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World Bank cuts global growth outlook
2022-06-09 00:00:00.0     星报-商业     原网页

       

       WASHINGTON: The World Bank has cut its forecast for global economic expansion in 2022 further, warning that several years of above-average inflation and below-average growth lie ahead with potentially destabilising consequences for low and middle-income economies.

       “The world economy is again in danger,” president David Malpass said in the foreword of the latest edition of the lender’s Global Economic Prospects report.

       “It is facing high inflation and slow growth at the same time. Even if a global recession is averted, the pain of stagflation could persist for several years – unless major supply increases are set in motion.”

       The Washington-based lender reduced its estimate for global growth this year to 2.9% from a January prediction of 4.1% and April’s 3.2% estimate due to a surge in energy and food prices, supply disruptions triggered by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and a drive by central banks globally to increase interest rates from rock-bottom levels.

       The world economy expanded 5.7% in 2021 after the Covid-19 pandemic triggered the deepest global recession since World War II.

       “For many countries, recession will be hard to avoid,” Malpass said, adding that the adverse shocks of the past two years mean real income per capita will remain below pre-Covid-19 levels in about 40% of developing economies in 2023.

       Central banks are battling a worse-than-anticipated inflation surge spurred by disruptions in the supply of goods, energy and food amid lockdowns in key production hubs in China and the war in Ukraine.

       More than 60 monetary authorities – including the Bank of England and the Federal Reserve – have raised interest rates this year, and the European Central Bank may start within months. Accelerating inflation and slowing growth have raised World Bank officials’ concerns that the global economy is entering a period of stagflation reminiscent of the 1970s.

       As a result, a steeper-than-anticipated policy tightening may now again be required to return inflation to target – and this might trigger a hard landing.

       With emerging and developing economies’ debt at multi-decade highs, “the associated rise in global borrowing costs and exchange-rate depreciations may trigger financial crises, as it did in the early 1980s,” the World Bank said.

       About 60% of the world’s 75 poorest countries are in or at risk of debt distress, and this is spreading to middle-income countries, Malpass said in an interview on Bloomberg Television.

       China is the biggest creditor, and the contracts are written with collateral and non-disclosure clauses, which makes it “hard to engage the conversation,” he said. — Bloomberg

       


标签:综合
关键词: economies     disruptions     middle-income     stagflation     major supply increases     growth     president David Malpass     inflation     recession    
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