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Europe still a risk as global recovery builds: IMF

Addison Ray

JOHANNESBURG | Tue Jan 25, 2011 5:55am EST

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - Europe should strengthen its financial rescue fund to reduce the risk of renewed global instability as U.S. tax cuts and emerging economies help propel recovery elsewhere, the IMF said on Tuesday.

In an updated World Economic Outlook, the International Monetary Fund said the global economy would likely expand 4.4 percent this year, a touch higher than the 4.2 percent forecast in October. It expects growth of 4.5 percent in 2012.

But in an update to its Global Financial Stability Report, the Fund said the effective size of Europe's financial rescue fund needed to be increased and that its banks need rigorous stress-testing to help restore market confidence.

"Problems in Greece, and now Ireland, have reignited questions about sovereign debt sustainability and banking sector health in a broader set of euro-area countries and possibly beyond," it said as it released the reports in Johannesburg.

The worry is that the European Financial Stability Facility, which has a headline value of 440 billion euros but an effective lending capacity of around half that, could be wiped out if a larger European economy needs rescuing.

There have been EU discussions on beefing up the fund so it can lend the full amount, but there has been resistance from Germany, which says it must be part of a wider set of measures expected in March.

The IMF said Europe's banks needed further stress-testing to ensure they could withstand a shock. Non-viable banks should be closed, it said.

The link between weak balance sheets of European banks and governments was a primary reason why the International Monetary Fund said global financial stability was still at risk nearly four years after the financial crisis struck.

LIFT TO RECOVERY

The Fund forecast a lift to a global economic recovery which began to gain pace in 2010 from a package of U.S. tax cuts enacted late last year. It said a separate stimulus package in Japan would also help.

"More generally, signs are increasing that private consumption... is starting to gain a foothold in major advanced economies," it said.

Advanced economies have been a drag on global growth since the financial crisis erupted and the IMF said they still posed the biggest risk to recovery.

It revised up its 2011 growth projection for advanced economies to 2.5 percent, but warned the pace was not sufficient to make a dent in high unemployment. It said rich nations needed to keep loose monetary policies to bolster growth.

"As long as inflation expectations remain anchored and unemployment stays higher, this is the right policy from a domestic perspective," it said.

The Fund forecast U.S. growth at 3.0 percent this year, a sharp upward revision from its 2.3 percent October forecast for the world's largest economy.



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