5 biggest geopolitical threats

3
5 Big Geopolitical Risks for 2015 Critical events of early 2015 — cheap oil and Middle East violence — will probably continue to take their toll as the year goes on, according to a new projection of geopolitical hotspots. Lower overall prices for commodities may hurt the economies of resource-rich nation. Aon Risk Solutions, a unit of Aon Plc, today issued its annual Political Risk Map, intended to provide the British insurer's clients with answers to common questions about where it’s getting safer, and more dangerous, to do business. There isn't a lot of good news. Just seven of 163 developing countries reduced their political risk since last year, and most of those, like Zimbabwe and Laos, still have plenty of room for improvement. Twelve countries face greater strain this year, including Libya, Haiti, and Pakistan. “The last 12 months have just been catastrophic country-risk-wise,” said Curtis Ingram, vice president of the political-risk practice. It’s almost like “a vacuum has opened up and a lot of bad actors have moved in,” in Crimea and Eastern Ukraine, Nigeria, Iraq, and elsewhere. Aon and research partner Roubini Global Economics, founded by the economist Nouriel Roubini, evaluate each nation across nine categories of risk, such as foreign currency exchange and capital conditions, law and regulation, and political interference and violence. The report considers only developing nations; members of the Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD) together form the baseline for the research and are therefore excluded. Here are five of the things the report says we should keep an eye on in the months ahead.

Upload: geezoo96

Post on 30-Sep-2015

220 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

geopolicy

TRANSCRIPT

  • 5 Big Geopolitical Risks for 2015

    Critical events of early 2015 cheap oil and Middle East violence will

    probably continue to take their toll as the year goes on, according to a new

    projection of geopolitical hotspots. Lower overall prices for commodities may

    hurt the economies of resource-rich nation.

    Aon Risk Solutions, a unit of Aon Plc, today issued its annual Political Risk Map,

    intended to provide the British insurer's clients with answers to common

    questions about where its getting safer, and more dangerous, to do business.

    There isn't a lot of good news. Just seven of 163 developing countries reduced

    their political risk since last year, and most of those, like Zimbabwe and Laos,

    still have plenty of room for improvement. Twelve countries face greater strain

    this year, including Libya, Haiti, and Pakistan.

    The last 12 months have just been catastrophic country-risk-wise, said Curtis

    Ingram, vice president of the political-risk practice. Its almost like a vacuum

    has opened up and a lot of bad actors have moved in, in Crimea and Eastern

    Ukraine, Nigeria, Iraq, and elsewhere.

    Aon and research partner Roubini Global Economics, founded by the economist

    Nouriel Roubini, evaluate each nation across nine categories of risk, such as

    foreign currency exchange and capital conditions, law and regulation, and

    political interference and violence. The report considers only developing

    nations; members of the Organization for Economic Co-Operation and

    Development (OECD) together form the baseline for the research and are

    therefore excluded.

    Here are five of the things the report says we should keep an eye on in the

    months ahead.

    [email protected]

    [email protected]

    [email protected]

  • Russia

    Low oil prices and international sanctions stemming from the Ukraine conflict

    have taken their toll on the Russian economy. The murder last week of Boris

    Nemtsov, an opposition leader and Yeltsin-era deputy prime minister not

    mentioned in the report but a dark omen has exacerbated internal political

    tensions.

    Russias instability will continue to cast a shadow over the region, according

    to the political risk report, which projects consequent hardships for trading

    partners Belarus and Kazakhstan. Researchers see a possible frozen conflict

    and continued sanctions in Ukraine, unlikely to be resolved in the months

    ahead.

    Oil and other commodities

    Russia, Venezuela and Iran have drawn much of the attention, and punishment,

    from the oil glut. Its also a problem for smaller powers, such as Uzbekistan and

    Turkmenistan, whose fragile foreign currency exchange and capital policies

    leave them vulnerable to trade shocks. Mining- and energy-heavy nations in

    Africa Angola, Cameroon, Congo, and Nigeria all face weaker incomes and

    likely spending cuts.

    Conflict and violence

    The horrors of Islamic State in Syria and Iraq, and Boko Haram in Nigeria, are

    top threats to regional stability. Porous borders and immature civic institutions

    in parts of the Middle East and Africa make nations there particularly sensitive

    to violence.

  • Interest rates

    Even modest interest-rate increases by the Fed will intensify the

    global competition for capital and make it costlier to service external debt.

    The Middle East and North Africa

    Countries such as Egypt, Tunisia, and Morocco should see a boost from the oil

    price drop, the report's authors suggest. Yet all three countries, rated either high

    or very high risks, face countervailing security risks from what the report calls

    power vacuums in Iraq, Libya and Syria.

    There's also everywhere else. Private insurers have offered political risk

    coverage for several decades, to help companies take some of the edge off doing

    business in new and emerging markets. But, like most of us, the problems of

    these places like to travel. Turkey and Mexico, for example, may be particularly

    politically or economically vulnerable to tumult in the Middle East and Latin

    America. But as OECD members, they pose risks that arent addressed in the

    report.