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Speed of the essence in Asia's new financial corona-contagion

Asian economies are at terrible risk from capital outflows. Australia, China and Japan must step up quickly to organise multilateral financial support for them.

Chatib Basri, Peter Drysdale and Adam Triggs
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    A surge of financial crises across emerging economies has already begun. Ecuador and Zambia have been the first to default. Argentina has postponed negotiations with creditors, Turkey looks more and more vulnerable and the International Institute of Finance warns that South Africa is next. Collapses in exchange rates are an indication of who might follow. Brazil, Russia and Mexico are at the top of the list.

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    Chatib Basri is an Indonesian economist and was the nation's minister of finance in 2013-2014.
    Peter Drysdale is emeritus professor of economics and head of the East Asian Bureau of Economic Research and East Asia Forum at the Crawford School of Public Policy at the Australian National University.
    Adam Triggs is director of research of the Asian Bureau of Economic Research at the Crawford School of Public Policy, The Australian National University, and a non-resident fellow in the Global Economy and Development program, Brookings Institution. Connect with Adam on Twitter.

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      Original URL: https://www.afr.com/world/asia/speed-of-the-essence-in-asia-s-new-financial-corona-contagion-20200407-p54htl