Emerging Markets
What Is An Emerging Market? Not The UK

Contrary to some headlines, the UK is not heading for "emerging market" status, and here's why.
As the August holidays kick in and the industry catches its
breath, this pithy piece of commentary caught our eye.
Entertainingly entitled, "Is the UK headed for emerging market
status?", associate director at London-based financial risk
consultancy JC
Rathbone Associates and author of the piece, Joshua
Roberts, explains in numerous ways why this is "arrant nonsense."
We enjoyed reading it, and hope you do too. (The usual editorial
disclaimers apply).
There is a growing fashion amongst economic pundits for claiming
that the UK is starting to behave like an emerging market. In
more level-headed times, it would go without saying that this is
arrant nonsense. And yet with level-headedness being less prized
than it used to be, the idea has gained traction. So how far
wrong is it? Let me count the ways.
We may not have a precise definition for an emerging market, but
there are some easily identifiable shared characteristics.
Lower-than-average income per capita, faster-than-average
economic growth, currency volatility and issuance of government
debt in foreign currencies are all good empirical metrics. On the
“softer” side, you might also include political instability,
dependence on exporting to China and the degree to which the
country’s central bank imitates the actions of the Federal
Reserve.
How well do these characteristics describe the UK? By any
objective assessment, very poorly indeed. Start with the hard
numbers. The World Bank defines developing countries as those
with income per capita of less than $4,035. The UK’s figure is
more than ten times that. Meanwhile, economic growth may have
confounded expectations following the 2016 referendum, but – to
put it mildly – the stats are way short of the high single digits
achieved in 2018 by the likes of Egypt, Poland, Bolivia, China,
India, Vietnam and Malaysia. And, while the UK government does
hold a small amount of foreign currency debt, it is a fraction of
that held by (for instance) Argentina. Three quarters of UK
government debt is owed to domestic investors.
What about the softer factors? The impact of Chinese growth, or
any lack thereof, is difficult to quantify. But the fact that UK
exports to China account for only 3.6 per cent of the total
suggests a fair level of independence. As for the question of
whether the Bank of England is obliged to mimic the Federal
Reserve’s monetary policy decisions, the experience of the last
four years has settled it in the negative.
On to political instability, then. With hysteria being the order
of the day at most news outlets, this one seems more applicable.
According to certain headlines, the UK government has just
suffered a coup by a cabal of far-right, anti-establishment
ideologues who are seeking to abolish the British state in favour
of something like the feudal system. Admittedly, it is a funny
sort of coup that installs a leader elected by his party members,
who then immediately begins preparations for a general election
in order to obtain a wider democratic mandate. And it is a funny
sort of far-right Cabinet that immediately pledges an additional
£1.8 billion of spending on the NHS.
In fact, the only area in which the comparison to any emerging
market looks remotely valid is the volatility of the pound’s
exchange rate. It is beyond argument that sterling has had a
torrid few years by the standards of a G10 currency, and in
recent weeks it has taken a particular hammering. Again, though,
some context is needed. From its pre-referendum peak to the lows
seen in January 2017, the pound depreciated against the US dollar
by around 19 per cent. From June 2016 to the present day, the
similar trough-to-peak change for the euro was a little over 20
per cent. Over the same period, true emerging market currencies
(think of the Turkish Lira or the Argentine Peso) posted
peak-to-trough changes of up to 70 per cent.
None of this is intended to suggest that smooth sailing is ahead
for the UK economy. With less than three months to go before we
reset our relationship with our largest trading partner, the
timbre of that reset is still unclear. There is bound to be
turbulence ahead. But the comparison with emerging markets is
misjudged, damaging, and discourteous to citizens of economies
that are facing more severe challenges than ours.