IMF ‘admits it was bluffing’ on Brexit: Capital
o did the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and its boss Christine Lagarde (pictured) collude in “project fear?”
The world’s leading monetary authority was “bluffing” over Brexit’s threat to the world economy, a top economic consultancy has claimed.
“Having spent the past few months warning that Brexit would cause “severe regional and global damage”, the International Monetary Fund today all but admitted that it had been bluffing, and acknowledged that economic growth outside Europe would be “little affected”, Capital Economics’ global economist Michael Pearce wrote on Tuesday.
On the face of it he has a point.
The IMF’s latest global economic forecast update still contains plenty of warnings about Brexit. But it pulled its punches when it comes to the actual numbers. The Fund marked down its projections for world GDP growth by just 0.1 percentage point this year and next.
No UK recession predicted
Sure the biggest national downward revision was to the UK. The Fund now expects the economy to grow by 1.3% in 2017. That’s almost a percentage point lower than its previous forecast.
“But even this is not as bad as the recession that many commentators anticipate,” Pearce wrote.
The IMF trimmed next year’s eurozone forecast by 0.2 percentage point. Projections for the US and most of the rest of the world were unchanged. So much, then, for the IMF’s claim that there would be “severe damage”.
Admittedly, the Fund warned of a more disorderly outcome from Brexit. However, IMF Chief Economist Maurice Obstfeld said this would need a trade impact “greater than [the IMF] thinks likely”. Financial conditions would have to deteriorate far more than they have so far.
China, US prospects far outweigh Brexit: IMF
Instead of Brexit, prospects for the world economy are still more likely to be shaped by developments in China and the US. Recent data suggest that growth is holding up fairly well in both. However, Capital still thinks there’s room for unpleasant surprises.
“We expect the American and Chinese economies to expand at a slower rate in the coming years than the IMF anticipates,” Pearce wrote.
“So Mr Obstfeld would be well placed to keep his red pen close to hand.”
Perhaps paradoxically, the problem for Brexiteers is the IMF’s tendency to optimism. Capital reckons its global growth calls were higher than actual outcomes by 0.7 percentage point between 2010 and 2014.
https://news.markets/brexit/imf-admits- ... tal-22241/