“The first lesson is that you want to treat EM and EM ex-China differently,” Kamakshya Trivedi,Goldman’s head of global currency,rates and emerging-markets strategy,said in December.
Also instructive was the resilience of developing economies in the face of factors that ought to have brought them undone:rate rises in the US,a muscular dollar,and slackening Chinese growth,he said.
Reports this week bear out that reasoning:Singapore,a small economy wedded to the ebbs and flows of global commerce,grew faster than anticipated in 2023. In the fourth quarter alone,gross domestic product gained 2.8 per cent from a year earlier. Exports,so vital for the city-state,returned to growth in November,and factory output,which had been languishing,enjoyed a spurt.
The news from Seoul was also refreshing. Exports emerged from a slump as the year drew to a close;in December,they jumped 5.5 per cent,handily beating economists’ forecasts. Adjusted for working days,shipments climbed an impressive 14.5 per cent. South Korea is a critical player in the global technology ecosystem,and the data may point to something more fundamental than a pick-up in the economy.
“The US has once again passed China as South Korea’s biggest export market,” wrote Hyosung Kwon at Bloomberg Economics. “This may signal a lasting shift in the shape of supply chains — not a blip.”
It’s not like China’s struggles are having zero impact on the rest of Asia. The latest purchasing managers’ indexes suggest factories aren’t having the best of times. Most of them saw a retreat in new orders and tepid customer appetite. But the point is,some of the most important economies in this part of the world are doing OK — or better — despite their larger neighbour’s woes.
The health of China’s economy will always be a factor in how the region fares,in much the same way that Canada and Mexico depend greatly on the US. But it’s worth remembering that China is one of a range of issues,not the sole determinant. That’s hardly an earth-shattering observation,but one that got a bit lost over the years in fawning over its ascent.
Time for a recalibration. Now that would be a big export.
Bloomberg
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