Which Emerging Markets Are Most Tied To China?

International Business Times

Published Apr 04, 2014 07:12AM ET

Which Emerging Markets Are Most Tied To China?

By Kathleen Caulderwood - Despite fears of an emerging market slowdown thanks to recently slowing growth in China, the International Monetary Fund is forecasting that they’re still set for growth, just not as fast as they may be used to.

“On a global level, the situation’s looking up,” said Barry Bosworth, global economics expert and former presidential advisor at the Brookings Institute. “They’ve taken a somewhat more optimistic tone. In the last couple of years reading the thing was just a big downer."

The report, parts of which were released Thursday, suggests that growth in emerging markets will continue despite a slowdown in Chinese demand.

“Positive external conditions provided emerging market economies with the opportunity to strengthen their economic policies and reforms,” the report reads. “But while growth may soften as those conditions unwind, it will remain strong.”

But certain emerging markets are more attached to China than others, and thus more sensitive to fluctuations in the Chinese economy.  Due to trade patterns, the fate of some countries is tied to China, while others are more correlated with the United States.

For example, Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, India, Indonesia, Thailand and Venezuela all show stronger ties to Chinese growth.