The International Monetary Fund
(IMF) has downgraded its world economic growth forecast yet again and warned of
a backlash against cross-border economic integration in richer countries.
In its latest World Economic
Outlook, the organization said Tuesday that it now saw the global economy
growing by only 3.2 percent this year — 0.2 percentage points down on its
January forecast, 0.4 percentage points lower than its estimate from October
2015 and 0.6 percent points down on its forecast from July.
It also cut its global growth
estimate for 2017 to 3.5 percent, down from the 3.6 percent forecast in
January.
Managing Director of the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) Christine Lagarde: "Global growth
continues, but at an increasingly disappointing pace that leaves the world
economy more exposed to negative risks. Growth has been too slow for too
long," IMF Chief Economist Maurice Obstfeld told a media conference on
Tuesday, according to prepared remarks.
The IMF downgraded the outlook for
all major advanced economies, including the U.S., Canada, the euro area, the
U.K. and Japan.
The U.S. is now seen expanding by
2.4 percent this year, rather than the 2.6 percent forecast in January. The IMF
said U.S. domestic demand would be supported by strengthening balance sheets,
the decline in fiscal drag and an improving housing market. This was expected
to offset the downward push from a strong dollar and weaker manufacturing on
net exports.
'Humanitarian
crisis'
Obstfeld said both the U.S. and
Europe faced a backlash at home against international economic integration — as
seen in the rise of euroskeptic parties in the European Union (EU) and the
isolationist policies of some U.S. presidential candidates. This trend
threatened to halt or reverse 70 years of increasingly open trade, he warned.
The EU's open borders between member
countries were also under threat, Obstfeld added, due to both economic
pressures and the influx of refugees from the Middle East.
"Continuing violent instability
in a number of countries, notably Syria, continues to crater their economies,
driving millions of refugees to surrounding countries as well as to Europe.
This is a humanitarian disaster," the economist said at the conference.
"It has challenged the European
Union's capacity to preserve open internal borders and as the incidence of
terrorism has increased, the strains have only grown. Coupled with other,
economic, pressures, the result in Europe has been a rising tide of
inward-looking nationalism."
He said one manifestation of this
was the possibility the U.K. might vote to leave the EU in the referendum the
country is holding in June 23. This would damage a wide range of trade and
investment relations, Obstfeld said.
The U.K. Chancellor of the
Exchequer, who is in favor of the U.K. remaining part of the EU responded to
the IMF report on Tuesday. "Well
today we have a stark warning from the IMF. For the first time they're saying
that the threat of Britain leaving EU is having an impact on our economy and
they cut our growth forecast as a result," George Osborne said in an
emailed statement. "They say were
we actually to leave the EU there would be a short-term impact on stability and
a long-term cost to the economy."
The IMF cut the 2016 growth outlook
for both the euro area and the U.K. on Tuesday by 0.2 percentage points.
The 19 economies that use the euro
currency are now seen growing by an average of 1.5 percent this year, while the
U.K. economy is seen expanding by 1.9 percent.
EM
gloom - The Washington-D.C. based organization also turned more bearish on many
emerging and low-income countries. Some of the countries suffering the biggest
growth downgrades were oil exporters.
Nigeria is now seen growing by 2.3
percent in 2016, 1.8 percentage points less than the 4.1 percent forecast by
the IMF in January.
Russia's economy is now to shrink by
1.8 percent, rather than the 1.0 percent forecast at the start of the year.
Brazil, which is mired in a stiff
recession, is seen shrinking by 3.8 percent, as it did in 2015.
"Several large emerging market
economies face deep contractions due to internal political strife or
geopolitical pressures and a number of low-income countries suffer El
Nino-related drought or flooding. The costs could escalate," Obstfeld
said.
http://www.cnbc.com/2016/04/12/imf-slashes-world-growth-forecast-again.html
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