Anchor: The International Monetary Fund(IMF) has slashed its global economic forecast for this year to minus four-point-nine percent. South Korea's growth is predicted at minus two-point-one percent, which is much worse than the IMF's prediction in April. The world economic authority is now estimating much more damage to the global economy from the COVID-19 pandemic than it forecast two months ago.
Kim Bum-soo has more.
Report:
[Sound bite: Gita Gopinath - Chief Economist, International Monetary Fund]
"Several countries have started to recover. However, in the absence of a medical solution, the strength of this recovery is highly uncertain, and the impact across sectors and countries highly uneven."
The International Monetary Fund(IMF) has predicted the South Korean economy will contract by two-point-one percent this year, much worse than its growth forecast of minus one-point-two percent in April.
IMF Chief Economist Gita Gopinath on Wednesday introduced the latest global economic outlook, expecting greater damage to the global economy from the COVID-19 pandemic.
[Sound bite: Gita Gopinath - Chief Economist, International Monetary Fund]
"Compared to our April World Economic Outlook, we are now projecting a deeper recession in 2020, and a slower recovery in 2021. Global output is projected to decline by minus four-point-nine percent in 2020, which is one-point-nine percentage points below our April forecast, followed by a partial recovery with growth projected at five-point-four percent in 2021."
She said the pandemic has triggered the worst recession since the Great Depression.
[Sound bite: Gita Gopinath - Chief Economist, International Monetary Fund]
"In the first half of this year, the length of the lockdowns and the severity of the lockdowns were more severe than we had anticipated, and secondly because there is no medical solution yet, we expect much more persistent social distancing into the second half of this year. Now we have a recovery projected for 2021, but that's partial of five-point-four percent growth. Over this two-year period, the hit to the global economy from this crisis is over 12 trillion dollars."
The world economic authority predicted that China will see growth this year, but at mere one percent.
[Sound bite: Gita Gopinath - Chief Economist, International Monetary Fund]
"As countries reopen, the pickup is uneven on the one hand, pent up demand is leading to a surge in spending in some sectors like retail. On the other hand, contact intensive sectors like hospitality, tourism and travel remain depressed. So countries that are heavily reliant on these sectors are likely to be deeply impacted for a prolonged period."
The U.S. economy is predicted to shrink eight percent, while Japan and Germany are expected to contract five-point-eight percent and seven-point-eight percent, respectively.
The South Korean economy is forecast to grow three percent next year.
Kim Bum-soo, KBS World Radio News.