CHRISTINE LAGARDE: RECENT MARKET TURMOIL IS MANAGEABLE
By Seana Smith January 21, 2016 12:30 PM
Stronger
downside risks, including China’s change of growth model, lower
commodity prices, and “asynchronous” monetary policy around the world
prompted the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to lower its global
growth outlook, IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde told Yahoo
Finance editor-in-chief Andy Serwer at the World Economic Forum in
Davos, Switzerland.
The IMF
pared its global growth forecast to 3.4% in 2016, a decline of 0.2% from
the agency’s prior estimate in October. Lagarde warned of consequences
as the world faces weaker growth.
“There
will be fewer jobs created around the world, and there will be
countries that will struggle, particularly those suffering from the
double downside risks, which is the trade relationship with China
slowing down a bit and lower commodity prices,” said Lagarde. “This will
affect some of the emerging market economies and low income countries
that are vastly commodity export dependent.”
Growth
in China, the world’s second-largest economy, hit a quarter-century
low, falling to 6.9% after the fourth quarter slowed to 6.8%. The IMF
forecasts an expansion of 6.3% in 2016 and 6.0% in 2017, which represent
sharp slowdowns from 2015.
Despite
the rocky start to 2016 and the IMF’s recent downgrade, it’s not time
for investors to panic, Lagarde said. “[3.4% growth] is not that bad; it
would be better than last year,” she said. “We believe that the
situation is manageable as long as [all policy makers] upgrade their
monetary policies, cooperate with each other and not just look at their
domestic situation, but how [their actions] will impact the rest of the
world. There is volatility. There will be more than what we had in the
immediate post crisis years, but it’s also a phenomenon that we have to
get used to and anticipate.”
Lagarde’s
call for cooperation from all monetary policy makers comes on the heels
of the U.S. Federal Reserve’s decision to raise interest rates in
December. Lagarde warned of hiking rates too quickly, saying that the
IMF is “more supportive of a raise in early 2017 rather than late 2016”
and that she hopes there will be “clear focus on inflation variations
and movement” when the Fed decides on its next move.
Lagarde,
whose current five-year term as head of the IMF is set to expire in
July, is widely considered a sure bet for another term. The United
Kingdom, France, and Germany have come out in support of Lagarde’s
re-election.
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/christine-lagarde--recent-market-turmoil-is-manageable-160408513.html#
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