AFP
Oluşturulma Tarihi: Aralık 29, 2008 00:00
PARIS - The subprime-mortgage crisis that started in 2007 snowballed into a global financial crisis in 2008, but there is worse to come. As demand slows and commodity prices plummet, the authoritative Institute of International Finance predicts a global contraction.
If you thought 2008 was bad for the world economy, just wait for 2009. After a year when leading economies slid into recession, the forecasts paint an even grimmer picture for the 12 months ahead.
The slowdown in global demand will mean more job cuts, factory closures and bankruptcies, as well as budget-stretching rescue plans and government bailouts running into the hundreds of billions of dollars, economists said.
"We see 2009 as being a bad year, with recession for most advanced economies and growth decreasing for emerging economies," the head of the International Monetary Fund, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, said earlier this month.
The IMF's chief economist, Olivier Blanchard, urged governments to spend more in order to boost domestic demand "if we want to prevent this recession developing into a Great Depression" like the downturn of the 1930s.
In the past 12 months, the OPEC oil cartel has implemented record cuts in production amid plummeting demand, stock markets have plunged and the world financial and auto sectors have been reshaped by state intervention.
Global contraction
The Institute of International Finance, a Washington-based association of 375 leading world banks and financial institutions, has predicted a contraction for the world economy in 2009 for the first time since at least the 1950s.
The IIF said the global economy will shrink 0.4 percent in 2009 after 2.0 percent growth this year, with IIF managing director Charles Dallara calling it "the most severe, globally synchronized recession in modern economic history."
A report on Friday by the Centre for Economic and Business Research in London forecast contraction of 2.9 percent for the British economy over 2009 - the worst full-year growth figure for Britain since the end of World War II.
The world's biggest economy, the United States, will shrink by 0.9 percent, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said this month despite hopes that President-elect Barack Obama plans to stimulate growth.
Obama has promised a "bold" stimulus plan of vast public works to pull the economy out of recession after he takes office Jan. 20, drawing parallels to the 1930s New Deal that helped end the Great Depression.
Germany's Ifo institute said Europe's largest economy will contract by 2.2 percent and the Japanese government has forecast zero growth for 2009 as Japan's export-oriented economy takes a hard hit from the slump in demand.
"We need to take unprecedented measures when in an extraordinary economic situation," Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso said this week soon after his cabinet approved a record-high budget aimed at stimulating the ailing economy.
While all the growth forecasts remain positive for Brazil, Russia, India and China, these recently booming giants have also been hit hard by the fall in global demand.
The Russian government is forecasting a budget deficit for 2009 for the first time since the 1998 crisis and wage arrears and layoffs have prompted officials to warn about the prospect of popular unrest.
Admission of trouble
In a rare admission of trouble ahead, China's top economic planner, Zhang Ping, said this month: "We are confronted with great challenges resulting from a dramatic change in the world economic and financial situation."
In Iceland and Ukraine, the two European countries worst hit by the crisis, 2008 has seen street protests and bank closures. Both countries are predicting their economies will shrink massively in 2009.