China's GDP to grow by 6% this year: IMF chief
IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde attends a news conference after a seminar on the international financial architecture in Paris, France, March 31, 2016. [Photo/Agencies] |
International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde said on Wednesday China and India would continue to do relatively better this year, growing at around 6 percent and more than 7 percent, respectively.
China is rightly rebalancing from manufacturing to services, from investment to consumption, and from exports to domestic services – which should produce a more sustainable, albeit slower growing economic model, Lagarde said.
"Even so, it will continue to grow at a robust rate of about 6 percent," Lagarde said in prepared remarks at Northwestern University ahead of next week’s IMF and World Bank annual meetings.
Meanwhile, Lagarde said the IMF would lower its 2016 US growth forecast again and called policies that restrict trade "economic malpractice" that would choke off growth.
The IMF in July had cut its 2016 US growth forecast to 2.2 percent from 2.4 percent based on weak first quarter growth. The Fund will issue new forecasts next week in an update to its World Economic Outlook.
Japan and Europe were seeing sub-par growth, but the picture did not appear to be deteriorating, Lagarde said.
"Adding it all up, the good and the bad, we continue to face the problem of global growth being too low for too long, benefiting too few," Lagarde said.
The former French finance minister strengthened her warnings on the dangers of erecting more trade barriers, calling this "a clear case of economic malpractice" that would deny economic opportunities to many workers, hurt global supply chains and raise costs of many basic goods.
"If we were to turn our backs on trade now, we would be choking off a key driver of growth at a point when the global economy is still in need of every good piece of news it can get," Lagarde said.
Governments should pursue instead more and better policies to retrain workers displaced by trade and automation, invest more in education and infrastructure and pursue efficiency reforms to help drive growth in their economies, she said.
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