The IMF is concerned
about global economic growth and considers the major risks to be the on-going
problems in Europe and the fiscal cliff in the US.
The article is in italics and the bold is mine. From Bloomberg.com
The IMF cut its global growth forecasts as the euro
area’s debt crisis intensifies and warned of even slower expansion unless
officials in the U.S. and Europe address threats to their economies.
“A key issue is whether the global economy is just hitting another
bout of turbulence in what was always expected to be a slow and bumpy recovery
or whether the current slowdown has a more lasting component,” the IMF said in
its World Economic Outlook report. “The answer depends on whether European and
U.S. policy makers deal proactively with their major short-term economic
challenges.”The world economy will grow 3.3 percent this year, the slowest
since the 2009 recession, and 3.6 percent next year, the IMF said today,
compared with July predictions of 3.5 percent in 2012 and 3.9 percent in 2013. The Washington-based lender now sees “alarmingly
high” risks of a steeper slowdown, with a one-in-six chance of growth slipping
below 2 percent.
The IMF’s 188 member countries convene in Tokyo this
week as low growth damped by fiscal consolidation in the richest economies
hurts developing counterparts from China to Brazil. As the IMF
urged measures to boost confidence, uncertainties out of Europe show
no sign of abating, with leaders still divided over a banking union
and Spain resisting a bailout.
“Confidence in the global financial system
remains exceptionally fragile,” the IMF said. “Bank lending has remained
sluggish across advanced economies” and increased risk aversion has damped
capital flows to emerging markets, it said. . . .
. . . . In Seoul, World Bank President Jim Yong Kim told a
forum today that he saw mildly encouraging signs in Europe. In Tokyo, IMF Chief
Economist Olivier Blanchard indicated that yields on Spanish
and Italian bonds, which decreased after the ECB’s bond-buying plan
announcement, could rise if the countries don’t request bailouts.
The IMF report called for U.S. policy makers to find an
alternative to planned automatic tax increases and spending cuts that would
trigger a recession. Europeans must follow on their commitments for a more
integrated monetary union, and many emerging markets can afford to cut interest
rates or pause tightening to fight off risks to their economies, the IMF
said.
The 17-country euro area economy will
contract 0.4 percent this year, 0.1 percentage point worse than forecast in
July, and grow 0.2 percent in 2013, less than the 0.7 percent predicted three
months ago, the IMF said.
The U.S. is seen expanding 2.2 percent this year, higher than an
earlier forecast, and growing 2.1 percent next year, less than previously
predicted. Japan’s estimate was cut to 2.2 percent this year and to 1.2
percent in 2013.
Spain’s economy will shrink 1.3 percent next year, 0.7 percentage
point worse than predicted in July. German growth is seen at 0.9 percent each
year, with the 2013 estimate half a percentage point less than previously
forecast.
“Spain and Italy must follow through with adjustment plans that
re-establish competitiveness and fiscal balance and maintain growth,” Blanchard
wrote in a foreword to the report. “To do so, they must be able to recapitalize
their banks without adding to their sovereign debt. And they must be able to
borrow at reasonable rates.”
Growth forecasts were also lowered
for emerging markets, where domestic factors add to external constraints,
the IMF said. Brazil had some of the steepest cuts, with growth seen at 1.5
percent this year from 2.5 percent and 4 percent next year.
India's economy may grow 4.9 percent this year and 6 percent
next year, lower than previous forecasts of 6.2 percent and 6.6 percent respectively.
China’s estimate was cut by 0.2 percentage point each year to 7.8 percent in
2012 and 8.2 percent in 2013.
Monetary policy should remain accommodative in developed
economies, with expectations for slower inflation giving the European Central
Bank “ample justification for keeping policy rates very low or cutting them
further,” the IMF said. The Bank of Japan may need to ease further,
it said.
Other risks to the global economic outlook in the short term
include a renewed increase in oil prices and an inability to raise
the U.S. debt ceiling, it said.
The IMF forecasts assume oil at $106.18 a barrel this year and
$105.10 next year, based on the average prices of U.K. Brent, Dubai and West
Texas Intermediate crude. That compares with estimates of $101.80 and $94.16 in
July.
In economic releases in the Asia Pacific region
today, Japan reported a larger-than-estimated 454.7 billion yen ($5.8 billion)
current-account surplus. In Australia, business confidence recovered
in September as the prospect of interest- rate reductions overshadowed weaker
sentiment among miners and manufacturers, a private survey showed.
In South Korea, the central bank said today that the nation’s
economy faces increased external risks and the finance ministry said
it will step up efforts to boost growth.
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