Since the start of the year, growth in emerging countries has held up quite well. This is reflected not only in business and household confidence, but also in the confidence of foreign investors in the local bond and stock markets. The tightening of US monetary policy from early 2022 to mid-2023 did have a major negative impact on portfolio investment flows. However, this impact was largely offset by the attractiveness of emerging markets for both private and institutional investors, whether for purely financial reasons (carry trade strategies) or as part of a diversification strategy
In China, manufacturing activity remains dynamic, but rising tensions with most of its trading partners and an increase in protectionist measures are now weighing on export prospects. At the same time, domestic demand continues to be held back by the crisis in the property sector, and credit growth is slowing despite monetary easing measures. Therefore, the authorities are expected to continue to ease cautiously their economic policy in the coming months. The financial difficulties of local governments and, more generally, the deterioration in public finances have reduced the fiscal room for manoeuvre. The central government is being pressed to take a more direct role in support measures.
Indian economic growth reached 8.2% for the fiscal year 2023/2024. However, this performance did not enable Narendra Modi's ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) to retain a majority in parliament. Over the next five years, the BJP will have to deal with the smaller parties that are partners in the coalition it leads to run the country. Adopting new reforms to further liberalise the economy could prove difficult. In addition, the Prime Minister may have to change the structure of budget spending in order to increase once again the share of subsidies and other social transfers, which have been falling for the past five years
President Lai Ching-te took office on 20 May. He is expected to continue the domestic and foreign policy agenda of his predecessor, in a more tense climate. On the one hand, Beijing could increase its military manoeuvres around the island. On the other hand, Parliament is now dominated by opposition parties, which are expected to slow down or block many government projects. The new administration will at least be able to count on a favourable economic situation to start its mandate. Economic growth has been accelerating over the past year, driven by the rebound in the global electronics cycle
The accession of several Central and Eastern European countries to the EU in 2004 has been accompanied by impressive growth in their respective economies. Improvements in labour productivity have enabled real wages to catch up over the last twenty years, but wage pressures have remained very strong over the recent period without, however, affecting the economies' competitiveness to date. The region also remains attractive for foreign direct investment and continues to benefit from nearshoring activities. In the short term, consolidating public accounts is a priority to comply with commitments under the Stability and Growth Pact. Some countries are already under EU's surveillance, with the opening of an excessive deficit procedure.
Economic growth prospects are improving for 2024, but the recovery is likely to be limited by still sluggish domestic demand. On the foreign exchange market, the Hungarian forint has come under downward pressure recently. On public accounts, the fiscal consolidation that began in the summer of 2022 has not significantly reduced the deficit. For 2024, the deficit will probably be less pronounced than last year, but will remain high in any case (around 5% of GDP). As a result, Hungary will probably be subject to an excessive deficit procedure in 2024
The messages sent out by the Brazilian financial markets and those of the real economy have become increasingly incongruent. Robust economic growth, low unemployment and relatively subdued inflation have become steadily overshadowed by rising political and fiscal risks, which have weighed more heavily on the currency, equity prices and the yield curve. Lula's parliamentary setbacks, his frictions with the Central Bank and increased interventionism have rattled investors already shaken by major revisions to global and local interest rate projections. The challenge for the second half of the year will be to bolster economic agents’ confidence in an effort to stabilise expectations.
Claudia Sheinbaum was elected President of Mexico on 2 June. The political and economic challenges she will face during her mandate are numerous, and mainly concern the sustainability of public finances, the reform of the energy sector (a particularly sensitive point in Mexico, especially in the context of nearshoring and renewed appeal to foreign investors) and the renegotiation of the trade treaty with Canada and the United States (UMSCA) in 2026. In the short term, as a member of the Morena party of the former outgoing President, the new President needs to find the appropriate distance from Andres Manuel Lopes Obrador and his supporters. Discussions relate in particular to the reform of the justice system that AMLO himself had proposed.
The Ley Bases (a set of measures designed to liberalise the economy and, more generally, society) presented by Javier Milei after his inauguration last December was finally adopted at the end of June. As the President's party has no majority in either the Chamber of Deputies or the Senate, the final version was watered down. However, it is a victory for Milei, who is racing against time between an economy sinking into deep recession and the first signs of disinflation. For the government, the fight against inflation justifies the drastic cuts in public spending and the maintenance of a strategy of real exchange rate appreciation
Buoyed by relatively high global energy prices and sustained demand for its gas, the Algerian economy continues to perform strongly. In 2023, economic growth was one of the strongest among the region's hydrocarbon-producing countries, and the outlook for 2024 remains favourable. However, the expansionary stance of economic policy is beginning to show some limitations, not least because of rising fiscal imbalances. While the risks of macroeconomic instability are largely contained in the short term, rebalancing the engines of growth remains a major challenge in the medium term. A number of recent decisions by the authorities are moving in the right direction, but efforts to diversify the economy will need to be continued
Since the beginning of 2024, the Nigerian authorities have accelerated the implementation of reforms aimed at curbing the deterioration in external accounts and restoring macroeconomic stability. By relaxing the exchange rate regime and raising interest rates, the central bank has sent a strong signal to foreign investors. However, it will take time and the implementation of major structural reforms for capital inflows to take off significantly and durably. At the same time, fiscal consolidation is being complicated by an unprecedented inflationary shock and its impact on economic growth. The high cost of implementing reforms could force the government to backtrack.
Energy and mineral commodities are central to the low carbon transition process. Latin America, which boasts abundant amounts of minerals and key metals for the transition, and GCC[1] countries, which are dependent on revenue from hydrocarbons, are seemingly, on the face of it, taking contrasting paths on the transition journey. However, the macroeconomic consequences cannot easily be determined currently. Gulf countries have some advantages in the oil market, but the pace of the transition could affect revenues more quickly than expected. In Latin America, while the size of critical minerals reserves is brightening the outlook, various national strategies and numerous constraints could curb the scale