IMF lowers global growth outlook, pointing to China’s rocky economic shift
Latest report knocks 0.1 percentage point off forecast for this year, taking figure to 3.1 per cent, and urges Beijing to adopt policies appropriate for slowdown

The International Monetary Fund revised down its global economic growth for this year and the next, flagging increasing spillovers from China’s ongoing economic restructuring.
It knocked 0.1 percentage point off its forecast for this year, taking the figure to 3.1 per cent, and made a similar revision for the 2017 outlook, taking the number to 3.4 per cent, in its latest world economic outlook report.
The IMF estimated that China’s push to switch its economic engine away from investment and towards consumption and services would drag its growth down to 6.6 per cent this year and 6.2 per cent in 2017 – which is lower than a number of analysts’ predictions.
“We are a little bit cautious because we think the restructuring in China has barely begun,” said Frederic Neumann, co-head of Asian Economic Research at HSBC. “We would expect the Chinese economy to slow down next year, and that could put headwinds for emerging markets going into 2017.”