The Financial Crisis of 2008 and the Developing Countries
Published By: UNU-WIDER on eSS | Published Date: January, 13 , 2009Following the financial crisis that broke in the US and other Western economies in late
2008, there is now serious concern about its impact on the developing countries. The
world media almost daily reports scenarios of gloom and doom, with many predicting a
deep global recession. This paper critically discusses this and concludes that as far as
the developing countries are concerned, a bit more optimism may be warranted.
Although without doubt there are particular countries that will be adversely affected,
there will also be countries that may be less affected, may avoid recession, and may
recover sooner than expected. Six major reasons for this conclusion are discussed.
Without this resilience in the developing world, prospects for the world’s richer
countries would be much bleaker. Finally, some options available to the developing
countries for minimizing the impact of the crisis are discussed. The crisis accentuates
the urgent need for accelerating financial development in developing countries, both
through domestic financial deepening, domestic resource mobilization, and reform of
the international financial system. [Discussion Paper No. 2009/01] URL: [http://www.wider.unu.edu/publications/working-papers/discussion-papers/2009/en_GB/discussion-papers-2009/]
Author(s): Wim Naudé | Posted on: Jun 13, 2011 | Views(878) | Download (177)