Global economy recovering faster than expected: OECD

The world economy is on course to contract 4.5 percent instead of previously estimated 6 percent, the policy forum says.

India supermarket
The global economy will bounce back into growth next year by expanding by 5 percent [Danish Siddiqui/Reuters]

The global economy appears to be recovering from the coronavirus recession faster than thought only a few months ago thanks to improving outlooks for China and the United States, according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).

The world economy is on course to contract 4.5 percent this year, the OECD said on Wednesday, which – though unprecedented in recent history – was up from the 6 percent contraction that it forecast in June.

Provided the virus is kept from spreading out of control, the global economy will bounce back into growth next year by expanding 5 percent, trimmed from a June forecast of 5.2 percent, the Paris-based policy forum said.

However, a stronger resurgence of the virus or stricter measures to contain it could chop 2-3 percentage points from the 2021 outlook, the OECD warned.

The OECD said its forecasts were built on the assumption that local outbreaks would continue and would be targeted with local action rather than nationwide lockdowns. It also assumed a vaccine would not be widely available until late next year.

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The OECD said governments and central banks’ actions to support households and companies’ incomes had helped avert worse downturns and should therefore be kept up as outbreaks keep appearing sporadically.

Brighter outlook

Its brighter overall outlook for this year masked big differences between big economies with the United States, China and Europe seen performing better than feared while India, Mexico and South Africa may do worse as they struggle to contain the virus.

Having been the first country to experience the outbreak and having moved swiftly to control its spread, China was forecast to be the only country in the G20 group of economic powers to see growth this year with an increase of 1.8 percent, up from a June projection of a contraction of 2.6 percent.

Meanwhile, the US economy, the world’s biggest, was also forecast to fare better this year than previously feared with a contraction of 3.8 percent, still dire but far better than the – 7.3 percent forecast previously.

Source: Reuters

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