Baltimore Sun

IMF boosts forecast for U.S. economy

Organizati­on says Trump’s policies should help growth, but it warns about trade war

- By Martin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON — The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund on Monday raised its forecast for the U.S. economy over the next two years, saying President-elect Donald Trump’s policies should boost economic growth, particular­ly in 2018. But officials warned that if Trump’s protection­ist trade proposals set off a trade war, that could be “quite destructiv­e” for the global economy.

The IMF also increased 2017 growth projection­s for a number of other countries including China, Germany, Japan and Britain but warned that the global economy faced a number of downside risks from rising protection­ism to a jump in interest rates.

The 189-nation global lending agency’s latest economic outlook took note of the significan­t impact Trump’s election has already had in giving a boost to U.S. stock prices, interest rates and the dollar. The new outlook puts U.S. economic growth at 2.3 percent this year and 2.5 percent in 2018. That would be an improvemen­t from lackluster U.S. growth around 1.6 percent in 2016.

During the campaign, Trump said his economic policies of tax cuts, regulatory reform and boosts in infrastruc­ture spending would lift U.S. growth to annual rates of 4 percent.

The new forecast represents a boost of 0.1 percentage point this year and an increase of 0.4 percentage point for 2018, when Trump’s stimulus plans would be expected to be The IMF warns against tariffs that could spark a trade war between the U.S. and China, causing harm to both nations. phased in. That is a halfpoint higher growth than the IMF was forecastin­g in October, before Trump’s election.

In contrast, the World Bank last week left its U.S. forecast unchanged at 2.2 percent growth in 2017 and 2.1 percent for 2018, arguing that there was too much uncertaint­y over the fate of Trump’s proposals to incorporat­e them in a forecast.

But IMF Chief Economist Maurice Obstfeld told reporters at a briefing Monday that he viewed the IMF’s upgrade for the United States as a moderate increase that took into account the U.S. election results.

“We now have the presidency and the legislativ­e branch in the same hands. It seems very clear to us that some of the promises will be delivered on,” Obstfeld said. “We know the direction of policies. We don’t know the specifics.”

He said that the IMF had chosen not to incorporat­e Trump’s threats of imposing higher tariffs on countries such as China and Mexico if their trade policies do not change because of a belief “that at the end of the day, countries will realize these are not in their best interests given the threat of retaliatio­n. The outbreak of a trade war would be quite destructiv­e.”

For the overall global economy, the IMF left its projection­s unchanged with growth of 3.4 percent for this year and 3.6 percent for 2018, both up from 3.1 percent growth in 2016, a year when global growth slowed to its weakest performanc­e since the 20082009 financial crisis.

“The global economic landscape started to shift in the second half of 2016,” Obstfeld said.

He said that was helped by a rebound in manufactur­ing activity in many countries and the financial market rally that started with Trump’s November election victory.

But Obstfeld said there was a wider-than-usual range of upside and downside risks in part because of the uncertaint­y over how much of Trump’s program will win congressio­nal approval and what the spillover effects will be for the rest of the world.

The new outlook boosted the growth forecast for China, the world’s secondlarg­est economy, by 0.3 percentage point to 6.5 percent this year.

 ?? JOHANNES EISELE/GETTY-AFP ??
JOHANNES EISELE/GETTY-AFP

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