Lender also warns of danger if China does not manage well its slowdown and reforms

19/01/2016 19:44 AST

The International Monetary Fund warned of substantial risks in the major emerging market economies on Tuesday as it lowered its outlook for global economic growth this year.
Slower Chinese growth, a stronger US dollar, collapsed oil prices and political turmoil could all wreak further havoc in struggling economies like Russia and Brazil and across the Middle East, putting the brakes on the global recovery, the Fund said.
It also warned of danger if China does not manage well its slowdown and reforms, already spinning shock waves through global financial markets.
And it said the Mideast refugee crisis poses formidable challenges to Europe as it tries to restart growth and urged more efforts to assimilate the new arrivals.
The IMF said it expects the world economy to grow by 3.4 per cent this year, an improvement from 3.1 per cent in 2015 but still 0.2 percentage points below what it predicted in October.
While the advanced countries will anchor world economic expansion in 2016, rather than picking up pace, the United States will grow only 2.6 per cent, 0.2 percentage points less than previously expected due to the strong dollar’s hit on US exporters and the slump in investment in the energy industry.
Europe got a slight upgrade, to 1.7 per cent this year, on the back of Spain’s stronger-than-expected rebound; and Japanese growth should pick up as well.
The Fund stuck to its forecast of 6.3 per cent growth for the Chinese economy, slowing from 6.9 per cent last year.
Separately, Beijing said early Tuesday that its economy grew 6.9 per cent in 2015, slumping to its lowest annual expansion rate in a quarter of a century.
The IMF expressed guarded confidence in Beijing’s ability to manage its metamorphosis into a domestic consumption-driven economy and to modernise its financial sector.
Even so, it expects China’s deceleration will continue into 2017.
Latin America as a whole meanwhile will be dragged into recession by the deep troubles in regional giant Brazil, whose economy the IMF expects to contract by 3.5 per cent this year, after 3.8 per cent in 2015.
Overall, the picture for this year from the IMF, the world’s key crisis lender, is of slowing global trade and investment, with the sharp declines in commodity prices led by oil continuing to hurt exporters while not yet providing expected stimulus to importers and consumers.
Indeed, rather than a net positive for growth, the steepness of the plunge in oil prices has become a drag as major exporters retrench in the face of large fiscal deficits and the entire oil industry slashes investment.
“Downside risks to our central scenario have intensified,” IMF chief economist Maurice Obstfeld said.
“We may be in for a bumpy ride this year, especially in the emerging and developing world.”
The IMF’s updated forecast for the world economy dwelled mostly on the interlinked problems that could exacerbate local crises and unleash shock waves elsewhere.
The transition of China, the world’s second largest economy after the United States, topped the list.
The sharper-than-expected slowdown in Chinese imports and exports is putting more downward pressure on the depressed global commodities market.
“It’s created large spillover effects,” said Obstfeld.
Less directly, that is taking a toll on general economic confidence around the world and fuelling more volatility in global markets, which discourages longer-term investment.
However, Obstfeld said markets may be overestimating the risks.
“They may be reacting very strongly to rather small bits of evidence,” he said. “The reactions are very extreme.”
The IMF suggested that if China’s slowdown intensifies, its own currency could weaken and force down others.
Obstfeld urged Chinese authorities to “communicate more closely with markets” over its currency plans on order to ease volatility.


AFP

Ticker Price Volume
SABIC 114.77 5,915,941
Index Closing Change
NIKKEI 225 21,292.29 -96.29 (-0.45%)
DAX 12,002.45 -94.28 (-0.77%)
S&P 500 2,614.45 32.57 (1.26%)
Global markets down on trade war worries

05/04/2018

Stock markets recoiled on Wednesday as China retaliated in an escalating trade war with the United States, leaving investors reluctant to take positions in anything but the safest of assets.

The Gulf Today

Egypt to meet investors this week ahead of euro-denominated bond

04/04/2018

Egypt will start meeting bond investors in Europe this week ahead of a potential euro-denominated bond issue, a document from one of the banks appointed to arrange the meetings showed on Tuesday.

Gulf News

Foreign investment in France hit 10-year high last year

04/04/2018

Foreign investment in France rose 16 per cent in 2017 to levels not seen for a decade as President Emmanuel Macron’s (pictured) bid to attract money from abroad gains pace, a government report said o

Oman Daily Observer

Japan's economy a tricky one to understand

03/04/2018

Explaining Japan’s economy to foreign audiences is hard.
One big reason for this is that explaining something as large and complex as a $5 trillion economy is an inherently difficult task - the

The National

China raises import duties on US products

03/04/2018

China raised import duties on a $3 billion list of US meat, apples and other products on Monday in an escalating dispute with Washington over trade and industrial policy.

The government of

The Gulf Today