Between Brazil's political corruption scandal, Russia being its normal self, India - possibly facing a leader with diminished power, pending the outcome of elections:
Gunned Down: The Wild Lawless State That Could Break Modi's India - Bloomberg Business
South Africa, who has never fit the BRICS mold and China who's slowdown isn't looking too good right now, I can't help but think the "if" part is being taken seriously in BRICS nations.
Looking back at that article and your lead, what comes to mind now? Has BRICS taken any steps to mitigate their troubles? I haven't really seen any action apart from China, but the effectiveness of its actions are debatable too ( such as its market intervention, only to see stocks completely erase 2015 gains and its backtracking on some pledges to liberalize their economy. Also the devaluation of the RMB when Chinese exports weren't facing a competitiveness problem, the problem was demand).
If anything, in just two months since that article was written, things have gotten worse.
If this post seems China-centric, that's because China has a disproportionate influence among the BRICS. While each BRICS case has its own specific proximal causes, I always fall back on the following post earlier in the thread:
Emerging and Frontier Markets: Economic and Geopolitical Analysis
The common theme tying the BRICS together is the lack of strong institutions (widespread corruption in all, lack of rule of law in Russia, India, China, and South Africa, weak regulatory and judicial controls, etc.), which leaves them unable to adapt and execute policy efficiently in order to deal with the change in the economic cycle. Most are flailing, and Xi Jingping has been railing against the vested interests which are fighting back against his reform efforts.
In addition, most of the BRICS outside of China were not diversified enough, and passively relied on the booming commodity trade with China to power their economies. Now that China is slowing and commodity prices are crashing, so does the primary engine of growth for the BRICS. And until or unless India substitutes for that demand, this engine of growth is unlikely to restart soon. As your article points out, India's case is quite complicated, and there is little prospect of India fulfilling that role in the near or even medium term.
The Headwinds Facing China
So what ails China? Clearly, that's a matter of intense debate, and I only reluctantly discuss this in a PDF thread (although there are several other threads where PDF denizens are flailing in an attempt to answer this question, or deny that China even has a problem).
That said, in abstract, you have already expertly identified the issue: it's lack of domestic demand. China's consumption as a percent of GDP is approximately 36% vs. 68% in the US (
World Bank). Consumers are repressed by the government in favor of other growth factors, namely investment and exports. The Brookings Institute has a nice write-up about the rebalancing effort that is necessary for China, but the trend does not provide much hope:
The path to sustainable growth in China | Brookings Institution
China has driven the investment- and export-led growth model to its logical end, with over-investment in capacity outstripping demand, leading to a rapid debt build up:
BlackRock: Soaring Chinese debt a major concern - Business Insider
Blackrock:
“China has been taking on increasing amounts of debt to maintain growth. Yet it has been getting less bang for its yuan as growth has edged down. Credit growth is not just losing its potency; it is turning into a poison. Debt is growing faster than borrowers’ ability to service it. The resulting debt mountain stood at $28.2 trillion at the end of 2014, according to a McKinsey report. The debt cannot be rolled over indefinitely. China’s debt-to-GDP ratio has reached almost 300%. Government debt makes up a relatively small share of the total, with the bulk in the corporate sector”.
It's also worth reading this Reuters article explaining the dangers, but I will include the top-line summary here.
CORRECTED-Manage, meddle or magnify? China's corporate debt threat| Reuters
* China's corporate debt 160 pct of GDP, twice U.S. level
* Estimated to climb 77 pct to $28.8 tln over five years
* Increased bank lending not going to most profitable areas
* Manufacturers' loan to core profit ratio rising sharply
* Loan quality, pricing compromised by 'open credit taps'
China has been able to sustain this model for decades because of the demographic dividend it enjoyed (an increasing labor pool migrating to urban centers to provide cheap labor), favorable trade conditions (China opened up to the world in the age of GATT, WTO, and widespread tariff elimination), and the strong desire of advanced economies to offshore their manufacturing sectors in order to increase profit margins. All of these factors are coming to an end.
Declining demographics leading to wage pressures:
The End of Cheap Labor- Finance & Development, June 2013
World trade volume growth appears to be permanently impaired:
WTO | 2015 Press Releases - <!--WTH:INSERT_TITLE-->Modest trade recovery to continue in 2015 and 2016 following three years of weak expansion <!--/WTH:INSERT_TITLE--> - Press/<!--WTH:INSERT_COUNTER-->739<!--/WTH:INSERT_COUNTER-->
Re-shoring appears to be the new fad:
Record number of manufacturing jobs returning to America - MarketWatch
Xi Jinping's Reform Program
The CCP leadership is a largely professional and experienced group, and is aware of these issues. That's why Xi attempted to implement his market-based reform program to tackle the debt-misallocation problem and adjust the growth model from investment- and export-led model to a consumption-led model. He thought the best way to carry this out would be to purge those political enemies who opposed his vision, and present it as an anti-corruption drive in order to generate the political capital necessary to execute painful and unpopular policies. We know what happened with the real estate bubble, the stock market bubble, and the inept RMB devaluation. It's not working out so well, but that's because Xi is treating the symptoms, not the cause. To close the circle, the driver of imbalances in the Chinese economy is lack of domestic demand.
How to Generate Demand
As much as it pains me to say this, some form of social safety net is necessary in order to allow the citizenry to open the purse strings and spend, rather than desperately save and essentially self-insure against unemployment or medical bankruptcy. An old article, but it illustrates how much was promised and how much remains to be done:
China hopes social safety net will push its citizens to consume more, save less
Aside from the individual benefits, there is a larger economic imperative to the new social programs. The country's leaders want to persuade Chinese citizens to spend more and save less, a goal that analysts say could be achieved if the government provided a safety net. Increasing domestic consumption would decrease China's reliance on the American and European export markets for its growth -- a goal also being pushed by Washington and China's other Western trading partners.
The key reason Chinese save so much and consume so little, experts say, is because without dependable government payments, they need to sock away money for the future -- for medical emergencies, for children's educational expenses, as a guarantee against a job loss or to help elderly parents.
That results in China's infamous high savings rate:
Tinkering with open capital accounts, interest rate liberalization, or inclusion of the RMB in the IMF's SDR program does nothing to address China's domestic demand problem.
Because the CCP is so opaque, it's difficult to know if Xi tried and failed, or only went through the motions of trying to implement reforms as a cover for his program of purging political rivals. But until China seriously tackles the demand issue, China will remain at the mercy of other countries' appetite for Chinese exports.
Russia
Seeing Russia destroy foreign food imports leads me to believe that no amount of suffering on the part of the Russian citizenry will dissuade them from supporting Putin's program of rebuilding Russian glory. Hence, the economy is a secondary consideration, so there's little reason to analyze it more deeply.
Brazil
Corruption and the end of the commodity boom. Not much more to say.
South Africa
Same as Brazil, but the factionalism and racialist politics makes a turnaround difficult to expect.
India
As you pointed out with your article, India's fractured political system has stymied Modi's reform program. This is both a blessing and a curse: a blessing, because the autonomy available to each Indian state means that visionary local politicians can implement their own version of the Gujarat model, and effect an economic turnaround. It's a curse because the central government can play only a marginal role in helping India reform and move forward. That said, I've been impressed by Modi's salesmanship and his attempt to turn lemons into lemonade with his "Make in India" program, which appears to be
yielding dividends, although the jury is still out:
India’s foreign investment data looks great—but the problem is with India Inc - Quartz
Also fortunate for India, if we can say that, is that it still has the investment lever available to it. India's infrastructure is sub-par, so intensive capital investment can produce quick results for the Indian economy, even if other thorny issues like GST reform continue to face delays.
Conclusion
While we focus on the BRICS, the truth is that the entire emerging market cohort has been too complacent in implementing economic reforms. From Malaysia's protectionism to Turkey's stubborn current account deficit and addiction to dollar-denominated debt, there is much to be done to ensure that the emerging markets reinforce their economies and make them more resilient against the economic cycles of the G-7.
To answer your question, I do not think that the emerging markets have taken these issues seriously, or done enough to rectify them. Therefore, we can expect a lot of pain in emerging markets as developed markets recover (see my post earlier today about the mass devaluations in EM currencies) and serve as a magnet for capital seeking low-risk, steady returns protected by robust legal systems.