WASHINGTON (AP) — A recession in Europe and
weaker growth in India, Brazil and other developing countries will likely slow
global economic growth, the World Bank said Tuesday.
In its annual report, the bank substantially
cut its forecasts for growth in both developed and poorer nations. It now
projects that the global economy will expand 2.5 percent this year and 3.1
percent in 2013.
That's down from a June forecast of 3.6
percent growth for both years.
The U.S. economy will also suffer from slower
global growth, the report said, though not by as much as developing countries.
"The world is very different than it was
six months ago," said Andrew Burns, head of the bank's global economics
team and lead author of the report. "This is going to be a very difficult
year."
The report noted two major reasons for the
projected global slowdown: Europe's debt crisis has worsened. And several big
developing countries have taken steps to prevent growth from overheating and
fueling inflation.
And a growing concern is that each trend is
negatively affecting the other, Burns said during a conference call with
reporters.
Europe's debt crisis has made investors
nervous, so they are lending less to many emerging-market governments. That has
pushed up interest rates in those countries.
International investors have also cut their
investments in developing countries by 45 percent in the second half of last
year, compared to the same period in 2010.
At the same time, India, Brazil, Russia, South
Africa and Turkey are taking steps to rein in borrowing in order to cool their
economies. That might be prudent for those nations, Burns said. But coming at
the same time as Europe's troubles, the moves "create a fairly dangerous
dynamic where these two trends feed on themselves," he said.
The bank now forecasts that developing
countries will grow 5.4 percent this year, below its June estimate of 6.2
percent. Developed nations will expand only 1.4 percent, down from the bank's
earlier 2.7 percent projection.
The 17 nations that use the euro, meanwhile,
will shrink 0.3 percent in 2012, the bank said. That's down from an expansion
of 1.9 percent that it forecast in June.
The U.S. economy will grow 2.2 percent this
year and 2.4 percent in 2013, the report said. In June, the World Bank said the
U.S. would grow 2.9 percent in 2012 and 2.7 percent in 2013.
The weaker outlook in the U.S. is in part
because of the anticipated global slowdown. But the World Bank also cites the
on-going fight in Washington over spending and taxes as a reason for the
downgrade.
The World Bank's updated U.S. forecasts are
similar to most private-sector projections. And they would represent
improvement from 2011's projected growth of 1.7 percent.
The U.S. government will give its first
estimate for 2011 growth on Jan. 27.
Recent data show that the United States is
already feeling some pain from Europe's crisis. Exports to Europe fell 6
percent in November, the Commerce Department said last week. That helped push
the trade deficit up 10.4 percent to $47.8 billion.
Global trade has also fallen, partly because
banks are cutting back on a type of lending known as trade financing. Trade
financing enables exporters to obtain loans to cover their costs while they
wait to receive payment for their goods.
Worldwide exports of goods and services
increased last year at half the pace of the previous year. Still, that's better
than 2009, when trade volumes shrank.
The World Bank lends to poor countries at low
interest rates to support education, health and infrastructure projects.
The report follows similar warnings about the
global economy in recent months. Christine Lagarde, managing director of the
International Monetary Fund, issued a dire warning about the global economy
last month.
In a speech at the State Department, Lagarde
said that if Europe's debt crisis wasn't resolved, the world economy could face
rising protectionism and isolationism, trends that helped cause the Great
Depression in the 1930s.
And World Bank President Robert Zoellick last
September criticized European leaders for not taking more decisive action to
resolve the region's debt crisis.
He said then that the global economy "has
entered a new danger zone."
AP
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