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Strategies & Market Trends : Coming Financial Collapse Moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Box-By-The-Riviera™ who wrote (590)8/31/2001 7:56:28 PM
From: EL KABONG!!!  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 974
 
Hmmm... Given the sell-off earlier this week, this "leaked" report makes me wonder how many other people had "early" knowledge before the little guy heard the "forecast"... (Thanks to a friend who e-mailed the link to me earlier today.)

news.ft.com

IMF warns of a significant danger of global recession
By Ed Crooks in London, Peronet Despeignes in Washington and David Ibison in Tokyo
Published: August 30 2001 19:43GMT | Last Updated: August 31 2001 08:34GMT

Economists at the International Monetary Fund have
warned of a "significant danger" of a global recession
along the lines of the early 1980s and early 1990s.


A leaked draft version of the IMF's World Economic
Outlook, obtained by Financial Times Deutschland,
predicts the world economy will grow by 2.8 per cent this
year but states that there could be "a much deeper and
more protracted global downturn".

The IMF economists' comments emerged as economic news from around the
world gave investors and analysts fresh reasons for concern.

US government figures pointed to a sharp slowdown in consumer spending,
while in Japan a decline in industrial output, weak retail sales figures and a round
of job cuts reinforced a growing expectation that the country was poised to fall into
recession.

The focus of the IMF's concern is the outlook for the US. Although the IMF
forecasters have not changed the prediction made in April that the US will grow by
1.5 per cent this year and 2.5 per cent next year - roughly in line with the US
administration's expectations - they see a serious risk of a much worse outcome.

If US productivity growth is less than expected, then stock markets could fall,
triggering sharp declines in business investment and private consumption. That
would cause a global recession, and possibly "substantial financial market
turbulence", including "a possible abrupt decline in the value of the dollar".

The impact of global recession and market turbulence might be particularly
severe for developing countries, the IMF economists note.

Fresh evidence that the IMF's fears might be realised was released in the US on
Thursday, as official figures showed the savings rate jumped to a two-year high in
July. The news strengthened fears of a sharp slowdown in the consumer
spending that has been the principal support for the US economy this year.

The commerce department said consumer spending grew only 0.1 per cent, its
slowest pace since October, even though personal income rose by 0.5 per cent.

The figures were a sign that nervous US consumers were unwilling to spend the
proceeds of the tax cut enacted by the Bush administration.

Separately, the US labour department said the number of Americans who
continued to receive unemployment benefit rose to 3.17m - its highest level in
nearly nine years.

The IMF's economists argue that the impact of a US recession on the world
economy would be made more severe by the weakness of the economies of
Japan and Europe.

Official figures from Japan on Thursday confirmed that weakness. Industrial
production fell 2.7 per cent in July, outpacing earlier forecasts and the fifth
consecutive monthly decline. Retail sales for the month also dropped 2.7 per cent,
their fourth back-to-back monthly drop. The news helped push Japan's Nikkei 225
benchmark stock market index even further below the key 11,000 level on
Thursday to a 17-year low of 10,938.

Meanwhile Kyocera, an electronics company, said it would reduce its overseas
workforce by 10,000 by the end of the year, while Oki, a telecommunications
company, said it was aiming for a 10 per cent reduction in its workforce.

In the draft World Economic Outlook, the IMF economists say they believe it is
"likely" that the Japanese economy has slipped back into recession. They forecast
the economy will shrink by 0.2 per cent this year, before growing by just 0.6 per
cent next year.

The IMF economists call on Japan to loosen monetary policy "move aggressively",
even if this leads to a further fall in the yen, and not to move too rapidly to tighten
fiscal policy.

The point is also made by some US economists, who contend the US should
focus for now on additional measures to revive growth - rather than on shoring up
its shrinking federal budget surplus.

The World Economic Outlook is to be published ahead of the IMF's annual
meetings at the end of next month. It may be revised after it is discussed by the
IMF's executive directors next week but is unlikely to be substantially changed.

KJC