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EUROPE As a whole, the alliance of 17 economies that use the euro will shrink 0.4 percent this year and grow just 0.2 percent next year, the IMF predicts. Europe's economic slide has been deepened by its financial crisis. Countries such as Greece and Spain are suffering from high debts and weak banks. Greece, Ireland and Portugal have already needed bailouts. Some relief has come from a pledge by the European Central Bank to buy unlimited amounts of government bonds to help lower borrowing costs for the most troubled nations. Yet political differences are making a solution difficult. Proposals to shore up Europe's financial system
-- by authorizing the ECB to supervise banks and creating shared bank deposit insurance
-- have run into obstacles. Germany, for example, wants more time to finalize details before making the ECB the supervisor of banks. The IMF warns that a failure to bolster Europe's banks and more tightly link its economies would further darken the outlook for the continent. Spain has begun to unnerve investors by declining so far to ask for financial aid from the rest of the eurozone. That's a condition for receiving help from the ECB. The Spanish government fears the eurozone would force it to make further deep spending cuts. Spain's delay in seeking aid has caused its borrowing costs to creep up. The most troubled European nations remain gripped by dismal economies. Unemployment in the eurozone as a whole is 11.4 percent. Greece, Spain, Italy, Cyprus, Malta and Portugal are in recession. Unemployment in Greece and Spain is around 25 percent. ASIA China has been a potent economic engine for Asia and the world. But its annual growth fell to a three-year low of 7.6 percent in the quarter that ended in June. The IMF expects China's economy to grow 7.8 percent this year. That's explosive by Western standards. But as recently as 2010, China's annual economic expansion topped 10 percent. The slowdown has hurt Chinese companies that depend on robust growth. The weakening of its export markets in Europe and the United States will likely delay China's rebound. Japan's economy, the world's third biggest, is far worse off. The IMF expects the Japanese economy to grow just 2.2 percent this year and 1.2 percent in 2013 as construction related to its recovery from the 2011 earthquake slows. Japan's population is shrinking and aging. And its economy is facing high debts and stagnation. For developing Asia-Pacific economies as a whole, the World Bank predicts 7.2 percent growth this year. India's cooling economy will grow 4.9 percent, Brazil's just 1.5 percent, the IMF predicts. Friction between China and Japan over disputed islands in the East China Sea poses another threat to the region's growth. The antagonism and a wave of anti-Japanese riots in China have slashed demand for Japanese-brand cars and cooled a once-booming tourist trade between the two countries. J.P. Morgan predicts that Japan's auto exports to China will plummet 70 percent during the October-December period. Exports of auto parts will tumble about 40 percent, as will exports of other consumer products such as electronics, J.P. Morgan estimates.
[Associated
Press;
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