China, Japan growth to slow sharply: IMF

This photo taken on May 1, 2016 shows workers fixing steel at an interchange construction site in Hangzhou, eastern China's Zhejiang province.  China and Japan's economies are expected to slow sharply over the next two years but Asian growth will remain strong as domestic demand takes up the slack from weak global trade, the IMF said on May 3. / AFP PHOTO / STR / China OUT

 

Hong Kong / AFP

China and Japan’s economies are expected to slow sharply over the next two years but Asian growth will remain strong as domestic demand takes up the slack from weak global trade, the IMF said on Tuesday.
Government stimulus measures, lower commodity prices and low unemployment will help drive regional expansion, the International Monetary Fund said, and called on leaders to push on with reforms.
However, in its Regional Economic Outlook for Asia and the Pacific, the Fund also warned of several external challenges, from weakness in
advanced economies, weak global trade and increasingly volatile global financial markets.
“Asia remains the most dynamic part of the global economy but is facing severe headwinds from a still weak global recovery, slowing global trade, and the short-term impact of China’s growth transition,” the Fund said.
“To strengthen its resilience to global risks and remain a source of dynamism, policymakers in the region should push ahead with structural reforms to raise productivity and create fiscal space while supporting demand as needed.”
The Fund predicted growth in Asia to come in at 5.3 percent this year and next, down from its previous forecast of 5.4 percent.
China’s economy, the world’s second biggest and a crucial driver of global growth, is tipped to expand 6.5 percent this year — the lower end of Beijing’s target — and 6.2 percent in 2017.
The figures are well down from the 6.9 percent seen in 2015, which was the slowest rate in a quarter of a century, but slightly better than the IMF’s October outlook.
“While Asia remains the global growth engine, the external environment is becoming much more difficult,” said Rhee Chang-Yong, director of IMF’s Asia and Pacific Department, speaking to reporters on Tuesday.

Japan tipped for recession
The Fund noted China’s leadership is trying to transform the country’s growth driver away from a reliance on government investment and exports to one dominated by domestic consumption. It also warned of the spillover effects of China’s slowing growth on other economies that rely on the country to drive their own expansion, including weaker trade and commodity prices. “Overall, the region has become more sensitive to the Chinese economy,” it said.
Countries with strong China trade relations had suffered the greatest repercussions from its stocks rollercoaster, Rhee told reporters.
“When the China stock market moved quite significantly (last year)…the financial spillover was higher in countries with strong trade links with China,” he said.
Japanese growth is tipped to slow, with the Fund saying exporters would be hit by the strengthening yen — which is at 18 month highs against the dollar — and slowing trade with China.
It halved its growth outlook for Japan to 0.5 percent in 2016 and tipped it to shrink 0.1 percent owing to an expected consumption tax rise, while it also cited the long-running problem of an ageing population and a huge debt mountain.
The lower outlook comes days after the Bank of Japan refused to ramp up its stimulus programme despite a string of weak data that have raised questions about Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s faltering drive to kickstart growth.
The report said India would grow 7.5 percent this year and next, unchanged from its previous prediction and the fastest rate among the world’s big economies, as low oil prices, government investment and a pick-up in domestic consumption offset weak exports.
In South Korea, growth was forecast to rise to 2.7 percent this year and to 2.9 percent in 2017 — up from 2.6 percent in 2015 and again boosted by domestic demand. Australia’s growth is expected to remain stable at 2.5 percent in 2016 and pick up in 2017.

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