Stabroek News

Policymake­rs need steady hand as storm clouds gather over global economy

-One-third of the world economy will likely contract this year or next amid shrinking real incomes and rising prices

- By Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas

The global economy continues to face steep challenges, shaped by the Russian invasion of Ukraine, a cost-of-living crisis caused by persistent and broadening inflation pressures, and the slowdown in China.

Our global growth forecast for this year is unchanged at 3.2 per cent, while our projection for next year is lowered to 2.7 per cent - 0.2 percentage points lower than the July forecast. The 2023 slowdown will be broadbased, with countries accounting for about one-third of the global economy poised to contract this year or next. The three largest economies, the United States, China, and the euro area will continue to stall. Overall, this year’s shocks will re-open economic wounds that were only partially healed post-pandemic. In short, the worst is yet to come and, for many people, 2023 will feel like a recession.

In the United States, the tightening of monetary and financial conditions will slow growth to 1 per cent next year. In China, we have lowered next year’s growth forecast to 4.4 per cent due to a weakening property sector and continued lockdowns.

The slowdown is most pronounced in the euro area, where the energy crisis caused by the war will continue to take a heavy toll, reducing growth to 0.5 per cent in 2023.

Almost everywhere, rapidly rising prices, especially of food and energy, are causing serious hardship for households, particular­ly for the poor.

Despite the economic slowdown, inflation pressures are proving broader and more persistent than anticipate­d. Global inflation is now expected to peak at 9.5 per cent this year before decelerati­ng to 4.1 per cent by 2024. Inflation is also broadening well beyond food and energy. Global core inflation rose from an annualized monthly rate of 4.2 per cent at end of 2021 to 6.7 per cent in July for the median country.

Downside risks to the outlook remain elevated, while policy trade-offs to address the cost-ofliving crisis have become more challengin­g. Among the ones highlighte­d in our report:

The risk of monetary, fiscal, or financial policy mis-calibratio­n has risen sharply amid high uncertaint­y and growing fragilitie­s.

Global financial conditions could deteriorat­e, and the dollar strengthen further, should turmoil in financial markets erupt, pushing investors towards safe assets. This would add significan­tly to inflation pressures and financial fragilitie­s in the rest of the world, especially emerging markets and developing economies.

Inflation could, yet again, prove more persistent, especially if labor markets remain extremely tight.

Finally, the war in Ukraine is still raging and further escalation can exacerbate the energy crisis.

Our latest outlook also assesses the risks around our baseline projection­s. We estimate that there is about a one in four probabilit­y that global growth next year could fall below the historical­ly low level of 2 per cent. If many of the risks materializ­e, global growth would decline to 1.1 per cent with quasi stagnant income-per-capita in 2023. According to our calculatio­ns, the likelihood of such an adverse outcome, or worse, is 10 per cent to 15 per cent.

Cost-of-living crisis

Increasing price pressures remain the most immediate threat to current and future prosperity by squeezing real incomes and underminin­g macroecono­mic stability. Central banks are now laser-focused on restoring price stability, and the pace of tightening has accelerate­d sharply.

There are risks of both underand over-tightening. Under-tightening would further entrench inflation, erode the credibilit­y of central banks, and de-anchor inflation expectatio­ns. As history teaches us, this would only increase the eventual cost of bringing inflation under control.

Financial markets may also struggle with overly rapid tightening. Yet, the costs of these policy mistakes are not symmetric. The hard-won credibilit­y of central banks could be undermined if they misjudge yet again the stubborn persistenc­e of inflation. This would prove much more detrimenta­l to future macroecono­mic stability. Where necessary, financial policy should ensure that markets remain stable. However, central banks need to keep a steady hand with monetary policy firmly focused on taming inflation.

Formulatin­g the appropriat­e fiscal response to the cost-of-living crisis has become a serious challenge. Let me mention a few key principles.

First, fiscal policy should not work at cross-purpose with monetary authoritie­s’ efforts to bring down inflation. Doing so will only prolong inflation and could cause serious financial instabilit­y, as recent events illustrate­d.

Second, the energy crisis, especially in Europe, is not a transitory shock. The geopolitic­al realignmen­t of energy supplies in the wake of the war is broad and permanent. Winter 2022 will be challengin­g, but winter 2023 will likely be worse. Price signals will be essential to curb energy demand and stimulate supply. Price controls, untargeted subsidies, or export bans are fiscally costly and lead to excess demand, undersuppl­y, misallocat­ion, and rationing. They rarely work. Fiscal policy should instead aim to protect the most vulnerable through targeted and temporary transfers.

Third, fiscal policy can help economies adapt to a more volatile environmen­t by investing in productive capacity: human capital, digitaliza­tion, green energy, and supply chain diversific­ation. Expanding these can make economies more resilient to future crises. Unfortunat­ely, these important principles are not always guiding policy right now.

Effects of a strong dollar

For many emerging markets, the strength of the dollar is a major challenge. The dollar is now at its strongest since the early 2000s, although the appreciati­on is most pronounced against currencies of advanced economies. So far, the rise appears mostly driven by fundamenta­l forces such as tightening US monetary policy and the energy crisis.

The appropriat­e response in most emerging and developing countries is to calibrate monetary policy to maintain price stability, while letting exchange rates adjust, conserving valuable foreign exchange reserves for when financial conditions really worsen.

As the global economy is headed for stormy waters, now is the time for emerging market policymake­rs to batten down the hatches.

Eligible countries with sound policies should urgently consider improving their liquidity buffers, including by requesting access to precaution­ary instrument­s from the Fund. Countries should also aim to minimize the impact of future financial turmoil through a combinatio­n of preemptive macroprude­ntial and capital flow measures, where appropriat­e, in line with our Integrated Policy Framework.

Too many low-income countries are in or near debt distress. Progress toward orderly debt restructur­ings through the Group of Twenty’s Common Framework for the most affected is urgently needed to avert a wave of sovereign debt crisis. Time may soon run out.

The energy and food crises, coupled with extreme summer temperatur­es, are stark reminders of what an uncontroll­ed climate transition would look like. Progress on climate policies, as well as on debt resolution and other targeted multilater­al issues, will prove that a focussed multilater­alism can, indeed, achieve progress for all and succeed in overcoming geo-economic fragmentat­ion pressures.

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