IMF Chief tells that global economy was showing 

signs of ecovery but world needs to be cautious...

 

London: The head of the IMF questioned on Monday any debate about when to roll 
back stimulus spending, saying the world economy had yet to weather the worst 
of a recession that claimed a record number of European jobs.
The 16-country euro zone lost a record 1.22 million jobs in the first quarter, 
official data showed. Employment during the first quarter fell 1.2% 
year-on-year, the deepest annual drop since measurements started in 1995. 
Even if some form of economic recovery is not far off, analysts say 
unemployment will climb for many months to come.
Underlining the fragile state of the global economy, an influential economist 
said China would not see a rapid rebound and South Korea’s finance minister 
said its economy was still sliding, although the pace had slowed.
But in southern Italy, Group of Eight (G8) finance ministers meeting at the 
weekend described their economies in the most positive terms since the collapse 
of US bank Lehman Brothers nine months ago heightened the world’s worst 
financial crisis since the Great Depression of the 1930s.
“Their (G8) stance is that we are beginning to see some green shoots but 
nevertheless we have to be cautious,” International Monetary Fund chief 
Dominique Strauss-Kahn said during a visit to Kazakhstan. “The large part of 
the worst is not yet behind us.”
Pressure has been building in the G8, particularly from fiscally conservative 
nations such as Germany and Canada, for plans to wind down stimulus as soon as 
it is no longer needed.
But ministers in Lecce differed over how quickly to start rolling back state 
spending plans and hiking interest rates.
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner indicated the United States was unlikely to 
tighten policy soon, saying: “It is too early to shift toward policy restraint.”
Most experts do not expect major tightening of fiscal and monetary policy in 
the developed world before next year. According to media, France is headed in 
the opposite direction.
Paris plans to pump an extra €3.5 billion ($4.92 billion) into stimulus 
measures earmarked for 2010 and is preparing to increase its public budget 
deficit forecast for 2009, Les Echos newspaper reported on Sunday.
Li Yang, a former adviser to the People’s Bank of China, said he expected 
China’s recovery to be “W-shaped” -- meaning that growth will falter once 
fiscal and monetary stimulus wears off, before regaining momentum.
“China should not count on a turnaround of external demand to bring about its 
recovery,” Li, director of the finance institute at the Chinese Academy of 
Social Sciences, was quoted by the Shanghai Securities News as saying.
In Britain, a leading business group said the country would pull out of 
recession earlier than previously forecast, but that a sustained recovery was 
not assured.
South Korean finance minister Yoon Jeung-hyun said it was too early to consider 
reversing stimulus policies.
“The economy is certainly still sliding, although the pace of decline is 
slowing,” he said. “Let me make it clear that we are not at the stage for a 
change in the aggressive fiscal stimulus and financial easing policy stance.” 
Aviation leaders attended the Paris Air Show on Monday expecting only crumbs of 
new business to bolster an industry hurt by the crisis, which has cast doubt on 
the ability of airlines to pay for the roughly $800 billion of planes on order.
“It is out of the hands of Airbus and Boeing and in the hands of the travelling 
public, who are voting with their feet and not getting on planes or buying 
tickets,” said Richard Aboulafia, vice president at US aerospace and defence 
consultancy Teal Group.
Shares slide
Shares fell with some market players saying the cautious tone from the G8 
gathering had prompted investors to cut back their bets on riskier assets.
European shares shed 1.6% on Monday, tracking losses in Asia. Tokyo’s Nikkei 
closed 1 percent lower.
The European benchmark index is up 35.9% from the lifetime low it hit on 9 
March, as investors have become less gloomy on the prospects for economic 
recovery.
“We’ve verified that markets have bottomed out but we have yet to see what sort 
of form the recovery will take and we need clear proof that it will continue,” 
said Masayoshi Okamoto, head of trading at Jujiya Securities. 
_________________________________________________________________
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