Managing Director’s Global Policy Agenda to the International Monetary and Financial Committee

The latest snapshot of the global economy looks uneasily familiar: a brittle, uneven recovery, with slower-than-expected growth and increasing downside risks.
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Volume/Issue: Volume 2014 Issue 018
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Labor , Economics- Macroeconomics , Public Finance , PP , emerging market , monetary policy , economy , euro , labor market , IMF financial support , fiscal policy , IMF staff calculation , policy response , data standards initiative , inflation expectation , product market flexibility , Structural reforms , Employment , Infrastructure , Global , Africa

Summary

The latest snapshot of the global economy looks uneasily familiar: a brittle, uneven recovery, with slower-than-expected growth and increasing downside risks. Bold and resolutely executed policies are needed to prevent growth from settling into a “new mediocre,” with unacceptably low job creation and inclusion. Measures should emphasize: lifting growth, building resilience, and achieving coherence. The IMF will help members deliver on this policy agenda by redeploying resources toward lending and capacity building for members facing pressing challenges; strengthening macro-financial surveillance; providing policy advice and analysis on managing the impending monetary normalization, including on deploying macro-prudential tools; and implementing growth-friendly fiscal policies and macro-critical structural reforms. Staff will also build on existing work and develop options for next steps should ratification of the 2010 reforms be delayed beyond year end.