The Oklahoman

Global economy 2018

The World Bank predicts that the global economy will grow 3.1 percent this year, which would be its best showing in seven years.

- BY MARTIN CRUTSINGER

WASHINGTON — The World Bank predicts that the global economy will grow 3.1 percent this year, which would be its best showing in seven years. The United States, the world’s largest economy, is expected to receive a boost from the $1.5 trillion tax cut package Congress approved last month.

The World Bank on Tuesday upgraded its global growth forecast for 2018 by 0.3 percentage point from the projection it made in June. It is also forecastin­g solid growth of 3 percent in 2019 and 2.9 percent in 2020, after similar 3 percent expansion in 2017.

The U.S. economy will grow 2.5 percent this year, the World Bank now predicts, up 0.3 percentage point from its June estimate.

Its forecast shows U.S. growth slowing to 2.2 percent in 2019 and 2 percent in 2020.

In its report released Tuesday, the World Bank credited the widespread global rebound, after years of tepid growth, to stronger investment, rising manufactur­ing activity and increased trade flows.

“The upturn is broad-based, with growth increasing in more than half of the world’s economies,” the report said.

Raising risks

The 189-nation lending organizati­on cautioned about some risks it sees to the internatio­nal economy. It noted, in particular, a shift by the Federal Reserve and some other central banks toward raising interest rates after having kept them near record lows for years.

Higher borrowing rates, if they go too far, could depress economic activity. The bank also warned of threats posed by rising trade protection­ism and geopolitic­al pressures.

World Bank economists said their latest forecast reflects an expectatio­n of some benefit from the tax-cut plan President Donald Trump signed into law last month.

But the boost it foresees falls short of the expectatio­ns of the Trump administra­tion, which is projecting that U.S. growth will reach a sustained annual pace of at least 3 percent, propelled by tax cuts, deregulati­on and tougher enforcemen­t of trade laws.

The report also upgraded the World Bank’s forecast for other economies on the belief that a broad-based pickup in global growth that began last year will endure. The internatio­nal economy as a whole grew last year at a stronger-thanexpect­ed 3 percent. That was a sharp pickup from the lackluster 2.4 percent pace of 2016 — the weakest showing since the recession year of 2009, when the global economy shrank 1.8 percent.

The World Bank forecast that China, the world’s secondlarg­est economy, will grow 6.4 percent this year. And it foresees growth of 2.1 percent in the eurozone and 1.3 percent in Japan.

World Bank President Jim Yong Kim cautioned against complacenc­y. He urged policymake­rs to make needed investment­s in such areas as education and infrastruc­ture as a way to lift lagging worker productivi­ty and increase future growth.

“If policymake­rs around the world focus on these key investment­s, they can increase their countries’ productivi­ty, boost workforce participat­ion and move closer to the goals of ending extreme poverty and boosting shared productivi­ty,” Kim said.

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 ?? [AP PHOTO] ?? Metalworke­rs demonstrat­e Tuesday in Schweinfur­t, southern Germany.
[AP PHOTO] Metalworke­rs demonstrat­e Tuesday in Schweinfur­t, southern Germany.

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