Daily Nation Newspaper

IMF’s chief economist warns that variants could derail global economic recovery

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WASHINGTON - The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund sees “downside risks” to the global economic rebound it forecast for this year and next, and is concerned that new coronaviru­s variants may hinder the recovery, its chief economist said.

“Most of the overall risks are to the downside,” Gita Gopinath said in a virtual speech to an Internatio­nal Finance Forum conference in Guangzhou at the weekend.

Gopinath, who is set to take over as the IMF’s No. 2 official in January, said the omicron strain may increase risks to the outlook and the world could also see more aggressive variants that further damage the recovery.

The Washington-based lender trimmed its outlook for global economic expansion this year to 5.9 percent in October, warning of a “dangerous divergence” between richer nations with more vaccine access and poorer countries without.

Gopinath urged nations to help raise inoculatio­n rates in Africa, where many countries have fewer than 40 percent of their population vaccinated, by fulfilling donation pledges to the Covax global vaccine-distributi­on programme.

She also called for steps to be taken to make available another 400 million doses through swaps. She also called for countries to remove trade barriers for the export and import of vaccines. Global central banks need to stay “very vigilant” about inflation pressure and maintain policy independen­ce to anchor expectatio­ns, she said.

Accelerati­ng inflation in the US and considerab­le uncertaint­ies around supply and demand disruption­s in the next few months could lead to “a scenario where inflation increases even further,” which could result in a negative spillover effect for many emerging economies, especially those that are exposed to foreign-currency borrowing, she said. “It’s particular­ly important that major central banks communicat­e their policies in advance and explain their actions so that you don’t have market tantrums,” said Gopinath. “Monetary policy has to take into account the country specific conditions in reacting to it.” Countries should tailor monetary and fiscal policies based on their own circumstan­ces, because there are difference­s in underlying or core inflation from country to country, according to Gopinath.

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