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9/02/2013

Economic worry shifts to emerging markets at Russian G20

MOSCOW: Long hailed as the hungry new tigers of the global economy, the world's biggest emerging markets will be the chief economic focus at the G20 summit in Russia this week as their once surging prospects suddenly dim.


  Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa -- grouped in the informal BRICS bloc seen as an alternative economic powerhouse -- all go into the meeting experiencing slowing growth and embattled currencies.

While the dispute between Russia and the West over the conflict in Syria is likely to overshadow the summit in Saint Petersburg, splits between emerging markets and US over its winding down of stimulus could prove equally fraught.

"The biggest concern is going to be slow growth. There has been some slowdown in almost all developing countries and we need to discuss sources of long term growth," said Russia's leading official, or sherpa, for the G20 meeting, Ksenia Yudaeva.

There has been deep concern in BRICS economies over the plans by the US Federal Reserve to wind down its programme of quantitative easing (QE) which helped their economies expand fast in the last few years. The US stimulus freed up money that investors then ploughed into emerging markets.

But now risks that this liquidity may recede is triggering major outflows and sharply depreciating BRICS currencies.

The Federal Reserve's potential winding down of monetary easing "is one of the worries for some countries," Yudaeva said.

Most countries may have welcomed the stimulus policy when it was first introduced by the US central bank but now there is far less harmony about how it should be scaled down.

Chris Weafer, co-founder of Moscow-based consultancy Macro Advisory, said there is now an obvious division between the emerging markets and the European Central Bank and Fed about how the reduction of US stimulus can be handled without causing undue damage.

"The leaders in the emerging markets will be demanding that the Fed unwind its QE programme taking into account the collateral damage... as much as its US domestic interest," he said.

indiatimes.com 

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