France’s Coface lists Sri Lanka among 10 emerging countries hot on the heels of BRICS

Tuesday, 29 April 2014 00:00 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

Sri Lanka has been identified as one of the 10 emerging countries hot on the heels of BRICS by Coface, a worldwide leader in credit insurance with presence in over 66 nations. "Coface has distinguished two groups in the “new emerging” countries. One group comprising Sri Lanka, Colombia, Indonesia, Peru, the Philippines has a sound business climate (A4 or B), similar to that of the BRIC countries today" Coface said that after 10 years of frenetic growth, the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) are slowing down sharply. For 2014, Coface forecasts growth of on average 3.2 points lower than the average growth these countries registered over the previous decade. At the same time, other emerging countries are accelerating their development. Among them, a ‘top 10’ emerges with good production prospects and sufficient financing to support expansion. In addition to accelerating high growth, financing is needed to boost investment Despite a consumer trend that remains favourable, the BRICS are experiencing a growth downturn due to an adjustment in supply and a marked slow-down in investment. Local businesses no longer have sufficient production capacity to meet continued strong demand. To identify the promising countries that the BRICS are now giving way to, Coface identified several criteria, including two that are essential: Countries that have high growth which is accelerating, and whose economy is diversified and resilient to growth slowdowns; and countries that have sufficient funding capacity to finance growth (a minimum level of savings needed to avoid excessive recourse to foreign savings), without the risk of creating a credit bubble, or which do not yet have equity markets of a comparable size of those in OECD countries. Colombia, Indonesia, Peru, the Philippines and Sri Lanka were identified as possessing strong potential confirmed by a sound business environment. Coface identifies only 10 “new emerging” countries which meet all the criteria. However, these countries are not the same in terms of their business environments - the weaknesses of which can stifle growth. This leads Coface to distinguish two groups in the “new emerging” countries: Colombia, Indonesia, Peru, the Philippines and Sri Lanka have a sound business climate (A4 or B), similar to that of the BRIC countries today. Kenya, Tanzania, Zambia, Bangladesh and Ethiopiahave very difficult (C) or extremely difficult (D) business environments which could hamper their growth prospects. “Naturally, it will be more difficult for the second group of countries, who could take longer to fully realise their growth potential. However, their business environment problems are relative. In 2001, the quality of governance in Brazil, China, India and Russia was comparable to that of Kenya, Tanzania, Zambia, Bangladesh and Ethiopia today,” said Julien Marcilly, Head of country Risk at Coface. It also said growth of the “new emerging” countries will take a different path than for the BRICS Some weaknesses compared to the BRICS in the 2000s persist nonetheless. Firstly, the 10 identified “new emerging” countries currently only represent 11% of the world’s population while the BRICS accounted for 43% of the population in 2001. Secondly, their GDP level is only 70% of that of the BRICS in 2001. Finally, the BRICS recorded on average a current account surplus while the “new emerging” countries run a deficit of around 6% of GDP. “With growth in developed countries being structurally weaker today, the “new emerging” countries may benefit less from trade towards these countries than did the BRICS in the 2000s. Their growth rates will depend more on their domestic markets and on exports to other emerging markets,” concluded Marcilly. Despite a less buoyant environment, the “new emerging” countries have advantages over the BRICS of 2001. Their inflation rates are around 2.8 points lower than those the BRIC countries experienced, and their level of public debt is around 40% of GDP compared to 54% for the BRICS at the time. The Coface Group, a worldwide leader in credit insurance, offers companies around the globe solutions to protect them against the risk of financial default of their clients, both on the domestic market and for export. In 2013, the Group posted a consolidated turnover of 1.440 billion euros with 4,400 staff in 66 countries providing a local service worldwide. Overall, Coface is present directly or via strategic partnerships in 97 countries, with the ability to provide cover for its clients in approximately 200 countries and is a subsidiary of Natixis, corporate, investment management and specialised financial services arm of Groupe BPCE.

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