Net private capital flows to
developing countries reached a record US$647 billion in 2006,
although the rate of growth of these flows slowed from 34 percent
in 2005 to 17 percent in 2006. Emerging Europe attracted an
increasing share of the overall flows and equity financing grew
much faster than debt, showed Global Development Finance
2007. Despite commitments made by donors, aid flows were
disappointing, and the shift from official to private sources of
finance continued.
The annual World Bank report predicted that higher interest rates
and emerging capacity constraints will slow the very fast growth of
developing countries in the past few years, with global growth
falling from 4 percent in 2006 to around 3.5 percent in 2009. This
realignment could also temper some of the positive global financial
conditions that have prevailed in many developing countries over
the past four years.
Equity flows exceeded US$400 billion in 2006, accounting for almost
three-quarters of capital flows, up from two-thirds in 2004, the
report found. Strong gains were recorded in both portfolio equity
and foreign direct investment (FDI) in emerging markets and other
developing countries. A wave of cross-border mergers and
acquisitions boosted FDI flows to developing countries in 2006 to a
new high of US$325 billion, roughly one-fourth of worldwide flows
of US$1.2 trillion.
In 2006, private and state-owned corporations in developing
countries raised US$333 billion through syndicated bank loans and
international bond issuance -- up sharply from US$88 billion in
2002. Regionally, firms from emerging Europe and Central Asia stand
out, with debt expanding by US$135 billion in 2006. Financial
corporations, particularly banks from India, Kazakhstan, the
Russian Federation and Turkey are at the forefront of this apparent
foreign credit boom.
According to the report, this new landscape for development finance
-- particularly the shift from sovereign to private borrowers --
alters the conventional assessment of risks, and is likely to have
important implications for growth and financial stability.
"While the rapid growth of capital inflows to developing countries
reflects improved fundamentals, cyclical factors have also been at
work, and as growth slows even resilient countries could face
strong headwinds," said Uri Dadush, director of the World Bank's
Development Prospects Group. "We foresee a soft landing, but this
cannot be taken for granted."
In addition to benefiting from another year of strong growth and
high commodity prices, low-income countries' ability to access
private debt markets has been boosted by recent major international
debt-relief initiatives that have cut their debt burdens and
improved their creditworthiness.
Overall the picture for the debt markets in 2006 was mixed: While
foreign borrowing from the international banking system has grown
strongly, net bond issuance by emerging market economies has
declined as sovereign issuers holding large foreign exchange
reserves have less need for external borrowing. Countries have
reduced their external debt burdens and improved their external
debt profiles. Several bought back large amounts of outstanding
debt and refinanced existing debt by issuing longer maturities on
more favorable terms. A handful of countries, led by Algeria,
Nigeria and Russia, repaid their external debt to official
creditors. As a result, principal repayments to the Paris Club and
multilateral institutions exceeded disbursements by US$146 billion
in 2005-06, as net private debt flows reached US$432 billion.
As emerging market sovereigns have reduced their foreign
borrowings, corporations -- both banks and companies -- have
increased theirs.
"Corporations in emerging markets are raising large sums of capital
and their surging participation in global finance is the defining
feature of the current cycle of capital flows to developing
countries," said Mansoor Dailami, manager, International Finance in
the Development Prospects Group, and lead author of the report.
"Access to global capital markets allows these corporations to
diversify their sources of funds, improve risk management through
more sophisticated financing instruments, borrow at longer
maturities, and reduce their cost of capital."
As capital markets have integrated rapidly over the past few years
and as developing-country corporations have been raising funds
overseas, the need for a more coherent global approach to
regulating cross-border public offerings and listings of securities
has become more urgent. The report called for regulators and
governments to pay more attention to the transparency and quality
of accounting standards. It stressed the importance of reliable
information in helping investors to make informed decisions and
called for measures to improve the integrity of corporate
governance.
Global aid, meanwhile, has stalled. After reaching US$106.8 billion
in 2005, official development assistance (ODA) from Development
Assistance Committee members fell in 2006 to about US$103.9
billion, raising uncertainty about the G8 Gleneagles commitments to
scale up development assistance to Africa by 2010.
"The expansion in private capital flows in 2006 speaks well for
developing countries' resiliency, but what is worrying is that it
has coincided with a decline in net official lending and a delay in
delivering on aid commitments," said Francois Bourguignon, World
Bank chief economist and senior vice president for development
economics. "Many of the poorest countries continue to operate on
the periphery of the global financial system -- for them private
capital alone is not enough to finance basic needs."
Buoyant financial conditions over the past several years
contributed to the 7.3 percent growth of developing countries in
2006 -- the fourth straight year that developing country growth has
exceeded 5.5 percent. All regions grew by at least 5 percent last
year: Sub-Saharan Africa by 5.6 percent; South Asia by 8.6 percent;
the Middle East and North Africa by 5 percent; Latin America and
the Caribbean by 5.4 percent; Europe and Central Asia by 6.5
percent and the East Asia and Pacific region by 9.5 percent. Rarely
has the advance in developing economies been so marked and broad
based.
The authors predicted that after moderating to 6.7 percent in 2007,
developing country growth will ease further toward a more
sustainable 6.1 percent pace in 2009. Meanwhile, growth in
high-income countries' in 2007 is expected to be 2.5 percent,
reflecting a slowing in the United States. In 2008 and 2009, rich
countries are forecast to grow by 2.8 percent, as the US recovers
and as Japan and Europe continue to expand.
While a soft-landing scenario is likely, downside risks for
developing countries predominate. These include the possibility of
weaker export demand and financial sector disruption if the
downturn in the United States is deeper than projected; and the
risk that overheating or prolonged imbalances in some emerging
economies could cause higher borrowing spreads and risks.
Additionally, low stocks of wheat, maize and rice have
significantly increased the risk of a sharp price hike in these
products, which could have serious consequences for very poor
households.
(China Development Gateway May 29, 2007)
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