The Manila Times

IMF again cuts world growth forecast

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WASHINGTON, D.C.: The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) said on Tuesday (Wednesday in Manila) that the global economy faces wide-ranging threats from weak growth and rising protection­ism, warning of possible “severe” damage should Britain quit the European Union.

The Fund cut its global forecast trimmed to 2.4 percent this year, for the third straight quarter, sayfrom 2.6 percent in January. ing economic activity has been Only the pictures in China and “too slow for too long,” and developing Eastern Europe were stressed the need for immediate better. But even at a slightly upaction by the world’s economic graded pace of 6.5-percent growth, powers to shore up growth. China was still on track for a sig

political risks around the world, had left the economy “increasing­ly fragile” and vulnerable to recession.

The IMF raised concerns over “fraying” unity in the European Union under pressure from the migration crisis and the “Brexit” possibilit­y.

And it pointed to the contractio­ns in large emerging market economies, most notably Brazil, where the economic downturn has been accompanie­d by deep political crisis that has President Dilma Rousseff facing impeachmen­t.

Seeing a broad fall in trade and investment, the IMF cut its forecast for world growth this year to a sluggish 3.2 percent, 0.2 percentage points down from its January outlook and down from the 3.8 percent pace expected last July.

That reflects a glummer view of growth in both developed and emerging economies, with the forecasts for Japan and oildepende­nt Russia and Nigeria all sharply lowered.

Growth expectatio­ns for most leading economies were pared back by 0.2 percentage points. The outlook for the United States—hit by the impact of the strong dollar—was

Rising threats to growth

The growth downgrade was expected but the tone of the IMF message was more dire than in recent months.

It came as an increasing number of countries are approachin­g the support. Last week Angola, its in oil prices, asked the IMF for a three-year bailout program.

And the World Bank said requests for loan support had reached levels seen only during

IMF chief economist Maurice Obstfeld said there was a risk of a full stall in global growth without efforts to boost investment and demand.

“The weaker is growth, the greater the chance that the preceding risks, if some materializ­e, pull the world economy below stalling speed,” he said.

“Lower growth means less room for error.”

Refugee strains in Europe

The IMF singled out the violent

Maurice Obstfeld, Economic Counsellor and Director of Research Department, Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF), speaks during the World Economic Outlook media briefing during the IMF and World Bank Group 2016 Spring Meetings on Tuesday in Washington, DC. a particular threat to growth this year,

“Since last summer, we have seen two distinct rounds of global

from riskier assets and economies, higher borrowing costs for developing countries, and continued weakness in commodity prices.

The second factor with global consequenc­es, the Fund said, is the violent instabilit­y in Syria and elsewhere that has driven millions of refugees into surroundin­g states and Europe.

costs from that is “a rising tide of inward-looking nationalis­m” which jeopardize­s the long push for greater global economic progress.

“Across Europe, the political consensus that once propelled the European project is fraying,” the IMF said, warning “a backlash against cross- border economic integratio­n threatens to halt or even reverse the postwar trend of ever more open trade.”

One sign of that is the looming Brexit referendum. If British voters opt to leave the EU, the IMF said it “could do severe regional and global damage by disrupting establishe­d trading relationsh­ips.”

British Prime Minister David Cameron, who wants his country to remain in the European Union, agreed with that assessment.

“The IMF is right—leaving the EU would pose major risks for the UK economy. We are stronger, safer and better off in the European Union,” he said in a tweet.

Markets shrug off warnings

The reaction to the message in markets was sanguine. After weakening for several sessions, the dollar edged higher against the euro and yen, oil prices surged and stock markets from Asia to the Americas gained ground. London shares were up 0.7 percent and in New York the S&P 500 jumped 1.0 percent.

“If you’re trading based on the economic forecast from the IMF, your view is going to be lagging, not leading the market,” said Michael James, managing director of equity trading at Wedbush Securities.

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