The EBRD, which tracks trends in 37 countries across three
continents from Estonia to Egypt and Mongolia, said it expected
to see growth in every economy it covers. The bank predicted
average growth of 3.3 per cent in 2018, an upward revision of
0.3 percentage points from its November forecast, and an
expansion of 3.2 percent in 2019.
However, this represented a slowdown from last year's 3.8
percent, reflecting lower rates of productivity growth as well
as adverse demographic trends, the report said.
The bank's chief economist, Sergei Guriev, said most EBRD
economies had exhausted the growth levers that had delivered
rapid expansion until the onset of the crisis.
"In order to develop new sources of growth, these countries need
to carry out structural reforms of product, capital and labor
markets," Guriev said, adding that countries needed to improve
governance, promote integration into the global economy, and
invest in human capital and sustainable infrastructure.
Outlining risks to its forecasts, the EBRD cited a substantial
rise in corporate debt levels, policymakers' limited room for
maneuver, a further rise in populist political parties and
security as well as geopolitical risks.
"With constrained fiscal space and very accommodative monetary
policy, governments may have limited ammunition to respond to a
major dip in market confidence," the report found.
Corporate debt as a percentage of gross domestic product in the
EBRD regions increased to more than 60 percent in 2018 from
around 40 percent in 2007, much of it external and denominated
in foreign currency, the bank said.
(Reporting by Karin Strohecker; Editing by Gareth Jones
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