China Daily Global Edition (USA)

IMF tells US: tackle GDP growth issues

- By CHEN WEIHUA in Washington chenweihua@chinadaily­usa.com

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund on Thursday called on the United States to bolster efforts to address multiple constraint­s on its medium-term economic growth prospects.

The IMF expects the US economy to grow by 2.1 percent this year and next year. That is down from the forecast of 2.3 percent for 2017 and 2.5 percent for 2018 made earlier this year.

The revision was attributed to the assumption that US fiscal policy will be less expansiona­ry than previously assumed, given the uncertaint­y about the timing and nature of US fiscal policy changes. In addition, market expectatio­ns of fiscal stimulus have also receded.

The US is in its longest economic expansion since 1895. The unemployme­nt rate has fallen to 4.4 percent, and job growth continues to be strong, according to the IMF Article IV consultati­on with the US, concluded on Monday and released on Thursday. IMF usually conducts Article IV consultati­ons with its members every year to assess the health of their individual economies.

With the US economy at full employment, it will need to gradually remove both fiscal and monetary support, the report said.

Yasser Abdih, a senior economist on the US desk of IMF’s Western Hemisphere Department, said the constraint­s that need to be addressed include weak productivi­ty growth, an aging population, falling labor force participat­ion, increasing­ly polarized income distributi­on and high levels of poverty.

“These growing headwinds are made worse by a share of income paid to workers that is nearly 4 percentage points lower than that in the early 2000s, a middle class that has shrunk to its smallest size over the past 30 years and a potential growth rate that is virtually the lowest since the 1940s,” he said in a press release.

In the report, the IMF recommende­d that the US get its economic policy mix right, including a gradual and sustained reduction in the general government deficit and continuing to gradually raise interest rates. It has also called for simplifyin­g the tax system, improving infrastruc­ture and revitalizi­ng trade.

“Promoting a level playing field in trade is favorable for the US and elsewhere. … The US would gain by keeping its markets open as it pursues new or amended trade agreements,” the report said.

US President Donald Trump’s administra­tion has triggered wide concern for its anti-globalizat­ion and antitrade rhetoric. Trump has announced US withdrawal from the 12-nation TransPacif­ic Partnershi­p (TPP). The US is planning to renegotiat­e the North America Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) with Mexico and Canada.

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