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Business

IMF warns of growing global recession risk

IMF economic counsellor and director of the research department Olivier Blanchard (centre) announces the World Economic Outlook in Tokyo on Tuesday. Photo: AFP

Plagued by uncertainty and fresh setbacks, the world economy has weakened further and will grow more slowly over the next year, the International Monetary Fund says in its latest forecast.

Advanced economies are risking recession, the international lending organisation said in a quarterly update of its World Economic Outlook, and the malaise is spreading to more dynamic emerging economies such as China.

The IMF forecasts that the world economy will expand 3.3 per cent this year, down from the estimate of 3.5 per cent growth it issued in July. Its forecast for growth next year is 3.6 per cent, down from 3.9 per cent three months ago and 4.1 per cent in April.

Because uncertainty is high, confidence is low, and financial sectors are weak, the significant fiscal achievements have been accompanied by disappointing growth or recessions

Underpinning that bleaker scenario are the assumptions that Europe will continue to ease monetary policy and that the US will avert a crushing blow to growth by fending off a so-called “fiscal cliff” that could result from a failure to reach a compromise on its budget law and tax cuts.

Conditions could worsen if the United States doesn’t deal with its budget crisis soon, the IMF said.

“Downside risks have increased and are considerable,” the fund said. It said its forecasts are based “on critical policy action in the euro area and the United States, and it is very difficult to estimate the probability that this action will materialize.”

The IMF has urged the US to raise the ceiling on the level of debt the government can issue, which is capped by law. In August last year, a battle between the Obama administration and Congress over raising the limit wasn’t resolved until the US almost defaulted on its debt.

Global efforts to ease credit and increase the amount of money available for lending are helping, but appear to be yielding diminishing returns, as are fiscal stimulus policies, the IMF warned.

“Because uncertainty is high, confidence is low, and financial sectors are weak, the significant fiscal achievements have been accompanied by disappointing growth or recessions,” it said.

Among other things, it says governments need to do more to relieve the burden of household debt that is constraining spending power and thus crippling demand.

While large corporations pay record low rates for credit, households and small companies struggle to obtain bank loans, it said.

Fortifying domestic demand is all the more crucial given weakening trade trends. The IMF forecasts that growth in world trade volume will slump to 3.2 per cent this year from 5.8 per cent last year and 12.6 per cent in 2010.

“Low growth and uncertainty in advanced economies are affecting emerging market and developing economies through both trade and financial channels, adding to homegrown weaknesses,” the IMF’s chief economist, Olivier Blanchard, said in a statement.

Still, the IMF raised the US growth forecast slightly, to 2.2 per cent this year from 2 per cent in July. For next year, though, it expects US growth of 2.1 per cent, down from 2.3 per cent.

Among the 17 nations that use the euro, low growth in the major “core economies,” such as Germany and France, will be offset by outright contractions in the smaller economies, leading real gross domestic product to fall by about 0.4 per cent this year, the IMF said.

It forecasts growth in the euro area will stay flat in the first half of next year and tick up to about 1 per cent in the second half of the year, the IMF said.

The report was released just ahead of the World Bank-IMF annual meeting, which is being held in Tokyo this week. The gathering of some 10,000 bankers, executives and officials will likely refocus attention on Japan’s failure to escape its own economic slump two decades after its own financial implosion in the early 1990s.

The IMF said it expects growth in Japan to hit 2.2 per cent this year but to slacken further as reconstruction from the March last year disasters winds down, falling to 1.2 per cent next year.

Japan, whose population is both shrinking and aging faster than elsewhere, is confronting problems of high debt and stagnation, it said.

As usual, the bright spots are developing economies that were less affected by the global financial crisis, where rising employment and strong demand will help support growth, the IMF said.

China’s economy will likely expand 7.8 per cent this year, down from July’s 8 per cent forecast, though a pickup in construction projects is expected to spur growth late in the year. India’s economy will grow 4.9 per cent, down from 6.1 per cent. And Brazil’s growth will be only 1.5 per cent, compared to 2.5 per cent.

The IMF advised policymakers to devise stronger medium-term fiscal and structural reforms to shore up confidence in the growth potential of the advanced economies.

Only then, will investor confidence in markets and public debt be restored.

“Unless governments spell out how they intend to effect the necessary adjustment over the medium term, a cloud of uncertainty will continue to hang over the international economy, with downside risks for output and employment in the short term,” it said.