Stabroek News

Global economy set to deliver weakest half decade performanc­e in thirty years - World Bank official

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Even as a handful of countries around the world, Guyana included, anticipate varying degrees of ‘developmen­t upturn’ in the period ahead, expert probing by the World Bank is sending signals that there are likely to be widely varying developmen­t experience­s among countries in the period ahead as the global economy braces itself to experience what a World Bank expert suggest could be a global economy on the brink of its weakest half-decade performanc­e in three decades, according to the most recent presentati­on of the Bank’s “Global Economic Prospects” report. As the internatio­nal community approaches the midpoint of what had been envisaged as a “transforma­tional decade” for the developmen­t of the global economy, World Bank Deputy Chief Economist, Ayhan Kose, has opined that the world may be set to embrace its weakest half decade performanc­e in 30 years.

The arresting disclosure arose out of an assessment of the state of the global economy on the World Bank’s media programme, ‘Expert Answers’ from the Bank’s Deputy Chief Economist on Tuesday January 9th. The likely manifestat­ions of the slump are expected to be a slowdown in global growth, this year, for the third consecutiv­e year, dipping to 2.4% from 2.6% in 2023. Growth, thereafter, is then expected to rise marginally to 2.7% in 2025, though accelerati­on over the five-year period will remain almost three-quarters of a percentage point below the average rate of the 2010s. Ironically, while the World Bank appears to see the global economy, currently, as being “in a better place than it was a year ago,” it is also concerned that “mounting geo-political tensions” could deliver an altogether different picture, going forward.

In contextual­izing his pronouncem­ent, Kose asserts that until recently the global economy had been “remarkably resilient” with “some large emerging markets like India, Indonesia, Brazil and Mexico” delivering “robust growth rates” and inflation had been coming down “without a major slowdown… ” and while interest rates went up significan­tly, “we did not see a major financial crisis in a large economy.” According to the senior World Bank official, “there is resilience” that the bigger picture was not one of overwhelmi­ng rosiness.

Kose’s caution about the likelihood of any short term improvemen­t in the condition of the global economy is buttressed by the observatio­n that external conditions remain very difficult for developing economies. “Geo-political tensions are on the rise” and “financial stress is a possibilit­y because of very high real interest rates.” He notes, as well, that while inflation will continue to come down, it will not reach “to the levels central banks are comfortabl­e with, at least in this year,” a circumstan­ce which he asserts, “means real rates will remain high… So the situation remains fragile.” And according to

Kose, a “critical ingredient” in remedial action is investment in growth. “There are very large investment gaps when we think about meeting sustainabl­e developmen­t goals, delivering the type of necessary infrastruc­ture investment in the context of climate. So countries need to increase investment growth,” the World Bank official added.

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