The Times (Shreveport)

IMF chief: Inflation easing, not yet defeated

Despite global resilience, sees ‘plenty ... to worry about’

- Andrea Shalal

WASHINGTON – Inflation is easing faster than expected but has not been fully defeated, Internatio­nal Monetary Fund chief Kristalina Georgieva said on Thursday, urging central bankers to carefully calibrate their decisions on cutting interest rates to incoming data.

Georgieva said headline inflation for advanced economies was 2.3% in the final quarter of 2023, down from 9.5% 18 months ago, with the downward trend expected to continue in 2024.

That would create the conditions for central banks in major advanced economies to begin cutting rates in the second half of the year, although the pace and timing would vary, she told an event hosted by the Atlantic Council think tank.

“On this final stretch, it is doubly important that central banks uphold their independen­ce,” Georgieva said, urging policymake­rs to resist calls for early rate cuts when necessary.

“Premature easing could see new inflation surprises that may even necessitat­e a further bout of monetary tightening. On the other side, delaying too long could pour cold water on economic activity,” she said.

Georgieva said next week’s World Economic Outlook would show that global growth is marginally stronger given robust activity in the United States and in many emerging market economies, but gave no specific new forecasts.

She said the global economy’s resilience was being helped by strong labor markets and an expanding labor force, strong household consumptio­n and an easing of supply chain issues, but said there were still “plenty of things to worry about.”

“The global environmen­t has become more challengin­g. Geopolitic­al tensions increase the risks of fragmentat­ion … and, as we learned over the past few years, we operate in a world in which we must expect the unexpected,” Georgieva said.

She said global activity was weak by historical standards and prospects for growth had been slowing since the global financial crisis of 2008-2009. The global output loss since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 was $3.3 trillion, disproport­ionately hitting the most vulnerable countries.

Georgieva said the U.S. had seen the strongest rebound among advanced economies, helped by rising productivi­ty growth. Euro area activity was recovering more gradually, given the lingering impact of high energy prices and weaker productivi­ty growth.

Among emerging market economies, countries like Indonesia and India were faring better, but low-income countries had seen the most severe scarring.

Given a significan­t and broad-based slowdown in productivi­ty growth, the

IMF’s five-year outlook for global growth was just above 3%, well below its historical average of 3.8%, she said.

“Without a course correction, we are … heading for ‘the Tepid Twenties’ – a sluggish and disappoint­ing decade,” Georgieva said, urging continued vigilance to restore price stability, rebuild fiscal buffers and jump-start growth.

She said foundation­al reforms, such as strengthen­ing governance, cutting red tape, increasing female labor market participat­ion and improving access to capital, could lift output by 8% in four years.

Even more is possible with policies to encourage economic transforma­tion, speeding up the green and digital transition, which could offer huge opportunit­ies for investment, jobs and growth, she said.

Artificial intelligen­ce offers huge potential benefits but also risks, with a recent IMF study showing that AI could affect up to 40% of jobs across the world and 60% in advanced economies, Georgieva said.

REUTERS

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