Net private capital flows to developing countries as a whole
rebounded to US$200 billion in 2003, up from US$155 billion in
2002, but most of the increase is concentrated in just a few
relatively better-off countries, while official development
assistance to poor nations increased only marginally, says the
annual World Bank report,
Global Development Finance 2004.
"The rebound in capital flows to some of the larger countries is
encouraging, and reflects an improving global economic picture,"
said Francois Bourguignon, the World Bank's Chief Economist. "But
we are concerned about official aid flows, which are of critical
importance to the poorest countries. They have increased only
slightly, and last year remained well below the levels required to
achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs),"
The increase in net private flows -- bonds and bank loans --
most of which went to Brazil, China, Indonesia, Mexico and Russia,
is the major factor in an overall increase in net capital flows to
developing countries from all sources, public and private, to
US$228 billion in 2003 from US$190 billion in 2002. Net private
capital flows rose to all developing regions, except the Middle
East and North Africa. These increases are due partly to low
interest rates in the industrial countries, and reflect a
strengthening global economic recovery. They have also been
prompted by sounder fiscal policies in many developing countries,
as well as structural reforms.
Despite the overall increase in capital flows to developing
countries, however, net resource transfers from rich to poor
countries remain negative. Also, net official development
assistance (ODA) rose by only US$6 billion to US$58 billion in
2002, with half of this increase is accounted for in debt relief
and some administrative costs to donor agencies, rather than new
resources to developing nations. Another US$1 billion of the
increase consists of new flows to Afghanistan and Pakistan.
"This small increase in ODA is troubling, especially given the
failure to reach agreement at last year's WTO meeting in Cancún on
reducing agricultural subsidies and trade barriers," Bourguignon
said. "We hope to see progress in the next year with Northern
countries delivering on their promises at recent international
conferences in Monterrey, Doha, and Johannesburg to make
development a top priority."
As a whole, the developing countries ran current account
surpluses totaling US$76 billion, or about 1.1 percent of
GDP. These surpluses-concentrated in Russia, China and Saudi
Arabia-now coincide with a large buildup of a few developing
countries' reserves totaling more than US$1.2 trillion. China,
India and a few others account for a large proportion of these
reserves and have invested large volumes in the financial markets
of developed countries.
"This shows deepened interdependence in the world economy, with
global capital flows, trade and exchange-rate policies more
intricately linked than ever before," said Mansoor Dailami, lead
author of the report. "The challenge is to increase the flows to
developing countries in a way that is sustainable, which requires
channeling them to countries with good policies and into
investments that spur long-term growth and poverty reduction." With
this in mind, the GDF outlines mechanisms to re-ignite slumping
investment in infrastructure, as well as trade finance in
developing countries.
The increase in capital flows reflects improved global economic
growth, which rose from 1.8 percent in 2002 to 2.6 percent in 2003,
and which is forecast to jump to 3.7 percent this year. Developing
countries, as a group, grew by an estimated 4.8 percent in 2003,
and are expected to register 5.4 percent growth in 2004, which
would surpass their previous 5.2-percent record high in 2000.
This new buoyancy is prompted by the easing of fiscal and
monetary policies in the rich countries, especially the United
States, and by a 10-percent rise in non-oil commodity prices, upon
which many developing countries heavily depend for foreign
exchange. Also, as many developing countries accumulated surpluses
and moved to rely on equity finance, they have improved their
external liability positions. Total external debt of the developing
countries was 37 percent of GDP in 2003, down from 44 percent in
1999.
These trends have been mutually reinforcing, as they coincide
with sounder fiscal and monetary policies in many developing
countries, as well as the adoption of flexible exchange-rate
systems which, together, tend to reduce the incentives to borrow in
foreign currency. The average sovereign credit rating for
developing countries reached its highest level since 1998, with
several countries, including India, Russia and Turkey, receiving
upgrades from the major credit rating agencies in 2003. Also, the
average spread on emerging-market bonds (EMBI+) fell from more than
765 basis points at the end of 2002 to just 385 basis points in
early January 2004, before rebounding to 430 basis points in late
January.
There is a risk, however, that fiscal deficits in high-income
countries, which have widened every year since 2000, could imperil
the flow of capital to the developing countries.
"Fiscal deficits in the developed countries have widened to 3.7
percent of GDP," said Uri Dadush, Director of the World Bank's
Development Prospects Group. "If uncorrected, fiscal imbalances
could push real interest rates higher globally as the recovery
builds, potentially dampening capital flows to low and
middle-income countries, as the public sector in the high-income
countries competes with developing countries for access to global
savings."
While overall private flows to developing countries increased in
2003, foreign direct investment declined for the second consecutive
year, dropping to US$135 billion, down 24 percent from its 2001
peak of US$175 billion. Much of this decline can be
attributed to weaker FDI in the services sectors such as
telecommunications and energy, in which the privatization cycle of
the late 1990s has now wound down, and where a few countries that
were large recipients of services-bound FDI, such as Argentina,
suffered a crisis.
A significant and growing new source of capital for developing
countries is remittances sent home by migrants working in rich
countries, which have climbed steadily since 1998, reaching US$93
billion in 2003, up 20 percent from 2001. They are now the second
most important financial flow to developing countries after FDI,
and represent almost double the flows of official aid.
The small increase in official aid flows is accompanied by a
drop in net non-concessional lending by bilateral aid agencies,
from -US$8.8 billion in 2002 to -11.8 billion in 2003. Multilateral
institutions' net non-concessional lending also dropped in 2003,
from US$7.2 billion to US$0.1 billion, largely due to the absence
of major crises requiring emergency packages, and prepayment of
loans to the World Bank, notably by China, India and Thailand.
Capital flows open opportunity
The increase in private capital inflows offers significant
opportunities for developing countries to invest in infrastructure
and facilitate trade finance to foster a self-reinforcing cycle of
sustained capital flows, economic growth and poverty reduction.
Since 1997, every important measure of infrastructure finance to
developing countries, including total external finance, project
finance, and investment with private participation, has declined by
at least 50 percent. This downturn, led by the East Asia, Russia
and Brazil crises of the late 1990s, has been accentuated by
retrenchment by major commercial banks, and a weakening of the
global infrastructure industry.
But infrastructure needs in developing countries are both
pressing and largely unmet. About 1.1 billion people do not have
access to safe drinking water, 2.4 billion do not have adequate
sanitation, and 1.4 billion have no power. The cost of needed
infrastructure investments in developing countries is estimated at
US$120 billion a year from now to 2010 in the electricity sector,
and US$49 billion a year up to 2015 for water and sanitation.
The World Bank report recommends that developing countries seek
to tap international capital to meet this demand for infrastructure
financing by, among others, establishing transparent rules with the
assurance that contracts will be respected, strengthening local
capital markets, developing public-private risk mitigation
instruments, and helping public providers of infrastructure
services achieve commercial standards of creditworthiness. It also
calls on multilateral agencies to support countries in pursuing
these reforms.
As trade accounts for about one-half of the gross national
income of developing countries, financing that trade is important
to a country's development prospects, the Bank report says.
Trade finance, provided by commercial banks, export credit
agencies, multilateral development banks, suppliers and purchasers,
has fluctuated since the early 1980s, but on average its growth has
been about 11 percent a year. In 2003, trade finance
commitments by international banks totaled US$23.7 billion. Global
Development Finance calls on countries and multilateral agencies to
take steps to increase trade finance, especially for poor
countries. With creditors' risk mitigated by securing finance
with the traded goods, such countries can open their way to broader
access to financial markets.
While the global economy is clearly on a track to recovery, the
pace of the upturn and likely prospects is varied across developing
regions. Some highlights:
· East Asia led the world with 7.7 percent growth, largely
driven by China, as it represents two-thirds of the region's GDP,
but also because it is becoming an important export market for
other countries in the region.
· Led by a tripling in capital spending growth, GDP in
Eastern Europe and Central Asia was 5.5 percent in 2003, up from
4.6 percent in 2002.
· Buoyant growth propelled by domestic consumer demand and
relief from drought in India helped South Asia reach 6.5 percent
growth. Workers' remittances and growing FDI are also increasingly
important factors in South Asia's growth and prospects.
· Despite the Iraq war, GDP in the Middle East and North
Africa rose by 5.1 percent, up from 3.3 percent in 2002, with oil
exporters leading the way on the strength of higher oil prices.
· Despite a booming oil sector in West Africa, Sub-Saharan
Africa's overall growth slowed to 2.4 percent , down from 3.3
percent in 2002, as adverse weather conditions dampened
agricultural production, while civil conflict remained a factor in
several countries.
· Latin America is experiencing a slow
recovery, with regional GDP up 1.3 percent in 2003. Excluding
the countries emerging from crises, the strongest performers were
Chile, Colombia and Peru. With recovery broadening to Mexico
and Brazil, growth is projected to reach 3.8 percent this
year.
Global Real GDP Growth
|
2002
|
2003e
|
2004f
|
2005f
|
2006f
|
World
|
1.8
|
2.6
|
3.7
|
3.1
|
3.0
|
High income countries
|
1.4
|
2.1
|
3.3
|
2.6
|
2.5
|
Developing countries
|
3.4
|
4.8
|
5.4
|
5.2
|
5.0
|
East Asia and
Pacific
|
6.7
|
7.7
|
7.4
|
6.7
|
6.3
|
Europe and Central
Asia
|
4.6
|
5.5
|
4.9
|
4.8
|
4.7
|
Latin America and
Caribbean
|
-0.6
|
1.3
|
3.8
|
3.7
|
3.5
|
Middle East and N.
Africa
|
3.3
|
5.1
|
3.7
|
3.9
|
4.0
|
South Asia
|
4.3
|
6.5
|
7.2
|
6.7
|
6.5
|
Sub-Saharan Africa
|
3.3
|
2.4
|
3.4
|
4.2
|
3.9
|
Financial Flows to Developing
Countries
|
1997
|
1998
|
1999
|
2000
|
2001
|
2002
|
2003e
|
FDI
|
171
|
176
|
182
|
162
|
175
|
147
|
135
|
Net private flows
|
286
|
206
|
194
|
171
|
151
|
155
|
200
|
Net official flows
|
38
|
61
|
42
|
23
|
55
|
35
|
28
|
Workers' remittances
|
66
|
63
|
68
|
68
|
77
|
88
|
93
|
Note: e=estimate, f=forecast
(China.org.cn April 20, 2004)