Toronto Star

IMF forecasts deeper global recession as virus lingers

Global GDP expected to shrink 4.9% this year

- ERIC MARTIN

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund downgraded its outlook for the coronaviru­s-ravaged world economy, projecting a significan­tly deeper recession and slower recovery than it anticipate­d just two months ago.

The fund said Wednesday it now expected global gross domestic product to shrink 4.9 per cent this year, more than the 3 per cent predicted in April. For 2021, the fund forecast growth of 5.4 per cent, down from 5.8 per cent.

Having already warned of the biggest slump since the Great Depression, the IMF said its increased pessimism reflected scarring from a larger-than-anticipate­d supply shock during the earlier lockdown, in addition to the continued hit to demand from social distancing and other safety measures. For nations struggling to control the virus spread, a longer lockdown also will take a toll on growth, the IMF said.

“With the relentless spread of the pandemic, prospects of long-lasting negative consequenc­es for livelihood­s, job security and inequality have grown more daunting,” the lender said in its update to the World Economic Outlook.

The IMF warned that the rebound in global financial-market sentiment “appears disconnect­ed from shifts in underlying economic prospects,” raising the possibilit­y that financial conditions will tighten more than forecast in its core scenario.

The fund lowered its expectatio­ns for consumptio­n in most economies based on a largerthan-expected disruption to domestic activity, demand shocks from social distancing and an increase in precaution­ary savings.

In recent weeks, the IMF repeatedly noted that it was likely to downgrade its mid-April forecasts based on incoming data, with chief economist Gita Gopinath saying as early as May 8 that the global outlook had worsened.

The projection­s assume that countries with declining infection rates don’t need to reinstate the strict lockdowns from the first half of the year and are able to rely on alternativ­e methods such as increased testing, contact tracing and isolation to contain transmissi­on.

One bright spot has been financial conditions, which have eased in advanced economies and to a lesser extent in emerging markets.

Announced fiscal measures amounting to about $11 trillion globally, up from $8 trillion estimated in April, have helped cushion the blow to workers and businesses. Swift and innovative interventi­ons by central banks have limited the rise in borrowing costs, and portfolio flows into emerging markets have recovered from record withdrawal­s.

The fund said its new forecast is subject to revision depending on the length of the pandemic and lockdowns, voluntary social distancing and displaced workers’ ability to find jobs.

The forecast could be upgraded if there’s a medical breakthrou­gh or business activity resumes more quickly, but significan­t downside risks include outbreaks requiring more lockdowns or tightening financial conditions.

“This could tip some economies into debt crises and slow activity further,” the IMF said.

In the U.S., GDP is expected to contract 8 per cent in 2020, compared with the previous 5.9-per-cent projection. The world’s largest economy may grow 4.5 per cent next year, the IMF said.

The euro area will probably shrink 10.2 per cent in 2020 and expand 6 per cent in 2021, the fund said.

The IMF sees advanced economies shrinking the most, contractin­g 8 per cent, compared with 6.1 per cent previously. Emerging-market and developing economies will see a 3-percent contractio­n, compared with the 1-per-cent forecast in April. China will still manage to expand 1 per cent, supported by policy stimulus.

Latin America has been hit by the virus due in part due to less developed health systems, and its two biggest economies, Brazil and Mexico, are forecast to contract 9.1 per cent and 10.5 per cent, respective­ly.

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