Arab Times

IMF chief warns slowing productivi­ty risks living standards drop

Slower growth could jeopardize financial and social stability of some countries

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WASHINGTON, April 4, (RTRS): Living standards around the world could fall unless government­s invest more in research and education that can help revive weak productivi­ty growth, Internatio­nal Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde warned on Monday.

Lagarde said in a speech in Washington that the private sector alone will not be able to generate enough innovation to lift productivi­ty to acceptable levels without government help.

Her remarks were accompanie­d by release of an IMF study that found that the 2008-2009 financial crisis and deep recession played a bigger role in slowing productivi­ty than previously thought, stifling global demand and investment.

“Another decade of weak productivi­ty growth would seriously undermine the rise in global living standards,” Lagarde told an audience at the American Enterprise Institute, a probusines­s think tank in Washington.

“Slower growth could also jeopardize the financial and social stability of some countries by making it more difficult to reduce excessive inequality and sustain private debt and public obligation­s,” she added.

Economists have long viewed productivi­ty gains as essential for sustaining higher wages and living standards, but have struggled to explain a protracted slowdown in productivi­ty growth since the early 2000s.

Lagarde said the post-crisis recession has left a “permanent scar” on output per worker and total factor productivi­ty, a broad measure of innovation that includes both labor and capital inputs.

“We estimate that, if total factor productivi­ty growth had followed its pre-crisis trend, overall GDP in advanced economies would be about 5 percent higher today,” Lagarde said. “That would be the equivalent of adding another Japan — and more — to the global economy.”

She said that all government­s should do more to unleash entreprene­urial energy, including cutting barriers to competitio­n, investing in education and providing tax incentives for research and developmen­t.

“One thing is clear: we need more innovation, not less. Market forces alone will not be able to deliver that boost, because innovation and invention are to some degree public goods.”

Lagarde said smartphone technologi­es have hugely benefited from large-scale state spending on developing the internet and global positionin­g satellite system, while defense spending often creates new technologi­es that have civilian uses.

She cited IMF research last year showing that an increase of private research spending by 40 percent in advanced economies could increase their GDP by 5 percent in the long term.

Lagarde said a critical improvemen­t in education and worker retraining programs was needed to aid those displaced by the effects of technologi­cal change, trade and structural reforms.

 ??  ?? In this file photo, shows the Tesla Motors showroom in Salt Lake City. The Utah Supreme Court has ruled against Tesla in a push to sell its sleek, all-electric vehicles in the state. The court said in an opinion issued on Apirl 3, that Utah’s State Tax...
In this file photo, shows the Tesla Motors showroom in Salt Lake City. The Utah Supreme Court has ruled against Tesla in a push to sell its sleek, all-electric vehicles in the state. The court said in an opinion issued on Apirl 3, that Utah’s State Tax...

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