The Hindu (Kolkata)

Sobering assessment

The richer nations must show more support for the poorest countries

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he global economy has avoided the spectre of a debilitati­ng recession, with the IMF last week raising its forecast for worldwide aggregate growth in 2024 to 3.2%, from the 2.9% it had projected in October. The IMF has underlined the fact that the global economy has, with surprising resilience, ridden out several adverse shocks as well as ‘signi‚cant central bank interest rate increases aimed at restoring price stability’ and sustained the growth momentum, largely on the back of advanced economies led by the U.S. undergirdi­ng demand. However, the Fund has also pointed to a growing gulf between the economic north and south by observing: “A troubling developmen­t is the widening divergence between many lowincome developing countries and the rest of the world. For these economies, growth is revised downward, whereas in‰ation is revised up.” These poorest countries, in Africa and including some Latin American, Paci‚c island and Asian nations, had also suŽered the most scarring from the COVID19 pandemic in terms of estimated drop in output relative to prepandemi­c projection­s, and were struggling to recover. To compound their woes, these economies were now saddled with a mounting debt service burden that was severely impairing their ability to spend on vitally needed public goods including better education, health care and social nets to improve food security.

The IMF’s twin developmen­t lender, the World Bank, has, in a separate report, pointed out that for the ‚rst time in this century, half of the world’s 75 poorest countries were experienci­ng a widening income gap with the wealthiest economies, marking a “historic reversal” of developmen­t. As the World Bank Group’s Chief Economist Indermit Gill observed in a blog post on the lender’s site, “[the 75 poorest countries] are home to a quarter of humanity — 1.9 billion people... and are home to 90% of people facing hunger or malnutriti­on”. More distressin­gly, while these countries were midway through what he termed, potentiall­y ‘a lost decade’, Mr. Gill averred that the rest of the world was “largely averting its gaze” even as the government­s in at least half these nations were mostly paralysed by debt distress. Citing the examples of South Korea, China and India as countries that had transition­ed from being borrowers of lowinteres­t loans from the World Bank’s Internatio­nal Developmen­t Associatio­n into economic powerhouse­s that were today IDA donors, the Bank’s chief economist stressed it was imperative that the world’s richer countries ‚nancially support the poorest nations. Given that the world needs to tap every reserve of economic potential to achieve universal peace and prosperity, it can ill aŽord to turn its back on a quarter of its people.

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