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Month: May 2022

As US Federal Reserve Raises Rates, Emerging Markets Brace for Impact

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Experts warn that the Federal Reserve’s efforts to tamp down inflation in the United States could have damaging effects, perhaps lasting several years, on developing economies around the world by encouraging capital flight, raising the rates on sovereign debt and destabilizing their currencies.

On Wednesday, the central bank announced that the Federal Open Market Committee, which sets the benchmark federal funds rate, had voted to increase the target rate by one-half of 1%, to between 0.75% and 1%. Further, the Fed indicated that it aimed to impose a series of additional half-point increases through the remainder of the year.

“Inflation is much too high, and we understand the hardship it is causing, and we are moving expeditiously to bring it back down,” Fed Chair Jerome Powell said in a news conference after the committee meeting Wednesday.

When Powell said that increases of more than 50 basis points were not currently part of the central bank’s plan, he offered some relief to those wondering whether the Fed might be considering even larger increases. Nevertheless, the prospect of the Fed going into full inflation-fighting mode has many concerned about the impact its actions might have on developing countries.

Multiple concerns

There are a number of reasons emerging markets might suffer when U.S. interest rates rise.

One is the prospect of capital flight. Investors who have invested in emerging markets to take advantage of higher rates of return may find investment in the U.S. more attractive as rates rise, prompting them to move capital to the U.S.

Higher interest rates in the U.S. can also result in higher rates globally. In April, the International Monetary Fund issued a report that found that 60% of low-income developing countries were either already experiencing debt distress or were at high risk of doing so. The report warned, “Past episodes suggest that rapid interest rate increases in advanced economies can tighten external financial conditions for emerging market and developing economies.”

Another danger to emerging economies in a rising interest rate environment is currency depreciation, which reduces purchasing power and increases the difficulty of servicing debt denominated in foreign currencies, such as the U.S. dollar.

Historical perspective

Economic historian Jamie Martin, an assistant professor at Georgetown University, told VOA that there is a strong historical correlation between sharp interest rate increases in the U.S. and catastrophic economic consequences in the developing world.

In the years after World War I, a rise in rates orchestrated in part by the Fed and the Bank of England helped reverse a recession in major industrialized countries. However, it resulted in several years of curtailed growth in nonindustrialized countries.

Similarly, the Fed’s aggressive rate hikes in the early 1980s successfully tamed double-digit inflation in the U.S. but pushed global interest rates so high that numerous developing countries, particularly in Latin America, defaulted on their debts.

In 2013, when then-Fed Chair Ben Bernanke hinted that rate increases were on the horizon, the impact on emerging markets was instant, with capital rapidly flowing out and currency instability setting in.

“History should counsel extreme caution,” Martin said. “Because, over as long as a century, when the U.S. Fed and other kinds of globally systemic central banks have moved to aggressively tighten monetary policy, almost every time, it’s had dramatic global effects. Particularly in what we have come to call developing economies.”

Fed research supports concern

The impact of U.S. rate increases on the developing world has not always been well understood. Paul Volcker, the Federal Reserve chairman who orchestrated the increasing of interest rates to nearly 20% in the 1980s, would later say that his focus had been on the U.S. and that the impact on the developing world hadn’t been part of his calculus.

“Africa was not even on my radar screen,” he said.

Now, though, the connections between actions by the Fed and the broader global economy are better understood.

In a 2021 article published by the central bank, Fed economists Jasper Hoek and Emre Yoldas, and Steve Kamin of the American Enterprise Institute noted that there are multiple instances in which rate increases in the U.S. have been shown to “increase debt burdens, trigger capital outflows, and generally cause a tightening of financial conditions that can lead to financial crises.”

While they didn’t find that economic crises in emerging markets always resulted from U.S. rate hikes, one of their observations would seem to apply to the current circumstances: “If higher rates are driven mainly by worries about inflation or a hawkish turn in Fed policy … this will likely be more disruptive for emerging markets.”

Pushed ‘over the edge’

Organizations that track the indebtedness of developing countries warn that conditions across the developing world are already dire. In particular, the effects of the coronavirus pandemic as well as a global spike in food prices exacerbated by the war in Ukraine have already created severe economic disruption.

A recent debt default by Sri Lanka has some concerned that further defaults may be coming.

“Many lower income countries have already been pushed into (a) deep debt crisis by the pandemic and rising energy and food prices,” Jerome Phelps, head of advocacy for the London-based Jubilee Debt Campaign, told VOA in an email exchange.

“They are diverting crucial resources away from healthcare and the needs of communities to debt payments, often to U.S. and European banks who stand to make large profits if repaid in full,” Phelps wrote. “Rising U.S. interest rates will push many over the edge by making their debt payments suddenly more expensive, for no fault of their own. We need urgent debt cancellation so that countries can prioritize recovery from the multiple crises they face.”

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Stocks Slump 3% as Worries Grow Over Higher Interest Rates

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A sharp sell-off left the Dow Jones Industrial Average more than 1,000 points lower Thursday, wiping out the gains from Wall Street’s biggest rally in two years, as worries grow that the higher interest rates the Federal Reserve is using in its fight against inflation will derail the economy. 

The benchmark S&P 500 fell 3.6%, marking its biggest loss in nearly two years, a day after it posted its biggest gain since May 2020. The Nasdaq slumped 5%, its worst drop since June 2020. The losses by the Dow and the other indexes offset the gains from a day earlier. 

“Yesterday’s sharp rally was not rooted in reality, and today’s dramatic selloff is a reversal of that misplaced exuberance,” said Ben Kirby, co-head of investments at Thornburg Investment Management. 

Wall Street’s breakneck day-to-day reversal reflects the degree of investors’ uncertainty and unease over the array of threats the economy is facing, starting with inflation running at the highest level in four decades, and how effective the Federal Reserve’s bid to tame higher prices by jacking up interest rates will be. 

On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve announced a widely expected half-percentage point increase in its short-term interest rate. Stocks bounced around following the move but then sharply rose as bond yields fell after Fed Chair Jerome Powell reassured investors by saying the central bank wasn’t considering shifting to more aggressive, three-quarter point rate hikes as the Fed continues with further rate increases in coming months. 

But whatever relief Powell’s remarks gave stock investors vanished Thursday. Stocks slumped and bond yields climbed. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose to 3.04%. Rising yields are sure to put upward pressure on mortgage rates, which are at their highest level since 2009. 

Investors remain uneasy about whether the Fed can do enough to tame inflation without tipping the economy, which is showing signs of slowing, into a recession. In addition to high inflation and rising interest rates, investors are grappling with uncertainty over lingering supply chain disruptions and geopolitical tensions. 

“The biggest issue is there are just a lot of moving parts and the unanswered question is to what extent as the Fed attempts to tame inflation will that result in economic slowing, and perhaps, a recession,” said Terry Sandven, chief equity strategist at U.S. Bank Wealth Management. 

The S&P 500 fell 153.30 points to 4,146.87, while the Nasdaq slid 647.16 points to 12,317.69. The Dow briefly skidded 1,375 points before closing down 1,063.09 points, or 3.1%, to 32,997.97. 

Smaller company stocks also fell sharply. The Russell 2000 fell 78.77 points, or 4%, to 1,871.15. 

 

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Кроки, які суперечать суверенітету України, вважатимуться незаконними – розмова Байдена і Шольца

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Президент США Джо Байден і канцлер Німеччини Олаф Шольц не визнаватимуть порушення суверенітету України, а кроки, які йому суперечать, вважатимуть нелегітимними. Про це йдеться у повідомленні пресслужби канцлера Німеччини за підсумкам телефонної розмови Байдена і Шольца.

«Канцлер і президент США наголосили, що не визнають жодних кроків, які суперечать територіальному суверенітету та цілісності України, і вважатимуть їх нелегітимними», – повідомляє пресслужба Шольца.

Вони погодилися, що Україна має продовжувати отримувати значну й постійну підтримку задля самооборони.

Як повідомляє Білий дім, Байден і Щольц переглянули свої поточні зусилля з надання допомоги уряду України.

Президент США привітав надання Німеччиною допомоги у сфері безпеки та недавню обіцянку додаткової гуманітарної допомоги.

В повідомленні Білого дому не згадується, що Байден і Шольц обговорювали питання суверенітету України.

Українська влада припускає, що 9 травня президент Росії Володимир Путін може заявити про анексію Донецької та Луганської, Херсонської областей, а також частини Запорізької.

Секретар Ради національної безпеки й оборони України Олексій Данілов із посиланням на дані військової розвідки заявляв, що в Росії 9 травня можуть оголосити загальну мобілізацію, в Кремлі цю інформацію назвали 

«маячнею».

Раніше також повідомлялося про намір російських військ провести референдум на тимчасово окупованих українських територіях, зокрема в Херсонській області. 

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Categories: Новини, Світ

Путін вибачився перед прем’єром Ізраїлю за слова Лаврова – канцелярія Беннета

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«Прем’єр-міністр прийняв вибачення президента Путіна за слова Лаврова і подякував йому за роз’яснення ставлення президента до єврейського народу і пам’яті про Голокост»

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Categories: Новини, Світ

Анджеліна Джолі показала «особливий камінь», який знайшла маленька дівчинка з України

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Джолі каже: боротьба за припинення війни – це «щоденні перегони у спробі обмежити кількість убитих, поранених, переміщених та травмованих

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Categories: Новини, Світ

Путін не міг уявити, що світ так згуртується навколо України – глава Пентагону

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Президент Росії Володимир Путін не міг уявити, що світ так швидко і впевнено згуртується навколо України, заявив міністр оборони Сполучених Штатів Ллойд Остін.

«Ми надали Україні допомогу в сфері безпеки з рекордною швидкістю, і весь світ бачить різницю на полі бою. Путін ніколи не міг уявити, що світ так швидко і впевнено згуртується навколо України», – написав він у твіттері.

У Німеччині на американській авіабазі «Рамштайн» 26 квітня відбулося засідання міжнародної Консультативної групи з питань оборони України, яку скликав міністр оборони США Ллойд Остін. Участь у заході взяли керівники оборонних відомств понад 40 країн світу.

Ллойд Остін заявив, що від початку повномасштабного вторгнення РФ США, їхні союзники та партнери зобов’язалися надати Україні обладнання на понад 5 млрд дол. 

Палата представників Сполучених Штатів 28 квітня підтримала проєкт закону про лендліз. 7 квітня Сенат США одноголосно схвалив законопроєкт, який дозволяє президенту Джо Байдену використати програму лендлізу для спрощення відправки військової допомоги Україні та країнам Східної Європи.

Востаннє програма діяла під час Другої світової війни, коли американська військова допомога вирушала супротивникам нацистської Німеччини, насамперед Великій Британії та СРСР.

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Categories: Новини, Світ

US Central Bank Boosts Key Interest Rate by Half Percentage Point

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The U.S. central bank, the Federal Reserve, raised its benchmark interest rate by a half percentage point on Wednesday and scaled back its support for the American economy, a pointed effort to curb surging inflation in the world’s largest economy.

The interest rate increase, pushing its federal-funds rate to a target range between 0.75% and 1%, was the largest since 2000, and could quickly ricochet through the U.S. economy, increasing borrowing rates for businesses and consumers alike, with the goal of curbing spending and cutting inflation. The Fed usually increases interest rates in quarter-point increments.

The cost of consumer goods has been spiraling for months in the U.S., and an 8.5% year-over-year increase was recorded in March, the biggest jump in four decades. U.S. consumers are paying sharply higher prices for food, housing and gasoline at service stations, squeezing family budgets.

Aside from increasing the interest rate, the Fed said that starting next month it would scale back its $9 trillion asset portfolio in another move to curb inflation.

After a two-day meeting in Washington, the Fed said in a statement, “The invasion of Ukraine by Russia is causing tremendous human and economic hardship. The implications for the U.S. economy are highly uncertain.”

It added, “The invasion and related events are creating additional upward pressure on inflation and are likely to weigh on economic activity. In addition, COVID-related lockdowns in China are likely to exacerbate supply chain disruptions” in world trade.

After the meeting, Fed chairman Jerome Powell said at a news conference that “inflation is much too high, and we understand the hardship it is causing.”

But he said the Federal Reserve has various measures it can take over the coming months to bring the inflation rate to the Fed’s 2% average target, but not so fast that it sends the U.S. economy into a recession.

Ahead of this week’s meeting, policymakers had already said they could raise interest rates several more times through the end of 2022 to slow the surge in consumer prices.

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У шостому пакеті президентка Єврокомісії пропонує санкції проти «Сбербанку» й російської нафти

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Фон дер Ляйєн пропонує поступову відмову від російської нафти, «аби максимізувати тиск на Росію, при цьому мінімізуючи вплив на наші економіки»

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Кремль відмовляється від терміну «денацифікація», бо росіяни не розуміють суті – журналісти-розслідувачі

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Як зауважили журналісти, «рупор Кремля» Дмитро Кисельов також майже перестав говорити про «денацифікацію» і у квітні використав це слово раз за увесь випуск програми

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Categories: Новини, Світ