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IMF Warns of Capital Flow Dry-Up, Oil Price Falls, and China's Deflationary Pressures


Updated: April 22, 2025 22:15

Image Source: Reuters
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) expressed concerns about falling capital flows and official assistance for low-income economies, attributing trade tensions and economic uncertainty as major drivers. IMF Chief Economist Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas noted that lower oil prices, as a result of declining global activity, will keep headline inflation low. China, on the other hand, experiences more intense deflationary forces, although fiscal support is partly mitigating the trade-related economic drag.
 
Key Highlights:
Capital Flow Issues: Drying up capital flows are predicted by the IMF, impacting low-income countries dependent on external borrowing.
Downgrade Growth: Low-income country economic projections have been lowered, reflecting tariff-related slowdowns across the globe.
Declines in Oil Prices: The IMF relates declining oil prices to declining world demand, reducing inflation rates.
China's Economic Distress: Trade tensions have strengthened deflationary pressures in China, although fiscal stimulus is tempering some of their impact.
Uncertainty about Global Trade: The IMF emphasizes that restoring policy predictability in trade policies is essential for economic stability.
 
As global financial conditions become tighter, the IMF calls for policy action to be taken jointly in order to cushion against economic risk.
 
Source: IMF, IMF Working Papers, IMF eLibrary

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