The International Monetary Fund has cut its growth forecast for
the UK
economy this year after a weak performance in the first three months of 2017.
In
its first downgrade for the UK since the EU referendum in June last year, the
IMF said it expected the British economy to expand by 1.7% this year, 0.3
points lower than when it last made predictions in April.
The
Fund raised its forecasts for the UK after the Brexit vote as a
result of the much stronger than envisaged activity in the second half of 2016.
In October 2016, it pencilled in growth of 1.1% for 2017, raising this forecast
to 1.5% in January this year and to 2% in April.
Maurice Obstfeld, the IMF’s economic counsellor, pointed to a
marked change in early 2017. He said the UK ’s
growth forecast had been lowered based on its “tepid performance” so far this
year, adding: “The ultimate impact of Brexit on the United Kingdom remains unclear.”The
IMF left its growth forecast for the UK in 2018 unchanged at 1.5% but
said one key risk facing the global economy was that the Brexit talks would end
in failure.It
contrasted its gloomier outlook for the UK
with a rosier forecast for the rest of the EU, with 2017 growth upgrades
for the four biggest eurozone countries – Germany ,
France , Italy and Spain .
Launching the report in Kuala Lumpur ,
Obstfeld said the IMF had left its global growth forecasts unchanged at 3.5% in
2017 and 3.6% for next year, noting that the stronger performance by the
eurozone, China and Japan had been
offset by weaker performances elsewhere.
“The
recovery in global growth that we projected in April is on a firmer footing;
there is now no question mark over the world economy’s gain in momentum,”
Obstfeld said.
He
added that Donald Trump’s failure so far to push through his promised
package of tax cuts had dampened US growth prospects.
“From
a global growth perspective, the most important downgrade is the United States ,”
he said. “Over the next two years, US growth should remain above its
longer-run potential growth rate. But we have reduced our forecasts for both
2017 and 2018 to 2.1% because near-term US fiscal policy looks less likely
to be expansionary than we believed in April.”
Three
months ago, the IMF said it expected growth in the world’s biggest economy to
be 2.3% this year and 2.5% next.
The
Fund said that while the risk of a repeat of the electoral shocks of 2016 –
Brexit and Trump’s presidential victory – had declined, policy uncertainty
remained at a high level and could rise further. It singled out
“difficult-to-predict US
regulatory and fiscal policies, negotiations of post-Brexit arrangements, or
geopolitical risks”, all of which it said could harm confidence, deter private
investment, and weaken growth.
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