Recession cancelled: IMF sees no signs of global economic growth deterioration

Yet many challenges still cloud the horizon, and it is too early to celebrate

Following the practical economists, theorists have also joined the recession cancellation party. According to the conclusions of the International Monetary Fund in the World Economic Outlook review, the risk of economic shocks this year has decreased. Global economic growth will slow to 3 percent, a 0.2 percentage points upgrade for 2023 from IMF's April projections.

However, not everything is so rosy, states the IMF:

"Signs are growing that global activity is losing momentum," says leading IMF economist Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas. "Yet many challenges still cloud the horizon, and it is too early to celebrate."

The IMF assessed the situation in 190 countries.

Among the winners is the UK. It is managing to avoid recession with a growth rate of 0.4%, driven by high consumer spending.

If a global financial crisis doesn't strike, the future of the world economy looks bright. However, Gourinchas urged central banks not to rush to lift restrictions and lessen control.

Banks are expected to heed the advice: the Federal Reserve is set to raise the key interest rate by a quarter of a percentage point. Tomorrow, the European Central Bank is set to establish the highest interest rate since 2000, and next week, the Bank of England could raise the interest rate for the 14th consecutive time.

Stay tuned for business and economy news on our Telegram-channel Mind.ua and the Google NEWS feed