IMF Chief: 'Clear We Have Entered Recession'

The coronavirus pandemic has driven the global economy into a downturn that will require massive funding to help developing nations, IMF chief Kristalina Georgieva said Friday.

"It is clear that we have entered a recession" that will be worse than in 2009 following the global financial crisis, she said in an online press briefing.

With the worldwide economic "sudden stop," Georgieva said the fund's estimate "for the overall financial needs of emerging markets is $2.5 trillion."

But she warned that estimate "is on the lower end."

Governments in emerging markets, which have suffered an exodus of capital of more than $83 billion in recent weeks, can cover much of that, but "clearly the domestic resources are insufficient" and many already have high debt loads.

Over 80 countries, mostly of low incomes, have already have requested emergency aid from the International Monetary Fund, she said.

"We do know that their own reserves and domestic resources will not be sufficient," Georgieva said, adding that the fund is aiming to beef up its response "to do more, do it better, do it faster than ever before."

She also welcomed the $2.2 trillion economic package approved by the US Senate, saying "it is absolutely necessary to cushion the world's largest economy against an abrupt drop the economic activities."

The US package also is important because it accelerated Washington's $78 billion contribution to the IMF's lending capacity. The fund membership in January approved a plan to double one of its funding baskets -- the New Arrangements to Borrow -- to about $500 billion.

"The U.S. decision to speed up approval of its substantial new contributions to the IMF is a powerful message to the international community and helps solidify the IMF's (overall) US$1 trillion lending capacity," Georgieva said in a statement after the House of Representatives approved the massive rescue package.

President Donald Trump signed the measure into law Friday evening.

It provides direct cash payments to Americans, a huge expansion of unemployment benefits, and grants and loans to businesses to help them weather the economic shutdown.

The IMF chief spoke to reporters following a virtual meeting with the Washington-based lender's steering committee, when she also requested an increase in the fund's fast-deploying emergency facilities from their current level of around $50 billion.

Copyright AFP. All rights reserved.

RECENT NEWS

Global Fund Groups Set To Hit $200tn

Global fund groups set to hit $200tn in assets by 2030, says PwCThe global fund management industry is expected to reach... Read more

Underperform And Report To Office: AHL's Struggles Trigger Policy Shift At Man Group

Man Group, one of the world’s largest hedge funds, has ordered staff at its flagship systematic trading unit AHL to re... Read more

Asia's Quiet Hedge Fund Star: Arrowpoint Rides Tariff Waves To Strong Gains

While some hedge funds chase headlines and media attention, others prefer to let performance speak for itself. Arrowpoin... Read more

China's Contrarian Hedge Fund Star Bags 1,485% Return

In a year when many global investors remained wary of China’s turbulent markets, one homegrown hedge fund has delivere... Read more

Beyond The Black Box: How Hedge Funds Are Systematically Embedding AI Into Core Operations

Artificial intelligence (AI) has long been discussed in hedge fund circles as a powerful but opaque tool—useful in the... Read more

Hedge Funds Rebuild Long Positions In Oil

Brent Crude Rally Gains Momentum After Diplomatic Thaw Hedge funds have significantly increased their bullish bets on B... Read more