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October 28th, 2008 at 9:16 pm

India Tops Asia-Pacific Political Risk Survey

India, Malaysia and Thailand face the highest political and social risk among Asia-Pacific countries in 2009, mainly because of internal instability, a political risk consultancy said.

India’s highest risk score of 6.87 on a scale of 10 also reflected fears over Pakistan, the Hong Kong- based Political & Economic Risk Consultancy (Perc) said in a report, warning of social unrest and insecurity if things worsened in the neighbouring nation.

The consultancy assessed 16 countries on factors such as the risk of disruptive political change, the threat posed by social activism and vulnerability to policy changes by other governments.
Asia Pacific political risk 2008 PERC

Source: PERCGrades are scaled from zero to 10, with zero representing the best situation possible and 10 the worst.

Contributing to India’s high score was uncertainty over the outcome of general elections next year, rising communal violence and increased militant attacks, Perc said in the report released on Monday.

‘India, Thailand and Malaysia are not so much vulnerable to negative fallout from the global financial crisis as they are to factors that are mainly internal,’ Robert Broadfoot, managing director of Perc, told Reuters.

‘For these countries, the coming global economic storm is only going to make a bad situation worse,’ he said.

‘India’s underlying attractions to foreign investors should remain no matter who wins the next election,’ the report said.

Thailand is the second riskiest country in Asia for 2009 with a score of 6.28, as the current political turmoil threatens to drag into 2009 and is eroding the country’s key institutions.

The consultancy projected Thailand’s worst case scenario to be if the King of Thailand dies before the turmoil is resolved.

As for Malaysia, the third riskiest in the region, the report said that the struggle for political power was aggravating racial and religious tensions.

Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore and Australia were ranked most stable and low in political risk for 2009 even though their economies are likely to be hurt by the global financial crisis, Perc said. Source – Reuters

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