Economic Research syndicated feed
Find out here below our sliding banners. Our banners are available to be published on your website.
If you need to customise a feed, please contact: manuel.dacruz@credit-agricole-sa.fr
Find out here below our sliding banners. Our banners are available to be published on your website.
If you need to customise a feed, please contact: manuel.dacruz@credit-agricole-sa.fr
Brazil – The shadow of fiscal imbalance looms over a fast-growing economy
While Brazil's growth performance has been quite remarkable, its success has been overshadowed by persistent fiscal concerns. At a time when the currency is already weakened by an unfavorable international context, fiscal uncertainty is accentuating the depreciation of the Brazilian real (BRL/USD), which in turn is tending to reinforce the inflationary pressures seen since May.
Argentina – Some progress but it seems reasonable to wait
The election of Javier Milei as President who took office in December 2023 have made 2024 a year of radical change. The results of his fiscal austerity, aimed at ending monetary financing, and his management of the peso are both impressive (budget surplus, important disinflation) and mechanical (progress on the inflation and external accounts fronts can also be explained by the recession). Reducing imbalances also comes at a high social cost.
Achieving a primary surplus has been the cornerstone of the President's strategy (violent spending cuts, concentrated on social spending, reduction of primary spending from 20% to less than 16% of GDP, reduction of total spending by more than 20% in real terms). The primary surplus could reach 1% of GDP by 2024, for a total budget deficit of 0.5%. The government is targeting a primary surplus of 1% for 2025, i.e., a budget deficit of 0.3% despite the abolition of the “Impuesto País” (a 30% tax on dollar transactions and imports), a loss of revenue which the government plans to offset by increasing other taxes (fuel taxes, export duties and income taxes). The government's forecasts for growth (5%) and inflation (18%) seem optimistic compared to consensus forecasts (4.4% and 30%).
The second key element of Milei's economic strategy was a significant devaluation of the peso in December 2023 and the introduction of a crawling peg (monthly depreciation of 2% against the dollar). These measures have considerably reduced the gap between the official and parallel exchange rates: a reduction also favored by the BCRA's interventions.
The exchange rate regime, however, remains under debate. Dollarization, initially envisaged by Milei as the solution to the peso's disaffection, seems to have been temporarily discarded in favor of “currency competition”, which aims to strengthen the role of the dollar (implicit dollarization?). In addition, discussions have emerged on the possibility of reducing the monthly slide to 1.0-1.5% as progress is made on inflation and foreign exchange reserve accumulation (nostalgia for the peg?). However, this strategy is likely to put pressure on the peso, as the real effective exchange rate has appreciated sharply. The goal (including that of the IMF) is a floating peso, but legitimate concerns about the lack of a nominal anchor, the impact of inflation and low reserves persist. Finally, more generally, structural problems remain. It relates notably to resident disaffection towards the peso, de facto dollarization, narrow export base, limited responsiveness of exports to depreciation.
The Milei administration has made significant progress in the fight against inflation. Annual inflation has fallen from a peak of almost 290% (April 2024) to 193% (October 2024). Monthly inflation rates have fallen below 2.5%, and projections for year-end 2025 range from 18.3% (government estimate) to 45% (IMF forecast).
This improvement is the result of a drastic fiscal adjustment, the end of monetary financing, a clearer exchange rate policy and, ultimately, a fall in domestic demand. This has enabled the central bank to lower interest rates and reduce its balance sheet. Real interest rates remain negative.
After a severe recession, the economy is showing some signs of recovery, mainly thanks to the primary sector (mining exports) and a sharp drop in imports. The primary sector has rebounded after a drought-stricken 2023. Industrial production is recovering slowly. Services are slow to recover. Domestic demand remains weak, due to a decline in consumption (loss of purchasing power of wages and pensions) and investment (lack of visibility, lack of demand, capital restrictions). The effects of lower interest rates and the resumption of credit (due to the increase in dollar-denominated bank liquidity following the amnesty) are unconclusive (limited impact due to low credit penetration in Argentina).
The situation is still precarious, but the economy should recover by 2025. Growth could exceed 4%, thanks mainly to a mechanical recovery in private consumption. Sales of durable goods and supermarkets have stabilized; after falling, real wages are slowly recovering, suggesting that the worst may be over. One of the major risks is an increase in imports as demand recovers, a risk all the greater given the peso's appreciation in real terms. While stimulating imports, an overvalued peso could damage the competitiveness of companies, particularly in tradable services, and small manufacturing firms. The abolition of the PAIS import tax in 2025 will add further pressure on their competitiveness. Finally, capital controls are likely to continue to limit investment.
The nominal depreciation of the peso, the adjustment of public finances and the recession led to an improvement in the external accounts. The current account showed a surplus of 0.4%, mainly due to strong exports (agriculture and energy) and a sharp drop in imports. Aided by the amnesty program, external financing has improved, but reserves remain insufficient, particularly in net terms (excluding the PBOC FX swap lines) and regarding external payments in 2025.
By 2025, the current account should show a slight deficit as imports recover. Foreign direct investment is likely to remain moderate until capital controls are lifted, and the foreign exchange regime is definitively stabilized.
External financing difficulties persist. While the prospects of a new agreement with the IMF are encouraging, the implications should not be overestimated. The IMF is due to review the current program ($44 billion) in the very near future; this program has been widely criticized by the IMF's own internal control bodies (lack of coherence, conditionality, etc.). In terms of austerity, Argentina, the IMF's biggest debtor, has gone well beyond what the IMF could ask for, but has not reached the target in terms of reserves. The IMF should continue to insist on the (floating) exchange rate regime and the accumulation of net foreign exchange reserves (outside China's swap lines). It may limit its assistance to renewing its commitment with little or no new money.
Despite uncertainties, the markets have reacted positively; however, a return to the markets could be premature and could prove dangerous (cf. the increase in foreign debt under Macri's presidency, much appreciated by the markets). Finally, the question of Argentines' disaffection with the peso (cf. accumulation of assets abroad and positive net external position) remains key.
Translation of the article published on January 10, 2024 in our weekly Monde – L'actualité de la semaine
Trump and fear : the new alliance between mercantilism and geopolitics
With a handful of jumbled, disruptive and ambiguous phrases, Trump showed the entire world just how much geopolitical room for manoeuvre he will have: for the time being, his allies’ strategic autonomy seems to extend – mentally, at least – only as far as he allows… However, what’s most important today is not that we understand (or, heaven help us, bet) whether or not he intends to invade Panama or annex Canada, but rather that we observe an already palpable reality: which type of words and topics are choosen by Trump, and how western governments and public opinions are reacting. These kinds of observations provide us with five broad categories of information for the future. We might call these the five stages of the Trump rocket.
The first stage is media manipulation: what little protest Western governments have raised has been weak. There is a mix of explanations for this apparent apathy, the first of which is outright shock. At the heart of the Trump playbook (as demonstrated by many things Trump has said) is the strategy of cultivating a kind of “power through uncertainty” which vaguely echoes Nixon’s “madman theory”1 and which, above all, is a classic technique of cognitive warfare designed to mentally destabilise one’s opponent. Judo and Clausewitzian military strategy share a similar approach here: finding the enemy’s balance point and using to it bring them down. Trump also explains in his business manual2 that he always begins negotiations by hitting hard – so hard that it catches his opponent off guard. Think big! After that, he harries his opponent.
At this stage, though, it’s important to remember Marie-France Hirigoyen’s3 analysis of how narcissists communicate both ambiguously and forcefully to leave their interlocutors wondering what they mean and whether they’re serious. Although what we’re seeing is a textbook case of what Trump calls negotiation, but others would call it manipulation4. And the more we agree to view Trump’s approach not as manipulation but as a transaction, the more power he will gain. “Don’t worry – at least he’s negotiating!” Remember that transactions don’t involve paralysing your enemy – and that consent extracted using an armlock is not freely given. In geopolitical terms, this is very important because it runs counter to the very idea of what it means to be allies.
The second stage of the Trump rocket is the difficulty of perceiving reality. Part of the West’s utter shock lies in the fact that it’s hard to believe that, behind its status as a vital ally, the United States is not the benevolent and disinterested “American friend”5. This goes right back to the Marshall Plan, which was not just about the interests of Europe but was also a power play6. Structurally biased ever since the Second World War, Europe struggles to see just how fundamentally unequal its relationship with the US is and just how brutal an economic war the US has long been waging7. While this is at least clear with Trump, blindness is liable to give way to fear and submission.
The once and future president is literally forcing us to change our mental world, one of the symptoms of which is Mark Zuckerberg’s belated alignment with the libertarian ideology of Elon Musk: fear is growing in the United States (and elsewhere). Fear of reprisals, first of all among judges, the administration and the media. Fear is the third stage of the Trump rocket. This is very bad for civil society and is not without implications for investors because it undermines judicial impartiality. At the same time, the fundamental idea of rules-based regulation is coming under attack in Europe from the tech giants. Since discontent with regulations is a politically unifying theme, this is also undermining judicial power in Europe.
All of this more or less bears out the theories of Frank Furedi8 and various other sociologists. Furedi has long been sounding the alarm about a culture of fear in the West (both words are important, with fear and culture blending into an inseparable whole), and about what a powerful political springboard such a culture is. Linguistic analysis highlights the harmful effects on public discourse of a combination of threats seen as existential (climate change, pandemics, terrorism, war, etc.) and day-to-day micro-fears, all amplified by social media. As an example, Furedi refers to studies showing that, out of fifty ingredients featured in a cookery book, forty are suspected of being carcinogenic. So Trump’s electoral base is obsessed by fear of migrants, the Chinese and… raw milk9. As trust is eroded and fear and anger grow, everything gets lumped together. An “us and them” culture merges with the hunt for scapegoats (the “Who’s to blame?” of the QAnon protests10), creating fertile ground for authoritarian political figures11.
Everything is pointing towards what we were saying before the election: the United States is changing not only its president but its regime12. In fact, Trump’s “charismatic” legitimacy – increasingly less supported by the sacrosanct US Constitution – means he must now write his own heroic story, to the detriment of the balance of power. At the time of Watergate, Hannah Arendt13 was already highlighting this institutional weakening, which she saw as a major crisis . She talked about the danger of arguments based on “national security” being used to stifle debate and impose a permanent state of exception.
This brings us straight to the fourth stage of the Trump rocket: the theme of national security combined with geopolitics. It’s clear that the Panama Canal and Greenland occupy strategic positions with regard to Russia and China. And the longer Russia remains unbeaten in Ukraine, the faster the Arctic front opens up. It’s also clear that Greenland and Canada both have essential resources, particularly critical metals. All of this may be true but Trump’s words should not be taken lightly: his language is that of the school of geopolitical realism whose authors – from Hans Morgenthau and Kenneth Waltz to Fareed Zakaria and John Mearsheimer – see states as players on an “anarchic” international stage not subject to any higher regulatory body. The actions of these states are driven purely by their own interests, to maximise their power or security, depending on the threats perceived by their elites. Meanwhile, the global scenario is driven by alternating confrontations and negotiations around strategic regions and sectors.
But do these words and arguments provide a sufficient rationale for everything Trump says? According to Georgia Meloni, the president-elect’s words are nothing more than a “message” to China. Really? Doesn’t this kind of rationalisation risk masking the fact that a giant is waging geopolitical blackmail against its more modest allies, a classic pattern in history? Max Weber long ago talked about Machtstaaten, a German word denoting powerful states whose mission is supposedly to protect smaller ones14. While there is nothing new about this idea, it serves as a reminder that geopolitics is as much a succession of worldviews as it is a mechanism for explaining conflicts based on geography, trade or resources.
Lastly, what makes these arguments based on national security and “vital” interests – Trump’s words bear a striking similarity to Ratzel’s “living space”15 – particularly difficult to manage is that they are the same arguments Russia deploys about Crimea and China about Taiwan. That said, Trump has captured a big chunk of disenchanted global public opinion, which is becoming increasingly attuned to “realist” theories as accusations of double standards undermine the geopolitics of human rights.
The final stage of the Trump rocket is the continental projection of power and the capture of resources. Yet the realists set great store by alliances, and no geostrategic rationale will hold water when it comes to allied powers whose loyalty to the Western order is not in doubt. In reality, Trump projects a mental map that goes beyond the theories of realism, dominated by a desire for continental power and resource capture. This sort of “mercantilist geopolitics” was on display at the muddled press conference he gave at Mar-a-Lago last week.
This type of projection of a world divided into continental blocs controlled by dominant powers – a well-known pre-war grammar16 – risks encouraging those nostalgic for empire, and those who would like to belong to the club of powerful countries, to move from thought to action. To find examples, one only need to look to Azerbaijani talk of a fascist Armenia17 or Syria’s Turkish ambitions. Yet there is reason for hope: all this looks strikingly like the outline of a geopolitics of the balance of power – though that would require another Congress of Vienne18. Henry Kissinger, who advocated for just such a balance, must be rejoicing in his grave. It remains to be seen who would be invited to the negotiating table. The great powers, of course: America, China, Russia. But what about Musk, who is a power all by himself? And what about states considered “secondary”, such as India, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Brazil, Indonesia, and so on? And Europe? Perhaps. Above all, though, Trump is showing that he knows how to twist Europe’s arm to get what he wants.
World – 2025-2026 scenario
More than ever, the outlook depends on the turn taken by US geopolitical and economic policy. Assumptions about the scale and timing of the measures to be taken by the new administration mean that, in the US, the economy is likely to remain resilient, but there will also be renewed inflation, modest monetary easing and upward pressure on long-term interest rates. Moreover, these measures are only one explanation for the sluggish recovery in the Eurozone, which is likely to be below potential.
Drawing the contours of the US (and therefore global) scenario requires making assumptions about both the scale of the measures likely to be implemented and their timing, depending on whether they fall within the prerogatives of the president or require the approval of Congress.
As far as tariffs are concerned, Donald Trump's threats look like extreme pressure tactics. They call for an ‘intermediate’ scenario consisting of substantial increases, without however reaching the campaign proposals. Tariffs would thus rise to an average of 40% for China, from Q225, and to an average of 6% for the rest of the world, phased in over the H225. Aggressive fiscal policy, favouring tax cuts and maintaining extremely high deficits, would be implemented later: its effects could become apparent from 2026. In terms of immigration, restrictions could be applied from the start of the presidential term. They would be followed by a very sharp slowdown in immigration flows and, if deportations are to be expected, they would be ‘selective’ as opposed to a massive and indiscriminate removal of millions of people. Finally, deregulation, of which the energy and financial sectors would probably be the main beneficiaries, would spread its ‘benefits’ throughout Trump’s term in office.
Taken as a whole, these policy orientations should be favourable to growth. However, if the expected positive impact of aggressive fiscal policy and deregulation exceeds the negative impact of tariffs and immigration restrictions, it will follow. Given the resilience of the US economy, which is still expected to outperform forecasts to grow by around 2.7% in 2024, this suggests that growth will remain strong, albeit slightly weaker. Because of a few vulnerabilities (low-income households & small businesses are more exposed to high interest rates), our scenario assumes a slowdown to 1.9% in 2025, before a recovery to 2.2% in 2026: a development that should be accompanied by a revival in inflation. The end of the disinflationary path to the 2% target is the most difficult, and customs duties could put pressure on prices in a range of 25-30bp. Total inflation could therefore fall back to around 2% next spring, before picking up to around 2.5% by the end of 2025 and remaining there in 2026: the potential for monetary policy easing will be very limited.
In the Eurozone, the acceleration in growth over the summer gives reason to hope that the recovery will be only a modest one and that it will still be below potential and below the pace that will benefit the US. While the upturn in household consumption recorded over the summer augurs slightly stronger growth, the latest information on investment does not augur a marked acceleration. Falling inflation, which will boost purchasing power, but also a rebuilding of real wealth, implying a reduced savings effort, and lower interest rates, which will help to restore purchasing power for property: the ingredients are there for a continued recovery in household spending. But only at a very moderate pace, as fiscal consolidation and global uncertainty are likely to encourage a continued high savings rate. Our scenario therefore assumes a modest acceleration in consumption to 1.1% in 2025 and 1.2% in 2026, after 0.9% in 2024. After a sharp fall in 2024 (-2.1%), investment in 2025 is likely to remain penalised by the transmission delay of monetary easing but above all by weak domestic demand and growing uncertainty over foreign demand. Investment is expected to grow by just 1.5% before firming slightly in 2026 (2%).
The Trump administration’s policies would have a moderately negative impact on growth in the Eurozone, in the short term primarily due to uncertainty. Furthermore, the monetary and fiscal policy mix remains unfavourable to growth, with the key rate returning to neutral by mid-2025, while the ECB’s balance sheet reduction continues to be restrictive. The forecasts therefore put growth on a very soft acceleration trend, rising from 0.7% in 2024 to 1.0% in 2025 and then 1.2% in 2026: potential growth should be reached, but the output gap, which is slightly negative, should not yet be closed, while the growth gap with the US economy is expected to widen.
In EMs, if it were not for the difficulties associated with Trump 2.0, the situation would be improving: lower US key rates favouring global monetary easing, loosening pressure on EM FX and, more generally, on external financing for EMs; domestic growth buoyed by falling inflation and rate cuts; still buoyant exports to developed countries (primarily the US). But the effects of these supporting factors are likely to be undermined by the plausible repercussions of the measures taken by the new US administration. In addition to the tariffs likely to make EM exports more expensive and more limited, there will be less monetary accommodation in the US and a possible reduction in US military and financial support for Ukraine, fuelling geopolitical uncertainty in Europe. It is therefore preferable to be a large country with a low degree of openness, such as India, Indonesia or Brazil, a commodity-exporting country or an economy that is well integrated with China, which is preparing for the Trump storm.
In China, the last Politburo meeting concluded in December with a commitment by the authorities to implement a “more proactive” fiscal policy and a “sufficiently accommodating” monetary policy, to revive domestic demand and stabilise the property & equity markets. A period of trade tensions is looming and, apart from restrictions on exports of critical products (including rare earths), the tools of retaliation are limited: it is difficult to react by boosting the competitiveness of exports (the CNY is already historically low) or by reciprocally increasing custom duties, which would risk penalising already very fragile domestic consumption. The authorities’ intentions to provide more vocal support for domestic demand are commendable, but the effectiveness of this strategy will depend on household confidence: the rebound cannot be decreed, and our scenario continues to predict a slowdown in growth in 2025.
The market’s hopes of bold monetary easing have been refuted and are no longer on the agenda, particularly in the US. In an economy assumed to remain ‘resilient’, with inflation around 2% and then likely to pick up again, the easing would be modest. After a total reduction of 100bp in 2024, the Fed could ease by a further total of 50bp, taking the Fed Funds rate (upper limit of the target range) to 4.00% in H125 before pausing for a prolonged period.
As for the ECB, with inflation in line with target and no recession in sight, it would continue its moderate easing via its key rates, while extending its quantitative tightening. After its four 25bp cuts in 2024, the ECB could cut rates by 25bp at the January, March and April meetings, then maintain its deposit rate at 2.25%, ie, very slightly below the neutral rate estimate (2.50%).
Everything points to a scenario of a modest rise in interest rates. Given the economic scenario (limited slowdown in growth and moderate inflation concentrated at the beginning of the period) and modest monetary easing followed by an earlier pause, US interest rates could fall slightly in H125 before recovering. 10Y Treasury rates would move within a range of 4.20-4.50%. The new rate forecasts are higher than the previous ones and envisage a 10Y rate approaching 4.50% at the end of 2025 and around 5.00% at the end of 2026.
In the Eurozone, several factors point to a scenario of a slight rise in sovereign interest rates: market expectations of a bold monetary easing, where a correction could lead to a recovery in swap rates; an increase in the volume of government securities linked to the ECB's reduction in the size of its balance sheet (quantitative tightening) and to still-high net issuance; and a diffusion of the rise in US bond yields to their European equivalents, expected at the end of 2025 and in 2026. While the German economy (where early elections are due to be held in February) continues to suffer, and the political situation in France struggles to become clearer, ‘peripheral’ countries have seen their good economic results (notably Spain) and their political stability (this applies to Italy and Spain) rewarded by a significant tightening of their spreads against the German 10Y rate in 2024: they should benefit from the same support in 2025. Our scenario therefore assumes German, French and Italian 10Y rates at 2.55%, 3.15% and 3.55% respectively at the end of 2025.
Finally, for the USD, several positive factors, including the currency’s attractiveness in terms of yield, have already been factored into its price. As a result, our scenario assumes that the USD will remain close to its recent highs throughout 2025, without overshooting them for long.
French growth – Starting to foot the bill of politics
Due to latest political developments and recent soft data (BdF survey, PMIs etc.), we are currently reviewing into details our forecast for France. The final and official version will be published in CASA Eco next ‘World scenario’ that will be published on 20 December. In this paper, we introduce some key preliminary figures that we obtained, the main news is the downward revision of our growth forecast from 1.0% to 0.8% for 2025.
Following his failed power grab, South Korean President Yoon escapes impeachment
As K-dramas1 go, we’d come to expect better plots than the one that unfolded in South Korea during the night of 3 to 4 December.
In the midst of negotiations over the budget bill, part of which had already been rejected by the centre-left opposition, which holds a parliamentary majority, President Yoon Suk Yeol decreed martial law, prohibiting all political activity and rallies and putting the press under the control of the army. This extremely surprising and inordinate power grab – a tactic widely used by the authoritarian military regimes that ruled the country from its independence in 1948 to the late 1980s – could have brought South Korea face to face with its old demons.
To justify his decision, the president said he wanted to protect the country from “the threat of North Korea’s communist forces”, “eradicate anti-state forces that shamelessly align with pro-North elements and plunder the freedom and well-being of our people” and “safeguard the free constitutional order”. He was referring to opposition members of parliament, who have held a majority since the parliamentary elections of April 2024, creating a situation – unprecedented in South Korea – where the president does not command a parliamentary majority.
Negotiations over the 2025 budget have proved particularly turbulent, with President Yoon accusing the Democratic Party of cutting “all key budgets essential to the nation’s core functions, […] turning the country into a drug haven and a state of public safety chaos”. Another bone of contention was a vote – also brought by the opposition – to impeach the Chief Auditor, tasked with auditing the accounts of state and administrative bodies and of some public prosecutors.
The opposition wasted no time in reacting. After gathering for an emergency meeting, the Democratic Party’s 170 members of parliament managed to enter the parliament building – closed off and guarded by the army – and pass a resolution calling for martial law to be lifted. Backed by twenty members of parliament from other parties, the resolution was passed unanimously by all present, representing a majority of all members (190 out of a total of 300). The vote was authorised and validated by the parliamentary speaker and was in keeping with the constitution, which stipulates that if a law is voted down, it must immediately be lifted by the president.
Despite restrictions imposed by martial law, tens of thousands of people also gathered outside parliament to condemn President Yoon’s attempted power grab. Trade unions called for an indefinite general strike and the leader of the presidential party declared the law unconstitutional.
Backed into a corner, the president admitted defeat and withdrew the decree imposing martial law. His main collaborators (his chief of staff and national security advisor) tendered their resignation and the army withdrew.
The Korean won (KRW) lost some ground following President Yoon’s announcement, with the exchange rate falling below KRW 1,400 to the dollar and sinking as low as KRW 1,425 to the dollar. Stock market indices declined slightly (down 1.4%) when the Seoul stock exchange – already closed when Yoon made his declaration – reopened on 4 December. This market reaction was to be expected and could have been even more pronounced: the impact was limited by the opposition’s quick response, the mobilisation of civil society and the withdrawal of the decree. By the end of the week, the Korean won had lost just over 1% against the dollar, the Kospi stock market index had lost around 3.5% and the spread to US Treasuries had risen by just over 4%.
This is good news: South Korea’s economy could do without high volatility in its currency, already struggling relative to other Asian currencies. The Korean won has lost 10% of its value since January 2024, making it Asia’s second worst performing currency after the Japanese yen. Last week, South Korea’s central bank announced an unexpected interest rate cut2, basing its decision on slowing economic activity and the stabilisation of inflation.
Already faced with a number of trade-offs and seeking to prevent the won from depreciating too quickly, the central bank would have been forced to intervene if the currency shock had been any more powerful. Although it has substantial currency reserves ($415 billion, equivalent to 25% of GDP), committing to a policy of defending your currency during a period of high volatility is always a risky business and can even end up being counterproductive. Keen to reassure investors, South Korea’s finance minister also said the government and the central bank would provide interbank markets with liquidity for as long as necessary.
As allowed by the constitution, opposition members of parliament immediately filed a motion to impeach the president, which was put to the vote on 7 December. To reach the 200 votes (two-thirds of the National Assembly) needed to impeach the president, Democratic Party members needed to enlist the support of eight members of the presidential party. In the end, only three conservative members of parliament stayed in the chamber and voted for the motion. The rest left to block a quorum, making the outcome invalid whichever way the vote went. The opposition is already planning to put forward a similar motion again on 11 December. President Yoon, more or less hidden from view since his statement on 3 December, presented his “sincere apologies” to the people of South Korea and explained that his action had been “a desperate decision made by me, the president” for which he would “not avoid legal and political responsibility”. He also promised that he would not seek to impose martial law a second time.
So overwhelming are the facts against Yoon that it is increasingly hard to imagine how he can possibly remain in power: in reality, his declaration of martial law – which had the appearance of a hasty decision – was accompanied by a plan to neutralise key opposition figures as well as some media outlets and was based on the idea that the parliamentary elections in April had been rigged by the Democratic Party.
Seventy-five percent of South Koreans are now demanding Yoon’s resignation, with hundreds of thousands demonstrating since 3 December. While prime minister Han Duck-so has promised to stabilise the situation, it is looking increasingly hard to escape the conclusion that Yoon is going to have to go. Moreover, were he to end up in prison, he would not be the first president to do so: his predecessors Lee Myung-bak (2008-2013) and Park Geun-hye (2013-2016) were both convicted in corruption cases. With the charges against him – including “treason” – much more serious, Yoon would risk life in prison.
Although this (bad) Korean soap opera is surely far from over, there is one positive point worth noting: South Korea’s young democracy held firm and people immediately sprang into action to defend their rights and freedoms. Even the army, whose very nature is to follow orders, appeared uneasy about the president’s power grab and limited its response to the bare minimum: while soldiers guarded Parliament, they did not bend over backwards to stop members entering the building to vote to repeal martial law, nor did they disperse protestors by force.
The rest is a bit more worrying. This episode will take its toll on the presidential party, driving a wedge between those who want to hold onto power and those who don’t. And, since markets always take a dim view of uncertainty, it will also leave its mark on the economy. On 9 December, the Korean won fell to a new record low of less than KRW 1,430 to the dollar.
Article completed 9 December
Climate issues catch up with India
For more than a month now, the residents of New Delhi – India’s overpopulated capital, home to more than 30 million people – have been suffocating under a cloak of pollution. The city’s air quality index has reached an all-time high, rising well above the 400 mark beyond which prolonged outdoor exposure becomes dangerous to the human body.
The city’s hospitals have also reported a huge surge in the number of consultations for pulmonary infections and respiratory difficulties. Pollution is estimated to be responsible for around 12,000 deaths a year in New Delhi, equivalent to over 10% of all deaths in the city. The authorities are in denial, stubbornly claiming that “there is no conclusive data available to establish a direct correlation of death exclusively with air pollution”.
Behind this spike in pollution are fires deliberately lit by farmers in the north of the country to burn crop residues after harvest and prepare the ground for subsequent crops – a practice that is strongly discouraged because of its severe environmental impact, but which the authorities have not failed to regulate. Then there is pollution arising from the construction sector, the burning of fossil fuels and, of course, extremely heavy traffic.
These episodes underscore India’s extreme vulnerability to climate issues. Eighty of the world’s one hundred most polluted cities are in India, which is seventh on the list of countries most exposed to extreme weather events, particularly those involving rain (floods and droughts) and heat.
India is already the world’s third-largest emitter of greenhouse gases, though it has the lowest emissions per capita of any G20 country. Despite efforts to invest in renewable energy, particularly solar and wind energy, the country remains heavily reliant on coal (which accounted for 75% of its energy mix in 2023), which contributes to fine-particle emissions and thus to pollution. At COP26 in Glasgow in 2021, India committed to meet 50% of its energy requirements from renewable sources and install 500 GW of renewable energy capacity by 2030. This is an ambitious bet but not an impossible one: in 2024, renewable energy capacity has risen by 24.2 GW year on year to 203.2 GW.
The transition will also mean growing electric vehicle (EV) sales – another priority for the authorities. While sales of new EVs have risen over the past two years, up from 1.75% of all vehicle sales in 2021 to 6.4% in 2023, they are still well short of the government’s 2030 target of 30%. For the time being, sales are mainly concentrated in motorcycles, more affordable to Indian consumers. But the sector is supported by a policy of substantial subsidies designed not only to help people buy new EVs but also to expand domestic production capacity, buoyed by Indian manufacturer Tata Motors, the undisputed leader, with a market share of over 70%.
This view of a modern country racing to develop renewable energy and clean transport must not be allowed to obscure the other face of India – that of a still underdeveloped and mostly rural country.
The challenges involved in energy transition are also intimately linked with agriculture, which continues to play a central role in India, where 64% of the population still lives in rural areas.
With India’s population exceeding China’s in 2023, some states – particularly in the east of the country – already face very high levels of water stress. Agricultural yields are still well below those of the main cereal-producing countries: the sector, which still employs 43% of the population, remains heavily reliant on manual labour and is dominated by very small farms (averaging one hectare), most of them family-owned and often operating at close to subsistence levels. Because India is so densely populated – China, for example, has three times the amount of land per capita – this presents a huge productivity challenge.
Above all, harvests are heavily dependent on the monsoon, the timing and magnitude of which are increasingly unpredictable. Rainfall in the 2023 monsoon season was below the historical norm, notably in the east of the country, as a result of the El Niño weather phenomenon. Conversely, India has this year benefited from the influence of La Niña. This has meant a fairly satisfactory summer monsoon season (July to September), which accounts for 70% of India’s total rainfall, though still with significant variations between regions.
Harvests, and thus food prices, are at heart of many of India’s economic challenges. Among the key demands of India’s farmers are guaranteed agricultural prices and their expansion to cover more crops. Their anger boiled over into months of protests in 2021 and again in 2024, just a few weeks before the general election in which Narendra Modi’s party would significantly underperform, notably in the heavily agriculture state of Haryana.
The consumer price index is also dominated by food products, which account for 46% of items making up the index. In the past, periods of inflation have primarily been triggered by shortages of the “TOP” vegetables (tomatoes, onions and potatoes), which are staples of Indian cuisine, and some cereals (rice and wheat).
Nor can the political importance of food prices be overstated. In 1998, a sharp rise in onion prices cost the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) the local elections in New Delhi. Highly volatile food prices make the central bank’s job more complicated: adjusting base rates and injecting liquidity have little impact on vegetable and cereal prices. The Central Bank of India is even considering targeting only core inflation to exclude food prices. In October, inflation quickened to 6.2%, driven by food inflation (13.5%), with vegetable prices rising fastest.
The reality of climate change is catching up with India and could perhaps constitute the most significant risk factor facing the country. Air pollution is making cities – particularly the capital, New Delhi – less and less liveable. And, as each monsoon season rolls around, unpredictable rainfall patterns plunge India into uncertainty: when will the rains come? Will there be enough rainfall… or will there be too much, with fatal consequences? Will it be evenly spread around the country? The importance of agriculture and the influence of harvests on income, prices and consumer spending still profoundly shape the Indian economy, making growth potentially highly volatile. In recent years, harvests have been increasingly affected by extreme weather events.
Seen against this backdrop, the authorities’ response has been lacklustre: while the emphasis has been on renewable energy and developing the production and sale of clean vehicles, too little is still being done to combat pollution arising from other sectors, most notably agriculture and construction. And, when it comes to the health consequences of pollution, which already costs the people of New Delhi around ten years’ life expectancy, one might be forgiven for thinking the government’s attitude sometimes smacks of denial.