It’s become widely accepted when talking about emerging economies to focus on the so-called BRIC countries – Brazil, Russia, India and China. But there is a very important region that gets lost in that discussion.
And it’s a region that holds the key to growth opportunities that could eclipse the growth in the BRIC countries.
In fact, this region collectively has a bigger economy than Brazil, Russia or India already. And in terms of growth, it is growing faster than any of these countries. In terms of population, it’s bigger than the U.S. and nearly as populous the EU. It holds 60% of the world’s proven oil reserves and nearly half of its natural gas.
That last clue probably gives it away. I’m talking about the Middle East and North Africa, or MENA.
Among its largest economies are Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.
In one of my presentations at Agora Financial’s 10th Annual Investment Symposium in Vancouver, I focused on the growth in these economies because it touches on nearly everything we’ve talked about here recently – water and food scarcity issues, infrastructure needs, energy and the growth in non-U.S. trade. To start, let’s look at a couple of basic facts that push this along.
The first is explosive population growth. MENA is one of the fastest-growing regions in the world. Over the last 50 years, MENA’s population is up more than fourfold. And the population is still young, with the majority of the population under 25 years old. Over the next 30 years, MENA’s population will grow more than 60%, to nearly 700 million people.
The second is that trade is expanding in this part of the world, as I highlighted in last month’s letter. To show this in a different way, let’s look at Syria.
Yes, Syria. Long a pariah state with which the U.S. maintained frosty relations, all that is beginning to change. In July, the U.S. made a couple of announcements that I thought signaled an important shift. First, the U.S. would send an ambassador to Damascus after a four-year absence. Second, the U.S. would ease export bans to Syria.
But more important than this political thaw is the economic story. Syria has been a mercantile crossroads between East and West since its days as a link on the old Silk Road.
Put Your Money Where China Puts Theirs
The ancient city of Aleppo, for instance, was a key stop along the old Silk Road. Even today, it still has the longest covered market in the Middle East – a souk seven miles long. There you can find goods that take you back in history – soap made from olive oil or silk scarves and keffiyehs of a variety of colors. Head down an alleyway and find gold jewelry and stands of fresh pistachios and sacks of spices and more. Then there are the backstreets of hawkers with lamb – always plenty of lamb – and you smell the scent of lime, garlic and mint.
But much has changed, as Ben Simpfendorfer relates in The New Silk Road. Today, for the first time in 22 years, banks in Syria can set their own interest rates on loans and deposits. Today, you can change money on the street without the threat of a ball and chain winding up around your ankles. A stock market even opened for business in March.
The largest investor in the country is Haier, a Chinese company. It makes 50,000 washing machines and 50,000 microwave ovens in Syria every year. Another Chinese company, Sichuan Machinery Import & Export, recently completed a $180 million hydroelectric plant here. There are big real estate projects, including a new $300 million resort on the Syrian Mediterranean coast. There are some 40,000 new hotel beds coming online in the next three years – up from 48,000 currently. Tourism is already 13% of the economy.
Syria is basically following the “China model” of maintaining a closed political order but carving out free zones and allowing trade.
Of course, this isn’t some Big Rock Candy Mountain fantasy where the sun shines every day on the birds and the bees and the cigarette trees. There are all kinds of problems in Syria, and elsewhere, but I find the changes taking place so far absolutely remarkable.
In a sense, we’ve seen this movie before. Roger Owen wrote the classic study on the Middle East and its place in the economy. In his book, he covers the period 1800-1914. This was a time of growth and transformation. At least a few points are similar to today. Then, as now, the region experienced a huge population growth. The Middle East’s population alone grew 300%. Then, as now, trade grew even faster under a more liberalized economic regime.
Then, the Middle East benefited from growing demand for agricultural goods from European markets. Today, the region benefits from expanded trade with China and the rest of Asia for the region’s oil.
But that’s not to say that oil has solved the problems of the MENA countries…
Right now, these countries are looking to invest in farmland overseas. The Saudis have grabbed farmland in Indonesia. The UAE has locked down farmland in the Sudan and Pakistan. As Eckart Woertz of the Gulf Research Center in Dubai says: “In a global food crisis, you may find it difficult to secure food supplies at any price no matter how many oil revenues you have.”
When I got back home from Vancouver, there was an issue of The Economist waiting for me. It had a cover story on the Arab world titled “Waking From Its Sleep” and a 14-page special report within. What’s happening in this part of the world is starting to get more attention.
The key takeaway from all of this is to recognize this other, non-BRIC, growth engine and the needs and opportunities it creates. Once again, we’ll see enormous investment in food and water resources to feed and slake the thirst of all these people. And we’ll need all of the infrastructure and burn all of the hydrocarbons that come with that growth.
Sincerely,
Chris Mayer
August 26, 2009
Forget BRIC… These Emerging Economies Hold the New Keys to Growth was originally featured in the Tomorrow In Review.