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#Economies
Brad Setser
Brad_Setser
Fiscal deficits in the big emerging economies are largely being financed domestically (with domestic debt bought by domestic investors)Useful (and BoP consistent) story from @markets 1/xhttps://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-08-24/mas
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Enes Sunel
enessunel
My @voxeu column with @YasinMimir onQuantitative easing in emerging market economies is now up! THREAD 1/nhttps://voxeu.org/article/quantitative-easing-emerging-market-economies#.YGsN6RbxCcI.twitter Before I start; views are mine and @Yasin
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Abdu Sharkawy
SharkawyMD
Lots of angst, frustration & pessimism being expressed by those in the business community and others re: the perceived (lack) of fairness of restrictive measures that are imposed by policy
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Andreu Escrivà
AndreuEscriva
Un recadito de Nature para quienes defienden, de forma absolutamente infundada, que “el progreso hará que se solucionen los problemas ambientales y la creación de riqueza es la mejor solución
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Ben Burgis
BenBurgis
I don't know that I'd describe *any* of my positions as my being "so certain" but I do believe that it's the case given the experience of actually existing planned
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ian bremmer
ianbremmer
I’m unconvinced the US is the big geopolitical loser post coronavirus. Yes, absence of US leadership gives China more influence, particularly w poor countries that desperately need help. But there’s
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Clearance Rack Connoisseur
goleyayo
If I lost my income (employment) why would I take my only source of income (unemployment) and gamble it on creating some "business" (during a pandemic).. when businesses especially small
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Michael Pettis
michaelxpettis
1/6Good article, but worrying. Albert Hirschman argued that once a developing country reaches the maximum level of investment it can absorb productively, which I'd argue China did in the past
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Peter Rowan
ptrrowan
5 potential missional consequences of COVID-19 (from a colleague in Asia) All 5 are an acceleration of trends already being felt... 1. A shift away from Western-led mission, as funding
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Tola Fola
TolaFola
I have an interesting "theory" as to why West African countries/companies struggle to have large scale industries with international subsidiaries l outside of West Africa, at least, in comparison to
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Andrew Neil
afneil
The UK downturn in H1 of this year is deepest since the Office for National Statistics started tracking quarterly GDP in 1955 + worst of any developed country during Covid-19
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Periperi 🌐🧦🥁 Jeni's Frozen Cow Juice
AgiaTheBun
1. No2. Economics is not a zero-sum game, and the economies of African and Latin America are significantly bigger than they were several centuries ago.https://twitter.com/center_for_cs/status/1251374913870598145 And how on Earth could
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David Guilpain
Davidguilpain1
Less developed economy catching up with core economies create deep political instabilities. Sectors of core economies "refusal to adjust to new economic realities" become new losers with global trade. Characterized
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Osama Bin Javaid
osamabinjavaid
Lessons for countries with-rotting economies-reliance on loans-shrinking industry-devalued currency-inept bureaucracy-endemic corruption-powerful clergy's clout in politics &-bloated militaryThe abyss awaits should you not make toug
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Bewi
Lebeoana_k
After the Presidential elections, i remember many of my Lesotho peers asked why those of us that are not US citizens were so interested in their & elections & so
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Jostein Hauge
haugejostein
Thread:The full health impact of COVID-19 in many developing countries remains to be seen, but the negative economic shocks will be lasting.Here are 5 reasons why we should care more
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