In the 1970s, "less developed countries" (LDCs) was the common term for markets that were less "developed" (by objective or subjective measures) than the developed countries such as the United States, Japan, and those in
Western Europe. These markets were supposed to provide greater potential for profit but also more risk from various factors like
patent infringement. This term was replaced by
emerging market. The term is misleading in that there is no guarantee that a country will move from "less developed" to "more developed"; although that is the general trend in the world, countries can also move from "more developed" to "less developed". Originally coined in 1981 by then
World Bank economist Antoine Van Agtmael, the term is sometimes loosely used as a replacement for
emerging economies, but really signifies a business phenomenon that is not fully described or constrained by such; these countries are considered to be in a transitional phase between
developing and
developed status. Examples of emerging markets include many countries in Africa, most countries in Eastern Europe, some countries of Latin America, some countries in the Middle East, Russia and some countries in Southeast Asia. Emphasizing the fluid nature of the category, political scientist
Ian Bremmer defines an emerging market as "a country where politics matters at least as much as economics to the markets". The research on emerging markets is diffused within
management literature. While researchers such as
George Haley,
Vladimir Kvint,
Hernando de Soto,
Usha Haley, and several professors from
Harvard Business School and
Yale School of Management have described activity in countries such as India and China, how a market emerges is now well understood and can easily be modeled. In 2009, Kvint published this definition: "an emerging market country is a society transitioning from a dictatorship to a free-market-oriented-economy, with increasing economic freedom, gradual integration with the Global Marketplace and with other members of the GEM (Global Emerging Market), an expanding middle class, improving standards of living, social stability and tolerance, as well as an increase in cooperation with multilateral institutions" In 2008 Emerging Economy Report, the Center for Knowledge Societies defines
emerging economies as those "regions of the world that are experiencing rapid informationalization under conditions of limited or partial
industrialisation". It appears that emerging markets lie at the intersection of non-traditional user behavior, the rise of new user groups and community adoption of products and services, and innovations in product technologies and platforms. More critical scholars have also studied key emerging markets like Mexico and Turkey. Thomas Marois (2012, 2) argues that financial imperatives have become much more significant and has developed the idea of 'emerging finance capitalism' – an era wherein the collective interests of financial capital principally shape the logical options and choices of government and state elites over and above those of labor and popular classes. Julien Vercueil recently proposed an pragmatic definition of the "emerging economies", as distinguished from "emerging markets" coined by an approach heavily influenced by financial criteria. According to his definition, an emerging economy displays the following characteristics: • Intermediate income: its PPP per capita income is comprised between 10% and 75% of the average EU per capita income. • Catching-up growth: during at least the last decade, it has experienced a brisk economic growth that has narrowed the income gap with advanced economies. • Institutional transformations and economic opening: during the same period, it has undertaken profound institutional transformations which contributed to integrate it more deeply into the world economy. Hence, emerging economies appears to be a by-product of the current globalization. At the beginning of the 2010s, more than 50 countries, representing 60% of the world's population and 45% of its GDP, matched these criteria. along with
BRICET (BRIC + Eastern Europe and Turkey),
BRICS (BRIC + South Africa),
BRICM (BRIC + Mexico), MINT (a term coined by
Jim O'Neill to describe Mexico, Indonesia, Nigeria and Turkey),
Next Eleven (Bangladesh, Egypt, Indonesia, Iran, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, the Philippines, South Korea, Turkey, and Vietnam) and
CIVETS (Colombia, Indonesia, Vietnam, Egypt, Turkey and South Africa). These countries do not share any common agenda, but some experts believe that they are enjoying an increasing role in the world economy and on political platforms. Lists of emerging (or developed) markets vary; guides may be found in such investment information sources as
EMIS (a Euromoney Institutional Investor Company),
The Economist, or market index makers (such as
MSCI). In an Opalesque.TV video,
hedge fund manager Jonathan Binder discusses the current and future relevance of the term "emerging markets" in the financial world. Binder says that in the future investors will not necessarily think of the traditional classifications of "
G10" (or
G7) versus "emerging markets". Instead, people should look at the world as countries that are fiscally responsible and countries that are not. Whether that country is in Europe or in South America should make no difference, making the traditional "
blocs" of categorization irrelevant. Guégan
et al. (2014) also discuss the relevance of the terminology "emerging country" comparing the credit worthiness of so-called emerging countries to so-called developed countries. According to their analysis, depending on the criteria used, the term may not always be appropriate. The 10
Big Emerging Markets (BEM) economies are (alphabetically ordered): Argentina, Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, Mexico, Poland, South Africa, South Korea and Turkey. Egypt, Iran, Nigeria, Pakistan, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Taiwan, and Thailand are
other major emerging markets. Analysis of the top ten wealthiest nations in 2025 indicates that several of these major emerging economies, particularly in the Middle East, continue to lead in terms of GDP per capita.
Newly industrialized countries are emerging markets whose economies have not yet reached developed status but have, in a macroeconomic sense, outpaced their developing counterparts. Investing in emerging markets dates back to at least the mid-1800s, with the establishment of Foreign and Colonial Investment Trust which still trades on the
London Stock Exchange under the symbol FCIT as of 2014. While European stocks dominated the globe when measured by
market capitalization and the
British Empire was the leading international superpower, FCIT invested heavily in North and South America which then largely qualified as emerging markets. while
John Templeton in the 1950s and '60s was one of the earliest American investors to devote significant attention to emerging market stocks. Individual investors today can invest in emerging markets by buying into emerging markets or global funds. If they want to pick single stocks or make their own bets they can do it either through ADRs (American depositor Receipts – stocks of foreign companies that trade on US stock exchanges) or through exchange traded funds (exchange traded funds or ETFs hold basket of stocks). The exchange traded funds can be focused on a particular country (e.g., China, India) or region (e.g., Asia-Pacific, Latin America). == Emerged market ==