GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS REPORT
GLOBAL ECONOMIC
PROSPECTS REPORT
Why In News:
World
Bank released ‘Global Economic Prospects Report’.Report called for a
significant acceleration in public investments by Emerging Markets and Developing
Economies (EMDEs) to meet their development goals.
What are the Key Highlights of the Report?
Global Growth:
§ Global
growth is projected to hold steady at 2.6% in 2024-25, despite flaring
geopolitical tensions and high interest rates, before edging up to 2.7% in
2025-26.
§ The
US economy has continued to grow despite the most aggressive monetary policy
tightening in 40 years.
§ India’s
economy has been buoyed by strong domestic demand, with a surge in investment
and robust services activity.
Global Trade:
§ The
value of global services trade grew about 9% in 2023, driven primarily by a
recovery in tourism flows.
§ Global
trade in goods and services was nearly flat in 2023, the weakest performance
outside of global recessions in the past 50 years.
§ The
volume of goods trade contracted for most of 2023 and fell by 1.9% for the year
as a whole.
§ Recent
attacks on commercial vessels in the Red Sea, coupled with climate-related
shipping disruptions in the Panama Canal, have affected maritime transit and
freight rates along these critical routes.
Commodity Markets:
§ In
2024, aggregate commodity prices have generally risen against a backdrop of
tight supply conditions and signs of firmer industrial activity.
§ Oil
prices have fluctuated this year, trending substantially higher in April 2024
in the context of escalating tensions in the Middle East.
§ Natural
gas prices fell nearly 28% in the first quarter of 2024 amid robust production,
mild winter weather, and elevated inventories.
§ Gold
prices reached record highs, fueled by geopolitical concerns and central bank
purchases.
§ Food
prices are forecast to dip by 6% in 2024 and 4% in 2025, mainly reflecting
ample supplies for grains as well as oils and meals.
Global Inflation:
§ Global
inflation has continued to decline, yet it remains above target in most
advanced economies and in about one-fourth of inflation-targeting Emerging
Markets and Developing Economies (EMDEs).
§ Across
most EMDEs in East Asia and Pacific (EAP), headline inflation broadly continued
to trend near or below pre-pandemic averages.
Global Financial
Developments:
§ Central
banks across major advanced economies are expected to gradually lower policy
rates in 2024.
§ Policy
rate projections derived from financial markets have been volatile since U.S.
policy tightening started in 2022, with expectations repeatedly revised higher
over time.
Per Capita Income
Growth:
§ EMDE
GDP per capita growth is projected to fall from 3.2% in 2023 to 3% in 2024 and
remain near that pace over 2025-26, well below the 2010-19 average of 3.8%.
§ In
EMDEs excluding China and India, the aggregate level of per capita income
relative to advanced economies is expected to be lower in 2024 than in 2019,
extending the stagnation that started in the 2010s.
Decline in Welfare:
§ Amid
heightened conflict and violence, prospects remain especially lackluster in
many vulnerable economies.
§ Over
half of fragile and conflict-affected economies will still be poorer in 2024
than on the eve of the pandemic.
Volatility:
§ Escalating
geopolitical tensions can lead to volatile commodity prices due to supply
disruptions, trade restrictions, market uncertainty and currency fluctuations.
Trade Fragmentation:
§ Trade
fragmentation can disrupt trade networks through supply chain interruptions,
trade diversion and reduced market access.
What are the Key
Global Challenges?
Elevated Debt:
§ Many
EMDEs are contending with high debt in an environment of weak growth, steep
borrowing costs, and a multitude of downside risks.
§ These
challenges are particularly acute for the poorest countries, where many sources
of financing are drying up or have become cost prohibitive.
Climate Change:
§ Reaching
net zero by 2050 will require cutting greenhouse gas emissions by between
one-fourth and one-half by 2030 relative to 2019.
§ However,
current global commitments are estimated to reduce emissions by only about 10%
by the end of this decade.
Digital Transition:
§ The
digital divide continues to widen. About one-third of the global population, or
2.6 billion people, remained offline in 2023.
§ About
18% of the population in EMDEs lacked electricity while only about 63% had
access to the internet, compared with over 90% in advanced economies.
Trade Fragmentation:
§ The
proliferation of trade-restricting measures, disruptions to global value
chains, and a further weakening of the multilateral trading system could lead
to significant welfare losses globally, with particularly adverse impacts for
EMDEs.
Lifting Human Capital:
§ The
pandemic brought about considerable disruption to schooling and learning and is
likely to have a lasting and unequal impact on learning levels.
§ Since
2019, the learning poverty rate is estimated to have risen by 13 percentage
points to 70%, on average, in low- and middle-income countries.
§ Learning
poverty rate is the share of children unable to read and understand a simple
text by age 10.
Food Insecurity:
§ Major
drivers of food insecurity and malnutrition are conflict, extreme weather
patterns, economic downturns, and inequality which have intensified in recent
years, often occurring in combination.
§ The
rise of trade-restrictive measures has further accentuated food insecurity
exposing people to fluctuations in international food prices.
Way Forward
§ Comprehensive
Reforms: Decisive global and national policy
efforts are needed to meet pressing challenges. At the global level, priorities
include safeguarding trade, supporting green and digital transitions,
delivering debt relief, and improving food security.
§ Public
Investment: Scaling up public investment by 1% of
GDP can increase the level of GDP by more than 1.5% over the medium term. The
impact on private investment is also significant as it grows by as much as 2%
over five years.
§ Revenue
Mobilize: States should improve their ability to mobilize revenue from domestic
sources, which constitute a more stable base than other alternatives. They
should improve spending efficiency especially in health, education, and
infrastructure.
§ Debt
Restructuring: Decisive action by the international
community is needed to address developing risks to avoid the economic costs of
debt crises. Debt restructuring and relief processes have so far delivered
little relief.
§ Climate
Finance: Mobilizing public resources through
subsidy reforms and carbon pricing can finance public investments and social
transfers for low-emission and equitable development.
§ Digital
Infrastructure: Developing digital infrastructure
can help raise investment growth and financial inclusion by enabling small
firms and financial institutions to access financial markets and digital
payments.
§ Trade
Growth: To guard against trade fragmentation, it
is key to restore the rules based multilateral trade system, mitigate the
adverse effects of geopolitical tensions on trade networks, foster a level
playing field for international commerce, and reduce trade policy uncertainty.
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