IMF chief expects lukewarm growth in medium term, urges reforms

Georgieva warns of high prices affecting poor and potential destabilisation from Middle East conflict

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Reuters
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IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva departs after delivering a curtain raiser speech on the outlook for the global economy and policy priorities ahead of the 2024 Annual Meetings of the IMF and the World Bank Group in Washington, DC, October 17, 2024. — AFP
IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva departs after delivering a curtain raiser speech on the outlook for the global economy and policy priorities ahead of the 2024 Annual Meetings of the IMF and the World Bank Group in Washington, DC, October 17, 2024. — AFP
  • "Rising protectionism, trade restrictions fracturing global economy".
  • Global trade no longer engine of growth it once was: IMF chief.
  • Georgieva delivers speech ahead of annual IMF, WB meetings.

New forecasts by the International Monetary Fund point to a difficult future for the global economy marked by lackluster medium-term growth, escalating trade tensions and high levels of debt, IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva said on Thursday.

Georgieva painted a sobering picture in a speech ahead of next week's annual IMF and World Bank meetings, but said much could still be done to boost growth, reduce debt and build a more resilient economy.

She warned of the persistent high prices that disproportionately affect the poor, and the potential of the escalating Middle East conflict to destabilise regional economies and global commodity markets

Georgieva also expressed concerns over increased military spending affecting the funding available for other priorities, including aid to developing countries.

Rising protectionism and increasing trade restrictions were fracturing the global economy, limiting growth in trade and "pouring cold water on an already lukewarm world economy," said Georgieva, who started her second five-year term this month.

"I'm not super pessimistic, because if you look at the trajectory of the world economy, yeah, we can do better, but we can also do much worse," Georgieva said during a discussion at IMF headquarters ahead of the next week's meetings.

Global trade was no longer the engine of growth it once was, but it "has not gone into reverse," she said, noting decades of interdependence had been a moderating factor for the jump in trade restrictions built up since the COVID pandemic.

She said there was some good news, including the retreat of global inflation and a return in the direction of price stability, with labour markets cooling in an orderly manner in the United States and Europe.

The United States was not in recession, despite the start of Federal Reserve rate cuts that have triggered downturns in the past three interest-rate cycles, and jobless numbers were expected to stay relatively low, she said.

"Our forecasts point to an unforgiving combination of low growth and high debt - a difficult future," Georgieva said, pointing to mixed economic forecasts for major players.

China's growth was slowing while India's growth was accelerating; the United States was doing "quite well" but Europe could do better, she told the IMF event.

Overall growth would not be sufficient to eradicate world poverty, create the number of jobs needed or to generate tax revenues required to service heavy debt loads and fund investments.

High and rising public debt made the outlook even more troubling, Georgieva said, noting that a "severe but plausible" adverse scenario could push debt 20 percentage points of gross domestic product (GDP) above its current forecast.

That meant governments would face agonizing choices about where to spend precious funds, and the challenges were even greater in emerging market economies.

To change course and spur more growth, countries needed to reduce debt, rebuild buffers for the next shock, cut spending and enhance productivity, she said.

Global cooperation was more important than ever, she said, citing ongoing trade challenges, unexpectedly fast global warming and the rapid growth of AI technology that required global regulatory and ethical codes.

"My expectation is that people would leave from here somewhat uplifted, somewhat more scared, hopefully scared to get them into high gear to act," she said.