In recent months, a fearful narrative has taken hold in international financial circles: Rising U.S. interest rates are boosting the dollar, forcing cheaper currencies and higher import costs onto economies already struggling with skyrocketing energy and food prices. To keep the lid on soaring inflation, foreign central banks must further tighten their own monetary policies, pushing the world into global recession. Moreover, higher U.S. interest rates and a stronger dollar are putting special pressure on emerging market economies (EMEs), which must buy dollars to repay their dollar debts with ever-cheaper local currencies.
These narratives, scary as they are, frequently appear below even scarier headlines:
“How the surging U.S. dollar is making it almost impossible to afford anything in countries around the world.” (Fortune, Oct. 18)
“Fallout From Rate Moves Won’t Stop the Fed.” (New York Times, Oct. 7)
“The Fed has the world in its hands — and its aggressive moves are creating global economic chaos that could come back and hurt the US.” (Business Insider, Oct. 1)
There is more than a grain of truth in these concerns. A rising dollar is one of the channels through which U.S. monetary policy tightening helps cool the economy, and this inevitably involves exporting a certain amount of our inflation to other economies. It is also true that, historically, tighter Fed policies have meant bad news for EMEs: plunging currencies, rising credit spreads and disruptive capital outflows. Those effects have been especially pronounced at times when the Fed was reacting to rising inflation (e.g., the early 1980s) rather than to solid U.S. economic growth (the mid-2000s).
But much of the current discussion exaggerates the role of Fed tightening and dollar appreciation in darkening prospects for the world economy. First, contrary to the impression conveyed by many commentators, the Fed has not been exceptionally aggressive in its response to rising inflation. Central banks in many countries (including Brazil, Chile, Colombia, the Czech Republic, Mexico, Peru, Poland and the United Kingdom) started tightening monetary policy before the Fed, and most of them raised rates by a great deal more. Countries with larger increases in core inflation (excluding food and energy) generally implemented larger increases in interest rates — the Fed’s response to inflation has been very much in line with that relationship.
Second, the strong dollar is putting less pressure on EMEs than is generally believed. Most discussions of this issue focus on the dollar’s value against the currencies of the advanced economies. Even after giving up some of its gains in the past week, this is up about 15 percent since the beginning of 2021, based on Federal Reserve data.
By contrast, the value of the dollar against the currencies of our EME trading partners is up only about 8 percent over the same period. This smaller rise in the dollar against the EMEs translates into a smaller rise in their debt burden. Indeed, so far this year, most of the major EMEs have held up reasonably well. Credit spreads over U.S. Treasuries on dollar debt owed by EMEs, a good measure of the market’s assessment of their creditworthiness, have widened on average but generally remain with historical ranges.
To be sure, especially fragile economies, such as Sri Lanka, Pakistan and Argentina, are experiencing more dire debt problems, but these largely reflect their own fundamental imbalances and, in any event, are unlikely to drag the global economy into recession.
Finally, the role of the strong dollar in boosting inflation abroad has been exaggerated. Because nearly all currencies have fallen against the dollar, each foreign economy’s “multilateral exchange rate” (that is, its average exchange rate against all its trading partners) has fallen by much less than its “bilateral” rate against the dollar.
Indeed, out of 31 of the world’s major currencies, all but one (the Russian ruble) fell against the dollar since the beginning of 2021, but more than a third of them actually appreciated in multilateral terms.
In consequence, the foreign economies experienced smaller increases in import costs and thus consumer prices than would be implied by the depreciations of their currencies against the dollar alone. (In addition to imports from the United States, commodity prices such as oil are also invoiced in dollars, but their prices generally fall when the dollar rises.) And this means that foreign central banks have had to tighten monetary policy by less.
Summing up, the rise in the dollar poses challenges for the global economy, but those challenges should not be overstated. A narrow focus on the strong dollar underplays what are undoubtedly the more salient forces pushing the world economy toward recession: elevated energy and food costs; energy shortages, especially in Europe, resulting from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine; soaring inflation rates prompting central banks around the world to tighten monetary policy; China’s growth-strangling zero-COVID policy; and economic scarring and debt buildups left as the legacy of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Steven Kamin is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), where he studies international macroeconomic and financial issues.