Current:Home > reviewsUN reports improved prospects for the world economy and forecasts 2.7% growth in 2024 -Momentum Wealth Path
UN reports improved prospects for the world economy and forecasts 2.7% growth in 2024
View
Date:2025-04-15 03:24:12
UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The United Nations reported improved prospects for the world economy since its January forecast on Thursday, pointing to a better outlook in the United States and several large emerging economies including Brazil, India and Russia.
According to its mid-2024 report, the world economy is now projected to grow by 2.7% this year – up from the 2.4% forecast in its January report – and by 2.8% in 2025. A 2.7% growth rate would equal growth in 2023, but still be lower than the 3% growth rate before the COVID-19 pandemic began in 2020.
“Our prognosis is one of guarded optimism, but with important caveats,” Shantanu Mukherjee, director of the U.N.’s Economic Analysis and Policy Division, told a news conference launching the report.
The report pointed to interest rates that are higher for longer periods, debt repayment challenges, continuing geopolitical tensions and climate risks especially for the world’s poorest countries and small island nations.
Mukherjee said inflation, which is down from its 2023 peak, is both “a symptom of the underlying fragility” of the global economy where it still lurks, “but also a cause for concern in its own right.”
“We’ve seen that in some countries inflation continues to be high,” he said. “Globally, energy and food prices are inching upward in recent months, but I think a bit more insidious even is the persistence of inflation above the 2% central bank target in many developed countries.”
The U.N. forecast for 2024 is lower than those of both the International Monetary Fund and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.
In mid-April, the IMF forecast that the world economy would continue growing at 3.2% during 2024 and 2025, the same pace as in 2023. And the OECD in early May forecast 3.1% growth in 2024 and 3.2% in 2025.,
The latest U.N. estimates foresee 2.3% growth in the United States in 2024, up from 1.4% forecast at the start of the year, and a small increase for China from 4.7% in January to 4.8%. for the year.
Despite climate risks, the report by the U.N. Department of Economic and Social Affairs forecasts improved economic growth from 2.4% in 2023 to 3.3% in 2024 for the small developing island nations primary due to a rebound in tourism.
On a negative note, the report projects that economic growth in Africa will be 3.3%, down from 3.5% forecast at the beginning of 2024. It cited weak prospects in the continent’s largest economies – Egypt, Nigeria and South Africa – along with seven African countries “in debt distress” and 13 others at “high risk of debt distress.”
Mukherjee said the lower forecast for Africa “is particularly worrying because Africa is home to about 430 million (people) living in extreme poverty and close to 40% share of the global undernourished population” and “two-thirds of the high inflation countries listed in our update are also in Africa.”
For developing countries, he said, the situation isn’t “as dire” but an important concern is the continuing fall and sharp decline in investment growth.
veryGood! (57482)
Related
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- The $7,500 tax credit to buy an electric car is about to change yet again
- Trump trial date in classified documents case set for May 20, 2024
- All of You Will Love All of Chrissy Teigen and John Legend's Family Photos
- 'Most Whopper
- Octomom Nadya Suleman Shares Rare Insight Into Her Life With 14 Kids
- A Pennsylvania chocolate factory explosion has killed 7 people
- On the Defensive a Year Ago, the American Petroleum Institute Is Back With Bravado
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- All of You Will Love All of Chrissy Teigen and John Legend's Family Photos
Ranking
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- ‘We’re Being Wrapped in Poison’: A Century of Oil and Gas Development Has Devastated the Ponca City Region of Northern Oklahoma
- Octomom Nadya Suleman Shares Rare Insight Into Her Life With 14 Kids
- Coal Powered the Industrial Revolution. It Left Behind an ‘Absolutely Massive’ Environmental Catastrophe
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- All new cars in the EU will be zero-emission by 2035. Here's where the U.S. stands
- Sophia Culpo Seemingly Shades Ex Braxton Berrios and His Rumored Girlfriend Alix Earle
- Michigan clerk stripped of election duties after he was charged with acting as fake elector in 2020 election
Recommendation
2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
The Navy Abandons a Plan to Develop a Golf Course on a Protected Conservation Site Near the Naval Academy in Annapolis
Las Vegas police seize computers, photographs from home in connection with Tupac's murder
Investigators looking into whether any of the Gilgo Beach murder victims may have been killed at home suspect shared with his family
Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
New $2 billion Oklahoma theme park announced, and it's not part of the Magic Kingdom
Anne Arundel County Wants the Navy’s Greenbury Point to Remain a Wetland, Not Become an 18-Hole Golf Course
You won the lottery or inherited a fortune. Now what?