IMF, global finance leaders fret over
populist backlash
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[October 07, 2016]
By David Lawder
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - World finance
leaders on Thursday decried a growing populist backlash against
globalization and pledged to take steps to ensure trade and economic
integration benefited more people currently left behind.
Their comments at the start of the International Monetary Fund and World
Bank fall meetings signaled frustration with persistently low growth
rates and the surge of public anger over free trade and other pillars of
the global economic system.
The meetings are the first since Britain voted in June to leave the
European Union and U.S. billionaire Donald Trump secured the Republican
presidential nomination with a campaign that attacked trade deals.
"More and more, people don't trust their elites. They don't trust their
economic leaders, and they don't trust their political leaders," German
Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said during an IMF panel discussion
in Washington.
"In the UK, everyone from the elites told the people, 'don't vote for a
Brexit.' But they did."
Schaeuble said Germany was trying to "hold Europe together" in the face
of rising nationalism, and failure to do so would bode poorly for global
economic cooperation.
Last week, the World Trade Organization slashed its global trade volume
growth forecast to the slowest pace since 2007, saying it expected it to
rise just 1.7 percent this year, down from the 2.8 percent it forecast
in April.
FEARS OF PROTECTIONISM
On Thursday, Latin American finance ministers also expressed concerns
about growing protectionist sentiment in advanced economies that
threatens to sink trade agreements such as the 12-country Trans-Pacific
Partnership, which includes Mexico, Chile and Peru.
"There are isolationist trends in Europe and sadly so in the U.S.,"
Argentine Finance Minister Alfonso Prat-Gay told a panel during the IMF
and World Bank meetings, holding out hope that cross-border investment
within Latin America could still grow.
IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde launched the meetings by
renewing her call for countries to further boost growth by increasing
spending when possible, keeping interest rates extraordinarily low and
implementing pro-business reforms aimed at improving economic
efficiency.
Lagarde singled out Canada, Germany and South Korea as among the nations
that could afford to sustainably increase spending, but said that others
with no additional capacity could rearrange their budgets towards
infrastructure and education programs.
Asked to comment on the dangers to the global economy if Trump wins the
White House in the November election and follows through on his pledges
to renegotiate trade deals and enact punitive U.S. tariffs, Lagarde
declined to give a direct answer.
"I simply note that trade has been in the main a great engine for
growth," she said. "We need that engine in order to support and
accelerate growth."
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Bank of England Governor Mark Carney (L) and IMF Director General
Christine Lagarde field questions during a panel discussion at the
annual meetings of the IMF and World Bank Group in Washington,
October 6, 2016. REUTERS/James Lawler Duggan
The IMF this week kept its global growth forecast unchanged at a
relatively low 3.1 percent for 2016 and 3.4 percent for 2017, noting
that the U.S. economy had performed worse than forecast while some
emerging markets had done somewhat better.
On Thursday, Bank of England Governor Mark Carney said policymakers
now have a better recognition of the need for their actions to "more
immediately, tangibly and clearly, transparently benefit larger
segments of the population."
However, he said that a major new global coordinated policy effort
was not likely to be struck at the meetings in Washington.
"I don't think it's realistic, nor do I think it's what people are
asking for, that there is a global grand bargain that is struck in
an international meeting that then delivers," Carney said on a panel
with Lagarde, Schaeuble and People's Bank of China Deputy Governor
Yi Gang.
DEUTSCHE BANK'S SHADOW
Worries over the health of Deutsche Bank's balance sheet cast a
shadow over the meetings, with Lagarde saying Germany's largest
lender needed to re-examine its business model in an ultra-low
interest rate environment.
Deutsche has faced a crisis of confidence since the U.S. Department
of Justice late last month demanded $14 billion in fines over its
sales of faulty mortgage-backed securities in the run-up to the
2007-2009 financial crisis.
The bank is fighting the fine but may have to turn to investors if
more money if the penalty is imposed in full.
Schaeuble, asked directly whether the German government was prepared
to bail out Deutsche, declined to comment, saying it was "the wrong
question."
(Reporting by David Lawder; Additional reporting by Gernot Heller,
Leika Kihara, Jan Strupczewski, Jason Lange and David Chance in
Washington; Editing by Paul Simao)
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