IMF
chief ramps up call for global action as growth risks
increase
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[April 05, 2016]
By Francesco Canepa and Frank Siebelt
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - The global economy's
already modest prospects will decline further unless authorities take
stronger action to boost growth, the head of the IMF warned on Tuesday,
saying the Fund would cut its headline forecasts next week.
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Christine Lagarde said China's shift to an economic model based more
on domestic demand, stubbornly low commodity prices and tighter
funding conditions in some countries had all clouded the outlook.
"Let me be clear: we are on alert, not alarm. There has been a loss
of growth momentum," the International Monetary Fund's managing
director said in a speech at Frankfurt's Goethe University.
The recovery from the 2007-2009 global financial crisis "remains too
slow, too fragile and risks to its durability are increasing."
But if policymakers confronted the challenges and acted together,
"the positive effects on global confidence -- and the global economy
-- will be substantial."
Lagarde advised the United States to raise its minimum wage, Europe
to improve job training and emerging economies to cut fuel subsidies
and boost social spending.
She gave her strongest hint yet that the IMF will cut its global
economic forecasts next week.
"The global outlook has weakened further over the last six months so
you can (deduce) from that there will be a slight revision (in the
IMF estimates)," Lagarde said.
SPRING MEETINGS
Lagarde's remarks come less than two weeks before ministers, central
bankers and other policymakers from the Fund's 188 member countries
gather in Washington to assess the health of the world economy at
the IMF and World Bank Spring Meetings.
While the U.S. recovery has been gaining momentum and some emerging
markets including as Mexico have performed well, the IMF views
Europe and Japan as major disappointments, while China's slowing
growth has hurt oil and commodity exporting countries, including
Brazil and Russia.
To counteract the headwinds, Lagarde called for accelerated
structural reforms, increased fiscal support and continued
accommodative monetary policy.
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She urged improved tax incentives for research and development
investments, citing IMF data showing that a 40 percent increase in
R&D spending in advanced economies could yield a 5 percent increase
in GDP over 20 years.
Asked about negotiations between the IMF, European lenders and
Greece for a new bailout program for the heavily indebted country,
Lagarde told Bloomberg TV the Fund continued to negotiate "in good
faith".
After Internet site Wikileaks published an apparent transcript of an
IMF conference call, Lagarde denied that IMF staff might threaten to
pull out of the bailout as a negotiating tactic to force more
European debt relief for Greece.
Introducing Lagarde's speech, Jens Weidmann, who sits on the
European Central Bank's decision-making body and heads Germany's
Bundesbank, said the IMF was "an essential component" in any euro
zone rescue program.
Among other sources of uncertainty facing the global economy,
Lagarde listed Britain's debate over remaining in the European
Union.
(Additional reporting by David Lawder in Washington; Editing by John
Stonestreet)
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