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World Bank Warns Of 2016 Perfect Storm If BRICS Slow Down In Sync

World Bank Warns Of 2016 Perfect Storm If BRICS Slow Down In Sync

From TheGuardian. Story by Larry Elliott.

The risk of the global economy being battered by a “perfect storm” in 2016 has been highlighted by the World Bank in a flagship report that warns that a synchronized slowdown in the biggest emerging markets could be intensified by a fresh bout of financial turmoil.

The bank said the possibility that Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa – the so-called BRICS economies – could all face problems simultaneously would put in jeopardy the chances of a pick-up in growth in the coming year.

It added that the impact would be heightened by severe financial market stress of the sort triggered in 2013 by the announcement by the U.S. Federal Reserve that it was considering reducing the stimulus it was then providing to the U.S. economy.

Launching its annual Global Economic Prospects, the bank said activity in 2015 had failed to live up to its expectations – the fifth year in a row that growth has undershot the forecasts made by the Washington-based institution, which lends to the world’s poorest countries.

The bank said growth had slowed to 2.4 percent in 2015, from 2.6 percent in 2014, but added that a stronger performance in developed countries should lead to 2.9 percent growth this year.

“Downside risks dominate and have become increasingly centred on emerging and developing countries,” it said.

The bank is predicting that recessions in Brazil and Russia will bottom out in 2016, that China will experience only a modest growth slowdown from 6.9 percent to 6.7 percent and that India will continue to expand at a robust pace.

The report said that, in a development unmatched since the 1980s, most of the largest emerging market economies were slowing at the same time. Sharp declines in commodity prices, subdued global trade, weaker capital flows and currency pressures had combined last year to create a “particularly challenging external environment for commodity exporters,” where most of the growth slowdown had occurred.

The bank has estimated that growth in developing countries reached a post-crisis low of 4.2 percent in 2015, down from 4.9 percent in 2014, and warned that 2016 could be another difficult year.

In the event that growth in the BRICS economies fell 1 percentage point short of expectations, the bank said this would knock 0.8 points off growth in other emerging markets and reduce growth in the global economy by 0.4 percent.

But the bank also highlighted the risks of what it called a perfect storm. “Spillovers could be considerably larger if the BRICS growth slowdown were combined with financial market stress.

“If, in 2016, BRICS growth slows further, by as much as the average growth disappointment over 2010-2014, growth in other emerging markets could fall short of expectations by about 1 percentage point and global growth by 0.7 percentage points.

“If such a BRICS growth decline scenario were to be combined with financial sector turbulence, emerging market growth could slow by an additional 0.5 percentage points and global growth by an additional 0.4 percentage points.”

Jim Yong Kim, the bank’s president, said: “More than 40 percent of the world’s poor live in the developing countries where growth slowed in 2015. Developing countries should focus on building resilience to a weaker economic environment and shielding the most vulnerable. The benefits from reforms to governance and business conditions are potentially large and could help offset the effects of slow growth in larger economies.”

The bank said it expected the growth rate in the Middle East and North Africa region to more than double as a result of ending sanctions against Iran and an end to declining oil prices.

Read more at TheGuardian.