WASHINGTON, Dec. 13 (Xinhua) -- The world economy has
maintained rapid growth in 2007 but will face greater risks in the coming year,
according to analysis of the latest World Economic Outlook from the
International Monetary Fund (IMF).
IMF: "RELATIVELY STRONG GLOBAL
GROWTH PERFORMANCE WILL CONTINUE"
In 2007, the robust economic development of the
newly-emerged markets, especially in Asia, has largely offset the slowdown in
economic growth of the United States and its economically-related countries
stemming from the U.S. subprime mortgage crisis and subsequent world financial
market unrest.
"The expansion is projected to remain above the
long-term trend, not withstanding recent financial market turbulence, with
emerging markets and developing countries leading the way," the IMF said.
Global economic growth has been faster, broader and
more stable since 2004 than at any time in the previous 30 years. Between 2004
and 2006, global economic growth remained at a stable 3.25 percent. Improved
monetary and fiscal policies have helped underpin growth and stability, the IMF
report said.
The world economy is expected to expand by 4.8
percent next year after a 5.2-percent pace projected for 2007, thanks to
generally sound fundamentals and the strong performance of the emerging market
economies, the IMF said in its report.
According to IMF's predictions, the economic growth
of Asia's developing countries, including China and India, will reach an
impressive 9.8 and 8.8 percent in 2007 and 2008 respectively, with China's
growth rates reaching 11.5 percent and 10 percent in the two years, and India's
8.9 and 8.4 percent respectively. Some sub-Sahara African countries have also
embraced their fastest developing period in more than 40 years.
Emerging market economies, like China, India and
Russia, have become "a source of stability in the global economy," said
RodrigoDe Rato, chairman of the Executive Board and Managing Director of the
IMF. "These countries have weathered the financial turbulence relatively well,
partly because global growth has been strong, and domestic macroeconomic
police-making has improved, though vigilance is still needed," said the report.
The global economy is increasingly reliant on those newly-emerged economies, with 50 percent of the global economic growth in 2007 coming from the above-mentioned three countries.