It said productivity was likely to grow at its slowest clip
since 2000, investment growth in 2022-2024 would be half the
rate seen in the last 20 years and international trade was
growing at a much slower rate.
To change the trajectory and attract more investment,
policymakers should prioritize taming inflation, ensuring
financial-sector stability and reducing debt.
Increased climate-friendly investment in transportation and
energy, climate-smart agriculture and manufacturing, and land
and water systems could boost potential growth by up to 0.3
percentage point per year, it said.
Lowering the costs associated with shipping, logistics, and
regulations could boost trade, it said, calling for changes to
remove the current bias toward carbon-intensive goods inherent
in many countries’ tariff schedules and eliminate restrictions
on access to environmentally friendly goods and services.
Boosting exports of digital services could result in big
productivity gains, while raising labor force participation
rates for women and others could raise global potential growth
rates by as much as 0.2 percentage point a year by 2030.
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal
Editing by Marguerita Choy)
By Andrea Shalal
WASHINGTON, March 27 (Reuters) - Average potential
global economic growth will slump to a three-decade low of 2.2%
per year through 2030, ushering in a "lost decade" for the
world's economy, unless policymakers adopt ambitious initiatives
to boost labor supply, productivity and investment, the World
Bank warned on Monday.
Failure to reverse the expected broad-based slowdown in
potential gross domestic product (GDP) growth would have
profound implications for the world’s ability to tackle climate
change and reduce poverty, it said in a new report.
But concerted efforts to boost investment in sustainable
sectors, cut trade costs, leverage growth in services, and
expand labor force participation could boost potential GDP
growth by up to 0.7 percentage point to 2.9%, the report said.
"A lost decade could be in the making for the global
economy," said World Bank chief economist Indermit Gill, adding
that policies which incentivized work, increased productivity,
and accelerated investment could reverse the trend.
The average GDP growth rate is a sort of "speed limit" for
the global economy, charting the maximum long-term rate at which
it can grow without sparking excess inflation.
The report said the overlapping crises of the past few
years, including the COVID-19 pandemic and Russia's invasion of
Ukraine, had ended nearly three decades of sustained economic
growth, adding to building worries about slowing productivity,
which is essential for income growth and higher wages.
As a result, average potential growth in GDP was seen
dropping to 2.2% from 2022-2030, down from 2.6% in 2011-21, and
nearly a third lower than the 3.5% rate seen from 2000-2010.
Low investment will also slow growth in developing
economies, with their average GDP growth dropping to 4% for the
rest of the 2020s, from 5% in 2011-2021 and 6% from 2000-2010.
Rising productivity, higher incomes and declining inflation
helped one out of four developing countries reach high-income
status over the past three decades, but those economic forces
are now in retreat, the report said.
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