Publication

Mar 2010

When the global financial crisis broke out in September 2008, it quickly became clear that developing countries would also be affected, but that the impacts would vary markedly. The Overseas Development Institute (ODI) coordinated a multi-country study over January-March 2009. This showed that, while the transmission mechanisms were similar in each (trade, private capital flows, remittances, aid), the effects varied by country, and much was not yet visible. As such, further country-specific monitoring was required. Most findings suggested that, as a result of time lags, the worst effects were yet to come. This synthesis of the effects of the global financial crisis on developing countries updates the description of the economic and social situation during the course of the crisis in 11 countries.

Download English (PDF, 77 pages, 1.0 MB)
Author Dirk Willem te Velde, Medani M Ahmed, Getnet Alemu, Lawrence Bategeka, Massimiliano Calí, Carlos Castel-Branco, Frank Chansa, Shouro Dasgupta, Marta Foresti, M Hangi, Lutangu Ingombe, Ashiq Iqbal, Hossein Jalilian, Luis Carlos Jemio, François Kabuya Kalala, Jodie Keane, Jane Kennan, Towfiqul Islam Khan, H B Lunogelo, Isabella Massa, A Mbilinyi, Dale Mudenda, Francis M. Mwega, Manenga Ndulo, Osvaldo Nina, Rodério Ossemane, Mustafizur Rahman, Glenda Reyes, Sarah Ssewanyana, Leni Wild
Series ODI Working Papers
Issue 316
Publisher Overseas Development Institute (ODI)
Copyright © 2010 Overseas Development Institute (ODI)
JavaScript has been disabled in your browser