IMF: World Economy To Shrink 1.3 Percent
Decline Is First In Six Decades, Calls It Worst Since "Great Depression"
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The International Monetary Fund projected the 1.3 percent drop in a dour forecast released Wednesday. That could leave at least 10 million more people around the world jobless, some private economists said. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)
The International Monetary Fund projected the 1.3 percent drop in a dour forecast released Wednesday. That could leave at least 10 million more people around the world jobless, some private economists said.
"By any measure, this downturn represents by far the deepest global recession since the Great Depression," the IMF said in its latest World Economic Outlook. "All corners of the globe are being affected."
The new forecast of a decline in global economic activity for 2009 is much weaker than the 0.5 percent growth the IMF had estimated in January.
Big factors in the gloomier outlook: It's expected to take longer than previously thought to stabilize world financial markets and get credit flowing freely again to consumers and businesses. Doing so will be necessary to lift the U.S., and the global economy, out of recession.
The report comes in advance of Friday's meetings between the United States and other major economic powers, and weekend sessions of the IMF and World Bank. The talks will seek to flesh out the commitments made at a G20 leaders summit in London last month, when President Barack Obama and the others pledged to boost financial support for the IMF and other international lending institutions by $1.1 trillion.
The IMF's outlook for the U.S. is bleaker than for the world as a whole: It predicts the U.S. economy will shrink 2.8 percent this year. That would mark the biggest such decline since 1946.
Among the major industrialized nations studied, Japan is expected to suffer the sharpest contraction this year: 6.2 percent. Russia's economy would shrink 6 percent, Germany 5.6 percent and Britain 4.1 percent. Mexico's economic activity would contract 3.7 percent and Canada's 2.5 percent.
Global powerhouse China, meanwhile, is expected to see its growth slow to 6.5 percent this year. India's growth is likely to slow to 4.5 percent.
With the projected downward slide in economic activity, unemployment will rise broadly.
The jobless rate in the United States is expected to average 8.9 percent this year and climb to 10.1 percent next year, the IMF said.
In Germany, the jobless rate is expected to average 9 percent this year and 10.8 percent next year. Britain's unemployment rate is projected to rise to 7.4 percent this year and to 9.2 percent next year.
Brian Bethune, economist at IHS Global Insight, estimates that at least 10 million jobs could be lost this year, mostly in the United States and Europe, because of sinking global economic activity.
He and other economists said the 1.3 percent projected decline would be the first in roughly 60 years. In a report issued in mid-March, the IMF predicted global activity would contract this year "for the first time in 60 years," though it didn't offer a precise estimate then.
Next year, the IMF predicts the world economy will grow again - but just 1.9 percent. It said this would be consistent with its findings that economic recoveries after financial crises "are significantly slower" than ordinary recoveries typically are.
All those factors tend to weigh against prospects "for a speedy turnaround," the IMF said.
In 2010, the IMF predicts the U.S. economy will be flat, neither shrinking nor growing. Germany's and Britain's economies, meanwhile, will shrink less - by 1 percent and 0.4 percent respectively - it estimates.
Others countries, such as Japan, Russia, Canada and Mexico are projected to grow again. And China and India should pick up speed.
The financial crisis erupted in the United States in August 2007 and spread around the globe. The crisis entered a tumultuous new phase last fall, shaking confidence in global financial institutions and markets. Total worldwide losses from the financial crisis from 2007 to 2010 could reach nearly $4.1 trillion, the IMF estimated in a separate report Tuesday.
The crisis has led to bank failures, wiped out Lehman Brothers and forced other big institutions, like insurance giant American International Group, to be bailed out by U.S. taxpayers.
And it's triggered radical government interventions - such as the United States' $700 billion financial bailout program and the Federal Reserve's $1.2 trillion effort to lower interest rates and spur spending.
Actions by the United States and government in other countries have helped ease the crisis in some ways. But markets are still not operating normally.
The 185-nation IMF, headquartered in Washington, is the globe's economic rescue squad, providing emergency loans to countries facing financial troubles. It has urged countries to take bolder actions to bolster banks.
The IMF also has pushed countries to work more closely together. It favors coordinating fiscal stimulus efforts through tax reductions or greater government spending to stimulate the appetites of consumers and businesses. And it warned countries to resist the temptation of enacting protectionist trade measures.
Bold policy actions could set off a mutually reinforcing "relief rally" in financial markets and a revival in consumer and business confidence, the IMF said. But it remains concerned that these policies won't be enough to break the vicious cycle whereby deteriorating financial institutions feed, in turn, weaker economic conditions.
"The problem is that the longer the downturn continues to deepen, the slimmer the chances that such a strong rebound will occur, as pessimism about the outlook becomes entrenched and balance sheets are damaged further," the IMF said in the report Wednesday.
With the global economy stuck in a recession, the risks of a dangerous bout of deflation - a prolonged decline in prices that can worsen the economy - has risen. The IMF cited a "moderate" risk of deflation in the United States and in the 16 countries that use the euro. It saw a "significant likelihood of deeper price deflation" in Japan.
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- How will be make payments on the 3 trillion borrowed unless we create wealth in the economy, wealth come from manufacturing. Wealth is borrowing and spending.
- Reply to this comment
- Besides, who in their right mind would believe a person with NO ETHICS, NO INTEGRITY, NO CONSCIENCE and NO BRAINS?
Posted by StopTheLoonyLeft at 10:14 AM : Apr 22, 2009
LoonyLeft
Realizing your shortcomings is the first step toward improvement. - Reply to this comment
- Question:
How do hard working Americans get more than three weeks off per year during their entire working life?
Answer:
They get Layed Off. - Reply to this comment
- After see my 401K shrink, My house lose value, my paycheck cut by my employer, I'm going to spend as little money as possible.
I guess the spending needed to get us out of this mess will have to be done by those few who still have something to spend. - Reply to this comment
- IMF/WORLD BANK IS A CRIMINAL ORGANIZATION THAT SHOULD FILE FOR BANKRUPTCY!
Folks,
How in the hell do you have an organization that has no money, just the authority to announce credit liabilities (denominated in U.S. Federal Reserve Notes) for international companies to trade and supposedly build infrastructure programs?
These countries cannot devalue their currencies any further to peg themselves to a worthless currency called the 'dollar'.
WE ARE NOT GIVING THESE COUNTRIES ANYTHING BUT WORTHLESS PAPER I.O.U.s.
This British Global Financial System of worthless derivatives and credit-default swaps denominated in 'dollars' is DEAD, KAPUT, GONE, OVER, FINISHED!
Unless we re-structure the financial system in a global concert of bankruptcy protection and go back to a Sovereign Nation-State System of treaties for fixed-exchange rates in currency,
WE WILL DIE!!!
larouchepac.com - Reply to this comment
- And yet the world loves Obama, who has stupidly locked up 4000 Billion in spending we can't afford(while at the same time begging the Communist Chinese to lend us more money)
- Reply to this comment
- Why won't CBS allow us to comment on the Freddie Mac CFO "suicide" (ha ha ha) story?
Suicide? Like the "suicide" of former Enron Corp. vice chairman J. Clifford Baxter? - Reply to this comment
- Why won't CBS allow us to comment on the Freddie Mac CFO "suicide" (ha ha ha) story?
Hey, Godfather, I'll just write my comments elsewhere.
Suicide? Like the "suicide" of anthrax scientist Bruce Ivins?
Lest we forget...
The first anthrax victim, a journalist named Robert Stevens, was "eliminated" by the CIA at the beginning of October 2001 because his private investigation led him to the truth behind the September 11, 2001 attack. The other anthrax victims were killed simply to give the public the impression of a conspiracy. - Reply to this comment

Author Thomas Friedman on Obama's Afghanistan plan and the war on terror.




