PROSPECTS FOR GLOBAL
GROWTH WORSENING
Prospects for global growth have deteriorated over
the past year with most developed economies in a recession and developing
economies suffering setbacks.
Early this month, the Business Cycle Dating Committee
of the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), the U.S. panel recognized as
the official arbiter of business cycles, announced it has determined that the
recession in the United States began in December 2007.
The classic definition of a recession is two
consecutive quarters of negative gross domestic product (GDP). The NBER,
however, did not identify economic activity solely with real GDP growth but used
a range of indicators, such as employment, personal income and industrial
output, in determining the onset of recession.
"The questions that remain are just how bad and for
how long this recession will linger over us," said Michael Fowlks, analyst at
Investor's Observer.
Some fear that the current recession might be the
longest at least since the 1981-82 recession, which lasted for 16 months.
As recession fears have become a reality in the
United States, other economies from Europe to Asia have fallen victim to the
financial crisis.
In the third quarter, Swedish economy contracted a
0.1-percent growth for two consecutive quarters, meaning that it has stepped
into recession together with other EU members like Ireland, Italy and Germany.
Japan slipped deeper into recession with factory
output tumbling 3.1 percent and consumer spending dropping 3.8 percent in
October.
In India, a rising economic powerhouse, the economic
growth slowed by 0.3 percent in the third quarter from 7.9 percent in the
second.
On November 6, the International Monetary Fund(IMF)
revised its world economic growth projections downward, saying "global activity
is slowing quickly."
According to the IMF, the world economy will grow
just over 2 percent in 2009, down by 0.75 percent from its projections made in
October.
The downturn will be led by developed economies,
which as a whole will contract 0.3 percent on a full-year basis next year, the
first such fall since World War II. The U.S. economy is projected to drop 0.7
percent in 2009.
Developing countries, being at the mercy of a crisis
not of their making, will see much slower economic growth next year.
The IMF expects the world economy to recover in late
2009.
FURTHER FISCAL STIMULUS
MAY CHECK DECLINE OF GLOBAL GROWTH
Acknowledging the economic outlook is "exceptionally
uncertain," the IMF said a stronger macroeconomic policy response could limit
the decline in world growth, noting its projections are based on current
policies.
"There is a clear need for additional macroeconomic
policy stimulus relative to what has been announced thus far, to support growth
and provide a context to restore health to financial sectors," it said.
However, monetary policy may not be enough because
monetary easing may be less effective in the face of the difficult financial
conditions and deleveraging -- cutting back on the amount borrowed as compared
to equity.
Also, in some cases room for further easing is
limited as policy rates are already close to the zero bound. In the United
States, for instance, a key interest rate has been cut to 1 percent, down by
4.25 percentage points since September 2007.
"These are conditions where broad-based fiscal
stimulus is likely to be warranted," said the IMF.
"Fiscal stimulus can be effective if it is well
targeted, supported by accommodative monetary policy, and implemented in
countries that have fiscal space," it noted.
The IMF's call for further fiscal stimulus has
received an echo in the Group of 20 (G-20), which comprises major developed and
developing economies.
At a summit in Washington on Nov. 15, the G-20
leaders vowed to work together to revive their economies, calling for fiscal
stimulus measures to take "rapid effect" and more rate cuts.
The G-20 support could bolster efforts in the United
States to push through a second economic stimulus plan.
On Nov. 22, U.S. President-elect Barack Obama
announced a two-year plan to simulate the economy which is facing "a crisis of
historic proportions." He aims to create 2.5 million new jobs by January 2011
and lay the foundation for the country's economic recovery.
The first plan -- a 168-billion-dollar package, which
includes rebates for people and tax breaks for businesses, was speedily passed
by U.S. Congress and signed into law by President George W.Bush in February this
year.
IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn has
welcomed the emphasis on fiscal stimulus by the G-20, "which I believe is now
essential to restore global growth."
"Each country's fiscal stimulus can be twice as
effective in raising domestic output growth if its major trading partners also
have a stimulus package," he said.