The International Monetary Fund is likely to lower its growth estimates for the global economy when they are published next month, IMF chief Christine Lagarde said Monday. "We continue to project a gradual recovery, but global growth will likely be a bit weaker than we had anticipated even in July," Lagarde said in a speech, according to the prepared text.
The IMF is slated to release its latest global growth forecasts on October 9 at an annual meeting with the World Bank in Tokyo, Japan. In July the Washington-based global lender projected global growth of 3.5 percent in 2012 and 3.9 percent in 2013.
"Our forecast has trended downward over the last 12 months," Lagarde said, underscoring that the global economy "is still fraught with uncertainty" after the global recession. The IMF managing director issued a clear call for action to fight the weakening global economy. "My main message today," she told a Washington think-tank, is "the urgent need to implement the policy actions required to secure the global recovery." Lagarde said that "Europe obviously remains the epicenter of the crisis and where the most urgent action is needed."
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