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Worst of financial crisis yet to come: IMF chief economist

World Economic Forum ends amid gloom

February 1, 2009

Life is getting back to normal in the Swiss ski resort of Davos now that the world’s movers and shakers have packed up their things and gone.

For five days, it hosted leading international business and political figures in a World Economic Forum overshadowed by the global downturn.

Pledges were made to strive for a new world trade deal and guard against protectionism. There was even a call to reform the economic system itself!
But delegates also found time to share their woes.

“Quite often the effect is that they get more and more excited in a positive sense about the virtues of globalisation,” said Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz.

But he added: “This time, they have got more depressed as they learned about the problems that each of them faced. So, in that sense, it almost surely has contributed to the deepening of the gloom.”

With the world economy in its worst state since the Second World War, gloom was inevitable as the big names gathered in Switzerland.


Headlines were also made by the shouting match between Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Israel’s President Shimon Peres over the Gaza military campaign.

And there were warnings that economic turmoil and measures taken to address it, could heighten the risk of social unrest.Protesters ensured their voice was heard at Davos, accusing bankers, business leaders and politicians of creating the crisis and sending them the bill.
 
Worst days for economy in 60 years, says IMF

Friday, 20 Mar, 2009

WASHINGTON, March 19: The International Monetary Fund on Thursday said that the world economy, reeling from financial crisis, was on track to shrink for the first time in 60 years in 2009, by as much as 1.0 per cent.

In a report prepared for the Group of 20 meeting of finance chiefs last week in Britain and published on Thursday, the IMF slashed forecasts from two months ago to a global contraction of between 0.5 per cent and 1.0 per cent.

The latest IMF projections were sharply lower than those in the World Economic Outlook update published on January 28 that had put global growth at an annual rate of 0.5 per cent.

“Global economic activity is falling – with advanced economies registering their sharpest declines in the post-war era – notwithstanding forceful policy efforts,” the IMF staff report said.

The revisions “reflect unrelenting financial turmoil, negative incoming data, sinking confidence, and the limited effect to date of policy responses with respect to the restoration of financial system health”. The world economy was expected to gradually stage a “modest recovery” in 2010, with growth between 1.5 per cent and 2.5 per cent, but downside risks were significant, it said.

Advanced economies were expected to suffer “deep recessions” in 2009, shrinking between 3.0 and 3.5 per cent, according to the IMF report.

The Group of Seven major industrialised economies – Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States — were expected as a group to experience the sharpest contraction since World War II “by a significant margin”.

The United States, the world’s largest economy, was projected to contract at an annual rate of 2.6 per cent, and Japan, the second largest, by a staggering 5.8 per cent.

The 16-nation eurozone would contract 3.2 per cent.

The IMF warned that the US and Japan have “high risks” of deflation, while that risk was “moderate” in several eurozone members, including Germany, Italy and France.

The Washington-based institution also sharply lowered growth projections for emerging and developing countries, to between 1.5 per cent and 2.5 per cent.

The IMF said that the G20 countries had not done enough to fight the recession and pointed out that its recommendation they implement stimulus measures amounting to 2.0 per cent of output so far had largely been unheeded.

“Country responses to the global crisis are in an early stage ... measures are still needed to restore financial stability,” the IMF said.

Next year’s projected recovery depends on comprehensive policy steps to stabilize financial conditions, sizeable fiscal support, a gradual improvement in credit conditions, a bottoming of the United States housing market, and the cushioning effect from sharply lower oil and other major commodity prices, the IMF said.—AFP
 
Next year’s projected recovery depends on comprehensive policy steps to stabilize financial conditions, sizeable fiscal support, a gradual improvement in credit conditions, a bottoming of the United States housing market, and the cushioning effect from sharply lower oil and other major commodity prices, the IMF said.

Removing Acid Assets plan by obama is going to help very much so, but time will tell how many investors bid on it. The proposal is lucrative and enticing.
 
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