Inflation, oil prices new risks to global economy: IMF
Soaring oil prices and inflation in emerging economies pose new risks to global recovery but are not yet strong enough to derail it, the International Monetary Fund said on Monday.
The global lender's latest assessment of world economic prospects marked a departure from recent years when its focus was on the potential peril from a near-financial meltdown and recession in advanced countries.
The fastest growth in recent years has come from emerging markets like China, Brazil and India, which helped offset the deep downturns in the United States and other rich nations touched off by burst housing bubbles.
Now, the IMF warns those very economies risk asset bubbles akin to the ones that sparked the 2007-2009 financial crisis.
The challenge for many emerging and some developing economies is to ensure that present boom-like conditions do not develop into overheating over the coming year, the IMF said in its World Economic Outlook report.
IMF chief economist Olivier Blanchard said there was no overwhelming threat to the global economy, but there were trouble spots that needed to be dealt with.
There is not any major downside risk at this point ... in the way there was a year or two ago, he told a news conference.
The IMF's central scenario continues to be one of a slow-paced global economic recovery. However, among the dangers the fund sees are rising inflation and hard-to-control inflows of capital into emerging markets. High debt levels in rich nations, such as the United States, are also a worry spot.
We are warning emerging market countries that they are getting to the point where things may be too good ... we have a long history of countries waiting too long to do something about it, Blanchard said.
COMMODITY PRICE PAIN
The IMF highlighted the searing impact that rising food and commodity prices posed to poorer countries.
Soaring costs for basic stapes stoked the social and economic tensions that have roiled the Arab world. Street protests have toppled dictatorships in Egypt and Tunisia, and left leaders in Yemen and Libya fighting to cling to power.
The Fund said inflation pressures were likely to build in developing countries as people pushed for higher wages in the face of pricier food and fuel.
Oil prices, which surged above $126 a barrel on Friday -- their highest level in 32 months -- retreated on Monday as the African Union signaled progress in Libyan peace talks.
Somewhat surprisingly, the IMF said it saw little lasting impact from Japan's triple disaster -- earthquake, tsunami and nuclear crisis -- although it cautioned of great uncertainty.
It revised down its 2011 forecast for growth in the world's third-largest economy only slightly and raised its projection for 2012.
Speaking of advanced economies collectively, the IMF said a slow-paced recovery was continuing and that risks of a double-dip recession had decreased. But it said unemployment remained stubbornly high and not enough action was being taken to ratchet down budget deficits in the United States and elsewhere.
RECOVERY PICKING UP
The IMF maintained its forecasts for global growth for both 2011 and 2012 at 4.4 percent and 4.5 percent, respectively, saying the global recovery was strengthening .
The fastest growth was still coming from emerging economies, it said. China was expected to lead the way with growth of 9.6 percent this year, followed by India's economy, which was projected to expand 8.2 percent.
By contrast, the United States was forecast to grow at a sub-par 2.8 percent rate this year and 2.9 percent in 2012. The IMF expressed concerns that U.S. plans to cut its budget deficit were backsliding and it urged Washington to tackle politically thorny Social Security and tax reforms.
Blanchard said the global economy needs rebalancing to ensure sources of demand as the United States tightens its budget. If the U.S. is going to do the fiscal consolidation of the size that it has to do then demand has to come from elsewhere he said.
In Europe, the IMF said the recovery was gaining traction despite financial turbulence in Greece, Ireland and Portugal, which have sought IMF and European Union rescue loans to stabilize their financial systems.
The IMF revised up its outlook for the euro zone to 1.6 percent this year and 1.8 percent in 2012.
The Fund said many old policy challenges remained unaddressed even as new ones appear on the horizon.
In advanced economies, strengthening the recovery underway will require keeping monetary policy accommodative as long as wage pressures are subdued, inflation expectations are kept under control, and bank credit is sluggish.
The European Central Bank last week raised interest rates in the first of what is expected to be a series of moves. In contrast, the United Kingdom has held rates steady and the U.S. Federal Reserve is expected to keep its easy policies in place through this year.
In emerging economies, the IMF said, it would be a mistake for policymakers to delay additional policy tightening until rich nations start to raise rates.
The task facing policymakers is to convince their national constituencies that these policy responses are in their best interest regardless of the actions others are taking, the IMF added.
Emerging economies have accused the United States and other advanced economies for causing the surge in potentially destabilizing capital flows with their easy monetary policies. Some, like Brazil, have introduced capital controls to manage the flow of investment money.
(Additional reporting by Glenn Somerville, Lucia Mutikani and Doug Palmer; Editing by Neil Stempleman and Andrew Hay)
© Copyright Thomson Reuters 2024. All rights reserved.