items: GDP   Developing Economies, ex. Libya 4.5 3.0 -0.6 1.1 3.1 2.3 3.5 3.6 High Income Oil Exportersh 4.6 7.7 6.1 4.6 3.8 3.8 3.5 3.8 Developing Oil Exporters 4.2 -1.8 0.5 -0.8 1.9 1.1 3.3 3.3 Developing Oil Importers 5.0 2.6 2.5 2.6 2.8 3.9 4.3 4.6 Egypt 4.8 2.0 2.1 2.1 3.2 4.3 4.7 4.8 Fiscal Year Basis 4.9 1.8 2.2 2.1 2.2 4.2 4.5 4.8 Iran 5.0 3.9 -6.6 -1.9 3.7 1.0 2.0 2.0 Algeria 3.9 2.8 3.3 2.8 4.1 2.6 3.9 4.0 Source: World Bank. World Bank forecasts are frequently updated based on new information and changing (global) circumstances. Consequently, projections presented here may differ from those contained in other Bank documents, even if basic assessments of countries’ prospects do not differ at any given moment in time. a. Growth rates over intervals are compound weighted averages; average growth contributions, ratios and deflators are calculated as simple averages of the annual weighted averages for the region. b. GDP at market prices and expenditure components are measured in constant 2010 U.S. dollars. c. Geographic region includes developing and the following high-income countries: Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and United Arab Emirates. d. Sub-region aggregate excludes Djibouti, Iraq, Libya, Syria and West Bank and Gaza, for which data limitations prevent the forecasting of GDP components or Balance of Payments details. e. GDP measured at PPP exchange rates. f. Exports and imports of goods and non-factor services (GNFS). h. Includes all developing economies, except Syria for which data is not available. i. High Income Oil Exporting Countries: Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates. 148 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 TABLE 2.8 Middle East and North Africa economy forecasts (Real GDP growth at market prices in percent, unless indicated otherwise) 00-10a 2011 2012 2013 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f Algeria 3.9 2.8 3.3 2.8 4.1 2.6 3.9 4.0 Djibouti 3.9 4.5 4.8 5.0 6.0 6.5 7.0 7.1 Egypt, Arab Rep. 4.8 2.0 2.1 2.1 3.2 4.3 4.7 4.8 Fiscal Year Basis 4.9 1.8 2.2 2.1 2.2 4.2 4.5 4.8 Iran, Islamic Rep. 5.0 3.9 -6.6 -1.9 3.7 1.0 2.0 2.0 Iraq -0.4 10.2 10.3 4.2 -0.5 -1.0 5.5 5.9 Jordan 6.3 2.6 2.7 2.8 3.1 3.5 3.9 4.0 Lebanon 5.9 2.0 2.2 0.9 2.0 2.5 2.5 2.5 Libya 4.3 -62.1 104.5 -13.7 -24.0 0.5 15.0 10.9 Morocco 4.9 5.0 2.7 4.4 2.6 4.6 4.8 5.0 Tunisia 4.7 -0.5 3.7 2.3 2.3 2.6 3.4 4.5 Yemen, Rep. 4.3 -12.7 2.4 4.8 0.3 -2.8 2.8 3.4 West Bank and Gaza 3.3 12.2 5.9 2.2 -0.8 0.9 4.3 4.1 00-10a 2011 2012 2013 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f Recently transitioned to high-income countriesb                 Oman 3.3 -1.1 7.1 3.9 4.1 3.7 3.6 3.5 Saudi Arabia 5.1 10.0 6.8 5.1 4.3 4.6 4.1 4.3 Source: World Bank. World Bank forecasts are frequently updated based on new information and changing (global) circumstances. Consequently, projections presented here may differ from those contained in other Bank documents, even if basic assessments of countries’ prospects do not significantly differ at any given moment in time. Data for Syria are excluded due to uncertain political situation. a. GDP growth rates over intervals are compound average; current account balance shares are simple averages over the period. b. The recently high-income countries are based on World Bank’s country reclassification from 2004 to 2014. SOUTH ASIA Growth in the South Asia region rose to 6.9 percent in 2014 and is expected to continue firming over the forecast period, led by a cyclical recovery in India and supported by a gradual strengthening of demand in high-income countries. The decline in global oil prices has been a major benefit for the region, driving improvements in fiscal and current accounts, enabling subsidy reforms in some countries, and facilitating the easing of monetary policy. Macroeconomic adjustments in India since 2013 have reduced potential vulnerability to headwinds from the tightening of monetary policy in the U.S. Risks to the outlook are balanced, and depend on the implementation of structural reforms, including those that help to delink fiscal balance sheets from global energy prices. Political uncertainty, stressed bank balance sheets, and the ability to maintain fiscal discipline are some of the other key risks to the region. Recent Developments FIGURE 2.45  India: Real GDP growth GDP revisions show the downturn has been sharper and the subsequent recovery Aggregate growth in South Asia (SA) rose to 6.9 per- stronger than initially estimated. cent in 2014, its fastest pace in three years. Further Percent change, year-on-year momentum is expected in 2015 in line with the cy- 14 Revised Original clical recovery in India, the largest regional economy. 12 Revised GDP data for India show a faster rebound 10 than initially estimated (Figure 2.45), with growth 8 rising to 7.3 percent in the recently-completed fiscal 6 year (FY2014–15, ending in March). The upward 4 revisions—deriving mainly from improvements in 2 data sources used to compute GDP alongside base- 0 Q3-05 Q1-06 Q3-06 Q1-07 Q3-07 Q1-08 Q3-08 Q1-09 Q3-09 Q1-10 Q3-10 Q1-11 Q3-11 Q1-12 Q3-12 Q1-13 Q3-13 Q1-14 Q3-14 year revisions to better capture the changing struc- ture of the economy—show strengthening manufac- turing and strong growth in government consumption Sources: Haver Analytics and World Bank. offsetting weakness in external demand over the past year. Higher frequency activity data show that the fall in global oil prices, strong tourist inflows (Bhu- domestic recovery is picking up (Figure 2.46): mo- tan, Maldives, Nepal, and Sri Lanka), good harvests mentum in industrial output has picked up strongly (Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Pakistan), the con- since the start of the year and while business senti- struction of major hydropower projects, and a relax- ment data are pointing to a sustained acceleration in ation of credit controls (Bhutan). These factors have the service sector. Meanwhile, earlier tightening of helped to compensate for sluggish export growth monetary policy and domestic policy measures such (Figure 2.47). In Nepal, the earthquake in April and as limited increase in mandated minimum procure- associated aftershocks have taken a huge toll in terms ment prices for grains has sent inflation tumbling, of human life lost, but also severely damaged infra- increasing real household disposable incomes. structure and affected activity. In Pakistan, an easing In the rest of the region, activity and growth have of political tensions toward the end of last year has remained robust, owing to healthy remittances, the helped already strong service sector growth, and the recent trade and investment agreements with China The main author of this section is Tehmina Khan. worth $28 billion in infrastructure and energy proj- 149 150 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 2.46  India: Industrial production and credit migrants increasing from about 1 million in 2010 to High frequency data show industrial production gaining momentum but weak external around 2 million in 2013). However, remittances demand and slow credit growth. growth decelerated in 2014, possibly reflecting less use of formal transfer channels. Remittances to In- Percent, 3m-on-3m saar Year-on-year,percent, 3-month moving average dia were broadly flat during 2014 and may reflect 60 16 the diversion of investment-oriented remittances 40 towards the higher returns offered by Indian stock 12 20 markets under a simplified portfolio investment re- gime for the diaspora introduced in late 2013. 0 8 Lower oil prices have improved the terms of trade -20 4 and helped narrow regional trade deficits (Figure Industrial production -40 2.48). Trade deficits in Bhutan, Maldives, Pakistan, Nominal credit (RHS) -60 0 and Sri Lanka, should see the largest improvements, Jan-13 Jul-13 Jan-14 Jul-14 Jan-15 given evidence of stronger short-term response of Sources: IFS, Haver Analytics, and World Bank. Note: SAAR refers to seasonally adjusted and annualized data. imports to oil price movements. Although India is a major (net) oil importing economy, the improve- ment is expected to be relatively more modest as FIGURE 2.47  Export growth diesel and other petroleum products comprise a sig- Regional exports have struggled to build momentum since the second half of last year. nificant share of exports (World Bank, 2015m). Nevertheless, with lower inflation expectations Percent, quarter-on-quarter saar curbing demand for imported gold as a hedge, In- 60 Bangladesh India Pakistan Sri Lanka dia’s trade deficit is improving and this has helped 40 narrow the current account deficit to 1.4 percent of 20 GDP in 2014, down from 5.0 percent in mid-2012. 0 External balances in the region have also been sup- -20 ported by strong remittance inflows. In the case of -40 Pakistan, remittances have been a key factor in help- ing contain the current-account deficit at an esti- -60 Jan-14 Apr-14 Jul-14 Oct-14 Jan-15 Apr-15 mated 1.2 percent of GDP in FY2014/15. Together Sources: IFS, Haver Analytics, and World Bank. with the strong economic prospects of some econo- Note: SAAR refers to seasonally adjusted and annualized data. mies, strong capital inflows, and healthy or improv- ing current account balances, local currencies have ects to connect China’s western regions with Paki- broadly held their value against the U.S. dollar (Fig- stan’s Gwadar port have buoyed investor confidence, ure 2.49). However, the Rupee has come under with current 5-year CDS spreads some 400 basis some pressure in late April and early May, in part points lower than in December 2014. reflecting reduced foreign investor appetite for equi- Remittances inflows have been particularly strong ties and bonds in response to unexpected tax bills in Pakistan, amounting to $13.3bn in the first three that India imposed late last year. On a trade- quarters of FY2014–15 (a 15 percent increase from weighted basis, though, currencies have appreciated a year earlier), helping shore up consumption in the slightly in recent months (Figure 2.50) implying a face of energy bottlenecks that have hampered pro- loss of price-competitiveness at a time when export duction and exports. Flows to Sri Lanka and Ban- momentum is already negative. gladesh have also remained strong, in the latter, Inflation has fallen to record or multi-year lows in helping to blunt the impact on the economy of re- the region (Figure 2.51). Partly reflecting favorable cent political tensions and a transport blockade in base effects and the impact of lower energy and food February that affected garment exports. In Nepal, prices, the disinflation trend has been further rein- the outflow of migrants has continued to be strong forced by relatively strong local currencies, and has after a period of massive growth (with the stock of facilitated policy easing in India and Pakistan, and GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 C H A P T E R 2 | S O U T H AS I A 151 most recently in Sri Lanka. In India, lower inflation FIGURE 2.48  Goods trade balance has primarily been driven by a sharp deceleration in A lower oil import bill is helping curb trade deficits. food prices, although improvements in the monetary US$, millions, 3-month moving average policy framework may have also begun to help an- Bangladesh Pakistan Sri Lanka India (RHS) 0 0 chor inflation expectations. Core inflation has also eased in line with inflation expectations. -500 -5,000 In India, although diesel prices were liberalized, pe- -1,000 riodic increases since November in excise taxes on -1,500 -10,000 diesel and petrol to bolster government revenues -2,000 and meet fiscal targets, have meant that domestic -15,000 fuel prices have been relatively slow to fall. The -2,500 extent of pass-through from international oil -3,000 -20,000 prices in India is estimated at 33 and 20 percent Jan-10 Jul-11 Jan-13 Jul-14 for diesel and gasoline respectively, but is higher Sources: Haver Analytics and World Bank. in Pakistan and Sri Lanka (World Bank, 2015m), FIGURE 2.49  Exchange rates against the U.S. dollar where reductions in (administered) fuel prices have helped to push inflation to multi-year or re- Regional currencies have only depreciated marginally against the US dollar... cord lows. Inflation has eased somewhat in Ban- LCU vs. US$, index 100 = January 2013 gladesh, but remains relatively elevated, partly 130 Bangladesh India owing to limited spare capacity in the economy 125 Pakistan Sri Lanka and recent transport disruptions. In addition, ad- 120 ministered energy prices have not changed since 115 2013, mainly reflecting efforts to recoup losses at 110 the national energy company. 105 100 The decline in global oil prices is also helping sup- 95 port fiscal consolidation efforts in the region. 90 The general government deficit in India nar- Jan-13 Jul-13 Jan-14 Jul-14 Jan-15 rowed to 6.7 percent in FY 2014–15 (ending Sources: Haver Analytics and World Bank. Note: Increase denotes depreciation. March), from close to 8 percent in FY 2011–12, reflecting savings from the elimination of diesel FIGURE 2.50  Nominal effective exchange rates subsidies, higher fuel excise duties, and under- ...but are appreciating in trade-weighted terms. performance in capital spending. In Pakistan, the government has remained focused on fiscal tight- Index 100 = January 2014 120 Bangladesh India ening as part of conditions attached to the IMF’s Pakistan Sri Lanka Extended Fund Facility loan program. The de- 115 cline in global oil prices is helping reduce spend- 110 ing on subsidies and contingent liabilities at state-owned companies, and has enabled adjust- 105 ments in administered energy prices to the ben- efit of consumers. Nevertheless, deficits remain 100 large and debt levels high in Pakistan and in sev- eral countries in the region (Figure 2.52), in part 95 Jan-14 May-14 Sep-14 Jan-15 May-15 reflecting poor tax policy and weak tax adminis- Sources: Haver Analytics and World Bank. tration. Together, these have contributed to some Note: Increase denotes appreciation. of the lowest tax-GDP ratios among developing countries and weakened long-term fiscal sustain- benefit spending resulting in a large unfinanced ability (World Bank 2015k). Afghanistan, mean- fiscal gap of $500 million in 2014. while, is in the midst of a fiscal crisis, with de- The policy environment is gradually improving clining revenues and higher security and social in the region, notably in India, where coordina- 152 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 2.51  Inflation Reforms are also underway elsewhere in the region, Inflation has fallen to multi-year or record lows. albeit at a slower pace. In Pakistan, an ambitious but piecemeal privatization program has been launched. Percent, year-on-year 14 Bangladesh India Severe energy shortages in January 2015 exposed Nepal Pakistan 12 Sri Lanka the slow progress thus far on energy reforms. How- ever, almost half ($15.5 billion) of recent invest- 10 ments agreed with China in April are estimated to 8 be channeled into coal, nuclear, renewable energy 6 and hydropower projects in the next few years. 4 These are expected to add some 10,000mw in elec- 2 tricity generation to the national grid (about half of current installed capacity) by 2017, which should 0 Jan-13 Sep-13 May-14 Jan-15 help ease energy constraints. Nepal introduced re- Sources: Haver Analytics and World Bank. forms to the subsidy system in 2014Q4, including the liberalization of petroleum product prices. However, progress on rationalizing prices and dis- FIGURE 2.52  Government finances mantling subsidies for liquefied petroleum gas Deficits remain large in several countries and debt levels high. (LPG) has been slower despite a large fiscal cost. In Percent of GDP, 2014 Percent of GDP, 2014 Sri Lanka, policy actions by the newly-elected gov- 6 160 Fiscal deficit Public debt (RHS) ernment include a one-off tax increase for large cor- 2 120 porates, a cut in infrastructure spending, and a sub- -2 stantial increase in public sector salaries. These 80 -6 actions have added to investor uncertainty ahead of -10 40 upcoming parliamentary elections in June. -14 0 Pakistan Nepal Bangladesh Maldives Sri Lanka Afghanistan* India Bhutan Outlook Regional GDP growth is expected to remain firm at Sources: World Bank. Note: Asterisk denotes that data is not available for public debt. just over 7 percent during 2015, and rise at a moder- ate pace toward 7.5 percent in 2017, in line with the tion in monetary and fiscal policy has strength- ongoing recovery in India and broadly stable growth ened. On the fiscal side, this is reflected in the in the rest of the region. In the baseline, stronger improvement in the quality of fiscal consolidation regional growth is underpinned by strengthening planned in the latest government budget (albeit at public investment. Private investment should also the cost of a slower pace of fiscal tightening) that improve, but at a slower pace as high levels of NPLs includes an expansion in public investment, simpler on banking sector balance sheets in Bangladesh, and lower corporate taxes offset by higher excise Bhutan, India, and Pakistan hold back the recovery taxes on fuel. Legislation is also pending on a goods in credit growth. and service tax (GST), which would replace the ex- Tailwinds from the fall in global commodity prices isting system of multiple (and distortionary) local and falling inflation should support real incomes and and state taxes with a single unified national GST, consumer spending in the early part of the forecast but this will likely take time to pass. Regarding mon- period, as should relatively stable growth in remit- etary policy, the adoption of a formal inflation target tance inflows, which are a substantial share of GDP has boosted the independence of India’s central bank in the region (World Bank 2015k). Although there and provides a clear anchor for inflation expecta- are risks that the recent fall in global oil prices could tions. Other key reforms in India include the elimi- adversely impact remittances from oil-producing nation of diesel subsidies in 2014 and, more recently, Gulf economies (a major destination for migrants an increase in foreign shareholding limits in the in- from SAR), there are several offsetting trends. These surance sector, which should boost FDI. include large fiscal and sovereign wealth fund buffers GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 C H A P T E R 2 | S O U T H AS I A 153 in Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries that should also help support business confidence should help to support activity there alongside on­ and lift private investment. going large scale construction activities (including • Energy shortages in Pakistan, which have preparations for the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qa- weighed on investment, and activity in recent tar), and improving economic prospects in the U.S. years, are expected to diminish gradually as in- and Euro Area. Most governments are expected to vestment in energy projects increases supply. remain focused on rebuilding fiscal space and curb- Credit growth is also expected to pick up, ing fiscal deficits through a mix of expenditure and helped by fiscal consolidation. Coupled with revenue measures (notably the introduction of GSTs solid growth in remittances, and recovering or VATs in India and Bangladesh). manufacturing and service sector growth, Accordingly, growth will be driven primarily by do- GDP growth is forecast to rise from 3.7 per- mestic demand during the early part of the forecast cent in 2015–16 to 4.5 percent in 2017–18. period, with a rising contribution from external de- • In Bangladesh, the growth forecast for mand in later years as growth in advanced economies FY2015 has been revised down on account picks up. Although imports should rise as the invest- of recent political tensions. The forecast is ment strengthens, current account balances should now 5.6 percent, compared with 6.4 percent remain manageable, reflecting macroeconomic ad- in the previous forecast and 6.1 percent in justments in recent years (in India, partly in response FY2014. As tensions settle, growth should to currency pressures during the “taper tantrum” in pick up in line with a recovery in exports and mid-2013), domestic fiscal consolidation efforts, and investment. Consumption should also re- lower oil import bills. As a large, financially-open main supported by resilient remittance in- emerging market economy, India remains exposed to flows, particularly following the resumption volatility in global financial markets and shifts in of migration of Bangladeshi workers to Saudi global portfolio allocations that may follow policy Arabia. With the economy running at capac- ity, growth is expected to remain at close to rate hikes in the United States, expected later this potential over the forecast period. year. However, the substantial reduction in current account deficits since 2013, record-high foreign ex- • Among the smaller economies of the region, change reserves, and improvements in the policy en- the severe earthquake in April will weigh on vironment should also help contain such risks. growth in Nepal this year. However activity should rebound as reconstruction efforts are • India is expected to continue on its path of re- stepped up, and should also remain sup- covery, with growth expected to reach 8 percent ported by relatively healthy service sector in FY2017–18, from 7.5 percent in FY2015– growth and private consumption spending 16. The improvement in the outlook hinges on (with remittances expected to increase). Both steady progress on key reforms, including re- Bhutan and Nepal, whose currencies are moving bottlenecks in public-private partner- pegged to the Indian rupee, should also ben- ships, the GST bill, and input market reforms efit from strengthening growth and lower in- (land, labor and finance) which are needed to flation in India over the forecast period. In ease supply side and energy constraints. The Bhutan, the construction of major hydro- GST would help create a single markets for power projects and the relaxation of credit goods and broaden the tax base. Fiscal disci- controls are expected to lift growth over 7 pline elsewhere would help public capital ex- percent over the forecast period, and even penditures to rise as announced in the recent higher once hydro-electricity exports to In- budget, and potentially attract private invest- dia begin to rise. Growth in Sri Lanka is ex- ment, which has been extremely weak in recent pected to decelerate gradually to its potential years. The slower pace of fiscal consolidation growth rate, as the government reassesses the over the next few years means that fiscal tight- investment-led growth model, partially off- ening will prove less of a drag, while lower cor- set by increases in consumption, and strong porate taxes and base-broadening measures tourism and remittance inflows. In Afghani- 154 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 stan, growth is projected to rise from 2.5 sage of key legislative bills pending in parliament percent in 2015 to 5 percent over the fore- (land acquisition reforms and GST) is delayed cast period if political uncertainty dimin- which could dampen investor sentiment and weigh ishes and the security environment improves. on infrastructure spending plans. Energy remains a However, the fiscal revenue shortfall is ex- key constraint, and the fall in oil prices over the past pected to persist if reforms to improve revenues year represents a rare opportunity to rationalize en- continue to stall. ergy prices as well as undertake wide-ranging energy sector reforms. To the extent that credible reform agendas boost investor sentiment, they will also Risks and Policy Challenges help create a virtuous cycle of stronger investment (including foreign investment) and output growth The key risks for the region are balanced and mainly in the short term. If, however, reforms stall, this domestic in nature. They relate to whether invest- could result in significantly lower investment and ment growth—which has stalled in recent years in growth than projected in the baseline. India, continues to decline in Pakistan (Figure Political uncertainty remains an important risk factor 2.53), and has weakened in Bangladesh more re- in Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, and Pakistan. In cently—strengthens as forecast. External risks in- addition to delaying or distracting attention from clude potential headwinds from financial market legislative reforms, it could hold back broader invest- volatility as monetary policy is tightened in the ment sentiment and spending. In Pakistan, promised U.S., although these are mitigated by a significant Chinese investments are contingent on improve- improvement in current account balances in the re- ments in security and the fulfillment of institutional, gion. Slower growth in the Gulf region or a disrup- regulatory, logistical and other commitments by the tion of oil trade (due to conflicts in the MENA re- government. In Bhutan, delays in the construction of gion) could affect remittance inflows and lift oil hydropower projects, and in Nepal uncertainty over prices, with repercussions for the region. Upside the extent to which FDI commitments translate into risks include a faster pace of reforms in India and hydropower investments remain key risks. The recent other countries, better-than-anticipated growth in natural disaster in Nepal has added to these risks, high-income countries, and a fall in oil prices below with policy makers likely to be focusing attention on current baseline projections. disaster relief and reconstruction. The regional growth outlook is predicated on the In addition, stressed banking sectors and corporate ability of governments to deliver on reforms and on balance sheets are key downside risks in several a pickup in domestic investment, both of which are countries in the region. Corporate leverage in India essential to ease infrastructure bottlenecks over the is among the highest among major emerging market medium term. In India, there is a risk that the pas- economies, and foreign currency debt in the form of external commercial borrowings has been steadily FIGURE 2.53 Investment increasing over the past decade (Lindner and Jung, 2014). In both India and Bangladesh banking sector Investment as a share of GDP has trended lower in Pakistan in recent years to extremely low levels. strains are largest in state-owned banks. In Pakistan, Percent of GDP the heavy reliance of the government on the banking 40 Bangladesh India Pakistan Nepal sector for budgetary borrowing is crowding out pri- 35 vate sector credit growth. In the absence of measures to address problem loans on banking sector balance 30 sheets (Figures 2.54 and 2.55), rising global funding 25 costs (as U.S. policy rates rise) could impede already weak credit growth (Figure 2.56) and a strengthen- 20 ing of investment. In Nepal, significant damage to 15 physical infrastructure (private and public) may 10 present short to medium term risks to financial sec- 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 tor stability from potential runs on the banking sec- Sources: Haver Analytics and World Bank. tor that trigger a liquidity crisis, and if banks see GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 C H A P T E R 2 | S O U T H AS I A 155 their capital buffers eroded by the physical destruc- FIGURE 2.54  India: Impaired loans tion of real estate pledged as collateral or a surge in Bank asset quality has deteriorated in India in recent years. NPLs (as income streams of debtors are disrupted). Percent of total assets 11 Other key risks and policy challenges include the ability to maintain fiscal discipline. In India, fiscal 9 Restructured loans NPL ratio consolidation has been relaxed in an attempt to raise 7 public investment. However, even this relaxation in 5 fiscal targets could prove hard to meet if asset divest- 3 ment and subsidy targets are not met. In Pakistan, in the absence of concerted tax policy reforms that 1 successfully raise tax revenues (particularly direct -1 FY2008 FY2009 FY2010 FY2011 FY2012 FY2013 FY2014 Sep-14 taxes), the ability to meet fiscal deficit targets is likely to depend on the ability of the government to restructure and privatize loss-making enterprises. Sources: IMF, Haver Analytics and World Bank. Similarly, in Sri Lanka, the quality of fiscal consoli- dation underway has deteriorated, and the govern- FIGURE 2.55  Non-performing loans ment could potentially overshoot its fiscal targets in NPLs are high across the region ... the short term. Nepal’s budget surplus is likely to shrink reflecting the impact of the earthquake on Percent of total assets 18 revenue collection and rising government spending 16 2012 Q3 2014 or latest 14 on relief and reconstruction. 12 10 Moreover, the recent decline in oil prices provides a 8 major opportunity to permanently decouple fiscal 6 4 balances from international oil price movements. 2 Although progress is being made in India on this 0 front1, there has been limited pricing reform in Pakistan Sri Lanka Afghanistan Bangladesh India Bhutan Bangladesh and Pakistan. In Pakistan, energy pric- ing reforms are particularly important given the country’s heavy dependence on imported oil in elec- Sources: IMF tricity generation, and heavily subsidized electricity Note: Data for India includes restructured loans tariffs that cost 1.2 percent of GDP in FY 2013–14 (World Bank, 2015m). FIGURE 2.56  Credit growth Finally, greater regional integration and further …which has weighed on bank lending. trade opening will yield important benefits. Al- Nominal, year-over-year, percent, 3-month moving average though most countries in SAR have substantially 60 liberalized trade and investment regimes in recent Bangladesh Nepal 50 decades, most economies remain highly protected, India Pakistan vis-à-vis intra-regional trade and trade with respect 40 to other developing or high-income regions (Fukase 30 and Martin, 2015). A comparison of import duty 20 (as a share of goods imported) in South Asia sug- 10 gests that tariff barriers are much higher in the re- gion compared to ASEAN countries (Ding and Ma- 0 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 sha, 2012). Deeper economic ties and a reduction in Sources: IFS, World Bank 1India has deregulated diesel prices, increased excise duties on trade barriers would provide opportunities to bene- petroleum and diesel, and under the Direct Benefit Transfer scheme, begun to deposit entitled subsidies directly into the bank accounts of fit from technological spillovers, improve access to consumers for the purchase of market-priced LPG cylinders. See World the large U.S. market, and stimulate more produc- Bank (2015m) for more details. tive growth in domestic industries. 156 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 TABLE 2.9  South Asia forecast summary (Annual percent change unless indicated otherwise) 00–10a 2011 2012 2013 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f GDP at market pricesb,e 6.7 7.0 5.4 6.3 6.9 7.1 7.3 7.5 GDP per capita (units in US$) 5.1 5.5 3.9 4.8 5.5 5.7 6.0 6.2 PPP GDPc 6.7 7.0 5.4 6.3 7.0 7.1 7.3 7.5 Private consumption 5.9 8.3 6.0 5.6 6.3 6.5 6.3 6.2 Public consumption 6.5 6.2 3.5 6.6 9.0 8.4 7.2 6.5 Fixed investment 9.6 11.1 3.2 2.5 5.0 7.0 11.3 13.0 Exports, GNFSd 13.1 15.0 7.9 6.5 2.3 3.2 4.8 6.9 Imports, GNFSd 10.9 17.7 8.1 –2.9 –0.2 4.2 6.8 8.5 Net exports, contribution to growth –0.3 –1.8 –0.7 2.6 0.7 –0.4 –0.8 –0.8 Consumer prices (annual average) 6.2 9.8 9.4 10.1 6.6 … … … Fiscal balance (percent of GDP) –7.4 –7.6 –7.2 –6.9 –6.7 –6.5 –6.0 –5.8 Memo items: GDP at market pricese   South Asia excluding India 5.0 5.0 5.1 5.7 5.8 5.7 5.8 5.9 India 7.4 6.6 5.1 6.9 7.3 7.5 7.9 8.0 Pakistan 4.2 2.7 3.5 4.4 5.4 6.0 3.7 4.5 Bangladesh 6.1 6.5 6.0 6.1 5.6 6.3 6.7 6.7 Source: World Bank. World Bank forecasts are frequently updated based on new information and changing (global) circumstances. Consequently, projections presented here may differ from those contained in other Bank documents, even if basic assessments of countries’ prospects do not differ at any given moment in time. a. Growth rates over intervals are compound weighted averages; average growth contributions, ratios and deflators are calculated as simple averages of the annual weighted averages for the region. b. GDP at market prices and expenditure components are measured in constant 2010 U.S. dollars. c. GDP measured at PPP exchange rates. d. Exports and imports of goods and non-factor services (GNFS). e. National income and product account data refer to fiscal years (FY) for the South Asian countries, while aggregates are presented in calendar year (CY) terms. The fiscal year runs from July 1 through June 30 in Bangladesh, and Pakistan, and April 1 through March 31 in India. Due to reporting practices, Bangladesh and Pakistan report FY2012/13 data in CY2013, while India reports FY2012/13 in CY2012. 2014 data for Bangladesh show growth in 2014-15. TABLE 2.10  South Asia country forecasts (Real GDP growth at market prices in percent, unless indicated otherwise) 00–10a 2011 2012 2013 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f Calendar year basisb                 Afghanistan 12.8 6.1 14.4 3.7 2.0 2.5 5.0 5.1 Bangladesh 6.2 6.3 6.1 5.9 6.0 6.5 6.7 6.7 Bhutanc 8.7 7.9 2.0 5.7 6.9 7.9 8.4 7.0 India 7.2 7.5 5.5 6.4 7.1 7.4 7.8 8.0 Maldivesd 7.0 6.5 1.3 4.7 5.0 5.3 5.0 5.0 Nepal 3.8 4.1 4.3 4.6 4.8 4.4 5.0 5.5 Pakistan 4.2 3.1 4.0 4.9 5.7 4.8 4.1 4.5 Sri Lanka 5.2 8.2 6.3 7.3 7.4 6.9 6.6 6.5 Fiscal year basisb  Bangladeshe 6.1 6.5 6.0 6.1 5.6 6.3 6.7 6.7 Indiag 7.4 6.6 5.1 6.9 7.3 7.5 7.9 8.0 Nepalf 3.9 3.4 4.9 3.8 5.5 4.2 4.5 5.5 Pakistan 4.2 2.7 3.5 4.4 5.4 6.0 3.7 4.5 Source: World Bank. World Bank forecasts are frequently updated based on new information and changing (global) circumstances. Consequently, projections presented here may differ from those contained in other Bank documents, even if basic assessments of countries’ prospects do not significantly differ at any given moment in time. a. GDP growth rates over intervals are compound average; current account balance shares are simple averages over the period. b. Historical data is reported on a market price basis.National income and product account data refer to fiscal years (FY) for the South Asian countries with the exception of Afghanistan, Maldives and Sri Lanka, which report in calendar year (CY). The fiscal year runs from July 1 through June 30 in Bangladesh, Bhutan, and Pakistan, from July 16 through July 15 in Nepal, and April 1 through March 31 in India. Due to reporting practices, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Nepal, and Pakistan report FY2012/13 data in CY2013, while India reports FY2012/13 in CY2012. GDP figures presented in calendar years (CY) terms for Bangladesh, Nepal, and Pakistan are calculated taking the average growth over the two fiscal year periods to provide an approximation of CY activity. Historical GDP data in CY terms for India are the sum of GDP in the four calendar quarters. c. GDP data for Bhutan is on a CY basis. d. Data for Maldives is GDP data at basic prices (i.e excluding taxes and including subsidies). e. 2014 data for Bangladesh show growth in 2014-15. f. Nepal forecasts are preliminary. g. Data for Fiscal Year 2000-2012 is old GDP series (base year is FY 2005). Subsequent data is revised GDP series (base year FY 2012.) SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA GDP growth in Sub-Saharan Africa rose from 4.2 percent in 2013 to 4.6 in 2014, supported by domestic de- mand. The World Bank forecast has the region expanding at a slower pace in 2015, with growth averaging 4.2 percent, a downward revision of 0.4 percent relative to the January 2015 Global Economic Prospects (GEP). Prospects in Angola and Nigeria have deteriorated because of the sharp drop in the price of oil, and in South Africa because of the ongoing difficulty in overcoming electricity problems. Risks to the outlook remain tilted to the downside. On the domestic front, risks associated with elections, the Boko Haram insurgency, the Ebola crisis, and fiscal vulnerabilities dominate. China’s slowdown, tightening of monetary policy in the United States, and the fragility of the recovery in Europe, remain as key external risks. Recent Developments FIGURE 2.57  Fiscal vulnerability Oil accounts for up to 90 percent of fiscal revenues for the region’s oil exporters. GDP growth in Sub-Saharan Africa improved to an average of 4.6 percent in 2014, up from 4.2 percent Oil as percent of fiscal revenues 100 in 2013, but weaker than the average of 6.4 percent 80 during 2002–08, supported by infrastructure in- 60 vestment and consumer spending. Growth softened 40 around the turn of the year owing to headwinds 20 from the plunge in the price of oil. Sub-Saharan 0 Equatorial Guinea Congo, Rep. Angola Nigeria Gabon Cameroon Congo, Dem. Rep. Ghana Africa’s oil exporters, which account for nearly half of the region’s GDP, are experiencing a major ad- verse shock1. Their economies depend heavily on oil for revenues and foreign reserves (Figure 2.57). Between June 2014 and January 2015, oil prices de- clined by nearly 50 percent, more than the prices of Source: IMF Country reports. Note: Latest available from latest IMF Article IV reports. other commodities, and have remained low despite the recent uptick (Figure 2.58). This has put sub- stantial pressures on the fiscal and current account cent to $34.25 billion (6.0 percent of GDP), drawn balances of oil exporters. down by the central bank in its attempt to support The oil exporters in Sub-Saharan Africa are less resil- the naira. In March, Standard & Poor’s downgraded ient to the price shock than many other oil-exporting Nigeria’s credit rating from B+ to BB-. countries because of their much more limited policy Several of the region’s oil exporters have started to buffers. In Nigeria, the Excess Crude Account, a sov- adjust. In Angola, the oil price assumption in the ereign wealth fund, totaled just $2.0 billion at the 2015 budget was revised down to $40/bbl from the end of 2014. Gross international reserves fell 20 per- original assumption of $81/bbl. In Nigeria, it was reduced to US$53/bbl from the earlier forecast of $65/barrel. The corresponding downward revision The main author of this section is Gerard Kambou. in expected revenues induced plans to cut public 1The region’s main oil exporters include Angola, Cameroon, Congo spending. In Angola, Parliament approved a 25 per- (Republic), Chad, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, and Nigeria. Of these, Nigeria and Angola are the largest; they are also the region’s first and cent reduction in spending from the original plan third largest economies. for 2015. The cuts cover public investment projects 157 158 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 2.58  Commodity prices February 2015 was more than 20 percent (Figure Since June 2014 oil prices have declined by more than 40 percent. 2.59). In response, the central bank ended its man- aged float exchange-rate regime, closing down the Percent change of nominal indices, 2010=100, June 2014–April 2015 Dutch Auction System window. The exchange rate 0 is now set in the interbank market. The naira re- -10 bounded in March and was stable through April, -20 as successful elections helped improve market senti- -30 ment, but remained weak (Figure 2.60). -40 In Angola, the central bank hiked its key interest -50 rate by 50 basis points, to 9 percent, in the fourth quarter, to anchor inflation expectations. Following Natural gas Cocoa Coffee Tea Iron ore Gold Copper Platinum Oil a gradual weakening of the Angolan kwanza, in early June, the central bank adjusted the official exchange Source: World Bank. rate, leaving the kwanza 14 percent weaker than at the start of 2015. Several of the region’s oil export- ers (Cameroon, Chad, Congo Republic, Equatorial FIGURE 2.59  Nigerian naira Guinea, and Gabon) share a common currency, the Oil prices continue to weigh on the Nigerian naira. CFA franc, which is pegged to the euro. With the euro depreciating against the dollar, the CFA franc LCU/US$ US$ per barrel 150 120 has also depreciated against the dollar. This has 160 110 helped smooth adjustment to the oil-price shock for 100 these countries, by boosting export earnings in do- 170 90 mestic currency. 180 80 70 In contrast to oil exporters, the oil-price plunge 190 Nigeria exchange rate against US$ 60 has provided cyclical support to real incomes in 200 Crude oil price (RHS) 50 oil-importing countries. Cheaper fuel helped lower 210 40 inflation and improve current accounts in the first Mar-14 Jul-14 Oct-14 Nov-14 Dec-14 Mar-15 Apr-15 Jan-14 Feb-14 May-14 Jun-14 Aug-14 Feb-15 quarter of 2015. In Kenya and South Africa, infla- tion rates moved back within their target range, al- Source: Bloomberg. Note: Decrease denotes "depreciation". lowing central banks to keep interest rates steady. By contrast, the naira devaluation added to price pressures in Nigeria, while Ghana continued to bat- and current expenditures, including subsidies. In tle double-digit inflation, at 16.8 percent in April Nigeria, the 2015 federal government budget passed (Figure 2.61). Against the broad-based strength by the Senate indicates sharp reductions in capital of the U.S. dollar, even the currencies of oil- expenditures. With the lower government spending, importing countries faced downward pressures, the non-oil economy in many of these countries is with, for example, the Zambian kwacha falling faltering, especially in the least diversified economies sharply. In trade-weighted terms, most of the re- (Angola and Equatorial Guinea). Nigeria’s non-oil gion’s currencies have remained broadly stable, output growth slowed to 5.6 percent in year-on-year with the exception of the naira and the Ghanaian terms in the first quarter of 2015, down from 6.4 cedi (Figure 2.62). Despite the nominal deprecia- percent in the fourth quarter of 2014. tion against the U.S. dollar the naira has appreci- Sharp currency depreciations, and foreign reserve ated considerably in real effective terms since 2011, losses, prompted adjustments in monetary and which may hurt exports. exchange rate policies. The Central Bank of Nige- Growth in South Africa, the region’s largest oil- ria raised the policy rate from 12 to 13 percent in importing economy, was stronger than expected in November. However, with oil prices declining, the the fourth quarter of 2014, supported by a rebound naira continued to depreciate against the U.S. dol- in the goods-producing sectors, after slowing earlier lar. The overall depreciation between June 2014 and in the year. This rebound failed to carry into the first GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 C H A P T E R 2 | S U B - S A H A R A N A F R I CA 159 quarter of 2015, however. Growth was held back by FIGURE 2.60  Exchange rates energy shortages, output contraction in agriculture, The region’s major currencies continue to depreciate against the U.S. dollar. weak investor confidence, policy uncertainty, and the LCU/US$, percent change, year-to-date anticipated gradual tightening of monetary and fiscal 10 policy. Elsewhere, the economies of Guinea, Liberia, 0 and Sierra Leone, the countries most affected by the -10 Ebola outbreak, remained weak as activity in mining, services, and agriculture continued to contract. -20 -30 Spreads on sovereign credit-default swaps rose sharply in a number of commodity exporters, sug- -40 Angola Ghana Kenya Nigeria gesting that investors are discriminating among the -50 Uganda South Africa Zambia Mar-14 Jul-14 Oct-14 Nov-14 Dec-14 Mar-15 Apr-15 Jan-14 Feb-14 May-14 Jun-14 Aug-14 Feb-15 region’s frontier markets based on their economic outlook. The sovereign spreads for the oil exporters Angola, Gabon, Ghana, and Nigeria have remained high, well above the 2013 “taper tantrum” peak Source: Bloomberg. (Figure 2.63). The spreads for Zambia have also FIGURE 2.61 Inflation remained elevated, reflecting investors’ concerns With the exception of Ghana price pressures look contained in the region. about soft copper prices, and uncertainty over gov- Year-on-year, percent Sub-Saharan Africa ernment policy. 35 Angola Ghana At the same time, many of the region’s frontier mar- 30 Kenya Nigeria kets are taking advantage of the very low global in- 25 South Africa Uganda terest rates, and have issued Eurobonds to finance 20 Zambia World infrastructure projects. Eurobond issuance in the 15 region has remained robust (Figure 2.64), as financ- 10 ing costs in the Euro Area have fallen sharply follow- 5 ing the European Central Bank’s introduction of an 0 Jul-10 Jul-11 Jul-12 Jul-13 Jul-14 Jan-10 Jan-11 Jan-12 Jan-13 Jan-14 Jan-15 ambitious program of quantitative easing in March. Frontier markets’ increased access to international capital markets was demonstrated by Ethiopia’s over- subscribed debut 10-year US$1 billion bond, issued Source: World Bank in December 2014, and Côte d’Ivoire’s return to FIGURE 2.62  Real effective exchange rates the market in February. Debt-to-GDP ratios for the countries with increased bond market access (Côte With the exception of the Nigerian naira, REERs have remained broadly stable. d’Ivoire, Ghana, and Mozambique) have picked up Year-on-year, percent in recent years. While debt burdens remain manage- 140 Ghana Nigeria able, continuing currency depreciations against the 130 South Africa Uganda Zambia Sub-Saharan Africa U.S. dollar could lead to a rapid increase in the value 120 of foreign-currency debt for these countries. 110 100 90 Outlook 80 70 60 Growth in Sub-Saharan Africa is projected to slow to 4.2 Jul-10 Jul-11 Jul-12 Jul-13 Jul-14 Jan-10 Jan-11 Jan-12 Jan-13 Jan-14 Jan-15 percent on average in 2015 from 4.6 percent in 2014, a downward revision of 0.4 percentage points relative to Source: World Bank. the January 2015 GEP . The revisions reflect the reassess- . Note: Decrease denotes “depreciation” ment of prospects in Angola, Nigeria, and South Africa. Growth in the region is expected to pick up in 2016 to an by domestic demand, supported by continuing infra- average of 4.6 percent and to accelerate to 5.0 percent in structure investment and private consumption fueled 2017 (Table 2.11). The increase in growth will be driven by lower oil prices. External demand is also expected to 160 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 FIGURE 2.63  Sovereign bond spreads 5.0 percent in 2015 and 5.6 percent in 2016–17, a faster Sovereign spreads of oil exporters rose sharply. pace than several other developing regions (Figure 2.65). Basis points Sub-Saharan Africa Consumption dynamics will differ for oil export- 1,300 Emerging markets Angola ers and importers. Private consumption growth is 1,100 Gabon Ghana expected to slow in the oil exporters as cuts to sub- 900 Nigeria sidies to alleviate pressure on the budget result in South Africa Zambia higher fuel costs. Purchasing power is also expected 700 to decline due to currency weakness, which would 500 push up the cost of imports in local currency. By 300 contrast, lower fuel prices are expected to contribute 100 to lower inflation in the oil importers, which should Jun-11 Oct-11 Dec-11 Apr-12 Feb-12 Jun-12 Oct-12 Dec-12 Apr-13 Oct-13 Dec-13 Apr-14 Oct-14 Dec-14 Apr-15 Aug-11 Aug-12 Feb-13 Jun-13 Aug-13 Feb-14 Jun-14 Aug-14 Feb-15 help boost consumers’ purchasing power and sup- port domestic demand. The price level impact of Source: Bloomberg. currency depreciation could, however, offset some of these effects. Meanwhile, remittance inflows in FIGURE 2.64  Eurobond issuance the region are projected to decelerate in 2015, re- flecting in part the appreciation of the U.S. dollar, Eurobond issuance in the region is set to rise further. before picking up gradually in 2016–17. Total value of Eurobonds issued since 2009, US$, millions China’s investment slowdown, and low commod- 14,000 ity prices, suggests that FDI flows may not provide 12,000 much support to growth. Furthermore, government 10,000 plans in oil exporting countries to reduce the bud- 8,000 get deficit are likely to hit capital expenditure more 6,000 than current expenditure, as governments seek to 4,000 limit cuts in public-sector wages or social spending. 2,000 However, governments in most oil-importing coun- 0 tries, especially the low-income, non-oil commodity 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 exporters, are expected to continue to expand public Source: Bloomberg. investment in priority sectors such as electricity and roads. Frontier markets are expected to continue to is- FIGURE 2.65  GDP growth outlook sue Eurobonds to finance key infrastructure projects. Growth is expected to slow in the region in 2015 and pick up moderately in 2016-17. The fiscal policy stance is expected to remain tight Percent throughout 2015 in oil-exporting countries. The Sub-Saharan Africa excluding South Africa 8 Sub-Saharan Africa revised budgets in Angola and Nigeria indicate that 7 Developing countries excluding China while capital expenditures will bear the brunt of ex- 6 penditure measures, recurrent expenditures will also 5 be reduced. Despite these adjustments, fiscal deficits 4 in these countries are likely to remain high because of 3 low revenues. Fiscal deficits are also expected to re- 2 main elevated in oil-importing countries, as spending 1 on goods and services and wages continues to expand. 0 Net exports are projected to make a marginally neg- 2007 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 ative contribution to real GDP growth. Low com- Source: World Bank. Note: The shaded area represents forecasts. modity prices will depress export receipts, especially among oil exporters, even as export volumes rise in some countries. The current account surpluses in support growth, because of stronger prospects in high- Angola and Nigeria are expected to turn into a defi- income economies. Excluding South Africa, GDP cit as their terms of trade have deteriorated sharply. growth for the rest of the region is projected to average Among oil importers, current account balances are GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 C H A P T E R 2 | S U B - S A H A R A N A F R I CA 161 expected to improve, although import growth will Risks remain strong, driven by capital goods imports. Risks to the outlook remain tilted to the downside. On the • In the baseline country forecasts (Table 2.12), domestic front, political factors associated with elections Nigeria grows at a slower pace in 2015, as fiscal in a number of countries, and Boko Haram insurgencies policy tightens in response to lower oil prices and in several others, are key risks for the region in 2015. The domestic demand contracts. Growth picks up in Ebola epidemic remains a concern. Banking sector weak- 2016 as the fiscal drag moderates, helping boost ness has emerged as a potential contingent liability activity in the non-oil sector, and the new govern- for governments in the region’s oil exporting countries. ment implements structural reforms to enhance On the external front, a sharper-than-expected slow- productivity. Output remains modest in Angola, down in China, a further decline in oil prices, a stalling reflecting its vulnerability to lower oil prices, as of the recovery in Europe, or a sudden deterioration in purchasing power declines, and lower government global liquidity conditions are the main risks. revenue leads to cuts or delays in capital expendi- tures. Growth improves only moderately in South Domestic risks Africa, as the ongoing difficulty of resolving the electricity supply constraint continues to hamper Postponed once for security concerns, Nigeria’s presi- economic activity, labor relations remain tense, dential election was held, and power was transferred, investor confidence declines, and fiscal consolida- without a major outbreak of violence. Presidential tion reduces government spending. elections, scheduled in Burundi, Côte d’Ivoire, South Sudan, Tanzania, and Togo, are likely to be conten- • Among frontier-market economies, Côte tious and could lead to political instability if the out- d’Ivoire, Kenya, and Senegal are expected to comes are contested. Several countries in the region grow at a robust pace, supported by strong in- (Cameroon, Chad, and Niger) have joined forces frastructure investment. In Ghana, the agree- with Nigeria to contain Boko Haram. In spite of ment reached with the IMF will help stabilize recent successes, the conflict may escalate again and the cedi, but fiscal consolidation and high infla- force these governments to divert budgetary resources tion will weigh on growth. In Zambia, growth from infrastructure investment to security, which will remain flat in 2015, owing to soft copper would have a negative impact on long-term growth. prices and fiscal consolidation, before picking The banking sector in some oil-exporting countries up in 2016–17 as improvements in the regula- has emerged as a potential contingent liability for their tory environment enhance the outlook for in- governments. Nigeria’s banking sector, in particular, vestment, especially in the mining sector. is heavily exposed to oil price declines. About 25 per- • Growth should remain robust in most low-in- cent of total bank loans were extended to the oil sector come countries, driven by infrastructure (Ethio- through December 2014, as the government sought to pia, Rwanda), mining (Democratic Republic of increase the presence of Nigerian firms in the sector. Congo, Mozambique, Tanzania) investment, With oil prices having declined sharply, some compa- consumer spending (Uganda), and agriculture nies may struggle to service these loans. Additionally, (Ethiopia), although continued weaknesses in to the extent that bank assets consist of foreign cur- the prices of their main exports (base metals) will rency-denominated domestic lending, a depreciation tend to offset the benefits of the oil-price decline. of the naira will increase financing cost. Non-perform- Countries that export agricultural commodities ing loans may rise, requiring capital injections. have experienced a smaller deterioration in their There has been a widespread drop in new cases of terms of trade (World Bank, 2015n). In Guinea, Ebola in 2015, suggesting that the vigorous efforts Liberia, and Sierra Leone, the Ebola crisis will to bring the epidemic under control have been suc- continue to constrain economic activity. Al- cessful. However, severe economic consequences are though the danger has receded, the risks of re- still being felt in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, newed spread and necessary controls on activi- and heightened fears of Ebola could undermine ties will continue to exert downward pressure on confidence, investment, and travel in these and economic growth. neighboring countries for some time. 162 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 External risks For oil exporters with inadequate buffers to allow for a gradual adjustment of public spending to Slower-than-expected growth in China would the lower oil prices, currency depreciation will be weigh on demand for the region’s commodities, the main means available to cushion the impact of driving prices down. A further decline in the already the oil-price plunge on their economies. However, depressed price of metals would lead to a significant countries may need to tighten their macroeconomic drop in export revenues in many countries. A scaling stances and strengthen their monetary policy frame- down of operations and new investments in these works to prevent inflation induced by currency- countries in response to the lower prices would re- depreciation from becoming a constant threat. For duce output in the short run, and slow growth mo- many countries, strengthening fiscal positions and mentum over an extended period of years. A fur- restoring fiscal buffers to increase resilience against ther decline in oil prices would also sharply lower exogenous shocks will also be necessary. The oil- revenue in oil-exporting countries, requiring them price shock highlights the need for oil exporters to to undertake deeper fiscal adjustments with sharper diversify their economies. This will require policies expenditure cuts. Some oil companies may delay or to remove impediments to private sector activity, even cancel planned investments in 2015. and to improve the business environment. It is important for Sub-Saharan Africa in general For policy makers throughout the region, the fall in that the recovery in Europe maintains momentum, oil prices provides a window of opportunity. Fall- as this could help boost investment and exports and ing oil prices reduce the need for fuel subsidies or support growth in the region. Risks are that the re- make room for higher energy taxes. Fiscal resources covery might stall as a result of renewed instability released by lower subsidies could be saved, used to in the Euro Area or because of premature tightening rebuild fiscal space, or reallocated towards programs of policies. better targeted than fuel subsidies to assist poor A sudden adjustment of market expectations to households (World Bank, 2015n). the upcoming tightening of monetary policy in In most economies, structural reforms are needed the United States could adversely affect the region’s to ignite and sustain rapid productivity growth. As emerging and frontier markets, especially countries elaborated in the January 2015 GEP, an acute in- that receive substantial portfolio inflows, such as frastructure deficit is evident, especially in electrical South Africa. However, quantitative easing in the power and transport. In particular, it will be critical Euro Area should contribute to continued attractive that improvements in public investment manage- borrowing conditions on Eurobond markets, allow- ment systems are accompanied by efforts to ensure ing frontier-market governments to maintain mar- that resources are allocated to the most productive ket access. Recent episodes of capital market volatil- ends. Reform efforts should aim at strengthening ity suggest that countries with large macroeconomic project selection, execution, and monitoring, and imbalances would face strong downward pressure encourage transparency and accountability in the use on the exchange rate, and hence an increased risk of of public resources. In addition, reforms will need inflation, further constraining policy. to focus on improving product and labor markets, easing constraints on trade and investment, and fos- tering human capital accumulation (McMillan and Policy Challenges Harttgen, 2014). GDP growth in Sub-Saharan Africa is expected to pick up moderately in 2016–17, after slowing in 2015, helped in part by a boost to private consump- tion from lower oil prices. However, growth con- tinues to be weaker than during the pre-crisis years. Sustaining high GDP growth therefore remains a policy priority for most countries in the region. As policymakers pursue growth objectives, it will be important to pay attention to macroeconomic constraints. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 C H A P T E R 2 | S U B - S A H A R A N A F R I CA 163 BOX 2.1 Linkages between China and Sub-Saharan Africa China’s engagement with Sub-Saharan Africa has ex- FIGURE B2.1.1  Growth in Sub-Saharan panded greatly over the past decade, to cover all aspects of Africa’s trade flows, by partner, 2000–13 development. The engagement has spurred growth in the region. Stronger domestic policies will help countries in The region’s trade with China has grown at a faster pace than with other countries. Sub-Saharan Africa increase the gains from this growing Percent change annualized, 2000-13 partnership. 60 170.7 Exports to SSA China’s economic ties with Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) 50 have expanded greatly over the past decade. Trade in- Imports from SSA 40 creased from negligible levels in 2000 to more than Total value of trade in 2013 (M+X), US$, billions $170 billion in 2013. Chinese direct investment in 30 SSA has grown more than six-fold. China’s official de- 20 81.4 velopment assistance to SSA expanded from $0.5 bil- 61.2 210.7 lion in 2000 to $3.2 billion in 2013. 10 The relationship is a complex one, involving multiple 0 China BRICs excl. United States EU and diverse state actors in China, often (but not al- China ways) coordinating with state-owned and private cor- Source: UN Comtrade mirror data. porations in a range of sectors across countries in SSA partner in 2009; in 2013, trade flows with China ac- (Bräutigam 2009; Fijalkowski 2011). Although com- counted for 22 percent of the region’s total trade with modities and associated infrastructure projects have the rest of the world. Official data on Chinese foreign tended to dominate the relationship, Chinese invest- investment and development financing are sparse, but ment in other sectors is also increasing, notably in flows to SSA appear to have grown substantially. manufacturing. In recent years, the Chinese govern- ment has increasingly provided assistance for social de- Trade velopment projects, and has engaged in peacekeeping Sub-Saharan Africa’s trade with China is dominated by and security operations (Hanauer and Morris 2014; commodities. Oil, gas, and metals, sourced from a few Fijałkowska 2011). countries, account for the bulk of SSA’s exports to This box examines China’s involvement in SSA and its China (Figure B2.1.2), although the region’s exports to impact on the region. The focus is on the following the United States, the European Union, and major four questions: emerging market economies are even more concen- • What is the nature of China’s involvement in SSA? trated in commodities (Figure B2.1.3). In contrast, the region’s imports from China are diverse. About one- • What has been the impact on growth in SSA? third comprise capital goods, including vehicles, gen- • What does the slowdown in China mean for the erators, telecommunications equipment, and factory region? machinery. Consumer and manufacturing goods ac- • How can the region increase the gains from its count for the remainder (Figure B2.1.2) and are about growing partnership with China? three times as large as imports from the United States and the European Union. What is the nature of China’s involvement in SSA? Investment China has become a prominent trade and financial partner for SSA. Trade with China is growing much China is the largest developing country foreign investor faster than that with the United States and the Euro- in Africa (UNCTAD 2013). The relationship started in pean Union (Figure B2.1.1). China surpassed the the early 1980s, as part of concerted diplomatic efforts United States to become the region’s largest trading promoting Chinese economic cooperation with Africa. The author of this box is Tehmina S. Khan with contributions from Jiayi Zhang and Raju Huidrom. 164 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 BOX 2.1 (continued) FIGURE B2.1.2  Sub-Saharan Africa’s trade FIGURE B2.1.4  Cumulative Chinese foreign flows with China, 2013 direct investment in Sub-Saharan Africa Sub-Saharan Africa exports to China are dominated by commodities. The stock of Chinese FDI to Sub-Saharan Africa has doubled since Percent of total 2009. 100 Other US$, billions 90 Other 25 80 Footwear Apparel 70 Machinery Manufact. 20 60 goods and 50 transport 15 40 Fuel and chemicals 30 Manufact. goods 10 20 Metal 10 Fuel and chemicals comm. 5 0 SSA imports from China SSA exports to China Source: UN Comtrade mirror data. 0 2009 2012 Source: Government of China 2013. FIGURE B2.1.3  Sub-Saharan Africa’s commodity exports to major trading partners, vestments by Chinese state-owned enterprises can be 2013 included in definitions of official flows of development assistance, if they receive subsidized state financing such ... but commodities are an even larger share of exports to other major as export credits (Hanauer and Morris 2014). trading partners. Percent of total Sub-Sarahan Africa exports to partner In any event, private investment flows are rising fast 100 87 (Gu 2009) and, to the extent they are channeled via tax 90 80 77 77 shelters, are likely to be underreported (Sun 2014). 70 69 The officially reported stock of Chinese FDI in Africa 60 59 was estimated at $21 billion in 2012, a doubling since 50 2009 (Figure B2.1.4).1 Reported flows are similar in 40 magnitude to flows from the United States (figure 30 20 B2.1.5), with the largest share directed toward the re- 10 source sector, notably in Angola, Chad, Niger, Nigeria, 0 Sudan, and Zambia.2 China World EU United BRICs States excl. China Chinese investment in other sectors is substantial, es- Source: UN Comtrade. Note: Commodities comprise food and beverages; inedible crude materials; mineral pecially in manufacturing (Figure B2.1.6). This is seen fuels, lubricants, and other related materials; animal and vegetable fats; and chemicals and related products in the gradual development of manufacturing clusters in Ethiopia (glass, fur, footwear, and automobiles), Mali (sugar refineries), and Uganda (textiles and steel Initial investments were small, amounting to $51.9 pipe manufacturing). Although partly driven by grow- million for 102 projects (about $500,000 per project) ing business opportunities in Africa, the shift toward between 1979 and 1990, with Chinese businesses rely- ing heavily on government-sponsored assistance proj- 1FDI data for China are available only for Africa as a whole rather than ects to gain a foothold in local African markets (Gov- SSA specifically. According to the Chinese Ministry of Commerce, by the ernment of China 2013; Chun 2013). The distinction end of 2009, 88 percent of the FDI stock in Africa was located in SSA (cited from GAO Report 2013). between foreign direct investment (FDI) and official 2Chinese Ministry of Commerce statistics from http://www.chinaafri- assistance may at times be ambiguous. For example, in- carealstory.com/p/chinese-fdi.html. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 C H A P T E R 2 | S U B - S A H A R A N A F R I CA 165 BOX 2.1 (continued) FIGURE B2.1.5  Chinese and U.S. foreign FIGURE B2.1.7  SSA manufacturing exports direct investment in Africa to China Chinese and US FDI flows to Africa are broadly comparable. Exports to China have grown rapidly. US$, billions Percent of total 12 China flows to Africa 14 10 United States net flows to 12 US$ 12.2 billions Africa 8 10 US$ 0.4 billions 8 6 6 4 3.7 4 2.5 2 2 0 0 2005 2007 2009 2011 2000 2013 Sources: Ministry of Commerce, China; OECD Statistics on FDI. Source: UN Comtrade. Development finance FIGURE B2.1.6  Chinese foreign direct investment in Africa, by sector, 2012 Africa is the largest recipient of Chinese development financing and its share is increasing. Africa received The largest share of Chinese FDI to Africa has been directed to the resource sector. nearly half of the cumulative $54 billion provided by Manufacturing $3.4bn, China in global foreign aid through 2012 (Figure 16% B2.1.8), significantly more than any other region (Government of China 2011, 2014). Financial sector $3.9bn, Chinese official development assistance has been, by 18% and large, complementary to aid from Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) Agriculture $0.8bn, 4% countries. Chinese and OECD official development as- $13.1bn, 62% Other (inc. minerals, infrastructure, transport) FIGURE B2.1.8  Distribution of aid and Source: Government of China 2013. development financing flows from China manufacturing is also indicative of Chinese firms’ ef- Africa is one of the largest recipients of Chinese aid. forts to develop global value chains as domestic labor 50 Percent of cumulative aid disbursed by China costs increase relative to lower-cost Africa (Hanauer 45 until 2012 40 US$, billions and Morris 2014). African firms in turn have gained 35 30 growing access to Chinese markets; since 2012, China 25 20 has given some 30 countries in SSA zero-tariff treat- 15 10 ment (covering about 60 percent of their exports) and 5 is importing a growing share of manufactures from the 0 Oceania Latin America and Asia Europe Others Africa region (Figure B2.1.7).3 the Caribbean 3Government of China (2013). Growing market access is also reflected in rising SSA manufacturing exports to China. According to Comtrade data, these comprised 11 percent of total exports to China in 2013 com- pared with 7 percent in 2000. Source: Government of China 2011, 2014. 166 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 BOX 2.1 (continued) FIGURE B2.1.9  Chinese development FIGURE B2.1.10  Development assistance to assistance and bilateral aid from OECD Sub-Saharan Africa countries to Sub-Saharan Africa …but is much smaller in size. Chinese assistance has grown at a faster pace than bilateral aid form US$, billions the OECD in recent years… 30 Percent change 25 50 Chinese external assistance 20 40 OECD bilateral 15 disbursements 30 10 20 5 10 0 WB IDA lendimg China(b) OECD countries United States(a) ODA lending by 0 -10 -20 -30 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 Source: World Bank 2013 Annual Report . a. 2012 OECD Development Assistance Committee statistics. Sources: OECD; Chinese Statistical Yearbook; MOFCOM. Cited from http://www.china b. Chinese Statistical Yearbook and MOFCOM. Cited from http://www.chinaafricarealstory africarealstory.com/p/chinese-aid.html. .com/p/chinese-aid.html. Note: OECD = Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. sistance differ substantially in scale, nature, and degree of China and the African Development Bank in 2014.6 of concessionality (Bräutigam 2011b; Strange et al. Finally, OECD country development assistance is typi- 2013).4 Although Chinese assistance increased rapidly cally accompanied by greater conditionality on social as OECD disbursements declined (Figure B2.1.9), development projects and policy reforms. As a result, Chinese aid remains well below the OECD’s, amount- almost two-thirds of OECD assistance to Sub-Saharan ing to $3.2 billion in 2013 compared with the $26 bil- Africa flows to the social infrastructure in health, edu- lion disbursed by OECD countries in the same year cation, water, and sanitation, or toward emergency re- (Figure B2.1.10). Chinese development assistance is lief and food aid (Figure B2.1.11). In contrast, half of frequently packaged into agreements that mix grants Chinese assistance is for infrastructure.7 and investment, and concessional and non-concessional What has been the impact on growth in SSA? loans (Bräutigam, 2011a, 2011b).5 Growth has accelerated strongly in the region over the China is also increasingly channeling development as- past two decades, coinciding with the expansion in eco- sistance through multilateral institutions, including a nomic ties with China. There has been a direct impact $2 billion co-financing fund between the People’s Bank 6The World Bank has also signed two Memoranda of Understanding 4Key differences include definitions, the degree of concessionality, and recently, one with China Eximbank in September 2013, and the other with conditionalities. Official development assistance is defined by the OECD China Development Bank in June 2013, to help co-finance projects. as concessional funding given to developing countries and to multilateral 7China is also increasingly engaged in combating ebola and in peace- institutions primarily for the purpose of promoting welfare and economic keeping and security operations in Sub-Saharan Africa, supported by development in the recipient country. China is not a member of the OECD growing political relations. An example is the dispatch of combat troops and does not follow its definition or practice on development aid. By this under the UN mandate in Mali—a first for China, which has previously measure, the bulk of Chinese financing in Africa falls under the category of dispatched only noncombat personnel. In part, the increased engagement development finance, but not aid (Strange et al. 2013). reflects a desire to reduce the impact of political instability on its supply 5There has been a longstanding debate over how the concessionality chain. Thus, the mediation efforts undertaken by China, between govern- of these loans is defined. The 2014 White Paper on Aid by the Chinese ment and rebel forces in South Sudan in 2013, and the expanded naval co- government offers some clarification, indicating that “the difference be- operation with Djibouti to secure the Gulf of Aden, may be seen in the light tween the concessional interest rates and the benchmark interest rates of the of China’s imports of oil from South Sudan. In the first 10 months of 2013, People’s Bank of China is subsidized by the government’s budget.” these amounted to 14 million barrels, twice those from Nigeria (Sun 2014). GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 C H A P T E R 2 | S U B - S A H A R A N A F R I CA 167 BOX 2.1 (continued) FIGURE B2.1.11  Bilateral aid from OECD FIGURE B2.1.12  Contributions to growth countries to Sub-Saharan Africa, by sector, in gross domestic product in Sub-Saharan 2013 Africa OECD aid is concentrated in the social sector. Investment and exports have underpinned faster growth in Percent of total bilateral commitments by OECD countries Social infrastructure Sub-Saharan Africa since the 2000s. and services* Humanitarian aid Percent GDP growth and food aid Investment (cont'n, %pts) 6 Exports (cont'n, %pts) Economic infrastructure services** GDP growth: average 1980-2013 5 Agriculture, forestry, and fishing 4 Multisector Sub-Saharan Africa 3 Action related to debt Developing countries 2 Other program assistance 1 Industry, mining, construction 0 0 China; 10 20 30on FDI. 40 50 -1 Sources: Ministry of Commerce, OECD Statistics Note: OECD = Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. 1980s 1990s 2000s 2002-2007 2010-2013 * Includes education, health, water and sanitation, and other such services. (pre-crisis (post-crisis ** Includes transport and communications and energy. period) period) (via rising trade, investment aid, and flows) and an indi- Source: World Bank. rect one (via China’s demand for and impact on the prices of global metals and minerals). These impacts is associated with an average 0.6 percentage point in- have been reflected in a quadrupling of the contribution crease in SSA export growth, with a larger impact on of exports and investment to growth in gross domestic resource-rich countries, especially oil exporters.9 Re- product in SSA since the 1990s (Figure B2.1.12). nard (2011) points to an additional benefit of China’s Significant Chinese investment and development fi- growth, through reduced consumer and investment nance have been channeled into infrastructure. This is prices, as cheaper Chinese manufactures and capital particularly important for SSA, given that transport goods displace imports from the United States and the and energy infrastructure deficits are severe and the re- European Union. These may be partially offset by the turns to investing in infrastructure are large.8 Improved displacement of local industries through imports from infrastructure contributed more than half of Africa’s China (e.g., apparel in South Africa and Madagascar; improved growth performance in the pre-2008 decade Ademola, Bankole, and Adewuyi 2009). (Foster and Briceno-Garmendia 2010). Between 2003 What does slower, more balanced growth in China and 2009, FDI from China contributed almost 2 per- mean for the region? centage points to growth in Zambia, about 1 percent- age point in the Democratic Republic of Congo and In the near term, slower, more balanced growth in Nigeria, and 0.5 percentage point in Madagascar China, coupled with a shift toward more consumption (Whalley and Weisbrod 2011). and less investment, is weighing on demand and prices for commodities, especially industrial commodities Indirect spillovers from growth in China have also such as iron ore and copper. These effects have been a been significant, especially for resource exporters. factor in the negative terms-of-trade shock to metal- Drummond and Liu (2013) report that a 1 percentage and mineral-exporting SSA countries over the past year point increase in China’s domestic investment growth (World Bank 2015). This situation may help to un- 8Simulations by Foster and Briceno-Garmendia (2010) suggest that if all African countries were to catch up with Mauritius (the country in SSA 9Busse, Erdogan, and Muehlen (2014) find a positive growth impact with the densest road network), per capita growth in the region could in- from terms-of-trade effects in resource-rich economies (but no impact from crease by 2.2 percentage points Chinese FDI). 168 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 BOX 2.1 (continued) wind some Dutch disease pressures—stemming from FIGURE B2.1.13  Effect of slower growth in real appreciation against the renminbi and weakening China on South Africa the competitiveness of African manufacturing—to which China’s demand for raw materials had contrib- Slower growth in China could dampen growth in Africa. uted over the past decade (Jeanneny and Hua 2015). Percentage point impact on GDP growth from a 1 percentage point reduction in Chinese GDP growth In addition, tightening financial conditions in China 0.2 Confidence bands Median may lead to higher funding costs for banks, which 0 could slow Chinese companies’ investment abroad, in- cluding in SSA (IMF 2014).10 -0.2 Over the medium to long term, Chinese economic en- -0.4 gagement should continue to grow, as reflected in re- cent proposals by the Chinese government to invest in -0.6 regional rail networks, eventually linking five East Af- -0.8 rican countries.11 In part, this undertaking reflects 1 2 3 4 5 Number of quarters 6 7 8 growing opportunities in SSA, as well as China’s grow- Source: World Bank. ing strategic (political, economic, and security) inter- Note: Results from a structural vector autoregression model with the following variables: South Africa’s GDP, China’s GDP, rest of the world’s GDP, and global interest rates (proxied ests in the region (Sun 2014). In the mining sector, for by the U.S. federal funds rate). instance, SSA is one of the two major regions (along- side the Arctic) that have been less well-explored. The How can the region increase the gains from its African market share is expected to grow, given the growing partnership with emerging markets? depletion of easily accessible mineral deposits in ad- China’s increasing presence in SSA has supported vanced countries and improvements in technology growth—somewhat similar to the impact of Japan’s (ICMM 2012). Accordingly, although investments in growing presence on East Asia in the 1960s. China’s infrastructure and mining are likely to slow, given the engagement has filled important infrastructure gaps recent decreases in global commodity prices, Chinese and encouraged supply chain integration. investment should continue to add to the domestic de- China is only one of several major emerging economies mand for goods and services in SSA. with an interest in SSA, the others being Brazil, India,12 the Republic of Korea, the Russian Federation, and 10To illustrate the possible short- and medium-term effects that a slow- Turkey. And traditional OECD partners remain impor- down in China could have, a structural vector autoregression model was estimated for South Africa with data from 2000Q2–2014Q2.The key vari- tant—the magnitude of their aid, investment, and ables are the rest of world’s gross domestic product (GDP) growth, global trade flows is (in aggregate) larger than that from China. interest rates (proxied by the U.S. federal funds rate), China’s GDP growth, South Africa’s GDP growth. All variables are seasonally adjusted and trans- But to benefit fully from the opportunities presented formed into log differences (quarter-on-quarter). The identification is based by trading partners (including China), countries in on a Cholesky decomposition with the variables ordered as listed, which SSA need to focus on improving domestic policies to is based on the presumed exogeneity or predetermination of variables. For instance, global GDP and global interest rates are presumably more exog- reform institutions, increase transparency (especially in enous than China’s GDP in the vector autoregression system, and hence mining), improve business environments (the cost of ordered before China’s GDP. A 1 percentage point reduction in China’s corruption is heavy; World Bank 2015), and promote growth results in a 0.37 percentage point decline in output growth in South Africa at the end of a horizon of two years (figure B2.1.13), consistent with estimates in other studies (Houssa, Mohimont, and Otrok 2015). 11In May 2014, China signed a deal to build a US$3.8 billion rail link 12With $52 billion in announced projects, greenfield investment in Af- between Mombasa and Nairobi in Kenya, the first phase of a line that will rica by India actually surpassed the $45 billion by China during 2003–12. It eventually link Burundi, Rwanda, South Sudan, and Uganda. Under the covered a wider range of sectors, including agro-processing, energy (including deal, the Exim Bank of China will provide 90 percent of the cost to re- renewables), consumer goods, and financial services (OECD 2013). Green- place the decades-old British colonial-era line with a 609.3 kilometer (379 field FDI is where a parent company constructs new operational facilities. mile) standard-gauge link, while Kenya will fund the balance of 10 percent. In addition to the boost from the investment itself, the hiring of staff to run http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/china/2015-02/24/c_134014338.htm. these facilities creates new long-term jobs. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 C H A P T E R 2 | S U B - S A H A R A N A F R I CA 169 BOX 2.1 (continued) the development of human capital. Closer economic important for the region’s growth prospects, better in- cooperation among African countries—for instance, tegration of the mineral sector into development and harmonizing laws and facilitating cross-border busi- macroeconomic policy would help shield resource-ex- ness and collaboration—could allow Africa to leverage porting countries from volatility in commodity prices the benefits of commerce with the major emerging and assist with more sustainable, longer-term socioeco- market economies (OECD 2013; Jacoby 2007). This nomic development (UNECA 2011). A higher degree would also help lower the costs of bureaucracy and im- of processing of agricultural and raw materials would prove competitiveness. Improvements in regional in- take better advantage of preferential access to Chinese, frastructure would encourage investment (domestic U.S., and European Union markets and would mean and foreign). Since natural resource wealth will remain more exports and jobs. TABLE 2.11  Sub-Saharan Africa forecast summary (Annual percent change unless indicated otherwise) 00–10a 2011 2012 2013 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f GDP at market pricesb 5.7 4.3 4.1 4.2 4.6 4.2 4.6 5.0 (Average including countries with full national accounts and balance of payments data only)c GDP at market pricesc 5.7 4.3 4.1 4.2 4.6 4.2 4.6 5.0 GDP per capita (units in US$) 3.1 1.7 1.6 2.4 2.1 1.7 2.1 2.5 PPP GDPc 5.8 4.4 4.2 5.0 4.9 4.4 4.8 5.2 Private consumptiond 5.8 3.3 2.4 12.2 4.2 4.0 4.2 4.5 Public consumption 7.3 7.9 5.7 3.6 3.9 3.6 3.7 3.8 Fixed investment 9.8 2.0 9.2 5.6 6.7 6.7 7.3 7.8 Exports, GNFSe 4.8 10.2 1.0 –7.3 3.4 2.8 3.1 3.3 Imports, GNFSe 8.4 8.0 1.3 6.4 2.7 3.0 3.1 3.2 Net exports, contribution to growth –0.7 0.7 –0.1 –4.3 0.1 –0.1 –0.1 0.0 Consumer prices (annual average) 8.4 10.1 11.1 8.1 9.0 … … … Fiscal balance (percent of GDP) –0.6 –1.1 –1.7 –2.9 –2.4 –2.2 –2.2 –2.1 Memo items: GDP SSA excluding South Africa 6.7 4.6 4.7 6.0 5.7 5.0 5.4 5.8 Broader geographic region (incl. recently high income countries)f 5.7 4.3 4.1 4.8 4.5 4.1 4.5 5.0 Oil exportersg 7.6 3.5 3.9 6.0 5.8 4.6 5.0 5.6 CFA countriesh 4.2 2.3 6.0 4.5 5.4 3.8 5.5 6.0 South Africa 3.5 3.6 2.5 1.9 1.5 2.0 2.1 2.4 Nigeria 8.8 4.9 4.3 5.4 6.2 4.5 5.0 5.5 Angola 11.3 3.9 8.4 6.8 4.4 4.5 3.9 5.1 Source: World Bank. World Bank forecasts are frequently updated based on new information and changing (global) circumstances. Consequently, projections presented here may differ from those contained in other Bank documents, even if basic assessments of countries’ prospects do not differ at any given moment in time. a. Growth rates over intervals are compound weighted averages; average growth contributions, ratios and deflators are calculated as simple averages of the annual weighted averages for the region. b. GDP at market prices and expenditure components are measured in constant 2010 U.S. dollars. c. Sub-region aggregate excludes Liberia, Somalia, Central African Republic, São Tomé and Principe,and South Sudan. Data limitations prevent the forecasting of GDP components or Balance of Payments details for these countries. d. The sudden surge in Private Consumption in the region in 2013 is driven by the revised and rebased NIA data of Nigeria in 2014. e. Exports and imports of goods and non-factor services (GNFS). f. Recently high-income countries include Equatorial Guinea. g. Oil Exporters: Angola, Côte d Ivoire, Cameroon, Congo, Rep., Gabon, Nigeria, Sudan, Chad, Congo, Dem. Rep. h. CFA Countries: Benin, Burkina Faso, Central African Republic, Côte d Ivoire, Cameroon, Congo, Rep., Gabon, Guinea Bissau, Equatorial Guinea, Mali, Niger, Senegal, Chad, Togo. 170 CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 TABLE 2.12  Sub-Saharan Africa country forecasts (Real GDP growth at market prices in percent, unless indicated otherwise) 00–10a 2011 2012 2013 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f Angola 11.3 3.9 8.4 6.8 4.4 4.5 3.9 5.1 Benin 3.9 3.3 5.4 5.6 5.5 4.6 4.6 4.7 Botswana 4.2 5.2 5.0 5.4 4.7 4.3 4.2 4.2 Burkina Faso 6.0 4.2 9.5 6.5 4.5 5.0 6.2 6.5 Burundi 3.3 4.2 4.0 4.6 4.7 4.8 5.0 5.2 Cabo Verde 5.7 4.0 1.2 0.5 1.3 3.0 3.4 3.5 Cameroon 3.3 4.1 4.6 5.6 5.0 4.0 4.6 5.0 Chad 10.7 0.1 8.9 4.0 7.3 9.0 4.7 5.6 Comoros 2.9 2.6 3.0 3.5 3.2 3.4 3.7 3.8 Congo, Dem. Rep. 4.7 6.9 7.1 8.5 9.0 8.0 8.5 9.0 Côte d’Ivoire 1.1 –4.4 10.7 8.7 8.0 8.0 7.7 7.5 Eritrea 0.9 8.7 7.0 1.3 2.0 1.5 2.0 2.2 Ethiopia 8.6 11.2 8.6 10.5 10.3 9.5 10.5 8.5 Gabon 2.0 7.1 5.6 5.9 5.0 4.0 5.2 5.5 Gambia, The 4.6 –4.3 5.9 4.8 –0.2 3.0 5.1 6.1 Ghana 5.8 14.0 9.3 7.3 4.2 3.5 5.9 7.8 Guinea 2.6 3.9 3.9 2.3 0.4 –0.3 2.3 2.5 Guinea-Bissau 2.5 9.0 –2.2 0.3 2.5 4.2 3.9 4.0 Kenya 4.4 6.1 4.5 5.7 5.3 6.0 6.6 6.5 Lesotho 4.0 2.8 6.5 5.5 2.0 4.0 4.5 4.5 Madagascar 2.6 1.5 3.0 2.4 3.0 4.6 4.8 5.0 Malawi 4.5 4.3 1.9 5.0 5.7 5.1 5.6 5.9 Mali 5.7 2.7 0.0 1.7 6.8 5.6 5.1 5.2 Mauritania 3.9 4.0 7.0 6.7 6.4 5.5 5.7 5.6 Mauritius 3.8 3.9 3.3 3.3 3.2 3.5 3.7 3.7 Mozambique 7.7 7.4 7.1 7.4 7.4 7.2 7.3 7.3 Namibia 4.7 5.1 5.2 5.1 5.3 5.5 5.3 5.1 Niger 4.6 2.3 11.0 4.1 6.2 4.5 5.5 7.7 Nigeria 8.8 4.9 4.3 5.4 6.2 4.5 5.0 5.5 Rwanda 7.9 7.9 8.8 4.7 7.0 7.0 7.0 7.5 Senegal 4.1 2.1 3.5 2.8 4.5 4.8 5.0 5.2 Sierra Leone 8.9 6.0 15.2 20.1 6.0 –12.8 8.4 8.9 South Africa 3.5 3.6 2.5 1.9 1.5 2.0 2.1 2.4 Sudan 5.8 –3.3 –10.1 –6.1 3.0 2.6 3.5 3.9 Swaziland 2.3 –0.7 1.9 2.8 1.7 2.0 1.8 1.6 Tanzania 7.0 6.4 6.9 7.0 7.2 7.2 7.1 7.1 Togo 2.0 4.9 5.9 5.1 5.5 5.1 4.9 4.7 Uganda 7.8 4.7 3.6 4.8 5.2 5.5 5.7 5.8 Zambia 7.4 6.4 6.8 6.7 5.6 5.6 6.2 6.9 Zimbabwe -4.7 11.9 10.6 4.5 3.2 1.0 2.5 3.5 00–10a 2011 2012 2013 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f Recently transitioned to high-income countriesb Equatorial Guinea 14.7 5.0 3.2 –4.8 –3.1 –15.4 3.6 3.7 Source: World Bank. World Bank forecasts are frequently updated based on new information and changing (global) circumstances. Consequently, projections presented here may differ from those contained in other Bank documents, even if basic assessments of countries’ prospects do not significantly differ at any given moment in time. a. GDP growth rates over intervals are compound average; current account balance shares are simple averages over the period. b. The recently high-income countries are based on World Bank’s reclassification from 2004 to 2014. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 2 | REFERENCES 171 References and Aid." IEE Working Papers 206. Institut fuer Entwicklungsforschung und Entwicklungspolitik, Aastveit, K. A., G. J. Natvik, and S. Sola. Ruhr-Universitaet Bochum. October 19, 2013. “Economic Uncertainty and Busso, M., L. Madrigal, and C. Pagés. 2012. “Pro- the Effectiveness of Monetary Policy.” CEPR ductivity and Resource Misallocation in Latin Vox Policy Portal. http://www.voxeu.org/article/ America.” IDB Working Paper No. 306. Inter- economic-uncertainty-and-effectiveness-mone- American Development Bank, Washington, DC. tary-policy. Chun, Z. 2013. “The Sino-Africa Relationship: To- Abdih, Y., and C. Geginat. 2014. “The Economic ward a New Strategic Partnership.” LSE Ideas. Spe- Impact of the Syrian Conflict on Jordan.” Economic cial Report SR016. London School of Economics, Window (blog). IMF blog. http://www.imf.org/ex- London. ternal/np/blog/nafida/093014.pdf. Devarajan, S., and L. Mottaghi. 2015. “MENA Ademola, O., Bankole A. S., and A. O. Adewuyi. Economic Monitor: Towards a New Social Con- 2009. “China-Africa Trade Relations: Insight from tract.” Middle East and North Africa (MENA) Eco- AERC Scoping Studies.” European Journal of Devel- nomic Monitor. World Bank, Washington, DC. opment Research 21 (4): 485–505. Ding, D, and I. Masha. 2012. “India’s growth spill- Ahuja, A., and M. Nabar. 2012. “Investment-Led overs to South Asia.” IMF Working Paper No. Growth in China: Global Spillovers.” Working Pa- 12/56. International Monetary Fund, Washington, per No. 12/267. International Monetary Fund, DC. Washington, DC. Drummond, P., and E. X. Liu. 2013. “Africa’s Ris- Baffes, J., M. A. Kose, F. Ohnsorge, and M. Stocker. ing Exposure to China: How Large Are Spillovers 2015. “The Great Plunge in Oil Prices: Causes, through Trade?” IMF Working Paper No. 13/250. Consequences, and Policy Responses.” Policy Re- International Monetary Fund, Washington, DC. search Note No 1. World Bank Group, Washington, DC. Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC). 2012. “Foreign Direct Invest- BBVA Research. 2014. “Mexico Economic Out- ment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2011.” look.” Third Quarter. https://www.bbvaresearch. com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/MEO_3Q14_ Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU). February 6, Rec3.pdf. 2015. “Latin America/Caribbean Economy: Re- gional Bond Issuance Reaches New Record in Bräutigam, D. 2009. The Dragon’s Gift: The Real 2014.” ViewsWire. Story of China in Africa. Oxford, U.K.: Oxford Uni- versity Press. Engel, E., R. Fischer, and A. Galetovic. 2013. “The Economics of Public-Private Partnerships: A User’s Bräutigam, D. 2011a. “Aid ‘With Chinese Charac- Guide.” Cambridge University Press. teristics’: Chinese Foreign Aid and Development Finance Meet the OECD-DAC Aid Regime.” Jour- Fijałkowskia, L. 2011. “China's ‘Soft Power’ in Af- nal of International Development 23 (5): 752–64. rica.” Journal of Contemporary African Studies 29 (2): 223–32. Bräutigam, D. 2011b. “Chinese Development Aid in Africa: What, Where, Why and How Much?” In Foster, V., and C. Briceno-Garmendia. 2010. “Afri- China Update 2011, ed. Jane Golley and Ligang ca’s Infrastructure: A Time for Transformation.” Song, 203–22. Canberra: Australia National World Bank Africa Infrastructure Country Diag- University. nostic, World Bank, Washington, DC. Burger, M. J., E. I. Ianchovina, and B. Rijkers. Fukase, E, and W. J. Martin. 2015. “Economic Im- 2015. “Risky Business: Political Instability and Sec- plications of a Potential Free Trade Agreement Be- toral Greenfield Foreign Direct Investment in the tween India and the United States.” Policy Research Arab World.” World Bank Economic Review. Working Paper No. WPS 7212. World Bank, Wash- ington, DC. Busse, M., C. Erdogan, and H. Muehlen. 2014. "China's Impact on Africa—The Role of Trade, FDI 172 GLOBAL OUTLOOK GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 GAO. 2013. ”Sub-Saharan Africa: Trends in U.S. ______. 2014a. Regional Economic Outlook Asia and and Chinese Engagement.” US Government Ac- Pacific. April 2014. Washington, DC: International countability Office Report to Congressional Re- Monetary Fund. questors. GAO-13-199. ______. 2014b. “Multilateral Policy Issues Report: Government of China. 2011. White Paper on Chi- 2014 Spillover Report.” International Monetary na's Foreign Aid. Information Office of the State Fund, Washington, DC. Council, the People's Republic of China. http:// ______. 2014c. “2014 Yemen: Article IV Discus- news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/china/2011- sion—Staff Report.” Country Report No. 14/276. 04/21/c_13839683.htm. International Monetary Fund, Washington, DC. ______. 2013. Paper on China-Africa Economic ______. 2014d. “2014 Algeria: Article IV Discus- and Trade Cooperation. http://www.scio.gov.cn/ sion—Staff Report.” Country Report No. 14/473. zxbd/wz/Document/1344818/1344818.htm. International Monetary Fund, Washington, DC. ______. 2014. White Paper on China's Foreign ______. 2014e. Regional Africa Outlook: Sub-Saha- Aid. Information Office of the State Council, The ran Africa—Fostering Durable and Inclusive Growth. People's Republic of China. http://news.xinhuanet. Washington, DC: International Monetary Fund. com/english/china/2014-07/10/c_133474011. htm. ______. 2015a. World Economic Outlook (April 2015.) Washington, DC: International Monetary Gu, J. 2009. “China’s Private Enterprises in Africa Fund. and the Implications for African Development.” Eu- ropean Journal of Development Research 21 (4): ______. 2015b. “Ukraine: Request for Extended 570–78. Arrangement Under the Executed Fund Facility and Cancellation of Stand-By Arrangement—Staff Re- Guillemont-Jeanneny, S., and P. Hua. 2015. “Chi- port.” March 2015. International Monetary Fund, na's African Financial Engagement, Real Exchange Washington, DC. Rates and Trade between China and Africa.” Journal of African Economies 24 (1): 1–25. ______. 2015c. Regional Economic Outlook Update: Middle East and Central Asia. January 2015. Inter- Hanauer, L., and L. J. Morris. 2014. “Chinese En- national Monetary Fund, Washington, DC. gagement in Africa Drivers, Reactions, and Implica- tions for U.S. Policy.” RAND Report. ______. 2015d. Global Financial Stability Report (April 2015.) Washington, DC: International Mon- Housa, R., J. Mohimont, and C. Otrok. 2015. “The etary Fund. Sources of Business Cycles in a Low Income Coun- try.” IMF Working Paper 15/40. International ______. April 2007. “Decoupling the Train? Spill- Monetary Fund, Washington, DC. overs and Cycles in the Global Economy.” Chapter 4 in World Economic Outlook. Washington, DC: In- Ianchovichina, E. I., and M. Ivanic. 2014. “Eco- ternational Monetary Fund. nomic Effects of the Syrian War and the Spread of the Islamic State on the Levant.” Policy Research Inter-American Development Bank. 2013. Rethink- Paper No. 7135. World Bank, Washington, DC. ing Reforms: How Latin America and the Caribbean Can Escape Suppressed World Growth. IADB, Wash- ICMM. 2012. “Trends in the Mining and Metals ington, DC. Industry” InBrief Publication. ______. March 2015. “The Labyrinth: How Can IMF. 2010. “2010 Syria: Article IV Discussion— Latin America and the Caribbean Navigate the Staff Report.” Country Report No. 10/86. Interna- Global Economy.” 2015 Latin American and Carib- tional Monetary Fund, Washington, DC. bean Macroeconomic Report. ______. 2013a. “2013 Libya: Article IV Discus- Lam, R. W. and P. Wingender. 2015. “China: How sion—Staff Report.” Country Report No. 13/150. Can Revenue Reforms Contribute to Inclusive and International Monetary Fund, Washington, DC. Sustainable Growth?” Working Paper No 15/66. In- ______. 2013b. “2013 Iraq: Article IV Discus- ternational Monetary Fund. Washington, D.C. sion—Staff Report.” Country Report No. 13/217. International Monetary Fund, Washington, DC. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 CHAPTER 2 | REFERENCES 173 Lindner, P., and S. E. Jung. 2014. “Corporate Vul- Sun, Y. 2014. “Africa in China’s Foreign Policy.” nerabilities in India and Banks' Loan Performance.” Working Paper, Brookings Institution, Washington, Working Paper No. 14/232. International Mone- DC. tary Fund, Washington, DC. UNCTAD. 2013. “World Investment Report: McKinsey, 2015. “Debt and (Not Much) Delever- Global Value Chains: Investment and Trade for De- aging.” McKinsey Global Institute. February 2015. velopment.” UNCTAD/WIR/2013. United Na- McMillan, M., and K. Harttgen. 2014. “What is tions Conference on Trade and Development, Driving the ‘African Growth Miracle’?” NBER Geneva. Working Paper 20077, National Bureau of Eco- UNECA. 2011. “Minerals and Africa’s Develop- nomic Research, Cambridge, MA. ment.” Economic Commission for Africa Report. Miner, S. 2015. “Real Value of China’s FX Reserves United Nations Economic Commission for Africa, in Essentially Flat.” April 2015. Peterson Institute Addis Ababa. for International Economics. Whalley, J., and A. Weisbrod. 2012. "The Contri- OECD. 2013. “New Challengers for China: Africa’s bution of Chinese FDI to Africa's Pre Crisis Growth Emerging Partnerships.” OECD Observer 296 Surge." Global Economy Journal 12 (4): 1–28. (Q3). Organisation for Economic Co-operation Witte, C. K., M. J. Burger, E. I. Ianchovina, and E. and Development, Paris. Pennings. 2015. “Dodging the Bullets: An Indus- ______. 2015. “OECD Economic Surveys: China.” try-Level Analysis of Multinational in Conflict (March 2015.) Organisation for Economic Co-op- Countries.” mimeo. eration and Development, Paris. World Bank and Development Research Center of Renard, M.-F. 2011. “China’s Trade and FDI in Af- the State Council, the People’s Republic of China. rica.” Working Paper No 126. African Development 2014. Urban China: Toward Efficient, Inclusive, and Bank, Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire. Sustainable Urbanization. Washington, DC: World Bank. Rennhack, Robert, and Fabián Valencia. February 2015. “Fiscal Impact of Lower Oil Prices on Latin World Bank. 2014a. “China Economic Update, America and the Caribbean.” iMFdirect. http:// June 2014.” World Bank, Washington, DC. blog-imfdirect.imf.org/2015/02/26/ ______. 2014b. Global Economic Prospects: Shifting fiscal-impact-of-lower-oil-prices-on-latin-america- Priorities, Building for the Future (June 2014.) Wash- and-the-caribbean. ington, DC: World Bank. Roache, Shaun K. 2008. “Central America’s Re- ______. 2014c. “Lebanon Economic Monitor, Fall gional Trends and U.S. Cycles.” IMF Working Pa- 2014: Downside Risks Materialize.” World Bank, per 08/50. International Monetary Fund, Washing- Washington, DC. ton, DC. ______. 2015a. “Philippines Economic Update: Rodrik, D. 2014. “An African Growth Miracle.” Making Growth Work for the Poor.” January 2015. NBER Working Paper 20188, National Bureau of Washington, DC: World Bank. Economic Research, Cambridge, MA. ______. 2015b. “East Asia and Pacific Economic Rutkowski, R. 2015. “Services Sector Reform in Update: Adjusting to a Changing World.” April China.” Policy Brief. Peterson Institute for Interna- 2015. Washington, DC: World Bank. tional Economics. http://www.piie.com/publica- ______. 2015c. “Indonesia Economic Quarterly.” tions/pb/pb15-2.pdf. March 2015. World Bank, Washington, DC. Strange, A., B. Parks, M. J. Tierney, A. Fuchs, A. ______. 2015d. “Malaysia Economic Monitor.” Dreher, and R. Vijaya. 2013. “China’s Development December 2014. World Bank, Washington, DC. Finance to Africa: A Media-Based Approach to Data Collection.” Working Paper No. 323. Center for ______. 2015e. Doing Business 2015. Washington, Global Development, Washington, DC. DC: World Bank. 174 GLOBAL OUTLOOK GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 ______. 2015f. “Russia Economic Report: The ______. 2015k. Global Economic Prospects: Having Dawn of a New Economic Era?” (April 2015.) Fiscal Space and Using It. (January 2015.) Washing- Washington, DC: World Bank. ton, DC: World Bank. ______. 2015g. “Kazakhstan Economic Update: ______. 2015l. “Latin America Treads a Narrow Low Oil Prices; an Opportunity to Reform.” (Spring Path to Growth: The Slowdown and its Macroeco- 2015.) World Bank, Washington, DC. nomic Challenges.” World Bank, Washington, DC. ______. 2015h. “Turkey Economic Update.” (April ______. 2015m. “South Asia Economic Focus, 2015.) World Bank, Washington, DC. Spring 2015: Making the Most of Cheap Oil.” ______. 2015i. “Europe and Central Asia Regional World Bank, Washington, DC. Brief.” (April 2015.) World Bank, Washington, DC. ______. 2015n. “Africa’s Pulse April 2015.” World ______. 2015j. “Commodity Markets Outlook.” Bank, Washington, DC. (April 2015.) World Bank, Washington, DC. World Economic Forum. 2014. The Global Com- petitiveness Report 2014-2015. STATISTICAL APPENDIX Additional statistical data can be found online at www.worldbank.org/gep 176 GLOBAL OUTLOOK GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 TABLE A.1 GDP growth Quarterly growthb Constant 2010 US Dollars Annual estimates and forecastsa 2013 2014 2015 00-10c 2011 2012 2013 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 World 2.8 3.1 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.8 3.3 3.2 3.6 2.7 1.9 2.1 3.5 2.5 1.8 High-Income Countries 1.8 1.9 1.4 1.4 1.8 2.0 2.4 2.2 2.7 2.0 0.8 1.4 2.3 1.8 1.3 Euro Area 1.1 1.7 -0.7 -0.4 0.9 1.5 1.8 1.6 0.7 1.0 0.9 0.4 0.7 1.3 1.7 OECD Countries (All) 1.6 1.8 1.3 1.3 1.7 2.3 2.5 2.2 2.7 1.9 0.9 1.4 2.3 1.9 1.3 Non-OECD Countries (High-income only) 4.7 5.2 3.8 2.6 2.2 0.9 2.4 3.2 2.7 3.4 1.1 1.1 2.0 1.1 .. Developing Countries 6.1 6.1 4.9 5.1 4.6 4.4 5.2 5.4 5.9 4.4 4.6 3.9 6.7 4.0 .. East Asia and the Pacific 9.0 8.3 7.4 7.1 6.9 6.7 6.7 6.6 9.0 6.5 6.0 6.2 8.7 6.6 4.8 Cambodia 8.0 7.1 7.3 7.4 7.0 6.9 6.9 6.8 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. China 10.5 9.3 7.7 7.7 7.4 7.1 7.0 6.9 9.9 6.9 6.6 6.4 9.8 6.7 5.3 Fiji 1.6 2.7 1.7 4.6 3.8 2.5 2.4 2.6 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Indonesia 5.3 6.2 6.0 5.6 5.0 4.7 5.5 5.5 5.1 5.5 4.4 5.0 4.9 5.7 3.3 Lao PDR 7.1 8.0 8.0 8.5 7.5 6.4 7.0 7.0 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Malaysia 4.4 5.3 5.5 4.7 6.0 4.7 5.0 5.1 6.8 6.9 5.5 6.7 3.3 7.3 4.7 Mongolia 6.5 17.5 12.4 11.6 7.8 4.4 4.2 3.9 10.2 7.0 -6.9 4.9 .. .. .. Myanmar 10.3 5.9 7.3 8.3 8.5 8.5 8.2 8.0 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Papua New Guinea 3.5 10.7 8.1 5.5 7.5 16.0 5.0 2.4 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Philippines 4.8 3.7 6.8 7.2 6.1 6.5 6.5 6.3 4.3 5.3 7.0 10.2 0.0 9.5 1.4 Solomon Islands 2.9 10.7 4.9 3.0 0.1 3.5 3.5 3.5 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Thailand 4.5 0.8 7.3 2.8 0.9 3.5 4.0 4.0 3.8 0.8 -3.0 1.7 4.8 4.6 1.4 Timor-Leste 4.3 14.7 7.8 5.4 6.6 6.8 6.9 7.0 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Vietnam 6.8 6.2 5.2 5.5 6.0 6.0 6.2 6.5 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Europe and Central Asia 4.6 6.1 1.9 3.7 2.4 1.8 3.4 3.6 2.3 4.2 3.2 -2.3 1.7 0.2 .. Albania 5.2 2.5 1.6 1.4 1.9 3.0 3.5 3.5 -9.6 10.8 1.6 0.2 3.3 4.5 .. Armenia 7.9 4.7 7.2 3.5 3.4 0.8 2.7 3.0 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Azerbaijan 14.9 0.1 2.2 5.8 2.8 1.5 2.6 2.7 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Belarus 7.4 5.5 1.7 1.0 1.6 -3.5 -1.0 1.0 1.7 -4.8 13.9 -3.5 3.9 -6.0 -3.5 Bosnia and Herzegovina 4.0 1.0 -1.1 2.5 0.4 2.0 2.3 2.9 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Bulgaria 4.0 2.0 0.5 1.1 1.7 1.1 2.0 2.7 2.7 2.6 0.5 1.2 1.8 1.6 .. Georgia 6.2 7.2 6.2 3.3 4.8 2.0 3.0 5.0 3.4 16.8 2.9 -3.0 4.8 2.2 .. Hungary 2.1 1.8 -1.5 1.5 3.6 2.4 2.5 2.7 4.5 4.1 3.2 4.1 2.4 3.6 2.4 Kazakhstan 8.3 7.5 5.0 6.0 4.3 1.7 2.9 4.1 10.1 5.2 .. .. .. .. .. Kosovo 6.1 4.4 2.8 3.4 2.5 3.0 3.5 3.7 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Kyrgyz Republic 4.1 6.0 -0.1 10.9 3.6 1.7 3.2 4.0 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Macedonia, FYR 1.6 2.3 -0.5 2.7 3.5 3.5 3.8 4.0 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Moldova 5.1 6.8 -0.7 9.4 4.6 -2.0 1.5 4.0 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Montenegro 3.6 3.2 -2.5 3.3 1.5 3.4 2.9 2.9 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Romania 4.1 1.1 0.6 3.5 2.9 3.0 3.2 3.5 4.1 4.4 1.3 -2.5 8.8 3.0 .. Serbia 3.6 1.4 -1.0 2.6 -1.8 -0.5 1.5 2.0 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Tajikistan 8.3 7.4 7.5 7.4 6.7 3.2 4.4 5.2 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Turkey 3.9 8.8 2.1 4.2 2.9 3.0 3.9 3.7 1.6 3.0 6.4 -1.8 2.2 2.8 .. Turkmenistan 13.6 14.7 11.1 10.2 10.3 8.0 9.0 9.0 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Ukraine 4.3 5.5 0.2 0.0 -6.8 -7.5 2.0 3.0 -7.4 17.2 -13.6 -11.6 -11.0 -22.3 -24.5 Uzbekistan 6.9 8.3 8.2 8.0 8.1 7.6 7.8 8.0 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Latin America and the Caribbean 3.3 4.7 2.9 2.7 0.9 0.4 2.0 2.8 2.3 1.1 1.9 -1.2 1.6 1.7 .. Argentinae 3.8 8.4 0.8 2.9 0.5 1.1 1.8 3.0 2.6 -1.0 -2.6 2.2 0.5 0.1 .. Belize 4.0 2.1 3.8 1.5 3.6 2.5 2.6 2.7 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Bolivia 3.8 5.2 5.2 6.8 5.3 4.8 4.2 4.1 6.5 9.0 1.6 2.1 11.6 .. .. Brazil 3.6 3.9 1.8 2.7 0.1 -1.3 1.1 2.0 0.4 0.3 2.6 -5.4 0.6 1.3 .. Colombia 4.1 6.6 4.0 4.9 4.6 3.5 3.9 4.2 4.0 5.5 5.2 2.4 3.6 2.9 .. Costa Rica 4.4 4.5 5.2 3.4 3.5 3.4 4.2 4.4 6.0 0.8 0.8 7.4 4.5 -0.5 .. Dominica 2.6 0.2 -1.4 -0.9 1.5 1.3 1.5 1.6 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Dominican Republic 4.9 2.9 2.6 4.8 7.3 5.2 4.8 3.4 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Ecuador 4.1 7.8 5.2 4.6 3.8 1.9 3.0 4.2 6.4 2.7 -0.2 6.5 5.9 1.9 .. El Salvador 1.9 2.2 1.9 1.7 2.0 2.2 2.5 2.6 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Guatemala 3.3 4.2 3.0 3.7 4.2 4.0 3.9 3.9 1.2 2.2 4.0 10.5 2.5 0.9 .. Guyana 2.4 5.4 4.8 5.2 3.6 3.7 3.8 4.0 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Haiti 0.1 5.5 2.9 4.2 2.7 1.7 3.2 3.1 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Honduras 4.1 3.8 4.1 2.8 3.1 2.9 3.3 3.5 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Jamaicad 0.5 1.7 -0.6 0.6 0.4 1.5 2.2 2.5 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Mexico 1.8 4.0 4.0 1.4 2.1 2.6 3.2 3.5 4.6 1.2 2.0 3.7 2.1 2.7 1.6 Nicaraguae 2.8 5.7 5.0 4.6 4.7 4.2 4.3 4.2 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Panama 6.3 10.9 10.8 8.4 6.2 6.2 6.4 6.5 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Paraguay 3.4 4.3 -1.2 14.2 4.4 4.2 4.1 4.1 3.2 0.1 13.0 -2.8 6.9 7.3 .. Perue 5.6 6.5 6.0 5.8 2.4 3.9 5.0 5.0 5.1 6.3 -1.3 -2.3 4.7 2.8 2.2 St. Lucia 1.8 1.2 -1.6 -0.4 -1.0 -0.6 0.8 1.4 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. St. Vincent and the Grenadines 3.5 -0.5 1.2 1.7 1.5 2.6 2.9 3.4 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Venezuela, RB 3.1 4.2 5.6 1.3 -4.0 -5.1 -1.0 1.1 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS | JUNE 2015 S TAT I S T I C A L A P P E N D I X 177 TABLE A.1 GDP growth (continued) Quarterly growthb Constant 2010 US Dollars Annual estimates and forecastsa 2013 2014 2015 00-10c 2011 2012 2013 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Middle East and North Africa 4.5 -0.1 1.3 0.5 2.2 2.2 3.7 3.8 1.3 3.7 5.1 4.1 6.4 1.1 .. Algeria 3.9 2.8 3.3 2.8 4.1 2.6 3.9 4.0 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Djibouti 3.9 4.5 4.8 5.0 6.0 6.5 7.0 7.1 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Egypt, Arab Rep.d 4.9 1.8 2.2 2.1 2.2 4.2 4.5 4.8 -0.9 5.4 4.5 6.5 10.2 -3.1 .. Iran, Islamic Rep. 5.0 3.9 -6.6 -1.9 3.7 1.0 2.0 2.0 2.2 2.2 10.6 0.4 6.2 2.7 .. Iraq -0.4 10.2 10.3 4.2 -0.5 -1.0 5.5 5.9 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Jordan 6.3 2.6 2.7 2.8 3.1 3.5 3.9 4.0 1.9 2.7 4.1 2.4 3.2 3.6 .. Lebanon 5.9 2.0 2.2 0.9 2.0 2.5 2.5 2.5 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Libya 4.3 -62.1 104.5 -13.7 -24.0 0.5 15.0 10.9 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Morocco 4.9 5.0 2.7 4.4 2.6 4.6 4.8 5.0 2.3 5.5 -10.2 13.5 2.1 3.1 .. Tunisia 4.7 -0.5 3.7 2.3 2.3 2.6 3.4 4.5 1.3 4.5 0.1 5.3 1.1 4.1 .. Yemen, Rep. 4.3 -12.7 2.4 4.8 0.3 -2.8 2.8 3.4 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. West Bank and Gaza 3.3 12.2 5.9 2.2 -0.8 0.9 4.3 4.1 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. South Asia 6.7 7.0 5.4 6.3 6.9 7.1 7.3 7.5 6.8 2.5 6.4 9.8 13.8 0.8 .. Afghanistan 12.8 6.1 14.4 3.7 2.0 2.5 5.0 5.1 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Bangladeshd 6.1 6.5 6.0 6.1 5.6 6.3 6.7 6.7 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Indiad 7.4 6.6 5.1 6.9 7.3 7.5 7.9 8.0 6.8 2.2 6.5 9.9 14.0 0.7 .. Maldives 7.0 6.5 1.3 4.7 5.0 5.3 5.0 5.0 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Nepald f 3.9 3.4 4.9 3.8 5.5 4.2 4.5 5.5 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Pakistand g 4.2 2.7 3.5 4.4 5.4 6.0 3.7 4.5 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Sri Lanka 5.2 8.2 6.3 7.3 7.4 6.9 6.6 6.5 8.4 10.3 4.8 7.9 7.8 4.8 .. Sub-Saharan Africa 5.7 4.3 4.1 4.2 4.6 4.2 4.6 5.0 3.6 5.8 1.8 4.6 4.2 5.3 -1.8 Angola 11.3 3.9 8.4 6.8 4.4 4.5 3.9 5.1 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Benin 3.9 3.3 5.4 5.6 5.5 4.6 4.6 4.7 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Botswana 4.2 5.2 5.0 5.4 4.7 4.3 4.2 4.2 3.6 1.7 1.8 6.4 12.7 0.4 .. Burkina Faso 6.0 4.2 9.5 6.5 4.5 5.0 6.2 6.5 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Burundi 3.3 4.2 4.0 4.6 4.7 4.8 5.0 5.2 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Cameroon 3.3 4.1 4.6 5.6 5.0 4.0 4.6 5.0 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Cabo Verde 5.7 4.0 1.2 0.5 1.3 3.0 3.4 3.5 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Chad 10.7 0.1 8.9 4.0 7.3 9.0 4.7 5.6 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Comoros 2.9 2.6 3.0 3.5 3.2 3.4 3.7 3.8 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Congo, Dem. Rep. 4.7 6.9 7.1 8.5 9.0 8.0 8.5 9.0 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Côte d'Ivoire 1.1 -4.4 10.7 8.7 8.0 8.0 7.7 7.5 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Eritrea 0.9 8.7 7.0 1.3 2.0 1.5 2.0 2.2 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Ethiopia 8.6 11.2 8.6 10.5 10.3 9.5 10.5 8.5 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Gabon 2.0 7.1 5.6 5.9 5.0 4.0 5.2 5.5 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Gambia, The 4.6 -4.3 5.9 4.8 -0.2 3.0 5.1 6.1 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Ghana 5.8 14.0 9.3 7.3 4.2 3.5 5.9 7.8 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Guinea 2.6 3.9 3.9 2.3 0.4 -0.3 2.3 2.5 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Guinea-Bissau 2.5 9.0 -2.2 0.3 2.5 4.2 3.9 4.0 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Kenya 4.4 6.1 4.5 5.7 5.3 6.0 6.6 6.5 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Lesotho 4.0 2.8 6.5 5.5 2.0 4.0 4.5 4.5 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Madagascar 2.6 1.5 3.0 2.4 3.0 4.6 4.8 5.0 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Malawi 4.5 4.3 1.9 5.0 5.7 5.1 5.6 5.9 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Mali 5.7 2.7 0.0 1.7 6.8 5.6 5.1 5.2 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Mauritania 3.9 4.0 7.0 6.7 6.4 5.5 5.7 5.6 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Mauritius 3.8 3.9 3.3 3.3 3.2 3.5 3.7 3.7 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Mozambique 7.7 7.4 7.1 7.4 7.4 7.2 7.3 7.3 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Namibia 4.7 5.1 5.2 5.1 5.3 5.5 5.3 5.1 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Niger 4.6 2.3 11.0 4.1 6.2 4.5 5.5 7.7 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Nigeria 8.8 4.9 4.3 5.4 6.2 4.5 5.0 5.5 5.9 6.6 4.8 8.4 5.7 6.4 -4.5 Rwanda 7.9 7.9 8.8 4.7 7.0 7.0 7.0 7.5 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Senegal 4.1 2.1 3.5 2.8 4.5 4.8 5.0 5.2 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Sierra Leone 8.9 6.0 15.2 20.1 6.0 -12.8 8.4 8.9 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. South Africa 3.5 3.6 2.5 1.9 1.5 2.0 2.1 2.4 1.2 5.1 -1.6 0.5 2.1 4.1 1.3 Sudan 5.8 -3.3 -10.1 -6.1 3.0 2.6 3.5 3.9 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Swaziland 2.3 -0.7 1.9 2.8 1.7 2.0 1.8 1.6 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Tanzania 7.0 6.4 6.9 7.0 7.2 7.2 7.1 7.1 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Togo 2.0 4.9 5.9 5.1 5.5 5.1 4.9 4.7 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Uganda 7.8 4.7 3.6 4.8 5.2 5.5 5.7 5.8 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Zambia 7.4 6.4 6.8 6.7 5.6 5.6 6.2 6.9 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Zimbabwe -4.7 11.9 10.6 4.5 3.2 1.0 2.5 3.5 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Source: World Bank, WDI, Haver Analytics, WEO Note: Aggregates include countries with full national accounts and balance of payment data only a. Annual percentage change b. Quarter-over-quarter growth, seasonally adjusted and annualized c. Compound average of the period 2000-10 d. Annual GDP is on fiscal year basis, as per reporting practice in the country e. Preliminary for long-term average. Data was recently rebased; missing data up to 2003 was spliced with the earlier series. f. Nepal forecasts are preliminary. g. GDP data for Pakistan are based on market prices. ECO-AUDIT Environmental Benefits Statement The World Bank Group is committed to reducing its environmental footprint. In support of this commitment, the Publishing and Knowledge Division leverages electronic publishing options and print-on-demand technology, which is located in regional hubs worldwide. Together, these initiatives enable print runs to be lowered and shipping distances decreased, resulting in reduced paper consumption, chemical use, greenhouse gas emissions, and waste. The Publishing and Knowledge Division follows the recommended stan- dards for paper use set by the Green Press Initiative. The majority of our books are printed on Forest Stewardship Council (FSC)–certified paper, with nearly all containing 50–100 percent recycled content. The recycled fiber in our book paper is either unbleached or bleached using totally chlorine free (TCF), processed chlorine free (PCF), or enhanced elemental chlorine free (EECF) processes. More information about the Bank’s environmental philosophy can be found at http://crinfo.worldbank.org/wbcrinfo/node/4.