IMF's Lagarde:
protectionist 'sword' hangs over firming growth
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[April 12, 2017]
BRUSSELS
(Reuters) - Global economic recovery is gaining momentum but could be
cut off by a "sword of protectionism" now threatening global trade,
International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde said on
Wednesday.
Lagarde, speaking ahead of next week's IMF and World Bank spring
meetings in Washington, argued for countries to strengthen the post-war
open trade architecture by cooperating multilaterally to solve trade
issues such as reducing excessive external imbalances.
Her prepared remarks did not specifically mention U.S. President Donald
Trump's "America First" trade agenda that aims to restrict imports into
the United States.
But she said restricting trade would be a "self-inflicted wound" that
would disrupt supply chains and raise prices for components and consumer
goods, hitting the poor hardest.
For the first time in years, she said the global economy "has a spring
in its step" as the Fund prepares to release new growth estimates on
April 18
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"The good news is that, after six years of disappointing growth, the
world economy is gaining momentum as a cyclical recovery holds out the
promise of more jobs, higher incomes and greater prosperity going
forward."
The prospects are better for advanced economies, where manufacturing
activity is stronger, as well as for emerging and developing economies,
which will contribute more than three quarters of global GDP growth this
year, she said. Higher oil and commodity prices have aided many
commodity exporters, but their revenues will stay well below the boom
years, she added.
"At the same time, there are clear downside risks: political
uncertainty, including in Europe, the sword of protectionism hanging
over global trade, and tighter global financial conditions that could
trigger disruptive capital outflows from emerging and developing
economies," Lagarde said.
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International Monetary Fund (IMF) Managing Director Christine
Lagarde holds a speech to present the report "Making Trade an Engine
of Growth for All: The Case for Trade and For Policies to Facilitate
Adjustment" in Berlin, Germany, April 10, 2017. REUTERS/Hannibal
Hanschke
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She
reiterated her call for countries to use fiscal and monetary policy to boost
demand and structural reforms to make economies more efficient.
She
also voiced concern about lagging productivity growth and called for more
investments in research. She said trade promotes efficiency and innovation,
citing forthcoming IMF research that estimates that China's integration into the
global trading system accounted for as much as 10 percent of advanced economies'
overall productivity gains between the mid-1990s and the mid-2000s.
Governments also need to find better ways to aid workers who are displaced by
technology and trade flows, Lagarde said.
"There is no magic formula. But we do know that greater emphasis on retraining
and vocational training, job search assistance, and relocation support can help
those affected by labor market dislocations," Lagarde said.
(Reporting by Francesco Guarascio and David Lawder; Editing by Sam Holmes)
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