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This article was first published 13 years ago

India among 6 countries set to redefine global economy

Last updated on: May 20, 2011 08:33 IST

Image: India will play a big part in changing the dollar's domination.
Photographs: Reuters
By 2025, six major emerging economies -- India, China, Brazil, Indonesia, South Korea, and Russia -- will account for more than half of all global growth, and the international monetary system will most probably no longer be dominated by a single currency, a new World Bank report says.

As economic power shifts, these successful economies will help drive growth in lower income countries through cross-border commercial and financial transactions.

The report, Global Development Horizons 2011 - Multipolarity: The New Global Economy, projects that as a group, emerging economies will grow on average by 4.7 per cent a year between 2011 and 2025.

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India among 6 countries set to redefine global economy

Image: China is another country that will help reshape the world.
Photographs: Reuters
Advanced economies, meanwhile, are forecast to grow by 2.3 per cent over the same period, yet will remain prominent in the global economy, with the euro area, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States all playing a core role in fueling global growth.

"The fast rise of emerging economies has driven a shift whereby the centers of economic growth are distributed across developed and developing economies - it's a truly multi-polar world," said Justin Yifu Lin, the World Bank's chief economist and senior vice-president for development economics.

"Emerging market multinationals are becoming a force in reshaping global industry, with rapidly expanding South-South investment and FDI [foreign direct investments] inflows.

"International financial institutions need to adapt fast to keep up."

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India among 6 countries set to redefine global economy

Image: Growth spillovers will boost exports.
Photographs: Reuters
According to the report, emerging economies that used to rely on technological adaptation and external demand to grow will have to make structural changes to sustain their growth momentum through productivity gains and robust domestic demand.

Global Development Horizons maps out the challenges that a multi-polar world economy poses for developing countries over the next 20 years.

The authors use empirically-based indices to identify high-growth countries with strong human capital and technological innovation, and that also drive economic activity in other countries.

Growth spillovers are likely via cross-border trade, finance, and migration, which will induce technological transfer, and increase demand for exports.

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India among 6 countries set to redefine global economy

Image: Rise in domestic demand will sustain global growth.
Photographs: Reuters
The report highlights the diversity of potential emerging economy growth poles, some of which have relied heavily on exports, such as China and Korea, and others that put more weight on domestic consumption, such as Brazil and Mexico.

With the emergence of a substantial middle class in developing countries and demographic transitions under way in several major East Asian economies, stronger consumption trends are likely to prevail, which in turn can serve as a source of sustained global growth.

"In many big emerging economies, the growing role of domestic demand is already apparent and outsourcing is already under way," said Hans Timmer, the World Bank's director of development prospects.

"This is important for the least developed countries, which are often reliant on foreign investors and external demand for their growth."

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India among 6 countries set to redefine global economy

Image: Emerging countries will see more investments in green technology.
Photographs: Reuters
The shift in economic and financial power toward the developing world has important implications on corporate financing, investment, and the nature of cross-border merger and acquisition deals.

As more deals originate in emerging markets, South-South foreign direct investment is likely to rise, with most of it going into greenfield investments, while South-North FDI is more likely to target acquisitions.

As they expand, more developing countries and their firms will be able to access international bond and equity markets at better terms to finance overseas investments.

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India among 6 countries set to redefine global economy

Image: No multilateral regime exists to govern cross-border investment.
Photographs: Reuters
The growing role and influence of emerging-market firms in global investment and finance can facilitate moving forward with the sort of multilateral framework for regulating cross-border investment that has been derailed several times since the 1920s, the report says.

In contrast to international trade and monetary relations, no multilateral regime exists to promote and govern cross-border investment.

Instead, the surge of bilateral investment treaties - more than 2,275 BITs as of end 2007 - has provided the most widely used mechanism for interstate negotiation over cross-border investment terms, including access to international arbitration of disputes through referral to the International Centre for the Settlement of Investment Disputes, an affiliate of the World Bank.

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India among 6 countries set to redefine global economy

Image: Chinese currency renminbi will play a bigger role on the world stage.
Photographs: Reuters
"Over the next decade or so, China's size and the rapid globalization of its corporations and banks will likely mean a more important role for the renminbi," said Mansoor Dailami, lead author of the report and manager of emerging trends at the World Bank.

"The most likely global currency scenario in 2025 will be a multi-currency one centered around the dollar, the euro, and the renminbi."

To sustain growth and cope with more complex risks, economies that are home to emerging growth poles need to reform domestic their institutions, including in the economic, financial, and social sectors.

China, Indonesia, India, and Russia all face institutional and governance challenges.

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India among 6 countries set to redefine global economy

Image: Access to education will be a concern in India.
Photographs: Reuters
Human capital and ensuring access to education is a concern in some potential growth poles, particularly Brazil, India, and Indonesia.

"The projected changes in the global economy are fundamental. Overall, these shifts will likely be positive for developing countries.

"However, a key question is whether existing multilateral norms and institutions are sufficiently strong to accommodate the passage toward multi-polarity.

"The challenges of managing global integration among power centers makes strengthening policy coordination across economies critical to reducing the risks of economic instability," said Dailami.

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India among 6 countries set to redefine global economy

Image: Poor countries will remain exposed to exchange rate fluctuations.
Photographs: Reuters
Most developing countries, particularly the poorest ones, will continue to use foreign currencies to carry out transactions with the rest of the world, and will remain exposed to exchange rate fluctuations in an international multi-currency regime.

Multilateral institutions have to help countries transition to the new multi-polar world.

This will require technical assistance, aid, and policy advice to equip developing countries with the necessary tools and financial capacity to respond to anticipated challenges and risks, while capitalizing on their strengths and opportunities.