Istanbul: The global economy is on unsteady legs, the World Bank warned on
Friday, saying that 2010 would be “a highly uncertain economic year” as
other signals took the gloss off talk of a quick recovery. IMF raised its
economic growth forecasts for next year for most major advanced and emerging
economies, on Thursday. But experts warn that unemployment will rise, that
recovery will be slow at best, and that there could even be a return to
recession.
   “We’ve broken the fall of the financial crisis but it’s certainly too
early to declare success,” World Bank president Robert Zoellick said in
Istanbul in the runup to the annual meetings of the IMF and the World Bank.
“2009 will continue to be a difficult year and 2010... a highly uncertain
economic year,” he said, citing in particular the risk of inflation in Asian
economies and the social effects of rising unemployment.
   “We expect that unemployment will continue to go up and it’ll be slow in
coming down.... When you have large-scale unemployment those at the bottom
are hurt the most and have the least cushion,” he added. Countries with
exchange-rate pegs should prepare for more volatility in currency markets,
and seek more balance in the assets they hold as reserves, Zoellick also
said. The need for more balanced reserve portfolios has led some analyst to
discuss the possibility that the International Monetary Fund’s Special
Drawing Rights could be used as a reserve currency, Zoellick said.
   IMF MD Dominique Strauss-Kahn issued a similar warning about mounting job
losses, telling reporters in Istanbul: “I’m still very much concerned about
unemployment... It casts a long shadow over the recovery.”
   In Europe, figures released on Thursday showed the unemployment rate in
the 16-nation eurozone hit 9.6% in August. Japan meanwhile said on Friday
that its jobless rate fell to 5.5% in August — the first improvement in
seven months. Japanese shares closed down 2.47% however after a plunge on
Wall Street, where the Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 2.09% on Thursday
amid fears about a possible setback in recovery for US manufacturing.
Jitters on the stock markets are mirroring broader conerns among experts about
the stability and pace of the recovery.
   Brian Coulton, head of global economics at international credit ratings
agency Fitch, said he expected “the pace of expansion to remain weak by the
standards of previous recoveries and fragile to shocks.”
   Fitch said the speed of global economic growth “may ease somewhat in
mid-2010 as the boost from the inventory cycle and normalisation in world
trade flows fades” but added that growth would remain positive. Some
economists have warned about the possibility of a “double-dip recession,”
with economic contraction following the current recovery. AFP
*
‘Don’t mistake revival as end of eco crisis’

*New Delhi: The signs of revival in the global economy should not be
confused with the financial crisis being over and the countries should be
ready with policies to sustain the recovery, multilateral lending agency IMF
has said. “The current numbers should not fool governments into thinking
that the crisis is over,” IMF chief economist Olivier Blanchard said while
releasing the World Economic Outlook.
   He also asked countries around the world to coordinate policies to
achieve a global rebalancing and sustain the recovery.
   Olivier’s remarks assume importance in the event of G-20 nations agreeing
not to withdraw stimulus packages prematurely and coordinate actions among
themselves in this regard. PTI

 It’s certainly too early to declare success... 2009 will continue to be a
difficult year, says Zoellick

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