Jorge Sicilia, Chief Economist at the BBVA Group, participated in a panel discussion on the global outlook and its impact on the Middle East and North Africa, moderated by Sergi Lanau, Deputy Chief Economist at the Institute of International Finance (IIF). James McCormack, Managing Director and Global Head of Sovereign and Supranational Ratings; Monica Malik, Chief Economist at Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank; and Radwan Shaban, Chief Economist at Arab Bank also participated in the panel. The debate focused on the political uncertainty stemming from the changing macroeconomic and financial situation in the world. Panel discussants also addressed issues such as monetary policy in the U.S. and Europe and the implications for MENA; the consequences of the trade war and U.S. sanctions; private equity flows to emerging markets; and the risk of a correction in capital markets.

For Sicilia, emerging markets are currently facing two major shocks. On the one hand, the rationalization of liquidity due to the change in monetary policy in the U.S. and Europe, and on the other, international trade disputes - a completely unexpected phenomenon a few years ago. Most analysts believe that the impact on international trade has been relatively moderate so far, but if the threats actually materialize, the impact would be significant.



How have emerging countries reacted to these two shocks? BBVA's Chief Economist feels that they have managed fairly well in general. He points to the capital flows from emerging economies as evidence, which are highly concentrated in countries like Argentina and Turkey. These two large countries that have experienced these episodes of volatility have two things in common: both have external vulnerabilities (a high current account deficit, high foreign currency debt and relatively low reserves to cover these two imbalances) and they did not apply appropriate economic policies given these weaknesses and the changing economic environment.

Although after this shock, both economies were forced to react with measures to correct these policies, the damage had already been done. The other emerging economies have handled these international shocks much better. However, the context will remain difficult for emerging economies in the future: interest rate hikes will continue and trade tensions will not disappear in the short- term. Jorge Sicilia therefore believes that emerging economies should adopt 'prudent monetary and fiscal policies that adapt to these shocks,' with some help from flexible exchange rates to absorb the impact. However, he is convinced that it is an 'idiosyncratic' - not systemic - problem and can remain that way if these countries take appropriate measures.

Attachments

  • Original document
  • Permalink

Disclaimer

BBVA - Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria SA published this content on 13 November 2018 and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 13 November 2018 02:03:08 UTC