The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has revised downwards its forecasts for Nigeria and the global economy as a whole.
Growths will be more subdued than previously expected as economies
struggle with appreciably weaker domestic and external demand, the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) said in its latest 'World Economic
Outlook (WEO) Update' entitled 'Growing Pains.
It was released in Washington on Tuesday.
In the report, IMF revised downward growth forecasts for the global
economy and all other segments of advanced and emerging economies citing
continuing old risks and emerging new downside risks.
The IMF reduced earlier growth projections for 2013 and 2014 for
Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), contained in its April 2013 WEO, by 0.4 per
cent and 0.2 per cent as some of its largest economies including Nigeria
and South Africa struggle with domestic problems.
According to the report, at 5.0 per cent in 2013 and about 5.5 per cent
in 2014, growth in emerging market and developing economies is now
expected to evolve at a more moderate pace, some one-quarter percentage
points slower than in the April 2013 WEO.
The Bretton Wood institution says, 'Global growth is projected to remain
subdued at slightly above 3 per cent in 2013, the same as in 2012. This
is less than forecast in the April 2013 World Economic Outlook (WEO),
driven to a large extent by appreciably weaker domestic demand and
slower growth in several key emerging market economies, as well as a
more protracted recession in the euro area.'
It also projects that global growth will recover from slightly above 3.0
per cent in 2013 to 3¾ per cent in 2014, a quarter per cent weaker for
both years than the April 2013 projections.
The report stated that downside risks to global growth prospects still
remain dominant pointing out that while old risks remain, new risks have
emerged including the possibility of a longer growth slowdown in
emerging market economies, especially given risks of lower potential
growth, slowing credit, and possibly tighter financial conditions if the
anticipated unwinding of monetary policy stimulus in the United States
leads to sustained capital flow reversals.
It noted that stronger global growth will require additional policy
action, which will require major advanced economies to maintain a
supportive macroeconomic policy mix, combined with credible plans for
reaching medium-term debt sustainability and reforms to restore balance
sheets and credit channels.
It advised that while many emerging market and developing economies face
a tradeoff between macroeconomic policies to support weak activity and
those to contain capital outflows, macro prudential and structural
reforms can help to reduce the stark consequences of this tradeoff.
The report underlined the excruciating impact of weak global economy on
the emerging market economies with recent increases in advanced economy
interest rates and asset price volatility and weaker domestic activity
leading to some capital outflows, equity price declines, rising local
yields, and currency depreciation. It should be noted that Nigeria's
stock market and forex exchange had witnessed steep declines in June 2013.
According to IMF, weaker growth prospects and new risks raise new
challenges to global growth and employment, and global rebalancing and
policymakers everywhere need to increase efforts to ensure robust
growth.
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