Source: AFP
Monday 12 February 2024 19:41:07
The IMF and World Bank warned on Monday that the Gaza war and the related attacks on shipping through the Red Sea pose threats to the global economy.
The Israel-Hamas war raging since October has already hit the Middle East and North Africa region's economy, said the International Monetary Fund's managing director Kristalina Georgieva.
Its knock-on effects could impact the world the longer the fighting drags on, Georgieva told the World Governments Summit, an annual gathering of business and political leaders in Dubai.
"I fear most a longevity of the conflict because, if it goes on and on, the risk of spillover goes up," she said.
"Right now we see a risk of spillover in the Suez Canal," she said, as Yemen's Huthi rebels have attacked Red Sea shipping leading to the crucial maritime passage.
Georgieva said that if there are other "consequences in terms of where the fighting goes, it could be more problematic for the world as a whole".
On a personal note, she added that "as a woman, as a mother, grandmother... I pray for peace".
Despite the war-related uncertainties, Georgieva said the IMF is "very confident that the world economy is now poised for this soft landing we have been dreaming of".
"I expect to see by mid-year interest rates going in the direction inflation has been going for the last year now," she said, when asked about interest rates being cut in leading economies.
Also speaking at the summit, World Bank President Ajay Banga said that "what's going on Gaza, but also the challenges of Ukraine... and the Red Sea" are among the top challenges to the global economic outlook.
"When you add these variables to what is already turning out to be probably the lowest growth of the last 55 years.... that's something we have to keep a close eye on," he said.