From: John Clancy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Sent: Saturday, April 28, 2001 9:38 PM
Subject: [MLL]global economy facing biggest threat since

IMF warns global economy facing biggest threat since 1997 crisis

WASHINGTON (AP) - The global economy is facing its biggest threats
since the worldwide financial crisis of 1997-98, the International
Monetary Fund warned Thursday as it sharply cut its economic forecasts
for this year.

The IMF's worries centered on problems facing the United States and
Japan, which have the world's biggest economies. IMF officials also
said Europe is doing too little to fight the global slowdown.

In its latest World Economic Outlook, the IMF slashed its forecast
for global growth for this year by a full percentage point, to 3.2
percent compared with projections published last October.

The 183-nation international lending agency, preparing for its
spring meetings, also warned that a global recession cannot be ruled
out, especially if a hoped-for rebound in the United States does not
come.

''The outlook remains subject to considerable uncertainty, and a deeper
and more prolonged downturn is clearly possible,'' the IMF said in its
gloomiest economic assessment since the end of the late 1990s Asian
currency crisis.

The IMF's projection of 3.2 percent global growth would be down from
4.8 percent growth in 2000 and would represent the slowest pace since
the world economy expanded just 2.8 percent in 1998, at the height of
the Asian currency crisis.

In the 1997-98 crisis, a red-hot U.S. economy kept the world from
toppling into recession. This time, however, the weakness is
originating in the United States as it battles a dramatic slowdown
caused by plunging stock prices and cutbacks in consumer demand.

The IMF predicted the U.S. economy will expand by just 1.5 percent
this year, its poorest showing since the last U.S. recession ended in
1991. In its October forecast, the IMF pegged U.S. economic growth this
year at 3.2 percent, more than double the current estimate.

The fund also significantly lowered its forecasts for other countries.
It slashed growth expectations for Japan, the world's second-largest
economy, to just 0.6 percent this year, and reduced the growth forecast
for 12 European nations to just 2.4 percent.

Still, the IMF found reason to be optimistic that the United States
will rebound this year. It pointed to consumer demand bolstered by
aggressive interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve and to expected
congressional approval of most of President George W. Bush's dlrs 1.6
trillion, 10-year tax-cut program.

Another hopeful sign, IMF officials said, were promises by new
Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi to attack the root problems
of his nation's 11-year economic slump, including bad loans held by the
nation's banks.

IMF officials were less positive, however, about developments in
Europe. Just Thursday, the European Central Bank, which controls
monetary policy in the 12-nation euro currency area, refused again to
reduce interest rates.

''In a slowdown such as we are experiencing, ... it is desirable that
the central bank of the second largest economic area in the world would
be a part of the solution rather than a part of the problem,'' IMF
chief economist Michael Mussa complained to reporters Thursday.

Interest rates as well as the overhaul of operating policies for the
IMF and its sister lending agency, the World Bank, will be prime agenda
items at the institutions' spring meetings in Washington this weekend.

Unlike last year, the discussions are not expected to draw thousands
of protesters, whose activities clogged streets near the White House
and resulted in more than 1,300 arrests last spring.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill and Federal Reserve Chairman
Alan Greenspan will meet with their counterparts from the world's seven
richest industrial countries Saturday as a prelude to the IMF-World
Bank meetings Sunday and Monday.

The finance discussions will focus on current economic trouble
spots. Principal ones include Argentina, mired in recession and
battling turbulence in financial markets that has spilled over to its
Latin American neighbors, and Turkey, seeking more IMF loans to
stabilize its economy.

The Turkey loan package probably will be approved by the IMF board
soon, but under stricter guidelines set by the United States. The Bush
administration is hoping to avoid huge IMF bailout packages approved
during the Clinton years. - AP


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