The IMF’s baseline scenario for growth is also weak compared to pre-pandemic standards. Both 2023 and 2024 are expected to see global growth fall below the 2010-19 average of 3.7% a year.
However, there are regional discrepancies within these forecasts. Emerging market economies in Asia, including the ASEAN-5 group, are expected to benefit from China’s economic reopening and grow at a faster rate than other emerging market regions.3
Within developed economies, the IMF expects the US to grow at twice the rate of the eurozone this year. Both economies’ growth forecasts have been upgraded relative to January’s WEO update but large differences are expected within the eurozone. While Spain’s economy is expected to grow by 1.5% this year, Germany’s economy is expected to contract by 0.1%.
The baseline scenario assumes no further shocks to the financial sector and that recent events involving Silicon Valley Bank and Credit Suisse are contained, with no material disruptions to global economic activity. An alternative scenario is also presented whereby further shocks stemming from financial sector fragility cause a moderate additional tightening in credit conditions and global growth is 0.3 percentage points below the baseline. Under this scenario, the IMF expects the US, eurozone and Japanese economies to fall further below their 2023 baseline projections, by around 0.4 percentage points.
Risks to the outlook
While the alternative scenario assumes a moderate additional tightening, a more severe tightening in global financial conditions could see bank lending in the US and other advanced economies decline sharply. In turn, household and business confidence could decline leading to higher desired saving and lower investment. Lower import demand in large, developed economies would spill over to global GDP growth. In this scenario the IMF predicts that global GDP could be up to 1.8 percentage points below the baseline scenario.
Rising real interest rates in conjunction with elevated corporate and household debt is another source of risk highlighted by the IMF. In this case, debt servicing costs would be expected to rise while income growth would be weaker than the baseline. The result would be reduced investment and consumption, higher unemployment, and higher default rates. The WEO points to even lower global growth if this risk materialises.
While inflation has been declining in most economies, core inflation has proved stickier, and the IMF sees this as another risk to the outlook. Central banks could be forced to maintain a restrictive policy for longer than expected, negatively affecting economic growth and financial stability.
An escalation of the war in Ukraine is another risk outlined in the WEO. 2022-23 saw an energy crisis avoided in Europe, with sufficient gas storage and a mild winter helping overcome the challenges of sanctions on Russia. However, the IMF believes an escalation of the war could trigger a renewed energy crisis, leading to higher inflation and lower growth.
The final downside risk highlighted is fragmentation hampering multilateral cooperation. Notable developments such as Brexit and China-US trade tensions have encouraged the decline in cross-border economic integration. Further geoeconomic fragmentation risks causing a decline in international flows of labour, goods, and capital. The IMF notes that some countries may benefit from a rearrangement in global trade flows but the overall impact on global economic wellbeing will likely be negative.
Additionally, one of the more significant factors providing a boost to global growth in 2023 is the economic reopening of China. However, the IMF notes that if this were to stall there would be significant cross-border effects given China’s role in global trade.
On the upside, the IMF stressed that the global economy could prove more resilient than expected. With a high stock of savings and tight labour markets in many economies, household consumption could exceed forecasts and boost activity.
Medium-term outlook
Finally, the IMF projects global GDP growth at 3% in 5-years. This is the lowest medium-term growth forecast published in all WEO reports since 1990. In the IMF’s view, this decline reflects slower labour force growth, geoeconomic fragmentation, and lower growth expectations for China and other large EM economies (see Chart 1).