The Asian Age

Global growth ‘weakest since financial crisis’

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Paris, Nov 21: The OECD trimmed its outlook for the global economy on Thursday, saying the world was headed for its weakest economic growth since the 2007-2008 financial crisis.

Urging government­s to invest in digital and climate transforma­tion, the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t said activity had been hobbled by weaker trade and investment in the past two years, as US President Donald Trump and Chinese leaders continue to be locked in a trade conflict.

The OECD now expects economic activity around the world to expand by 2.9 percent next year, a decline of 0.1 percentage points from a previous forecast issued in September. Growth was likely to remain slow, it said, with expansion in 2020-2021 seen at around 3.0 percent, down from a 3.5 percent rate projected only a year ago.

This was shaping up to be "the weakest rate since the global financial crisis", according to OECD chief economist Laurence Boone.

Growth this year was also likely to come in at 2.9 per cent, the OECD said in its November 2019 Economic Outlook.

Boone noted that "for the past two years, global growth outcomes and prospects have steadily deteriorat­ed, amidst persistent policy uncertaint­y and weak trade and investment flows."

She said that central banks had taken decisive and timely monetary decisions that partly offset the negative effects of trade tensions.

But government­s had not done the same, instead failing to invest enough in long-term projects to improve infrastruc­ture, advance digitalisa­tion of their economies or in the fight against climate change.

Boone warned that the OECD was concerned the outlook would deteriorat­e further due to "unaddresse­d structural changes more than any cyclical shock".

She highlighte­d climate change and digitalisa­tion as two examples, along with the fact that "trade and geopolitic­s are moving away from the multilater­al order of the 1990s."

A breakdown of the forecasts showed that the US economy is tipped "to slow to 2.0 percent by 2021, while growth in Japan and the euro area is expected to be 0.7 and 1.2 per cent.” —AFP

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OECD TRIMS OUTLOOK

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