For Amusement Only: IMF Growth Forecasts And Rationale

IMF global growth forecasts have been totally hopeless, with one downgrade after another.

The latest forecast takes the cake for ridiculousness, not only because of the direction, but also because of the rationale.

Please consider IMF Cuts Global Economic Growth Forecasts. 

 The International Monetary Fund has cut its growth forecasts for the global economy on the back of a slowdown in China, looming recession in Russia and continuing weakness in the eurozone.

The Washington-based fund warns that the boost from lower oil prices is being outweighed by a host of negative factors and it now expects global growth to edge up only slightly from 3.3% last year to 3.5% this year. That is down from a 3.8% forecast for 2015 in its World Economic Outlook published in October. It forecasts growth picking up only slightly next year and cut its 2016 forecasts from 4% to 3.7%.

Rose Garden Material

That forecast actually seems like rose garden material. But the reasons for the downgrades are even more amusing.

“New factors supporting growth – lower oil prices, but also depreciation of euro and yen – are more than offset by persistent negative forces, including the lingering legacies of the crisis and lower potential growth in many countries,” says Olivier Blanchard, IMF director of research.

Got that?

Depreciation of the Yen and Euro are “New factors supporting growth.”

Yet, if the euro and Yen sink, the dollar will rise. So isn’t a rising dollar bad for the US? Apparently not. In fact, the IMF raised its US forecast to 3.6% this year, up from  3.1% in October.

The IMF says the “US sees a boost from lower oil prices“.

Europe and especially Japan are more dependent on (and benefit from falling oil), but price deflation (primarily caused by falling oil prices) supposedly hurts Europe and Japan.

The IMF report says:

“In the euro area, inflation has declined further, and adverse shocks – domestic or external – could lead to persistently lower inflation or price declines, as monetary policy remains slow to respond.”

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