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IMF's Georgieva Flags Inflation, China Slowdown as Risks to Asia

IMF's Georgieva Flags Inflation, China Slowdown as Risks to Asia
IMF's Georgieva Flags Inflation, China Slowdown as Risks to Asia

International Monetary Fund Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva flagged rising inflationary pressures and China's economic slowdown as risks to Asia's economic outlook, calling on policymakers to rebuild their buffers against future shocks.

Asian Development Bank President Masatsugu Asakawa also urged Asia's policymakers to be vigilant to signs of any abrupt capital outflows driven by steady US interest rate hikes, Reuters said Friday.

"We are already seeing the risk of aggressive tightening of US monetary policy to fight inflation, which may trigger abrupt reversals of capital flows or sharp currency depreciation," Asakawa said in a video message broadcast at an ASEAN+3 forum held in Singapore on Friday.

Georgieva said economies comprising the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) are a "bright spot" in the global economy, with growth projected at 5% this year and moderating slightly in 2023.

But she warned the outlook was "exceptionally" uncertain and dominated by risks, such as the fallout from Russia's war in Ukraine, global financial tightening and a slowdown in China's growth.

"Another pressing global challenge is inflation. It is expected to average only 4% in Asia this year. But inflationary pressures in the region are rising," Georgieva said.

"We don't know how long this shock will last and whether other shocks may come. But we need to rebuild and preserve buffers and be prepared to fully use our policy tool-kit," she told the same forum.

At the forum, Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda said he did not see a significant risk of Asia facing a sudden loss of confidence or a renewed financial crisis.

But he warned against complacency as some Asian countries saw their policy buffers decrease, after deploying big spending packages to counter the Covid-19 pandemic.

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