The US Federal Reserve risks triggering “panic and turmoil” in
emerging markets if it opts to raise rates at its September meeting and
should hold fire until the global economy is on a surer footing, the
World Bank’s chief economist has warned.
Rising uncertainty over growth in China and its impact on the global
economy meant a Fed decision to raise its policy rate next week, for the
first time since 2006, would have negative consequences, Kaushik Basu
told the Financial Times.
His warning highlights the mounting concern outside the US over the
Fed’s potential “lift-off”. It follows similar advice from the
International Monetary Fund where anxieties have also grown in recent
weeks about the potential repercussions of a September rate rise.
That means that if the Fed’s policymakers were to decide next week to
raise rates they would be doing so against the counsel of both of the
institutions created at Bretton Woods as guardians of global economic
stability.
Such a decision could yield a “shock” and a new crisis in emerging
markets, Basu told the FT, especially as it would come on the back of
concerns over the health of the Chinese economy that have grown since
Beijing’s move last month to devalue its currency.
He said that, even though it had been well-advertised by the Fed, any
rise would lead to “fear capital” leaving emerging economies as well as
to sharp swings in their currencies. The likely strengthening in the
dollar would also hamper US growth, he said.
“I don’t think the Fed lift-off itself is going to create a major
crisis but it will cause some immediate turbulence,” Basu said. “It is
the compounding effect of the last two weeks of bad news with that
[China devaluation] . . . In the middle of this it is going to cause
some panic and turmoil.
“The world economy is looking so troubled that if the US goes in for a
very quick move in the middle of this I feel it is going to affect
countries quite badly,” he said.
After spending months priming investors for a rate rise this year,
the Fed faces an intense debate at its September 16-17 policy meeting
over when to raise interest rates and how to balance evidence of a
resilient domestic economy against gyrations in global financial markets
driven by fears of a China slowdown.
Mixed signals have recently been emerging from the central bank about
the prospects of an increase this month. While the labour market is
continuing to strengthen, officials are worried that inflation will be
weighed down by the higher dollar and recent falls in commodity prices.
The Fed’s chair, Janet Yellen, has repeatedly signalled that she
expects to raise rates this year for the first time since 2006. She has
only three meetings of the Federal Open Market Committee left this year
if that expectation is to be fulfilled.
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