Promoting India Latin America Collaboration

Latin America and the Caribbean’s Response to Growth in China and India

World Bank – Office of the Chief Economist –

According to the study Latin America and the Caribbean’s Response to the Growth of China and India: Overview of Research Findings and Policy Implications, concerns that both countries are displacing the LAC region in world markets for goods, services, foreign direct investment, and innovation are misleading.

Guillermo Perry, Chief Economist for the World Bank Latin American and the Caribbean region and one of the authors of the study, says despite the concern about the possible effects of the growth of these Asian economies on the LAC region’s manufacturing and services sectors, there is substantial evidence of positive aggregate effects associated with China and India’s presence in world exports, financial flows, and innovation.

China and India’s growth is creating new production possibilities for LAC economies, in particular for sectors that rely on natural resources and scientific knowledge.On the other hand, the study also indicates that some industries, firms and sub-regions are being negatively affected, specially industrial and electrical machinery, electronics, transport equipment, and textiles.

In sum, China and India’s growth has not been a zero-sum game for LAC, but the potential benefits are not being fully realized.

According to the authors, it is crucial that LAC countries take full advantage of the growing presence of China and India in world markets by adopting offensive strategies that facilitate both, the participation of LAC firms in global production networks and their commercial presence in the two Asian economies’ markets.

For governments, the study recommends avoiding protectionist temptations and focusing on facilitating the adjustment in affected sectors, as well as the emerging structural shift towards more natural-resource and scientific-knowledge-intensive sectors by adopting adequate education, innovation, natural resource management, and rural development policies.

Popularity: 7% [?]

‘India’s medium-term prospects still look bright’

The Hindu Business Line

Prof Arvind Subramanian, Senior Fellow, Peterson Institute for International Economics, Washington DC, has written extensively on growth, trade, development, institutions, aid, oil, India, Africa, the World Trade Organisation, and intellectual property. He also holds a joint appointment at the Centre for Global Development and is senior research professor at Johns Hopkins University. In Chennai recently to launch his book India’s Turn: Understanding the economic transformation, he spoke to Business Line on a range of issues concerning the Indian and global economy.

Excerpts from the interview:

Over the last one year, starting with the sub-prime crisis to the crude price going through the roof, and inflation shooting up, the mood over the global and Indian economy has darkened, the euphoria over the Indian growth story has been tempered. So going from here, what do you think are the near-term prospects for the Indian economy?

I would like to take a medium-term look at the economy. [India] grew at about 6 per cent from the late 1970s till about 2002. Then, over the last four-five years, we have gone from 6 per cent to close to 9 per cent growth.

Then, two external shocks — the sub-prime crisis and the rising global commodity prices — started kicking in. So, in the medium term, we are looking at an 8-plus per cent growth. Of course, in terms of the cycle, there is going to be some effect of what is happening in the US and world economy.

So, for the next one year or so, we could be looking at growth of around 7 per cent. This is partly because of external shocks and the policy response to those shocks, by way of monetary tightening and other measures. So some slowing down of growth is inevitable in the next year or so.

What’s your outlook on inflation? With crude prices falling, do you think inflation will come down in the next year or so?

With the slowing down of the US and European economies and Brazil and India, the dollar started appreciating and some commodity prices have softened; so the inflation outlook looks better now than it did a couple of months ago. But that does not mean that the inflation worries globally are by any means over. I think, fundamentally, we are looking at stresses on supply. Productivity growth is slowing down in the US and probably in Europe too.

Also, the policy stance in the US still remains expansionary. Monetary policy in the US remains relatively loose because of the financial crisis there. Regarding fiscal policy, many economists in the US are calling for a second fiscal stimulus package because they want to avert a growth slowdown at all costs. Plus, all those countries that have dollar pegs are **running US monetary policy. So, the inflation scare is by no means over, despite the supply-side easing to some extent.

The Doha Round has collapsed and it was not a surprise. Now, where does the WTO go from here?

If you step back and look at what has been happening around the world, you would see that there is a lot of unilateral liberalisation going on. Countries have either liberalised unilaterally or as a result of regional trade pacts. So, the attractiveness of the multilateral process to effect further liberalisation in the developing countries has reduced significantly. A corollary of that is private sector interest in the rich countries, which was the main protagonist in pushing multilateral trade agreement, was completely absent. So this was the biggest problem with the Doha Round.

If we look at the way the Doha Round was launched, we can see its aberration. Even the rounds before that — Seattle, Cancun, Geneva, Potsdam — were fractious where countries did not want to negotiate. So, given this, failure was always on the cards.

What compounded the problem was that between the launching of the Round and today, it is a completely different world.

When the Doha Round was launched, oil was selling at $20 a barrel; now, it is around $120 and the price of rice has shot up. China’s current account was very small; no one had heard of sovereign wealth funds then, so the world has completely changed since the launch of this Round.

So we need to step back and say that the collapse of the Round is not a serious issue. The Doha Round is dead, let us bury it and move on to more important issues. I am not saying there is no need for multilateral cooperation, in fact, there is a greater need for that today. But what we need to co-operate on is different from what the Doha round had been stressing.

The issues we need to cooperate on are: Agricultural prices and their link to bio-fuels; the cartelisation of oil markets (which is a big problem for oil importing countries); undervalued exchange rates (the Chinese exchange rates are a serious problem for India); and global warming.

Q: What about the issue of farm subsidies in the US and EU, isn’t that an intractable problem? Are they under less pressure to address that issue now that Doha round has collapsed?

A: The agriculture policies of the US and EU are outrageous. Over the last one year, because prices have gone up automatically, a lot of the protection has come down as it is price related. In the EU, there has been some liberalisation; it has reduced some tariffs. But a lot of it is because prices have gone up, there is less need for protection.

But if we look at the recent farm bill passed in the US, to me it is outrageous that so much subsidies for the farmers are still being given even when prices are going up. But I do not think that farm subsidies were the only reason for the collapse of Doha.

India’s stance at Doha was that it needs to protect its farmers and ensure food security. To me, there seems to be a bit of disjunction between what we are doing domestically in this crisis (that is slapping export curbs, liberalising imports, which are hurting farmers) and what we were saying in Doha about protecting farmers.

The US and EU were unwilling to liberalise their agriculture but we were not willing to go too far either. We have liberalised agriculture as a result of food price hikes but we are not willing to commit that these policies would not be reversed in future. We still want huge margins of freedom to manoeuvre our policies. At the moment, our tariffs are pretty low but we want to regain the right to raise tariffs at some future date to protect farmers which is an issue.

I found China’s stance at Doha interesting. China did not want the Round because it wanted the right to protect its farmers. China’s stance was more credible than India’s because India still has a lot of margin to protect farmers as our bindings are much higher than actual tariffs. That is not the case with China. Under the WTO accession agreement, China’s bindings were much closer to the actual tariffs. So they do not have the freedom to raise tariffs to protect their farmers and that is what they were seeking.

But stepping back from who said what and when, the point is no one really wanted the Round. It was all drowned in the cacophony about who was not willing to liberalise when the fact was no one wanted to. So it was the agricultural exporters who got hurt.

But the really interesting political economy issue here is that countries like Brazil and Argentina, (which are big agricultural exporters that wanted  agricultural liberalisation), even they, at the end of the day, are saying that if prices remained high, they were happy. We can live without freer trade as long prices rule high. They are getting market access anyway.

Q: You have said recently that removing the curbs on global grain trade could bring down food prices. Do you see that happening?

A: In March-April, food prices we
re really surging, especially rice. So what became evident was, especially in the rice market, when countries imposed curbs on exports — India, Vietnam and the Philippines (Thailand was also contemplating) — the prices really spiked. And as these policies got reversed, you did see prices softening again. The funny thing about trade in agriculture is when we have a situation of surplus, we have protection, where countries subsidise agriculture, which leads to greater supply. But when we have pressures on the supply side, perversely we see the reverse happening, with countries curbing exports and removing import barriers. So this policy is making global grain prices move counter-cyclically. Prices go down in countries which have surplus due to subsidies and they go up in countries where there is scarcity.

The WTO is also ineffective here as it is unable to prevent protection in countries where there is excess supply and it is unable to prevent liberalisation and export controls in countries with scarcity. So what we need is more symmetry in the global trading system so that it could act as a price stabilizer.

You see when India imposed curbs on exports [ed - Argentina did as well leading to nationwide strikes] and liberalised imports, that seemed the logical thing to do to make more food available within the country. But when all countries adopt this policy, it does not help as it further drives prices up. So everybody ends up losing.

Read the rest of this entry »

Popularity: 3% [?]

India clinches Asean FTA

Business Standard

Consumers can expect duty-free imports of a range of products like capital goods, some textiles, electronic goods and chemicals from next year after India successfully concluded negotiations on a Free Trade Agreement (FTA) for goods with the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) in Singapore today.

The formal pact will be signed this December at the India-Asean summit at Bangkok, which is expected to be attended by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

The breakthrough comes after six years of negotiations for the trade pact, which is expected to add $12 billion by 2010 to trade between the participating nations.

A SNEAK-PEEK AT THE INDO-ASEAN FTA
* Reduces tariffs to zero in over 4,000 goods out of 5,000 that are traded. To be done in a phased manner over six years
* Partial reduction in import tariffs on highly sensitive farm goods. Tea, coffee — 45%, pepper — 50%, crude palm oil — 37.5%, refined palm oil — 45%
* Sensitive list of goods with partial duty cuts — 606 items, (Agricultural — 16, Textile — 304, Machinery & auto — 60, chemicals & plastic — 226)
* Negative list with no duty cuts — 489 items. (Agricultural — 302, Textile — 81, Machinery & auto — 52, chemicals & plastic — 32, Others — 22)
* Operational from Jan 1, 2009, Deal to be signed in December, 2008 at Bangkok
TRADE SNAPSHOT
* Bilateral Trade (Apr-Feb 07-08) — $34.38 billion which is 9.59% of India’s global trade
* Exports — $14.02 billion, Imports — $20.36 billion

Today, a joint statement issued after a meeting of trade ministers from
India and key Asean members said the agreement will facilitate the
creation of an open market for 1.7 billion people with a combined gross
domestic product of $2.4 trillion.

Popularity: 1% [?]

India, shy of donor tag, wins US praise

The Economic Times

India and China were not meant to have been active participants in the 3rd High Level Forum on Aid Effectiveness, which was called by the World Bank and the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), the group representing the world’s richest donor nations.

But the two Asian nations were forced to step out of the sidelines in order to fend off what they said was an effort by traditional donor nations to include them in their fold of aid priorities.

“This is their show, not ours. We are not donors in the traditional sense of the term – former colonial powers or very wealthy countries dispensing aid to the developing world,” said a foreign ministry official on the Indian team.

“Neither do we particularly like the term ‘aid.’ What we are engaged in with our developing country partners is development cooperation. After all, we ourselves are still recipients of aid,” he added.

The Sept. 2-4 forum was attended by 1,200 delegates from 120 countries, including ministers, government and aid agency officials, as well as nongovernment activists and economists.

The meet brought together ministers from the world’s poorest countries and key officials from rich donor nations and agencies who Thursday agreed to a set of rules and principles aimed at making the multi-billion dollar aid industry more efficient.

The event came in the backdrop of a global financial downturn, and mounting claims that corruption is eating into the $120 bn given in aid every year – at the expense of the world’s 1.4 bn poorest people.

Equally, developing countries charge donors with using aid as an instrument to not only force political change – in Myanmar and Zimbabwe for instance – but also to further their businesses by tying aid to the purchase of goods and services by recipients.

India
,…made it clear that its tradition of extending ‘development assistance’ to Africa falls within the ambit of what it calls South-South cooperation.

The Indian official described the one bn dollars that India extends as aid every year as “miniscule” compared to Western aid but added: “We will continue to help countries in Africa.”

In common with African countries, India is opposed to donors attaching conditions to their aid and considers money that goes into increasing knowledge and capacity as the best kind of aid.

However, both Chinese and Indian officials say they have come under increasing pressure from some rich nations to be part of efforts to ‘harmonise’ aid – technical jargon that describes attempts by donor nations to erase the contradictions that often mark their individual aid policies.

“We say harmonisation is their problem. Let donor countries harmonise among themselves first,” the Indian official said.

A Chinese diplomat said: “We have staved off pressure for the moment. China, India and Brazil need to act together.”
But the Chinese role in African development differs vastly from India’s – Beijing has faced much criticism for its no-questions-asked aid to Africa in exchange for access to the continent’s abundant natural resources.

It is seen as a cynical role that has propped up dictators and, in come cases, alienated locals. In contrast, the United States views the Indian role as benign and pro-democracy.

“It is very important for India to be involved in development cooperation,” said Henrietta H. Fore, who, as Director
of Foreign Assistance in the State Department and USAID Administrator, is one of the most senior aid officials in the Bush Administration.

In an interview with media at the ‘aid summit’, Fore praised the way India has “shored up fragile countries and post-conflict societies” – most recently Nepal and Afghanistan.

In this context, she mentioned four new democracies of Europe – Poland, Romania, Bulgaria and Croatia – saying there was a need to build up democratic institutions in these countries.

“They are very excited,” Fore said, noting India’s contributions in building up the knowledge sector in South Asian countries.

Popularity: 3% [?]

U.S. Credit crunch ‘echoes Latin debt crisis’

Reading Minister Velasco’s comments reminded me of a statement made by Nouriel Roubini, as part of an NYT profile on him, a couple of weeks ago – “that the US looked like the biggest emerging market of them all“!! That movie ending that Latin America knows “full well” is scary – hyperinflation, capital flight, currency controls, and ultimately the destruction of the middle class.
FT.com / World

US financial regulators are making the same mistakes as their Latin American equivalents in the debt crisis of the early 1980s, according to Andrés Velasco, Chile’s finance minister.

Public guarantees for private financial activities had to be coupled with strong regulation, he said, while regulators and credit ratings agencies should have been more vigilant about the risks associated with new financial instruments.

“You learn the hard way,” Mr Velasco told the Financial Times. “This is a more modern and a much bigger version of what we have seen in emerging markets over the last couple of ­decades.

“The US has made, on a different scale of course, some of the same mistakes Latin America made two decades ago. The US [is living] through [the] movie whose end in Latin America we know full well.”

Popularity: 3% [?]

Raising Water Productivity

Earth Policy Institute: Sustainablog

With water shortages emerging as a constraint on food production growth, the world needs an effort to raise water productivity similar to the one that nearly tripled land productivity during the last half of the twentieth century. Worldwide, average irrigation water productivity is now roughly 1 kilogram of grain per ton of water used. Since it takes 1,000 tons of water to produce 1 ton of grain, it is not surprising that 70 percent of world water use is devoted to irrigation. Thus, raising irrigation efficiency is central to raising water productivity overall.

In surface water projects—that is, dams that deliver water to farmers through a network of canals—crop usage of irrigation water never reaches 100 percent simply because some irrigation water evaporates, some percolates downward, and some runs off. Water policy analysts Sandra Postel and Amy Vickers found that “surface water irrigation efficiency ranges between 25 and 40 percent in India, Mexico, Pakistan, the Philippines, and Thailand; between 40 and 45 percent in Malaysia and Morocco; and between 50 and 60 percent in Israel, Japan, and Taiwan.” Irrigation water efficiency is affected not only by the type and condition of irrigation systems but also by soil type, temperature, and humidity. In hot arid regions, the evaporation of irrigation water is far higher than in cooler humid regions.

Raising irrigation water efficiency typically means shifting from the
less efficient flood or furrow system to overhead sprinklers or drip
irrigation, the gold standard of irrigation efficiency. Switching from
flood or furrow to low-pressure sprinkler systems reduces water use by
an estimated 30 percent, while switching to drip irrigation typically
cuts water use in half. A drip system also raises yields because it
provides a steady supply of water with minimal losses to evaporation.
Since drip systems are both labor-intensive and water-efficient, they
are well suited to countries with a surplus of labor and a shortage of
water.

Popularity: 2% [?]

The New Paternalism

Nudge is an insightful entertaining read. I hope more policy-makers pay heed. For some reason reminded me of the Keynes quote “Practical men, who believe themselves to be quite exempt from any intellectual influence, are usually the slaves of some defunct economist.”
ChronicleReview.com

What does a peculiar pattern on the road have to do with fixing the nation’s health-care woes, protecting the environment, resolving the thorny issue of gay marriage, and increasing donations to charity? Everything, according to Thaler and Cass R. Sunstein, a professor of law and political science at the University of Chicago. They are authors of a new book, Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth, and Happiness (Yale University Press), in which they articulate an approach to designing social and economic policies that incorporates an understanding of people’s cognitive limitations.

They call this governing philosophy “libertarian paternalism.” That is not an oxymoron, they insist in their book. Rather it is a corrective to the longstanding assumption of policy makers that the average person is capable of thinking like Albert Einstein, storing as much memory as IBM’s Big Blue, and exercising the willpower of Mahatma Gandhi. That is simply not how people are, they say. In reality human beings are lazy, busy, impulsive, inert, and irrational creatures highly susceptible to predictable biases and errors. That’s why they can be nudged in socially desirable directions.

Sunstein explains the appeal of libertarian paternalism: “For too
long, the United States [ed. for that matter most countries] has been trapped in a debate between the
laissez-faire types who believe markets will solve all our problems and
the command-and-control types who believe that if there is a market
failure then you need a mandate
.” That debate has been exhausted, he
says.

“The laissez-faire types are right that … government can blunder, so
opt-outs are important,” he says. “The mandate types are right that
people are fallible, and they make mistakes, and sometimes people who
are specialists know better and can steer people in directions that
will make their lives better.”

Sunstein argues that understanding human irrationality can improve
how public and private institutions shape policy by increasing the
likelihood that people will make decisions that are in their own
self-interest.
Most important, he and Thaler insist, such nudges can be
executed while protecting freedom of choice.

Take two examples in their book. Studies show that placing fruit at eye
level in school cafeterias enhances its popularity by as much as 25
percent. Or consider this stroke of creativity by an economist in
Amsterdam charged with cleaning up the restrooms at the Schiphol
Airport: He had a fly etched into the wells of urinals, giving male
patrons something to aim at. Spillage was reduced by 80 percent. The
problems of childhood obesity and foul restrooms are remedied with very
little inconvenience to people — or cost. Children remain free to grab
that piece of chocolate cake, and there is nothing preventing visitors
to Schiphol’s restrooms from ignoring the fly and aiming elsewhere. It
is merely less likely that either group will do so.

[Sunnstein and Thaler] are eager to portray libertarian paternalism as a bipartisan
philosophy.
On many issues, including environmental protection, family
law, and school choice, they argue for less government coercion. “If
incentives and nudges replace requirements and bans, government will be
both smaller and more modest,” they write. “We are not for bigger government, just for better governance.

Popularity: 4% [?]

The world’s best investment: Vitamins for undernourished children

Some ideas in case you want to work on projects that change the world. Arrived at after a cost-benefit analysis.
Copenhagen Consensus Center – CCC Home Page

Over two years, more than 50 economists have worked to find the best solutions to ten of the world’s biggest challenges. During the last week of May, an expert panel of 8 top-economists, including 5 Nobel Laureates, sat down to assess the research.

The ranked list: A prioritized list highlighting the potential of 30 specific solutions to combat some of the biggest challenges facing the world.

Combating malnutrition in the 140 million children who are undernourished reached the number one spot, after economist Sue Horton of Wilfrid Laurier University in Canada made her case to the expert panel.

Providing micronutrients for 80% of the 140 million children who lack essential vitamins in the form of vitamin A capsules and a course of zinc supplements would cost just $60 million per year, according to the analysis. More importantly, this action holds yearly benefits of more than $1 billion.

In effect, this means that each dollar spent on this program creates benefits (in the form of better health, fewer deaths, increased future earnings, etc.) worth more than 17 dollars.

The ranked list of projects


1
Micronutrient supplements for children (vitamin A and zinc)
Malnutrition
2
The Doha development agenda
Trade
3
Micronutrient fortification (iron and salt iodization)
Malnutrition
4
Expanded immunization coverage for children
Diseases
5
Biofortification
Malnutrition
6
Deworming and other nutrition programs at school
Malnutrition & Education
7
Lowering the price of schooling
Education
8
Increase andimprove girls’ schooling
Women
9
Community-based nutrition promotion
Malnutrition
10
Provide support for women’s reproductive role
Women

Popularity: 5% [?]

Volcker’s best apprentice

Asia Times Online

Brazil, … Foreign debt has halved as a percentage of GDP since 2002, while the government’s finances are in only modest deficit. Foreign investment is encouraged and its rights protected. Most impressive, while inflation is around 6%, because of high commodity prices, the benchmark Selic interest rate has just been raised to 13%. At that level, inflation will be squeezed out of the system and excessive borrowing will be discouraged.

Thus when the commodities boom from which Brazil has benefited deflates, Brazil will be able to lower interest rates and continue domestic expansion without fear of running out of money. The Nobel Committee really needs to give a prize for monetary policy; there can be no question that Brazil would win
it and deservedly so.

Popularity: 2% [?]

Freedom From the Fed Fix

Economic Beat – Barrons.com

Columbia University economist and non-Austrian Jeffrey Sachs has recently written: “The U.S. crisis was actually made by the Fed…. Monetary expansion generally makes it easier to borrow, and lowers the cost of doing so, throughout the economy…. What was distinctive this time was the new borrowing was concentrated in housing…. The Fed, under Greenspan’s leadership, stood by as the credit boom gathered steam, barreling toward a subsequent crash.”

To be fair, economist Sachs seems to be implying that the solution is to be found in better management of the Fed, rather than outright abolition. On the other hand, since Sachs is indicting the reputed “maestro” of Fed chairmen, Alan Greenspan himself, the burden is surely on Sachs to prove the point. Should we really stake the future of the economy on the hope that wise men even wiser than Greenspan will someday be our central bankers?

The abolition of the central bank is just a major first step, since, as mentioned, the artificial expansion of money and credit can be carried on by other means. But it’s a necessary first step. There are better and worse ways to manage the Federal Reserve, but most are a matter of luck and hindsight. As economist Marc Faber has written, “When…the public…finally realizes that central bankers are no wiser than the central planners of former communist regimes, the tide will turn and monetary reform will come to the fore…. market forces [will] drive economic activity, and not some kind of central planner….”

Popularity: 1% [?]

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