World Bank Cuts Global
Growth 0.4% to 3% in 2015
Falling Energy Price
to Add 0.5% to World GDP
The
World Bank cut its forecast for global growth this year, as an improving U.S.
economy and low fuel prices fail to offset disappointing results from Europe to
China.
The world economy will expand 3 percent
in 2015, down from a projection of 3.4 percent in
June, according to the lender’s semi-annual Global Economic Prospects report,
released in Washington on 13 January.
“The global economy today is much larger than what it used to
be, so it’s a case of a larger train being pulled by a single engine, the
American one,” World Bank Chief Economist Kaushik Basu told reporters on a conference call. “This does not
make for a rosy outlook for the world.”
The Washington-based lender upgraded its forecast for U.S.
growth to 3.2 percent this year from a 3 percent estimate given in June. It reduced its projections
for the euro area and Japan, citing lingering effects from the financial crisis
and “structural bottlenecks.” It also cut its forecast for China, saying the
world’s second-biggest economy is undergoing a “managed slowdown.”
The World Bank is the latest institution to lower its global
estimate amid a recovery that has repeatedly disappointed policy makers. The
International Monetary Fund trimmed its 2015 outlook in October to 3.8 percent, citing weak demand and residual debt from the
financial crisis. The IMF plans to update its global forecast next week.
The 19-nation euro area is projected by the World Bank to
grow 1.1 percent in 2015, down from a June estimate
of 1.8 percent. China will expand 7.1 percent, down from the 7.2 percent
pace the bank projected in October and a 7.5 percent
estimate in June. Japan will expand at a 1.2 percent
clip, down from the 1.3 percent projected in June,
according to the bank.
It also cut its forecast for global growth in 2016 to 3.3 percent from 3.5 percent.
The bank sees average oil prices falling 32 percent this year, a decline that’s historically associated
with a boost to global GDP of about 0.5 percent. Yet
the impact on growth may be smaller in 2015 and 2016 because of other headwinds
including weak confidence that encourages saving rather than spending, and a
“significant” income shift from oil-producing countries to those that are net
consumers, the World Bank said.