Monterey Herald

IMF envisions a sharp 4.4% drop in global growth for 2020

- By Martin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON >> The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund foresees a steep fall in internatio­nal growth this year as the global economy struggles to recover from the pandemic- induced recession, its worst collapse in nearly a century.

T he IMF estimated Tuesday that the global economy will shrink 4.4% for 2020. That would be the worst annual plunge since the Great Depression of the 1930s. By comparison, the internatio­nal economy contracted by a far smaller 0.1% after the devastatin­g 2008 financial crisis.

The monetary fund’s forecast for 2020 in its latest World Economic Outlook does represent an upgrade of 0.8 percentage point from its previous forecast in June. The IMF attributed the slightly less dire forecast to fasterthan- expected rebounds in some countries, notably China, and to government rescue aid that was enacted by the United States and other major industrial countries.

While forecastin­g a global contractio­n this year, after 2.8% growth in 2019, the IMF predicts a rebound to global growth of 5.2% next year, 0.2 percentage point lower than in its June forecast.

The 189- nation lending agency cautioned that many developing countries, notably India, are faring worse than expected, in large part because of a resurgent virus. Many nations face the threat of economic reversals if government support is withdrawn too quickly, the IMF warned.

“While the global economy is coming back, the ascent will be long, uneven and uncertain,” Gita Gopinath, the IMF’s chief economist, wrote in the new outlook. “Recovery is not assured while the pandemic continues to spread.”

At a news conference, Gopinath said it was critical that government economic support not be withdrawn too quickly.

“This crisis will leave scars,” she told reporters, stemming from damage to labor markets that will take time to regain lost jobs, lost business investment and diminished schooling that will reduce the developmen­t of human capital around the world.

For the United States, the IMF forecasts an economic contractio­n of 4.3% this year, 3.7 percentage points better than in its June forecast. The lesspessim­istic outlook reflects a stronger-than- expected bounce from the $3 trillion in relief aid that Congress enacted earlier this year.

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