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Global Economy: Singapore gives optimists some succour

The Singapore central bank's latest assessment is careful not to declare victory, but does sound less dour than recent prognostications from OECD, IMF and European policymakers. If this hub for trade and capital is right, then the global expansion will live to fight another day

October 16, 2023 / 10:07 IST
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To hear it from Singapore, the global economy is a glass half full. The central bank's latest assessment skips some of the pessimism that's been a feature of communications this year. If this hub for trade and capital is right, then the global expansion will live to fight another day.

It's by no means a sure bet, and the city-state's officials are careful not to declare victory. They do sound less dour than recent prognostications from the OECD, the International Monetary Fund, and European policymakers. “The risk of a sharp downturn, precipitated by financial vulnerabilities, has receded compared to earlier in the year,” the Monetary Authority of Singapore said on Friday.

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Lots can still go wrong for the world economy: China, whose sub-par rebound has weighed on Asia, is still struggling. Consumer prices avoided declining again by the barest of margins, and economists predict figures this week will show the economy resumed its slowdown in the third quarter. War in the Middle East only adds to risks. Scenarios in which a wider conflict snuffs out growth got some oxygen at the annual meetings of the IMF and World Bank in Morocco last week.

After a strong recovery from the pandemic, Singapore entered 2023 fearing a pronounced downdraft. The island's economy shrank in the first quarter, and leaders warned of tough times ahead. Inflation was too high everywhere, with the exception of China, and interest rates were being raised aggressively. Singapore was itself an early mover, tightening policy well before the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank. The feared recession hasn't happened.