IMF sees rising prospects of global growth despite uncertainties

IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva said that when the IMF releases its updated economic forecast next week, it will show the global economy growing at a faster pace than the 5.5 percent gain it projected at the start of the year.

International Monetary Fund (IMF) logo is seen at the IMF headquarters building during the IMF/World Bank annual meetings in Washington, US, on October 14, 2017.
Reuters

International Monetary Fund (IMF) logo is seen at the IMF headquarters building during the IMF/World Bank annual meetings in Washington, US, on October 14, 2017.

The International Monetary Fund will raise its forecast for global economic growth in 2021 and 2022 after last year's 3.5 percent contraction, but financial conditions remain highly uncertain, IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva has said.

Georgieva said the global economy was on firmer footing after governments spent some $16 trillion on fiscal measures to contain the Covid-19 pandemic and mitigate its economic impact. However, developments are diverging dangerously across regions and countries, and even within nations.

The Biggest Test

"Vaccines are not yet available to everyone and everywhere. Too many people continue to face job losses and rising poverty," she told the Council on Foreign Relations ahead of next week's release of the fund's updated World Economic Outlook. "Too many countries are falling behind."

Georgieva said the world was at a critical turning point, much as it was in 1945 when the IMF and World Bank were created, and called for continued strong actions to safeguard the recovery, ramp up vaccine production and distribution, and invest in a new green and digital infrastructure.

READ MORE:  Asian markets shaken as US Fed ends emergency measures

"We face the biggest test of our generation," she said. "What we do now will shape the post-crisis world,"

Georgieva said the IMF would raise its January forecasts for global economic growth of 5.5 percent in 2021 and 4.2 percent in 2022 due to increased fiscal spending in the United States and prospects for a vaccine-powered recovery in other advanced economies.

It will release the new forecasts next week.

Multi-Speed Recovery 

Georgieva said the United States and China were powering a "multi-speed recovery" from the crisis, with advanced economies facing an 11 percent cumulative loss in per capita income, relative to pre-crisis projections, while emerging and developing economies, excluding China, would see a 20 percent drop.

The IMF had provided over $107 billion in new financing to 85 countries and debt service relief for 29 of its poorest members. In sub-Saharan Africa, the IMF's financing surged to 13 times its average annual level in the previous decade, she said.

READ MORE: Google pledges to invest $7B and create over 10,000 US jobs

But low-income countries needed more help, she said, citing new estimates that they would need $200 billion over five years to fight the pandemic and $250 billion to return to the path of catching up to higher income levels.

Georgieva said support was building for a possible $650 billion expansion of the IMF's Special Drawing Rights, which would help all members but especially the most vulnerable, by boosting reserves without adding to their debt burdens.

Small businesses at risk 

Extraordinary measures are undertaken by countries and more resilient banking systems had clearly helped avert a far worse global contraction and another global financial crisis, but the outlook remained highly uncertain, Georgieva said.

Much depended on the path of the pandemic, uneven vaccination rates and the emergence of new COVID-19 strains that are holding back growth prospects in Europe and Latin America.

READ MORE: UN revises up world economic growth forecast to 4.7% for 2021

Strong US growth could help many countries by boosting trade, but it could also trigger a rapid rise in interest rates, which could cause tighter financial conditions and significant capital outflows from emerging and developing economies. That would pose major challenges, especially for middle-income countries with large external financing needs and high debt levels, she said.

Georgieva urged authorities to keep an eye on financial risk, including stretched asset valuations, and to take steps to prevent excess financial volatility - at home and abroad.

Small and medium-sized businesses needed further support, she said, warning of a sharp rise in expected insolvencies this year as countries cut back loans and grants.

Route 6