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IMF cuts global growth forecasts on Russia-Ukraine war

  
Via:  Nerm_L  •  2 years ago  •  1 comments

By:   Silvia Amaro (CNBC)

IMF cuts global growth forecasts on Russia-Ukraine war
The Washington-based institution is now projecting a 3.6% GDP rate for the global economy this year and for 2023.

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Oh, come on.  We're supposed to believe this tripe?

According to the World Bank, , the Russian Federation is ranked 11th with a GDP of $1.48 trillion and Ukraine is ranked 56th with a GDP of $155 billion.  The combined economic output of the Russian Federation and Ukraine wouldn't cover the Federal budget of the United States.  Canada has a larger economy than does the Russian Federation.  And Greece has a larger economy than does Ukraine.  

Blaming the Ukrainian war for what's happening in the global economy is some of Joe Biden's famous malarkey.  The IMF is telling us that the global economy is extraordinarily fragile and has no resilience.  The IMF's dire finger pointing is like claiming that Italy invading Greece would cause the global economy to collapse.

There isn't any way to rationalize away the fact that neoliberal globalization has made the world less stable.  Global interdependence may be good for profits but the cost is loss of resilience.  Globalization really has made the rich astronomically richer and has protected the astronomically rich.  But if someone farts in Ukraine then the rest of us mere mortals suffer greatly disproportionate hardships.  

What is happening in the global economy is a dismal failure of neoliberal globalization.  And disruptions in the global supply chains have made lipstick too scarce to put a happy face on that pig.


S E E D E D   C O N T E N T



The International Monetary Fund on Tuesday cut its global growth projections for 2022 and 2023, saying the economic hit from Russia's unprovoked invasion of Ukraine will "propagate far and wide."

The Washington-based institution is now projecting a 3.6% GDP rate for the global economy this year and for 2023. This represents a 0.8 and 0.2 percentage point drop, respectively, from its forecasts published in January.

"Global economic prospects have been severely set back, largely because of Russia's invasion of Ukraine," Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas, economic counsellor at the IMF, said in a blog post Tuesday, marking the release of the IMF's latest World Economic Outlook report.

Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24 with officials like NATO's Jens Stoltenberg noting that Moscow is hoping to gain control of the whole of its neighbor.

"The effects of the war will propagate far and wide, adding to price pressures and exacerbating significant policy challenges," Gourinchas said in his blogpost.

The World Bank also cut its global growth expectations on Monday, now estimating a growth rate for 2022 of 3.2%, down from 4.1%.

Ukraine to contract 35%


The United States, Canada, the U.K. and the European Union have imposed several rounds of sanctions targeting Russian banks, oligarchs and energy.

The IMF said these penalties will have "a severe impact on the Russian economy," which estimated that the country's GDP will fall by 8.5% this year, and by 2.3% in 2023.

However, the fund has forecast an even bleaker assessment for the Ukrainian economy.

"For 2022, the Ukrainian economy is expected to contract by 35%," the IMF said in its latest economic assessment, while adding that more precise analysis on the economic hit was "impossible to obtain."

"Even if the war were to end soon, the loss of life, destruction of physical capital, and flight of citizens will severely impede economic activity for many years to come," the organization said.

Inflation concerns


More broadly, Russia's decision to invade Ukraine has intensified supply shocks to the global economy, while also bringing about new challenges.

"Russia is a major supplier of oil, gas, and metals, and, together with Ukraine, of wheat and corn. Reduced supplies of these commodities have driven their prices up sharply," the fund said Tuesday.

This is expected to hurt lower-income households globally and lead to higher inflation for longer than previously anticipated. The IMF estimates the inflation rate will reach 7.7% in the United States this year and 5.3% in the euro zone.

"The risk is rising that inflation expectations drift away from central bank inflation targets, prompting a more aggressive tightening response from policymakers," the fund said.

The U.S. Federal Reserve expects to hike interest rates six more times in 2022, while the European Central Bank confirmed last week it is ending its asset purchase program in the third quarter.

However, this monetary tightening could be accelerated if inflation remains high.

The latest IMF economic outlook also points to concerns about the 5 million Ukrainian refugees who have sought support in neighboring countries, such as Poland, Romania and Moldova, and the ensuing economic pressures for these nations from supporting them.

Speaking to CNBC Tuesday, Tobias Adrian, director for monetary and capital markets at the IMF, said that the current string of crises hitting the global economy reminded him of the euro sovereign debt crunch which followed the 2008 crash.

"Many commentators and policymakers hoped that the 2008 crisis was over but they were just about to enter this new sovereign debt crisis. Today, we had the pandemic, the pandemic caused tremendous stress in the financial markets … It has left the financial system with certain vulnerabilities and so on top of this pandemic, in this phase of pandemic recovery comes the war in Ukraine and that has caused further stresses in some segments," he told CNBC's Geoff Cutmore.


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Nerm_L
Professor Expert
1  seeder  Nerm_L    2 years ago

Don't pee down our backs and tell us you're an expert.  

 
 

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