The document discusses the state of the global economy in 2009-2010. It finds that the world is experiencing the worst financial crisis since WWII, with a synchronized global recession, rising unemployment, and setbacks to progress on poverty reduction. There are downside risks of a prolonged recession. Key policy challenges include taking further decisive action to restore bank health, better coordinating fiscal stimulus, and urgently reforming the international financial system and frameworks for global economic governance.
UN Report Examines Global Economic Recession and Prospects for Recovery
1. World Economic
Situation and
Prospects 2009-
2010
May 2009
Rob Vos
United Nations
www.un.org/esa/policy
2. Main messages
1. Worst financial crisis since World War II
2. Global economy is in recession
• Synchronized downturn, no green shoots yet
• Rising unemployment
• Setbacks in progress to poverty reduction and other
MDGs
3. Downside risks of a prolonged global recession
4. Policy challenges:
• Further decisive and cooperative action is needed to
restore the financial health of banks
• Fiscal stimulus measures should be better coordinated
and aligned with global sustainable development
objectives
• Deeper reforms of the international financial architecture
should urgently be set in motion
• A new framework for global economic governance 2
3. 0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
3.0
3.5
4.0
4.5
5.0
is easing somewhat…
Credit crunch in the US
Jan-06
Mar-06
May-06
Jul-06
Sep-06
Nov-06
Spread of interbank lending, %
Jan-07
Mar-07
May-07
Jul-07
Sep-07
Nov-07
Jan-08
Mar-08
May-08
…
…
…
Jul-08
Sep-08
Nov-08
Jan-09
Mar-09
3
4. … but borrowing costs for
developing countries remain
elevated; private capital flows
are reversing
10
Africa
Asia
8 Latin America
Europe
6
4
2
0
Jan-07 Apr-07 Jul-07 Oct-07 Jan-08 Apr-08 Jul-08 Oct-08 Jan-09 Apr-09
4
6. After a plunge, oil prices
are back to 2005 level
140
Nominal price
120
Real price
100
$ per barrel, monthly average
80
60
40
20
0
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
6
8. World economy is in recession,
recovery is uncertain
5
4.0 3.9
4 3.9
3.5
3
Optimistic
2.7 2.1
2
1.6
1
0 Pessimistic
2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
-1
-2
-2.6
-3
8
9. World income per capita is
declining in 2009
10
8
GDP per capita annual growth %
6
4
2
0
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
-2
-4
-6
Developed countries Economies in transition Developing countries
9
10. 60 developing countries will
see declining incomes in
2009
(number of countries with declining per capita incomes)
70
60 Developed countries
60 Economies in transition
Developing countries
50
40
33
30
22
18
20 14
12 13
10
1 2
0
2008 2009 2010
10
11. Severe recession in
developed economies
8
6.1
6
4.0
4
GDP growth rate, %
2.4 2.7
2.0
2 1.5 1.5
1.1 1.0
0.4 0.7
0.0 -0.1
0
-0.6 -0.4
-2 -1.1
-1.7
-4 -3.5 -3.7
-6
-8 -7.1
USA Japan EU15 NewEU
2007 2008 2009 2010 Baseline 2010 Pessimistic scenario
11
12. Sharp contraction of economic
activity in the economies in
transition…… 10
8.5
8
6.2
6 5.4
GDP growth rate, %
4.2
4
2 1.5
1.0
0
-0.3 -0.6
-2
-1.9
-4
-6 -5.4
South-eastern Europe CIS
2007 2008 2009 2010 Baseline 2010 Pessimistic scenario
12
13. Developing countries are
being hit hard through trade
and finance channels
• Spill-over effects through financial markets are hitting
strongest on the middle-income countries
• All developing countries are affected through slowing
trade.
• Primary exporters are also seeing deterioration in
terms of trade
• Low-income, net food and oil-importers are seeing
improving terms of trade, but are suffering mainly
through reduced demand for exports
• Balance of payments constraints are emerging in
growing number of countries and vast reserves are
quickly evaporating
13
14. Leading to slowdown of
growth in all developing
countries
10 9.6
8.5
7.6
8
6.8
6.0 6.1
GDP growth rate, %
5.4 5.6 5.5
6 5.4
4.9
4.9
4.3 4.5
4.0 3.9 4.1 4.0
4 3.0 3.1 2.9
2 1.7 1.7
2 1.4
0.9
0
-0.7 -0.7
-1.1
-2 -1.8
-4
Developing Africa East Asia South Asia Western Latin
countries Asia America
2007 2008 2009 2010 Baseline 2010 Pessimistic scenario
14
15. 3.Downside risks
• Deeper and prolonged crisis
(a)prolonged credit crunch in major
economies and deeper recession
(b)steep capital reversals in emerging
markets
(c)less ODA for low-income countries
• Global imbalances
15
16. continues
The dollar volatility
105
120
135
90
Jan 04
Apr 04
Jul 04
Oct 04
Jan 05
Yen/US$
Apr 05
Jul 05
Oct 05
Jan 06
Euro/US$
Apr 06
Jul 06
Oct 06
Jan 07
Apr 07
Jul 07
Oct 07
Jan 08
Apr 08
Jul 08
Oct 08
Jan 09
Apr 09
0.60
0.70
0.80
0.90
16
17. …and global imbalances
persist, though narrowing in
deflationary spiral
600 United States
400
Japan
200
Billion US$
0
European Union
-200
-400
Developing
countries (excl
-600 China) and EiT
-800 China
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 17
18. 4. Policy challenges (1)
• We have seen extraordinary
responses to deal with the crisis
– $18 trillion of public funding (30% of WGP)
allocated to financial sector
– $2.6 trillions fiscal stimulus (4% of WGP
spent over 2009-2011) planned, less than
the desired level of 2-3% of WGP annually
– Financial landscape has changed
– Coordinated monetary responses
18
19. 4. Policy challenges (2)
• More and even bolder action is
needed:
– Decisive and cooperative action is
needed to restore the health of financial
sector.
– Align fiscal stimulus with global
sustainable development objectives
– Fundamental reforms of the international
financial system are needed to overcome
the systemic flaws
19
– A new framework for global economic