China and India will together account for about half of the global growth this year, highlighting Asia’s rising heft in the global economy, according to the International Monetary Fund.
International Monetary Fund is now predicting growth in the Asia Pacific region will come in at 4.6 percent this year, some 0.3 percentage points higher than expected in October, and faster than the 3.8 percent last year — mostly due to China’s reopening.
The region as a whole will contribute over 70 percent of global growth this year, the IMF estimates.
China’s recovery is lifting activity around the region, Krishna Srinivasan, director of the IMF’s Asia and Pacific Department wrote in a blog.
The strongest spillovers to regional growth have been from Chinese demand for investment goods, he said. But this time, we expect the biggest spillover effect will be from China’s increased demand for consumption goods.
Even so, China’s expansion at 5.2 percent would be substantially lower than its pre-Covid trend rate. IMF First Deputy Managing Director Gita Gopinath earlier Thursday highlighted that “we don’t have any Chinas anymore that are growing at very high rates.”
So for the global economy as a whole, we don’t have very large engines of growth, Gopinath said on Bloomberg Television. “Unless we raise productivity, we are going to struggle with low growth.
Meantime, Srinivasan said that — like other parts of the world — Asia will need to be wary of threats including enduring inflation and leverage and risks in the financial and real estate sectors.
Policymakers should keep a close eye for financial stress and develop contingency plans, Srinivasan said.