Friday, April 17, 2009

IMF chief: recovery could emerge in 2010

Special Report:Global Financial Crisis



WASHINGTON, April 16 (Xinhua) -- The global recession
may be ending and a recovery could emerge next year, Managing Director of the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) Dominique Strauss-Kahn said here on Thursday.

"The freefall in the global economy may be starting
to abate, with a recovery emerging in 2010," said Strauss-Kahn in a speech at
the National Press Club.

But "this depends crucially on the right policies
being adopted today," he noted.

He urged all countries to act together and
immediately adopt policies aimed at ending the recession.

"Of course, the solutions differ by country, but
there must be a coherent and coordinated response by the international
community," said the chief of the 185-member IMF.

Strauss-Kahn said "2009 will almost certainly be an
awful year -- we expect global growth to enter deeply negative territory."

"It originated in advanced economies, and spread like
wildfire across the world," he said. "This is a truly global crisis, and nobody
is escaping."

At the G-20 summit earlier this month in London,
leaders from rich countries and emerging market nations focused on urgent
actions needed to restore growth and on what must be done to repair some of the
underlying problems that caused the world crisis.

Strauss-Kahn said he was happy the G-20 leaders had
made progress on "three urgent priorities" -- the financial sector reform,
fiscal stimulus, and financial support.

To fix the financial sector is essential to get the
global economy moving again, he said. "Until this is done, attempts to restore
demand are likely to falter."

The IMF has been recommending, as early as January
2008, a 2 percent of GDP discretionary loosening for countries that have the
fiscal space to do so, according to the chief.

"Countries have largely delivered in 2009," he said.
"But efforts need to be sustained in 2010, because we are not out of the woods
just yet."

He also stressed that urgent actions should be taken
on the financing front, "especially to alleviate pressures on emerging markets,
to help them overcome the economic and social costs of the crisis."

"This is the area where the G-20 was boldest,
agreeing to triple the IMF's lending capacity to an unprecedented 750 billion
dollars," and "to at least double its concessional resources for lending to
low-income countries."

"We now have the resources to make a difference,"
said Strauss-Kahn.

The chief's remarks on the current global crisis came
a few days before the IMF holds its spring meetings with the World Bank on April
25-26 in Washington.

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