Emerging market: Difference between revisions

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Examples of emerging markets include Argentina, Turkey, Brazil, China and Malaysia.
Different organisations produce slightly different lists of countries within each of these categories.
 
Examples of emerging markets in MSCI's classification include - in alphabetical order - Brazil, Chile, China, Colombia and the Czech Republic.
 




==See also==
==See also==
*[[Advanced economies]]  (AEs)
*[[Brazil]]
*[[China]]
*[[Developed market]]
*[[Developing country]]
*[[Emerging currency]]
*[[Emerging currency]]
*[[Emerging market and developing economies]]  (EMDEs)
*[[EMTA]]
*[[EMTA]]
* [[Frontier market]]
* [[Frontier market]]
*[[International Bank for Reconstruction and Development]]
*[[International Bank for Reconstruction and Development]]
*[[Least developed countries]]  (LDCs)
*[[LICs]]
*[[LMICs]]
* [[Market]]
* [[Market]]
*[[MSCI]]
*[[United Nations Conference on Trade and Development]]
*[[United Nations Conference on Trade and Development]]
==Other resource==
*[https://www.msci.com/our-solutions/indexes/market-classification Market classifications - MSCI]


[[Category:The_business_context]]
[[Category:The_business_context]]

Latest revision as of 22:27, 23 July 2024

Market classification.

(EM).

A market which is intermediate between a developed market and a frontier market.

Markets (in order of economic development) are often classified as:

Developed;
Emerging;
Frontier;
Least Developing.


Different organisations produce slightly different lists of countries within each of these categories.

Examples of emerging markets in MSCI's classification include - in alphabetical order - Brazil, Chile, China, Colombia and the Czech Republic.


See also


Other resource