Interesting:
From the Globe and Mail. The inflation rates in some of these places are huge:
So emerging market demand continues unabated, even encouraged, further exacerbating the inflation problem that governments around the world are scrambling to contain. Qatar's inflation is running at about 14 per cent. Egypt is at 19 per cent.
The average for the region just two years ago was a mere 2 per cent.
I suspect at some point some of these countries will have to cut loose from the dollar to maintain order at home; severe inflation in countries that already have extreme inequality in wealth is likely to make things difficult for the governments if they don't pull the plug on the greenback.
Another thing that stands out for me is that Saudi Arabia isn't mentioned once, and this says it's around 3.4%. Is their inflation rate actually that much lower, or is it measured differently?
OTTAWA — Inflation control measures in the Middle East are almost as rampant as inflation itself these days.Qatar just froze the price of steel and cement, and extended a diesel subsidy. Bahrain is spending more than a billion dollars a year to subsidize food and fuel. The mainly foreign construction workers in United Arab Emirates have launched strikes and riots as they watch the value of their savings erode.
Gulf countries are swimming in oil wealth but drowning in inflation - caused in large part by their own unrestrained consumer demand, and their insistence on hanging on to fixed exchange rates, analysts say.
Now, there's a growing fear among the world's opinion leaders that emerging market countries' last-ditch attempts to stifle inflation are akin to sticking a finger in the hole of a leaky dam.
Eleven years after the Asian financial crisis toppled currencies and wreaked havoc in Asia, Latin America, Russia and parts of the North American economy, analysts are again wondering whether the world is on the verge of another currency crisis - this time starting with the U.S. dollar.
The fear is that the inflation dam in emerging markets will break, prompting a quick abandonment of the U.S. dollar as a currency peg and reserve currency - an event that would be destabilizing at the best of times, but would be alarming in an era when the global economy is already dealing with soaring prices, a slowing U.S. economy and a credit crunch. "If you had a big shift in the Middle East, I think it would be a big deal because these countries are accumulating very sizable monthly excess revenues from oil sales. How they place that savings in terms of global currency markets is very important," said Jens Nordvig, senior global markets economist for Goldman Sachs.
Gulf countries are swimming in oil wealth but drowning in inflation - caused in large part by their own unrestrained consumer demand, and their insistence on hanging on to fixed exchange rates, analysts say.
Now, there's a growing fear among the world's opinion leaders that emerging market countries' last-ditch attempts to stifle inflation are akin to sticking a finger in the hole of a leaky dam.
Eleven years after the Asian financial crisis toppled currencies and wreaked havoc in Asia, Latin America, Russia and parts of the North American economy, analysts are again wondering whether the world is on the verge of another currency crisis - this time starting with the U.S. dollar.
The fear is that the inflation dam in emerging markets will break, prompting a quick abandonment of the U.S. dollar as a currency peg and reserve currency - an event that would be destabilizing at the best of times, but would be alarming in an era when the global economy is already dealing with soaring prices, a slowing U.S. economy and a credit crunch. "If you had a big shift in the Middle East, I think it would be a big deal because these countries are accumulating very sizable monthly excess revenues from oil sales. How they place that savings in terms of global currency markets is very important," said Jens Nordvig, senior global markets economist for Goldman Sachs.
So emerging market demand continues unabated, even encouraged, further exacerbating the inflation problem that governments around the world are scrambling to contain. Qatar's inflation is running at about 14 per cent. Egypt is at 19 per cent.
The average for the region just two years ago was a mere 2 per cent.
I suspect at some point some of these countries will have to cut loose from the dollar to maintain order at home; severe inflation in countries that already have extreme inequality in wealth is likely to make things difficult for the governments if they don't pull the plug on the greenback.
Another thing that stands out for me is that Saudi Arabia isn't mentioned once, and this says it's around 3.4%. Is their inflation rate actually that much lower, or is it measured differently?
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