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Global economy recovering: World Bank

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The global economy is slowly picking up steam, led by advanced economies appearing to turn the corner after five years of financial crises and recession and a continued good performance by China, according to a new report by the World Bank.

The global economy is slowly picking up steam, led by advanced economies appearing to turn the corner after five years of financial crises and recession and a continued good performance by China, according to a new report by the World Bank.

But the agency cautions that growth prospects remain vulnerable to rising interest rates and potential volatility in capital flows as the U.S. Federal Reserve eases up on the extraordinary stimulus it has been providing to the U.S. economy.

The World Bank’s twice-yearly Global Economics Prospects report says global growth is expected to firm from 2.4 per cent in 2013 to 3.2 per cent this year and 3.4 per cent in 2015.

The report said momentum building in countries such as the U.S. and Japan should support stronger growth in the developing countries.

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According to the report, although risks to the global economy have subsided, they have not been eliminated and include fiscal uncertainty in the U.S., protracted recovery in the euro zone and possible setbacks in China’s restructuring policies.

The bank said the Federal Reserve decision to begin trimming its intervention in the market, known as quantitative easing, “is welcome as it reflects increasingly convincing signs that a self-sustaining recovery is under way.” It said the most likely scenario is for the tapering off to follow an orderly trajectory and for global interest rates to rise only slowly, reaching 3.6 per cent by mid-2016

In Japan, the report continued, fiscal and monetary stimulus has sparked a strong cyclical upturn but keeping this going will require structural reforms.

The bank says in the euro zone, banks have gone a long way to restructuring themselves but that sector remains weak. Details on a fully fledged banking union are still being worked out “and the currency bloc remains susceptible to shock.”

The report said that although developing country growth in 2013 was relatively weak, at an estimated 4.8 per cent, “it has been firming in recent months, partly reflecting strengthening growth in high-income countries, but also a recovery from earlier weakness in large middle-income countries, such as India and China.”

Looking at regional trends, the bank said growth will be flat in East Asia and the Pacific, modest in Latin America and the Caribbean and held back in the Middle East and North Africa due to social and political uncertainty.  

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