Global Economy

IMF Best Growth in Three Decades

Thu, 20/04/2006 - 03:01

The IMF or International Monetary Fund has revised up their forecasts for world economic output despite record oil prices and natural disasters - the best groth in three decades. Global economy expected to achieve a growth rate of 4.9%, 0.6% higher than previous growth estimates. Predictions for the global growth in 2007 was also boosted to 4.7%, higer by 0.3%. Australia's economy is pegged to grow 2.9% in 2006 and 3.2% in 2007. This World Economic Outlook is releases twice a year in Washington.

Global financial stability - IMF Warning Threat to Global Markets

Wed, 12/04/2006 - 23:49

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has released a global financial stability report stating critical threats and risks that global world markets are exposed to now and the future. Major causes for concern and the major threats to the global financial markets are higher interest rates and other global "imbalances". Some threats to be aware of are the cyclical risks stemming from tighter credit and higher inflation, bad credit - and the quality of credit provided as well as imbalances that have caused the US current account deficit (cAD) to unprecedented levels.

China - Now the World's Fourth Largest Economy

Thu, 15/12/2005 - 06:00

This year, China will outstrip the UK to become the world's fourth largest economy. A new economic census, which has probed the murky depths of China's grey economy, with its cash-only back-alley businesses, decided that the Chinese economy is actually 20 per cent bigger than the official figures suggest.

What it Takes for Poor Countries to Join the Rich List

Sat, 10/12/2005 - 01:07

Professor Jeffrey Sachs of Columbia University, who is also director of the United Nations Millennium Project, says in a talk he gave in Beijing that there are four stages of economic development: pre-commercial, commercial, industrial and knowledge. Thus a country has to make three transformations to get to the wealthiest stage and can get trapped at any of them.

Most African countries are pre-commercial because the rural economy is so isolated from the urban economy that there's little exchange between the two and so little scope for exploiting economies of scale.

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