Houston Chronicle

Leaders warn of risks from trade tensions

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BEIJING — Leaders of the World Bank, Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and other global financial organizati­ons warned Tuesday that trade tensions pose a growing risk for emerging economies.

With the U.S. and China embroiled in their worst trade conflict in decades, global growth has “plateaued and some downside risks have materializ­ed,” the leaders said in a joint statement issued after a meeting in Beijing.

“We are concerned about a further escalation of trade tensions, and the spillover effects on vulnerable emerging markets,” the statement said, specifical­ly mentioning employment as a concern.

The leaders said they were “very strongly concerned” about protection­ism and one-sided measures, and urged support for broader efforts such as the World Trade Organizati­on. Conflicts over technology policies and other trade issues have led the U.S. to impose tariffs on billions of dollars’ worth of Chinese exports. China has responded in kind.

The disruption­s to trade as companies adapt and prices rise are adding to pressures on China’s leadership as the economy slows due to longer-term factors.

IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde said the IMF forecasts that China’s economy will grow at a 6.6 percent annual rate this year, slowing to 6.2 percent next year.

But she gave Beijing credit for tackling some key troubles.

“Significan­t progress has been made in rebalancin­g the economy, slowing credit growth, addressing risks in financial sector and government off-budget borrowing, and continuing to open up the economy,” she said in an address to the meeting.

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