International Economic Week In Review For Aug. 17-22

 | Aug 23, 2015 03:53AM ET

The most important overarching story of the week was the emerging market capital flight, which is occurring at startling pace:

Total net capital outflows from the 19 largest EM economies reached $940.2bn in the 13 months to the end of July, almost double the net $480bn that flowed out during three quarters of the 2008-09 financial crisis, according to a compilation of official data and estimates by NN Investment Partners, an investment bank.

The exodus leading to internal problems.

  • The real’s drop has complicated an already difficult macro and political situation in Brazil.
  • EM sell-offs have put pressure on the respective central banks.
  • Currencies that may follow the yuan lower.
  • Japanese 2Q15 GDP was a big disappointment.On an annual basis, the top line contracted 1.6%. But private consumption was down 3% annually. Although consumer’s inflation expectations are rising, this increase isn’t translating into an acceleration of purchases. Exports contracted 16.5%, throwing cold water on the BOJ’s yen devaluation strategy.The only good point was an 8% annual increase in residential construction: