专栏新兴市场

Money mirage poses emerging markets danger

If a shock were to hit Brazil, India, Indonesia – or any other emerging market country – tomorrow, how would investors react? Would asset values adjust smoothly, amid an explosion of trading flows? Or would markets instead freeze up, as liquidity evaporated?

It is not an academic question. Earlier this year, when investors started to speculate about an American “taper” – or wind-down from quantitative easing – this conjecture was enough to spark a dramatic gyration in the value of some emerging market assets, such as Indian or Brazilian equities. Since then, those markets have more than recovered. And with most economists still believing the taper remains many months away, investors expect this rally to continue. But behind the scenes, as the private debates in October’s meeting of the International Monetary Fund indicated, some policy makers and asset managers are getting uneasy.

For the real problem with emerging markets today, policy makers admit, is not simply that reform has slowed in places such as Brazil, or that growth rates have disappointed since the 2008 crisis. Nor is it simply that some emerging market countries have experienced spectacular capital inflows – and could thus suffer economic pain if these reverse.

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吉莲•邰蒂

吉莲•邰蒂(Gillian Tett)担任英国《金融时报》的助理主编,负责manbetx app苹果 金融市场的报导。2009年3月,她荣获英国出版业年度记者。她1993年加入FT,曾经被派往前苏联和欧洲地区工作。1997年,她担任FT东京分社社长。2003年,她回到伦敦,成为Lex专栏的副主编。邰蒂在剑桥大学获得社会人文学博士学位。她会讲法语、俄语、日语和波斯语。

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