The recovery in global growth that we projected in April is
on a firmer footing; there is now no question mark over the world economy’s
gain in momentum….
The distribution of this growth around the world has
changed, however: compared with last April’s projection, some economies are up
but others are down, offsetting those improvements.
Notable compared with the not-too-distant past is the
performance of the euro area, where we have raised our forecast. But we are
also raising our projections for Japan, for China, and for emerging and
developing Asia more generally. We also see notable improvements in emerging
and developing Europe and Mexico.
Where are the offsets to this positive news on growth? From
a global growth perspective, the most important downgrade is the United States.
Over the next two years, U.S. growth should remain above its longer-run
potential growth rate. But we have reduced our forecasts for both 2017 and 2018
to 2.1 percent because near-term U.S. fiscal policy looks less likely to be
expansionary than we believed in April.
READ MORE
Monday, July 24, 2017
IMF forecast bullish on global growth but downgrades U.S. estimates
at 2:35 PM
Labels: global growth, IMF, IMF forecast, International Monetary Fund, U.S. growth
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