Washington [US] : The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has cut China's GDP growth forecast for the financial year 2023-24 to 5.30 per cent, 20 basis points lower than its July estimate.
Many emerging market economies proved quite resilient and surprised on the upside, with China an exception, which was facing growing headwinds from its real estate crisis and weakening confidence, IMF noted in its latest World Economic Outlook report, released on Tuesday. IMF said the real estate crisis in China could deepen, an important risk for the global economy.
China's property sector crisis could deepen, with global spillovers, particularly for commodity exporters. Notably, Country Garden and Evergrande, two of China's largest developers, are at the centre of the spiralling property crisis as they reportedly face huge losses, high debt and missed payments to lenders. For the Euro Area too, it cut the growth estimate by 20 basis points to 0.7 per cent for 2023-24.
For the US, it, however, raised growth projection by 30 basis points to 2.1 per cent. The global economy continues to recover slowly from the blows of the pandemic, Russia's invasion of Ukraine, and the cost-of-living crisis. In retrospect, the resilience has been remarkable. Despite the disruption in energy and food markets caused by the war, and the unprecedented tightening of global monetary conditions to combat decades-high inflation, the global economy has slowed, but not stalled," IMF said.