2020
DOI: 10.1080/08911916.2020.1857586
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A Gathering of Storms: The Impact of COVID-19 Pandemic on the Balance of Payments of Emerging Markets and Developing Economies (EMDEs)

Abstract: The aim of this article is to track the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic crisis on EMDEs focusing on the performance of their Balance of Payments (BOPs). EMDEs are facing simultaneous hits in their BOPs as they try to cope with the domestic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. Those impacts call for a rethinking of some aspects of the Keynesian Approach to BOPs while strengthening the view of international financial markets as hierarchical and volatile institutions. The external impacts can be summarized in four ch… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(13 citation statements)
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References 43 publications
(38 reference statements)
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“…Even though the IMF and World Bank have been warning about the build-up of (public and private) debt, as noted above, they have simultaneously contributed towards it through policies of financial liberalization, and by pro-2. For some recollections, see Bortz et al (2020), Chowdhury and Jomo (this issue), Storm (2022) and UNCTAD (2022).…”
Section: Same Old Remedies…mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Even though the IMF and World Bank have been warning about the build-up of (public and private) debt, as noted above, they have simultaneously contributed towards it through policies of financial liberalization, and by pro-2. For some recollections, see Bortz et al (2020), Chowdhury and Jomo (this issue), Storm (2022) and UNCTAD (2022).…”
Section: Same Old Remedies…mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A dollar appreciation will not just make it more difficult to service the (higher) external debts, but higher debt-servicing costs will crowd out foreign exchange needed to pay for essential imports and a deterioration of the credit rating of the external debt will push up the yields on the government bonds of these economies. Bortz et al (2020) analyze the channels through which external shocks impact the domestic economies of the developing countries, making explicit the hierarchical nature of the global financial system.…”
Section: Figure 22mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This allowed robust growth performances for those countries for a long period, which might have been a central issue in the American strategy to win the Cold War (Serrano, 2004;Korpi, 2006). More recently, the Federal Reserve ensured international liquidity in dollars during the Great Recession (Matthijs, 2020) and the pandemic crisis (Bortz et al, 2020), thereby contributing to financial stability on a global basis. Although those interventions avoided a reversion in international trade and debt defaults from peripheral economies, they consolidated the dollar hegemony in the international system (Vernengo, 2021).…”
Section: The Political Economy Of Autonomous Demandmentioning
confidence: 99%