APRIL 23, 2009
IMF Says Global Recession Is Deepest Since Great Depression
<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124040469973043357.html#mod=rss_economy>

By TOM 
BARKLEY<http://online.wsj.com/search/search_center.html?KEYWORDS=TOM+BARKLEY&ARTICLESEARCHQUERY_PARSER=bylineAND>and
BOB
DAVIS<http://online.wsj.com/search/search_center.html?KEYWORDS=BOB+DAVIS&ARTICLESEARCHQUERY_PARSER=bylineAND>

WASHINGTON -- The global economy is in the grips of a deepening recession
that isn't likely to turn around until sometime next year, the International
Monetary Fund said. The IMF, which had been slow to apply the word to the
current downturn, also released a new definition of global recession.

Overall, the world economy is now expected to contract 1.3% this year -- a
sharp reduction from the IMF's January estimate of 0.5% growth for 2009 --
and then grow just 1.9% in 2010, well below the global growth rate before
the economic crisis hit.

"By any measure," the IMF's twice-yearly World Economic Outlook concluded
Wednesday, "this downturn represents by far the deepest global recession
since the Great Depression."

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said that "only 17 of the 182 economies
followed by the IMF are expected to grow faster this year than they did last
year. Some 71 -- including 30 of the world's 34 advanced economies -- are
expected to shrink."

Ahead of a gathering of Group of Seven finance ministers and central bankers
this week, as well as the spring meetings of the IMF and the World Bank, the
IMF urged global leaders to keep up the momentum that began at the Group of
20 summit this month.

The fund is anticipating that G-20 countries will pursue fiscal-stimulus
measures totaling about 2% of gross domestic product this year and 1.5% next
year, but said that may not be enough.

"It is now apparent that the effort will need to be at least sustained, if
not increased, in 2010, and countries with fiscal room should stand ready to
introduce new stimulus measures as needed to support the recovery," the IMF
said.

That's likely to be a subject of debate at the G-7 meeting; European leaders
thus far are resisting U.S. pressure to pursue additional stimulus measures.

Advanced economies, which are expected to contract 3.8% this year and see no
growth in 2010, should also continue to pursue rate cuts and unconventional
monetary measures to support demand and counter deflationary pressures, the
fund said.

The U.S., which remains the "epicenter" of the crisis, is expected to
contract 2.8% this year, with no growth next year. Much of the expectation
for a U.S. recovery to begin by the second half of 2010 hinges on the
success of the government's plan to partner with private-sector investors to
remove bad debts from bank balance sheets, the fund said.

Emerging economies overall are expected to remain in positive territory,
growing at a 1.6% pace in 2009 and 4% next year as a group. But an
increasing number are sliding into recession.

Informally, IMF chief economists have called global growth of lower than
either 3% or 2.5% -- depending on the chief economist -- a recession. It
hadn't called the current downturn a global recession yet, partly because it
didn't have a good definition. Now, IMF economists have a precise way to
measure global recession: a decline in real per-capita world GDP, backed up
by a look at indicators such as industrial production, trade, capital flows,
oil consumption and unemployment.

Under the new definition, this is the fourth global recession since World
War II, and the deepest by a long shot. The earlier recessions were in 1975,
1982 and 1991. All were one-year recessions when measured by purchasing
power parity, which takes into account the different cost of goods and
services in different countries.

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