Published: 14:18, October 21, 2024 | Updated: 16:58, October 21, 2024
IMF, WB meetings clouded by conflicts, slow growth, US election
By Reuters
A person walks past the International Monetary Fund headquarters building in Washington, DC on Oct 20, 2024 ahead of the 2024 IMF/World Bank Annual Meetings. (PHOTO / AFP)

WASHINGTON - Global finance chiefs will gather in Washington this week amid intense uncertainty over conflicts in the Middle East and Europe, a flagging global economy and worries that a coin-toss US presidential election could ignite new trade battles and erode multilateral cooperation.

The International Monetary Fund and World Bank annual meetings are scheduled to draw more than 10,000 people from finance ministries, central banks and civil society groups to discuss efforts to boost patchy global growth, deal with debt distress and finance the green energy transition.

But the elephant in the meeting rooms will be the potential for a Nov 5 election victory by US Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump to upend the international economic system with massive new US tariffs and borrowing and a shift away from climate cooperation.

"Arguably the most important issue for the global economy - the outcome of the US election - is not on the official agenda this week, but it's on everyone's mind," said Josh Lipsky, a former IMF official who now heads the Atlantic Council's GeoEconomics Center.

The election "has huge implications on trade policy, on the future of the dollar, on who the next Federal Reserve chair is going to be, and all of those impact every country in the world", he added.

People attend a watch party for the US Presidential debate between Vice-President and Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris and former US president and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump in New York on Sept 10, 2024. (PHOTO / AFP)

US Vice-President Kamala Harris, the Democratic presidential candidate, is largely expected to continue the Biden administration's resumption of multilateral cooperation on climate, tax and debt relief issues if she wins next month's vote.

The meetings, which start on Monday and get into full swing later in the week, will likely be the last for US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, who spearheaded much of the Biden administration's multilateral economic and climate efforts. Yellen has said she is "probably done" with public service at the end of President Joe Biden's term in office in January.

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Lackluster growth

The IMF will update its global growth forecasts on Tuesday. IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva last week flagged a lackluster outlook, saying the world, saddled by high debts, was headed for slow medium-term growth, and pointing to a "difficult future".

Still, Georgieva said she was "not super-pessimistic" about the outlook, given pockets of resilience, notably in the US and India that are offsetting continued weakness in Europe.

International Monetary Fund Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva delivers a curtain raiser speech on the outlook for the global economy and policy priorities ahead of the 2024 Annual Meetings of the IMF and the World Bank Group in Washington, DC, Oct 17, 2024. (PHOTO / AFP)

While debt defaults among poor countries may have peaked, participants at the annual meetings are expected to discuss the growing problem of scarce liquidity that is forcing some emerging markets saddled with high debt service costs to delay development investments as overseas aid shrinks.

Last year's IMF and World Bank annual meetings got underway in Morocco as the Palestinian militant group Hamas attacked Israel, killing more than 1,200 people and unleashing conflicts with a death toll of more than 40,000 Gazans, according to Palestinian health authorities.

The economic damage has been largely limited to economies in or adjacent to the conflict: Gaza, the West Bank, Israel, Lebanon, Egypt and Jordan.

An Israeli army tank maneuvers near the Israel-Gaza border in southern Israel, Oct 20, 2024. (PHOTO / AP)

"If there was to be an escalation that puts at risk oil and gas delivery, that could have much more significant spillover for the world economy," Georgieva told Reuters in an interview.

Support for Ukraine also will be a major topic at the meetings, as the G7 wealthy democracies aim to reach a political agreement by the end of October for a $50 billion loan for the Eastern European country. The loan in part is seen as a financial bulwark against a Trump victory next month, as the former US president has threatened to "get out of Ukraine".

Despite the wall of worry, World Bank and IMF officials intend to spend the week concentrating on the work at hand at the meetings, which coincide with the 80th anniversary of the institutions' founding in 1944 at Bretton Woods, New Hampshire.

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Ukrainian rescuers work to extinguish a fire in a residential building following a missile attack in Kharkiv on Aug 30, 2024. (PHOTO / AFP)

For World Bank President Ajay Banga, that means finding ways to speed up the preparations of projects to use the bank's expanded lending capacity and refining a new scorecard aimed at improving development outcomes.

"The world is the world right now. And rather than use the meetings to go over what we already seem to know - which is to admire the problem - I'd like to take the annual meetings to doing something about what we can do as institutions," Banga told reporters last week.