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Are we about to hit a BRIC wall?

As the debate about the decline of the West reaches feverish proportions, should we really still believe the BRIC hysteria?

March 31, 2011 10:40
Great wall of China? George Magnus, UBS senior economic adviser, questions China’s future global position

By

Candice Krieger,

Candice Krieger

4 min read

China and other emerging markets have been the big success story of the past decade, outperforming developed markets and leading many to predict that China will be next global superpower. So as the debate about the decline of the West and rise of the BRICs (Brazil, Russia, India and China) reaches feverish proportions, should we really still believe the BRIC hysteria?

George Magnus, the senior economic adviser at UBS, doesn't think so.

Mr Magnus, one of just a handful of people correctly to predict the financial crisis in early 2007, says: "There's no question you can make money from the BRIC growth story, and if you don't like the exposure to local companies and governance, there are plenty of Western companies which will benefit from it. But investors need to be more aware than ever that significant economic and political changes are afoot with often quite unpredictable outcomes."

The 61-year-old compares such changes with the current unrest in the Middle East and North Africa. "The uprising across the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) doesn't feel or look like the unequivocally positive world-changing events associated with the collapse of communism in 1989. Yet, it too will change the region and the world, but in political and existential ways that are impossible to predict. Small wonder that financial markets are wrestling with considerable uncertainty: they don't like rising oil prices, political instability and possible contagion risks to other emerging countries, especially where autocratic governments rule and corruption is widespread.

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