Washington:The global economy is at a "delicate juncture" which will require central banks to maintain stimulus and governments to resolve trade disputes quickly, the International Monetary Fund warned Wednesday.
"The immediate priority is to resolve the current trade tensions," IMF chief Christine Lagarde urged in a blog post aimed at the Group of 20 finance ministers and central bankers as they prepare for a meeting in Japan this weekend.
She said the exchange of tariffs between the United States and China will put the brakes on growth in both countries and cut a few points off global growth as well.
"These are self-inflicted wounds that must be avoided," she said. "How? By removing the recently implemented trade barriers and by avoiding further barriers in whatever form." The finance officials are meeting just weeks after US-China talks collapsed amid accusations of broken promises and another exchange of punishing tariffs.
President Donald Trump has threatened to extend the tariffs to all Chinese imports.
And last week Trump announced taxes on all goods coming from Mexico, which would increase every month up to 25 per cent unless the government helps crack down on the flow of migrants.
Lagarde urged governments "to help reduce trade tensions and clear other stumbling blocks on the way back to higher and more sustainable growth.
The goal must be to help, not stand in the way of global growth." In a report prepared for the G20 gathering, the IMF said the trade conflicts, as well as Brexit, mean "questions, remain about the strength of the recovery" that require policies to continue to support growth.