The group said Monday that weaknesses in emerging markets, such as India, and growing social unrest had caused it to downgrade its forecast for economic growth in 2020. The IMF now expects 3.3% growth in 2020, down from its 3.4% projection in October.
That would still mark an improvement from 2019, when growth likely came in at 2.9%, according to the IMF. And its economists note that some risks have eased.
Market sentiment has jumped on “tentative signs” that global manufacturing and trade will improve from here on out, the IMF said in its report. Monetary stimulus, “intermittent favorable news” on US-China trade negotiations and reduced anxiety about a messy Brexit have also improved the global mood.
Yet some confidence may be premature. The IMF also downgraded its outlook for growth in 2021 by 0.2 percentage points to 3.4%.
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“Few signs of turning points are yet visible in global macroeconomic data,” it said in its report.
One immediate concern is that developing economies won’t be as resilient as expected. The IMF now pegs India’s growth at 5.8% in 2020, up from 4.8% last year but a full 1.2 percentage points below what it forecast in October.
The IMF said domestic demand in India “has slowed more sharply than expected” because of stress in its financial sector and lower credit growth. It also moderated expectations for growth in Mexico, Chile and South Africa.
The outlook for the US economy remains stable, if not particularly encouraging. Growth is predicted to fall from 2.3% in 2019 to 2% in 2020. That’s 0.1 percentage points lower than the IMF projected in October.