Daily Mail

IMF warns of worst slump since the Great Depression

. . . as 17m Americans lose jobs in just 3 weeks

- by James Salmon

THe Covid 19 pandemic is a ‘crisis like no other’ that will lead to the worst economic crash since the Great depression, the internatio­nal Monetary Fund has warned.

As bleak figures showed one in ten uS workers have claimed unemployme­nt benefits in the last three weeks, the Washington- based watchdog said more than 170 countries around the world will see living standards fall this year.

iMF managing director Kristalina Georgieva – who will next week publish the group’s latest economic forecasts alongside chief economist Gita Gopinath ( pictured) – described the deadly disease as a ‘test of our humanity’.

in a staggering indication of the truly global threat posed by the pandemic, she pointed out that just three months ago the iMF expected living standards to rise in more than 160 countries.

decalaring that ‘that number has been turned on its head’, she said: ‘Today we are confronted with a crisis like no other. Covid19 has disrupted our social and economic order at lightning speed and on a scale that we have not seen in living memory. The virus is causing tragic loss of life, and the lockdown needed to fight it has affected billions of people.’

She added: ‘The bleak outlook applies to advanced and developing economies alike. This crisis knows no boundaries. everybody hurts.’ With the iMF’s 189 members set to meet at a virtual summit next week, Georgieva issued a rallying call for government­s across the world, saying ‘ the actions we take now will determine the speed and strength of our recovery’.

The hard-hitting interventi­on came as more details of the carnage inflicted by Covid-19 on the world’s biggest economy emerged. uS government data revealed that just over 6.6m applied for unemployme­nt benefits in the week ending April 4.

This brings the total number lodging unemployme­nt claims to 16.8m over the last three weeks – roughly one in ten of the workforce. it represents the biggest and fastest rate of job destructio­n since records began in 1948.

economists said these benefit claims could cause unemployme­nt to soar from around 3.5pc to 14pc – above the peak seen in the last financial crisis.

Shortly after the dire figures were published, the uS Federal reserve promised an extra £1.8 trillion of loans to struggling business and households.

Shares on Wall street rose in early trading with the dow Jones up more than two per cent. The recent stock market rally also continued across europe and in the uK, with the FTSe 100 rising 2.9pc. But in another bleak report, the National institute of economic and Social research warned the uK economy could shrink by between 15pc and 25pc in the second quarter.

describing coronaviru­s as a ‘once in a century event’, Kemar Whyte, a senior economist at research institute NieSr, added that ‘ instant and significan­t recovery remain a distinct possibilit­y if the spread of the virus comes to a halt quickly’.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom