sexta-feira, 23 de abril de 2010
TEc "Asia sunny, Europe cloudy" On IMF near future economic forecasting
The IMF, just as every other international organisation, has had a chequered record forecasting countrywide economic performance.
The weight of the institution whose work is backed up by reputed economists awards it immediate relevance nonetheless.
Perhaps undue, when not an exaggerated one at times.
The world is distinctly split between the emerging large economies led by China, India followed by Brazil, Russia, Mexico and OECD economies whose grouping is further split up from within.
While growth and growth potential in the former two remains big, Brazil, Russia and Mexico have entered a second phase of fast-but-not-so-fast growth from more mature positions.
The US and Canada trailed by Japan are expected to do quite well considering their long achieved developed rich-economy status.
What is truly despiriting and worrisome applies fully to the laggards in Western Europe.
The underlying issues facing most European economies loosely grouped in the EU need tackling quickly.
How, when and what needs doing is an ongoing challenge governments and businesses across Europe must find innovative ways successfully dealing with.
Even if these IMF forecasts should prove not entirely accurate - they are exactly forecasts - they do project into the near future results already confirmed in the near past.
Asia being sunny and Europe definitely cloudy then the Americas, Japan and much of the rest of the world fall somewhere mid-season in between.
With many sunny spells, blue skies interspersed with beautiful harmless white clouds.
Hopefully the next IMF report, all other forecasts remaining equal, will show a brighter weather outlook for Europe.
The weight of the institution whose work is backed up by reputed economists awards it immediate relevance nonetheless.
Perhaps undue, when not an exaggerated one at times.
The world is distinctly split between the emerging large economies led by China, India followed by Brazil, Russia, Mexico and OECD economies whose grouping is further split up from within.
While growth and growth potential in the former two remains big, Brazil, Russia and Mexico have entered a second phase of fast-but-not-so-fast growth from more mature positions.
The US and Canada trailed by Japan are expected to do quite well considering their long achieved developed rich-economy status.
What is truly despiriting and worrisome applies fully to the laggards in Western Europe.
The underlying issues facing most European economies loosely grouped in the EU need tackling quickly.
How, when and what needs doing is an ongoing challenge governments and businesses across Europe must find innovative ways successfully dealing with.
Even if these IMF forecasts should prove not entirely accurate - they are exactly forecasts - they do project into the near future results already confirmed in the near past.
Asia being sunny and Europe definitely cloudy then the Americas, Japan and much of the rest of the world fall somewhere mid-season in between.
With many sunny spells, blue skies interspersed with beautiful harmless white clouds.
Hopefully the next IMF report, all other forecasts remaining equal, will show a brighter weather outlook for Europe.
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