Emerging Markets and the "Global Recession"
The Council on Foreign Relations takes a look at the possibility of a global recession.
As many indices mark the worst stock market losses since 9/11, India suspends trading and Japan marks the worst two-day losses in 17 years, analysts are talking global recession (and its implications for the US).
The Council on Foreign Relations' Lee Hudson Teslik says that this recession (or mild economic turn down) could have implications for a number of US policies, ranging from immigration to possibly increasingly protectionist economic policies as US job losses cause citizens to feel the squeeze-- and subsequently pressure politicians.
However, can emerging markets counterbalance the fear and uncertainty present in the US and across Asia?
Globally, economists see a silver lining in the developing world. Emerging markets in East Asia, the Middle East, Latin America, Eastern Europe, and even Africa have seen rapid recent growth (Economist),
and analysts hope growing consumption in these regions might offset declines in the United States. Either way, analyst Zakaria and others argue, a downturn need not bring a permanent loss of power for Washington, if policymakers reclaim the “open and expansive” attitude with which they once embraced the world.


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