LECCE, Italy-Finance ministers from the G8 leading world powers meet for talks in Italy on Friday as populations hit by the worst economic crisis in decades wait for firm evidence of an upcoming recovery.
LECCE, Italy-Finance ministers from the G8 leading world powers meet for talks in Italy on Friday as populations hit by the worst economic crisis in decades wait for firm evidence of an upcoming recovery.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) is forecasting faster-than-expected global growth of 2.4% in 2010, the Wall Street Journal quoted a briefing paper for the G8 meeting as saying, adding that signs of a recovery have started mounting.
New data showed a rise in US retail sales and lower US unemployment claims, as well as rising global demand for energy.
But there are also worries about the huge debt incurred by governments to fight the crisis and their commitment to cut spending once growth restarts.
The World Bank forecast the global economy will shrink by 3% this year, far worse than a previous estimate of -1.75%.
“Financial markets seem to have broken the fall over past months but there are clear fragilities, and risks remain,†World Bank president Robert Zoellick said in a conference call with reporters.
“The developed economies seem to be contracting at a slower pace but the effects of the global economic downturn are rippling through the world and still hurting developing countries,†he said.
The two-day meeting in Lecce in southern Italy could also see rifts on whether Europe should go for US-style “stress tests†to check the stability of its banks and on how far new rules on global finance should go.
Washington has backed the tests for Europe but Germany has argued they could undermine fledgling economic confidence. Britain, meanwhile, has opposed stricter monitoring of financial markets proposed by the European Commission.
Ministers in Lecce “will look at the new rules on finance and the economy... wanted by the Italian presidency to be approved at the G8 in L’Aquila in July,†said Italian business daily Il Sole 24 Ore.
US treasury secretary Timothy Geithner has said he will urge fellow finance chiefs at the G8 meeting to stay the course on economic stimulus spending and financial reforms despite signs the global recession is easing.
“It is fair to say the global storm is receding a bit,†Geithner told reporters this week ahead of the talks.
“Fundamentally those signs of improvement... are the result of policy actions we have put in place here in the US and around the world.†AFP