19 Jan 2016
IMF cuts 2016 global growth outlook to 3.4% from 3.6%
FXStreet (Mumbai) - In its latest World Economic Outlook report published on Tuesday, the Washington-based International Monetary Fund (IMF) slashed global growth forecasts from to 3.4% from 3.6% on China headwinds.
Key Headlines:
IMF cuts 2016 U.S. growth forecast to 2.6 pct from 2.8 pct
Brazil, Russia to remain in recession in 2016
Brazil, Russia and Saudi Arabia have been badly affected by the falling oil price
European growth is expected to be 1.7% in 2016, an upward revision of 0.1 percentage points on October, with no change to the 1.7% predicted for 2017
The UK growth forecasts of 2.2% in 2016 and 2017 – unchanged
Downside risks include faster China slowdown, further Dollar appreciation, higher risk aversion
After the release of their latest report, IMF’s chief
economist Maurice Obstfeld noted:
U.S. FED rate hike was based on forecast of strong U.S. growth, inflation rising
Incoming data suggests U.S. recovery weaker than Fed forecast
Bank of England will not be in a rush to raise rates without strong evidence of tightening labour market
Markets are reacting strongly to small bits of evidence
Falling oil prices help consumers and is not an unmitigated negative
IMF doesn't see some of the extreme downside scenarios that the markets seem to be factoring in
Key Headlines:
IMF cuts 2016 U.S. growth forecast to 2.6 pct from 2.8 pct
Brazil, Russia to remain in recession in 2016
Brazil, Russia and Saudi Arabia have been badly affected by the falling oil price
European growth is expected to be 1.7% in 2016, an upward revision of 0.1 percentage points on October, with no change to the 1.7% predicted for 2017
The UK growth forecasts of 2.2% in 2016 and 2017 – unchanged
Downside risks include faster China slowdown, further Dollar appreciation, higher risk aversion
After the release of their latest report, IMF’s chief
economist Maurice Obstfeld noted:
U.S. FED rate hike was based on forecast of strong U.S. growth, inflation rising
Incoming data suggests U.S. recovery weaker than Fed forecast
Bank of England will not be in a rush to raise rates without strong evidence of tightening labour market
Markets are reacting strongly to small bits of evidence
Falling oil prices help consumers and is not an unmitigated negative
IMF doesn't see some of the extreme downside scenarios that the markets seem to be factoring in