The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has slashed its 2020 growth outlook for China to below 5.6 per cent because of the “sheer geographic spread” of the coronavirus epidemic globally, IMF managing director Kristalina Georgieva said on Wednesday.
Last month, the IMF forecast the outbreak could lower China’s economic growth this year to 5.6 per cent – 0.4 percentage points below the organisation’s January estimate.
The forecast early this year was based on two assumptions – that the crisis would stay limited to China and that it would remain fully contained. But those conditions have failed to materialise, as community transmission of the disease has occurred in several countries.
“We are already looking at adverse scenarios ... in which the impact on growth for China is more significant,” Georgieva told a joint press conference of the IMF and the World Bank. “The Chinese authorities themselves are recognising that there would be a lower growth this year.”
“Again, we will have to work on the numbers, but it is very unfortunate that I have to say that that baseline scenario, no longer holds,” the managing director said.
The coronavirus epidemic also poses a serious threat to global growth this year, which will be “deep below last year’s levels”, Georgieva said.
Based on similar, previous crises, “about one third of the economic losses from the disease will be direct costs from loss of life, workplace closures and quarantines”, Georgieva said. “The remaining two thirds will be indirect, reflecting a retrenchment in consumer and business behaviour and, I think, in financial markets.”
Covid-19 has sickened over 94,000 people worldwide and killed more than 3,200, mainly in China.
“The US$6 million [from IFC] is critical, because it's private sector financing and it is fast acting, and it takes the form of trade finance and working capital finance,” said World Bank group president David Malpass.
Malpass said the amount of frozen capital in the world has increased substantially, and the World Bank is trying to unlock it so that it may be turned into working capital. Companies need that capital to import goods to rebuild their inventories, which is “critical during a crisis”, according to Malpass.
Source South China Morning Post
