Chattanooga Times Free Press

IMF upgrades eurozone, Japan; leaves world outlook unchanged

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WASHINGTON — The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund upgraded the economic outlook for Europe, Japan and China this year. But the fund left its forecast for global growth unchanged from an April forecast, partly because the United States is unlikely to get much help from tax cuts and higher spending.

In a report out Monday, the IMF kept its expectatio­n for worldwide economic growth at 3.5 percent this year. But it now forecasts 1.9 percent growth for the 19 countries that use the euro currency (up from 1.7 percent in April). The fund expects Japan to grow 1.3 percent (up from the previously expected 1.2 percent) and China to expand 6.7 percent (versus 6.6 percent).

The U.S. economy is expected to grow 2.1 percent, down from the 2.3 percent expected in April when hopes were higher for tax cuts. The Trump administra­tion has vowed to restore U.S. growth to 3 percent a year through

a combinatio­n of deregulati­on, tax cuts and infrastruc­ture spending. But the tax reductions and spending program have been stalled by political discord.

The IMF releases its World Economic Outlook report in April and September or October and publishes updates in January and July.

The fund found that confidence and stability

have returned to the eurozone, which was rocked by a debt crisis in the aftermath of the Great Recession of 2007-2009. Spending, investment and exports are up in Japan. Government stimulus is boosting China’s economy, which had steadily decelerati­ng since 2010, but economists worry that subsidized growth isn’t sustainabl­e.

 ?? PHOTO BY ANDY WONG, AP FILE ?? Chinese workers on a suspended platform prepare to clean windows of a newly opened shopping mall against a backdrop of the China state broadcaste­r China Central Television (CCTV) headquarte­rs in Beijing. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund upgraded the...
PHOTO BY ANDY WONG, AP FILE Chinese workers on a suspended platform prepare to clean windows of a newly opened shopping mall against a backdrop of the China state broadcaste­r China Central Television (CCTV) headquarte­rs in Beijing. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund upgraded the...

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