The
International Monetary Fund on Tuesday slashed its forecast for world economic
growth, warning the weight of the eurozone crisis threatens to capsize the
global recovery.
The IMF cautioned that sharper budget cuts by
major economies in the face of slower growth could exacerbate the slowdown, and
if European leaders fail to get on top of their debt crisis, global economic
output could be cut by more than half.
In an update of its September economic
forecasts, the IMF cut 2012 projections to 3.3 per cent from 4.0 per cent, and
said the 17-nation eurozone would contract by 0.5 per cent this year.
It said global growth could pick up to 3.9 per
cent in 2013, but only if market panic over eurozone fragility is avoided.
The newest forecasts are "predicated on
the assumption that in the euro area, policymakers intensify efforts to address
the crisis," the Fund said.
If Europe's leaders do not take strong action
soon, nervous markets will press up the costs of borrowing for governments more
widely, forcing them to cut spending.
In that case, world output could be cut by
another two percentage points, the global crisis lender said.
"The global recovery is threatened by
intensifying strains in the euro area and fragilities elsewhere," the IMF
said.
"Financial conditions have deteriorated,
growth prospects have dimmed, and downside risks have escalated."
The lowered forecast was tied directly to the
euro area economy's expected fall into "mild" recession in 2012 on
the back of government spending cuts and commercial banks reducing lending.
"Growth in emerging and developing
economies is also expected to slow because of the worsening external
environment and a weakening of internal demand," it added.
The Fund has been warning for weeks that
global growth was weakening due to the European crisis.
On Monday in Berlin, IMF managing director
Christine Lagarde pressed European leaders to build a stronger backstop to
prevent the problems in the continent's weakest economies -- Greece, Spain and
Portugal -- from pulling down others.
"We need a larger firewall," she
said. "Without it, countries like Italy and Spain that are fundamentally
able to repay their debts could be forced into a solvency crisis by abnormal
financing costs."
The Fund warned against overly sharp
budget-balancing by those countries that can afford to move slowly to reduce their
deficits.
Otherwise, they will just create more drag on
the global economy.
"Decreasing debt is a marathon, not a
sprint," said Olivier Blanchard, the IMF's chief economist. "Going
too fast will kill growth and further derail the recovery."
The recommendation was pointed at Europe's
largest economies Germany, France and Britain, all of which it said would
continue to grow this year, albeit at a weak pace.
Germany's economy was seen growing 0.3 per
cent, France's 0.2 per cent, and Britain's 0.6 per cent.
The United States, the world's largest
economy, was projected to grow 1.8 per cent in 2012.
The growth downgrades covered the entire
world.
Forecast growth in central and eastern Europe
was slashed sharply to 4.5 per cent due mainly to fallout from the eurozone
crisis.
In China, the world's second largest economy,
the IMF saw a slower, soft-landing pace of 8.2 per cent this year and 8.8 per
cent in 2013.
But it warned of the risk of credit and real
estate bubbles which, if the country undergoes a loss in overall confidence,
could have a "very damaging" impact on economic activity.
Among the other major emerging economies,
India should grow at 7.0 per cent this year and pick up slightly in 2013;
Brazil 3.0 per cent; Mexico 3.5 per cent; and Russia 3.3 per cent.
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