Published: Thursday, 1 Mar 2012
The probability of a sharp global
slowdown has eased due to recent policy measures adopted in the euro zone to
tackle its debt crisis, the International Monetary Fund said on Thursday, but it
warned risks to world growth remain "squarely to the downside."
Reed Saxon /
AP
|
In a report to G20 finance
ministers in Mexico over the weekend and only published on Thursday, the
IMF
said the euro zone should act decisively on multiple
fronts to successfully resolve its sovereign debt crisis.
"The key risk remains that
policies do not shift Europe toward a 'good equilibrium' and fail to break
adverse feedback loops between real, fiscal, and financial sectors," the IMF
said, urging euro zone policymakers to increase a firewall by about $500 billion
to protect countries from financial contagion.
The IMF said the
European Central Bank
should continue injecting liquidity and stay fully
engaged in securities purchases to help shore up financial stability.
Meanwhile, ECB monetary policy
should focus on ensuring price stability, it said, adding that there was room to
lower the target policy rate if needed.
In the United States, Britain and
Japan, central banks should stand ready to expand unconventional measures if the
outlook worsens, the IMF said.
In emerging markets, the IMF said
growth had slowed more than expected, although risk perceptions had eased and
capital flows had resumed into emerging Asia, Latin America and South Africa
economies since the beginning of 2012.
In emerging countries with high
inflation and public debt, including India and some economies in the Middle
East, a "cautious stance" to policy easing was needed, the IMF said.
The IMF said higher oil prices
were a risk to global growth and repeated an earlier warning that the impact of
an oil supply shock in the Middle East "could be large" if supplies were not
increased elsewhere.
In particular, a halt in Iran's
oil exports could trigger an initial price increase of about 20 percent to 30
percent, the IMF warned.
Saudi Arabia assured G20 finance
ministers over the weekend it was prepared to release more oil if necessary to
make up for supply disruptions, IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde told a
news conference on Sunday.
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