Logo
utility
 
   News Front Page  
-
  News  
-
  Business  
-
  Editorial  
-
  Africa  
-
  World  
-
  Features  
-
  Arts, Culture & Entertainment  
-
  Lifestyle  
-
  Sports  
-
  Comment  
-
  Columns  
-
  Special Reports  
-
  Your Views  
-
  About The Statesman  
-
  All authors  
-
  Advertising  
-
  Contact us  
-
  Links  
-
 
empty
 Today's picks
NPP 2008 Manifesto
empty
 

IMF: Global economy on track for growth
Associated Press , 27/03/2007

The global economy is still on track for healthy growth despite the adverse impact on US business prospects of a housing slump and skittishness about risky mortgages, the head of the International Monetary Fund said Friday, the Associated Press reports.

IMF chief Rodrigo de Rato said the international lending institution expects worldwide economic growth for all of this year to clock in at close to 5 percent.

"This would be the strongest five-year span for the global economy since the late 1960s,” he said in prepared remarks to the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School in Philadelphia.

Even though economic growth in the United States_ the world"s largest economy_ is slowing, business growth in other parts of the world is moving ahead, he said.

“In the Euro area growth momentum looks solid,” de Rato said. “Japan’s economy seems to have regained its footing. China and India continue to be engines of growth.”

The recent turbulence in financial markets in the United States and abroad reflected a “reappraisal of risk” as investors contemplated, among other things, the odds of an economic slowdown in the United States, problems in the US mortgage market and the risks in currency trading, involving the Japanese yen, de Rato said.

Those were some of the factors behind the Feb 27 swoon in stock markets around the world. The Dow Jones industrials that day alone suffered a gut-wrenching 416-point plunge.

De Rato said investor concern is not in itself a bad thing.

“The most dangerous time in financial markets is when no one believes that they can lose,” he said. “Recent movements in markets, despite their costs, will at least help to reduce any such complacency.”

Still, he said, troubles in the United States involving lenders who made mortgages to people with blemished credit histories bears close watching and could have implications for the global economy.

Delinquencies and foreclosures for such risky mortgages are spiking in the United States. That has battered lenders of these so-called subprime mortgages, rattled investors and ignited criticism of regulators from lawmakers on Capitol Hill.


 

 

 

Other Headlines in Business
arrow Nkoranza-Fiagya Bank declares net surplus
arrow Zain profits jumps after sale of African assets
arrow Accra bourse continues gain
arrow AMA teams up with trade Ministry to stop pirated Ghanaian textiles
arrow Zimbabwe’s industrial sector could be revamped despite challenges – AGI President
arrow Ghana spends $450 million on rice importation annually
arrow US Embassy supports micro and small-scale enterprises in Ghana
arrow British business expert to meet businessmen and HR experts in Accra
arrow Accra bourse index rises on gains in seven equities
arrow GIPC records GHc 263.43 million for first quarter of 2010
arrow Management of HFC Bank to raise GH¢15 million from investors
arrow TDCL petitions government on disturbances at TOR and other companies
arrow Prudential Bank opens new branch at Atonsu
arrow Management of HFC Bank to raise GH¢15 million from investors
arrow Accra bourse index continues impressive run
  more headlines
Related Stories
arrow
 
© Copyright of Statesman 2005. Terms & Conditions of reading.