World Bank Sees Economy Shrinking 3 Percent This Year

By NELSON D. SCHWARTZ - THE NEW YOR TIMES
June 12, 2009


PARIS — Underscoring the risk that hopes for a quick turnaround may be 
premature, the World Bank said Thursday that it expected the global economy to 
shrink nearly 3 percent in 2009, far deeper than the 1.7 percent contraction it 
predicted slightly more than two months ago. 

Although the bank said that it expected growth in developed countries to resume 
next year, emerging-market countries could feel the effects of “aftershocks” 
for several years, as the full impact of the worst downturn since World War II 
became apparent.

“It’s quite clear that even if the developed world starts on a path of 
recovery, for many developing countries, it will take longer,” the World Bank’s 
president, Robert B. Zoellick, said Thursday. “Financial markets seem to have 
broken the fall but there are clear fragilities and risks remain.”

“Some of these fragile developing economies don’t have any cushion,” he added. 

The gloomy outlook is likely to top the agenda this weekend as finance 
ministers gather for a Group of 8 meeting in Lecce, Italy, and assess progress 
since the broader G-20 summit meeting with President Obama and other world 
leaders in London in early April. 

Despite a recent burst of optimism that the American economy has turned the 
corner, with the pace of job losses showing signs of easing, economies 
elsewhere remain deeply troubled.

Since the World Bank’s last estimate for 2009, released on March, 31, Europe 
has continued to weaken. Meanwhile, unemployment in the United States is still 
on the rise, and house prices are also still falling.

New figures released this week showed German exports in April declined 28.7 
percent from a year ago, the steepest drop since the government began keeping 
records in 1950. Meanwhile, industrial production fell 1.9 percent in April 
from the previous month, well below the 0.3 percentage point increase 
economists had been expecting.

Last week, the European Central Bank predicted the economy would contract 4.1 
to 5.1 percent in 2009, sharper than the 3.2 percent contraction the European 
Central Bank predicted in March.

By contrast, the United States economy is expected to contract 2.8 percent this 
year, according to I.M.F. estimates, and many private economists say growth 
could resume in the second half of the year.

“We are seeing more signs of improvement in the U.S. than across the euro 
area,” said Jonathan Coppel, a senior economist at the Organization for 
Economic Cooperation and Development. But both economies are still in 
recession, he pointed out, “and we’re not out of the woods yet in either 
region.”



Read business stories in ;

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/12/business/economy/12euro.html?hpw

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/4645751.cms

http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/NEWS/0,,contentMDK:22209360~pagePK:34370~piPK:34424~theSitePK:4607,00.html

http://www.rte.ie/business/2009/0611/worldbank.html




      

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