Skip to main content
Open this photo in gallery:

World Bank President David Malpass takes part in a news conference at the headquarters of the International Monetary Fund, in Washington, on Oct. 13, 2022.JAMES LAWLER DUGGAN/Reuters

World Bank Group president David Malpass said on Monday that the lender has revised its 2023 global growth outlook slightly upward to 2 per cent from a January forecast of 1.7 per cent, but the slowdown from stronger 2022 growth will increase debt distress for developing countries.

Mr. Malpass told a media briefing that the upward revision was due to an improved outlook for China’s recovery from COVID-19 lockdowns, with growth now pegged at 5.1 per cent this year compared with 4.3 per cent in the bank’s January Global Economic Prospects report.

Advanced economies, including the U.S. and in Europe, are also doing a bit better than the World Bank anticipated in January, Mr. Malpass said as the World Bank’s and International Monetary Fund’s Spring Meetings week kicked off.

But the departing World Bank chief warned that turmoil in the banking sector and higher oil prices could again put downward pressure on growth prospects in the second half of 2023. A bank asset maturity mismatch will take some time to work through and banks are likely to pull back credit for businesses, slowing growth, he said.

Mr. Malpass said that technical meetings this week with Chinese officials can help “break the ice” on potential movement on badly needed debt relief for poor countries.

Mr. Malpass said China also would be able to score some political points at a fairly low cost for its lending institutions.

“From the standpoint of their institutions, it’s not such a big amount,” Mr. Malpass said. “It’s beneficial to China to be making this movement” from both economic and political standpoints.

In a separate session, both Mr. Malpass and IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva said the slow medium-term outlook for growth – below 3 per cent this year and around 3 per cent for the next five years estimated by the IMF – is a problem for developing countries.

Mr. Malpass said higher growth was needed for job creation and also to slow economic migration from poor countries, but said capital was on net flowing out of developing countries and such flows needed to be reversed as interest rates normalize.

“I do hope that as we have these meetings to talk about the immediate pressing priorities of price stability, financial stability, we will pay more attention to how the world can go into higher growth,” Ms. Georgieva said.

A senior Treasury official said on Monday that the U.S. banking system remains strong and resilient, and recent problems at several banks are not expected to dominate the meetings.

The official said problems at banks always put downside risks into “sharp relief,” but that had not changed the baseline forecast for continued growth in the global economy.

The U.S. banking system was better capitalized and regulated and more liquid than during the 2008 global financial crisis, which is why there had been no broad spillovers as in the past, the official said. No big announcements were expected from regulators at the meetings, he added.

The IMF will release its latest economic forecasts on Tuesday. The World Bank’s forecasts tend to be a bit lower because they are based on market exchange rates, while the IMF’s forecasts are based on purchasing power parity exchange rates.

Follow related authors and topics

Authors and topics you follow will be added to your personal news feed in Following.

Interact with The Globe