Washington: The IMF on Tuesday projected a GDP growth of 1.9 per cent for India in 2020, as the global economy hits the worst recession since the Great Depression in the 1930s due to the raging coronavirus pandemic that has nearly stalled all economic activities across the world.
With this subdued forecast, India is likely to record its worst growth performance since the 1991 liberalisation. But the International Monetary Fund, in its latest edition of the World Economy report, has placed India as the fastest-growing emerging economies of the world.
It is among the only two major countries, which will register a positive growth rate in 2020. The other being China, for which the IMF has projected a growth rate of 1.2 per cent.
"We project global growth in 2020 to fall to -3 per cent. This is a downgrade of 6.3 percentage points from January 2020, a major revision over a very short period," Indian--American Gita Gopinath, the IMF Chief Economist said, adding that the COVID-19 pandemic will severely impact growth across all regions.
The Great Depression was the worst worldwide economic downturn that lasted for 10 years from 1929, beginning in the US when the New York Stock Exchange on Wall Street crashed and wiped out millions of investors.
Most countries, in the advanced economy group, are forecast to contract this year, including the United States (5.9 per cent), Japan (5.2 per cent), the United Kingdom (6.5 per cent), Germany (7.0 per cent), France (7.2 per cent), Italy (9.1 per cent), and Spain (8.0 per cent), the IMF report said.
Even with a sharp rebound in the remainder of the year and sizable fiscal support, the Chinese economy is projected to grow at a subdued 1.2 per cent in 2020.
The IMF said several economies in the region were forecast to grow at modest rates, including India (1.9 per cent) and Indonesia (0.5 per cent), and others are forecast to experience large contractions (Thailand, 6.7 per cent).
The IMF said that other regions are projected to experience severe slowdowns or outright contractions in economic activity, including Latin America (5.2 per cent) with Brazil's growth forecast at 5.3 per cent and Mexico's at 6.6 per cent; emerging and developing Europe (5.2 per cent) with Russia's economy projected to contract by 5.5 per cent.
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The Middle East and Central Asia (2.8 per cent) with Saudi Arabia's growth forecast at 2.3 per cent, with non-oil GDP contracting by four per cent, and most economies, including Iran, expected to contract; and sub-Saharan Africa (1.6 per cent) with growth in Nigeria and South Africa expected at 3.4 per cent and 5.8 per cent respectively.
This is a crisis like no other, and there is substantial uncertainty about its impact on people's lives and livelihoods, Gopinath said.