Effect of global 'slowdown' is 'more pronounced' in India: IMF chief
While the need for international cooperation is going up, the will to engage is falling, IMF chief rued.

In her first speech as managing director of IMF, Kristalina Georgieva said 90% of the world is likely to have slower growth in 2019, signalling out India along with Brazil. “In some of the largest emerging market economies, such as India and Brazil, the slowdown is even more pronounced this year,” she said in her inaugural address in Washington DC on Tuesday.
“In China, growth is gradually coming down from the rapid pace it saw for many years.” India’s economic growth slumped to a six-year low of 5% in the April-June quarter and, according to the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), is likely to be near this trough at 5.3% in the July-September quarter.

The central bank had last week cut the country’s growth forecast for FY20 to 6.1% from 6.8% estimated earlier. The IMF, which had forecast 7% growth for India in its July update of the flagship World Economic Outlook, is likely to lower it sharply in its fresh assessment that will be out next week.
“The global economy is now in a synchronized slowdown,” Georgieva said in her speech, adding that the deceleration will cause global growth to slide to its lowest since the start of the decade. She blamed the slowdown on a range of issues, but clubbing them under one common theme— fractures. The trade disputes are taking a toll and global trade growth has come to a near standstill.
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