Les marchés émergents sont-ils en crise?
OCP Policy Center, Rabat.
L’économie mondiale continue sur la voie d’une expansion régulière. Malgré la montée des tensions commerciales et géopolitiques et la perspective d'une hausse des taux directeurs, les marchés boursiers des pays avancés ont presque atteint leur sommet. Cependant, les crises économiques profondes en Argentine, en Turquie, au Venezuela, l’incertitude au Brésil et en Chine et d’autres événements moins importants ont provoqué une certaine nervosité chez les investisseurs et déclenché une série de dévaluations monétaires sur les marchés émergents. S'agit-il d'une répétition de la crise asiatique de la fin des années 90 ou s'agit-il seulement d'un incident passager? Compte tenu de l’importance croissante des marchés émergents, pourraient-ils faire dérailler l’expansion économique mondiale? Comment le Maroc et la région MENA seront-ils affectés?
Modérateur : Ali Bouzerda, ancien directeur général de la MAP, et rédacteur en chef, Article 19.
Intervenant : Uri Dadush, Senior Fellow, OCP Policy Center.
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Uri Dadush
Uri Dadush is a Senior Fellow at the OCP Policy Center who focuses on International economics, trade and financial flows, migration, economic policy and governance, as well as a non-resident scholar at Bruegel, based in Washington, DC. He is also Principal of Economic Policy International, LLC, providing consulting services to the World Bank and to other international organizations as well as corporations. He teaches courses on globalization and on international trade policy at the OCP Policy School and at the School of Public Policy at the University of Maryland. Dadush works mainly on trends in the global economy and on how countries deal with the challenge of international integration through flows of trade, finance, and migration. His recent books include “WTO Accessions and Trade Multilateralism” (with Chiedu Osakwe, co-editor), “Juggernaut: How Emerging Markets Are Transforming Globalization” (with William Shaw), “Inequality in America” (with Kemal Dervis and others), “Currency Wars” (with Vera Eidelman, co-editor) and “Paradigm Lost: The Euro in Crisis.”
He was previously Director of the International Economics Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, and, at the World Bank, Director of International Trade, as well as Director of Economic Policy, and Director of the Development Prospects Group. Based previously in London, Brussels, and Milan, he spent 15 years in the private sector, where he was President of the Economist Intelligence Unit, Group Vice President of Data Resources, Inc., and a consultant with Mc Kinsey and Co. His columns have appeared in leading publications such as the Financial Times, the Wall Street Journal, Foreign Affairs, and L’Espresso.