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IMF Sees Weakest World Growth in Three Years as Europe Slows

IMF blames softening demand across Europe and recent palpitations in financial markets for the downgrade.

IMF Sees Weakest World Growth in Three Years as Europe Slows
Attendees wait to begin an International Monetary Fund Committee (IMFC) plenary session at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank Group Annual Meetings in Washington, D.C., U.S. (Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- The International Monetary Fund cut its forecast for the world economy, predicting it will grow at the weakest pace in three years in 2019 and warning fresh trade tensions would spell further trouble.

In its second downgrade in three months, the lender blamed softening demand across Europe and recent palpitations in financial markets. It predicts global growth of 3.5 percent this year, beneath the 3.7 percent expected in October and the rate in 2018.

“The world economy is growing more slowly than expected, and risks are rising,” Managing Director Christine Lagarde told reporters in Davos, Switzerland.

IMF Sees Weakest World Growth in Three Years as Europe Slows

The outlook is perhaps more upbeat than that of many investors who openly fear a U.S-led slowdown taking hold. The fund left its projections for the U.S. and China unchanged and even anticipates a pickup in worldwide expansion to 3.6 percent next year.

Risks nevertheless “tilt to the downside,” the IMF said in a report which came hours after China revealed the slowest expansion since 2009 last quarter. The IMF’s outlook will set the tone for this week’s World Economic Forum meeting in Davos.

“It is important to take stock of the many rising risks,” said Gita Gopinath, the fund’s new chief economist. “Given this backdrop, policymakers need to act now to reverse headwinds to growth and prepare for the next downturn.”

Threats cited in the report included more trade tariffs, a renewed tightening of financial conditions, a “no deal” Brexit and a deeper-than-anticipated slowdown in China.

Among major economies, the deepest revision was for Germany, which the IMF now sees expanding 1.3 percent this year, down 0.6 percentage point from October. Soft consumer demand and weak factory production after the introduction of stricter emission standards for cars was behind the shift.

The fund also cut its forecasts for Italy, citing weak demand and higher sovereign borrowing costs, and France, where the so-called Yellow-Vest protests have hurt the economy. The overall euro area will grow 1.6 percent this year, 0.3 point below what it previously thought.

The IMF lowered its 2019 outlook for emerging markets to 4.5 percent, down 0.2 point from three months ago. A major factor was a deeper-than-expected recession in Turkey, which has been struggling to respond to the plunge in its currency last year. There was also a big downgrade to Mexico’s prospects.

While some of the issues in Europe may be temporary, the IMF noted that they came amid a backdrop of global trade policy uncertainty and concerns about China’s outlook. President Donald Trump and President Xi Jinping have given their officials until March 1 to reach a deal on a lasting truce after imposing tariffs on each other last year.

“The possibility of tensions resurfacing in the Spring casts a shadow over global economic prospects,” the IMF said. It predicts global trade volumes will rise 4 percent this year and next, the same pace as in 2018 but below the 5.3 percent of 2017.

Read More: What Bloomberg Economics is thinking about global growth

The 2019 U.S. forecast was unchanged at 2.5 percent. But the IMF said growth in the world’s biggest economy will cool to 1.8 percent in 2020 as stimulus from tax cuts fades and the economy responds to higher Federal Reserve interest rates.

As for China, the IMF still expects expansion of 6.2 percent this year after 6.6 percent in 2018, a slowing due to the trade war and the government’s attempt to pare leverage.

--With assistance from Catherine Bosley and Eric Martin.

To contact the reporter on this story: Andrew Mayeda in Washington at amayeda@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Sarah McGregor at smcgregor5@bloomberg.net, Fergal O'Brien, Simon Kennedy

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