World Bank’s Malpass Sees Risk of Stagflation, Likely Recession in Europe

World Bank’s Malpass Sees Risk of Stagflation, Likely Recession in Europe
World Bank President David Malpass responds to a question from a reporter during an opening press conference at the IMF and World Bank's 2019 Annual Fall Meetings of finance ministers and bank governors, in Washington on Oct. 17, 2019. Mike Theiler/Reuters
Reuters
Updated:

WASHINGTON—World Bank President David Malpass on Wednesday warned that it could take years for global energy production to diversify away from Russia after its invasion of Ukraine, prolonging the risk of stagflation, or a period of low growth and high inflation.

In a speech at Stanford University, Malpass said there was an increased likelihood of recession in Europe, while China’s growth was slowing sharply and U.S. economic output had contracted in the first half of the year.

Those developments would have grave consequences for developing countries, Malpass said, citing what he called “consequential” and “worsening” challenges facing development.

Addressing the current “perfect storm” of rising interest rates, high inflation and slowing growth required new macro- and microeconomic approaches, including better targeted spending and clearly messaged efforts to increase supplies, Malpass said.

Malpass said the bank’s upcoming “Poverty and Shared Prosperity” report showed that decades of progress in reducing poverty had slowed by 2015, even before the COVID-19 pandemic, which sent an additional 70 million people into extreme poverty.

The report, due out next week, also showed a 4 percent decline in the global median income, the first decline since the bank began measuring that indicator in 1990, he said.

“The developing world is facing an extremely challenging near-term outlook shaped by sharply higher food fertilizer and energy prices, rising interest rates and credit spreads, currency depreciation and capital outflows,” Malpass said.

“A pressing danger for the developing world is that the sharp slowdown in global growth deepens into global recession,” he said, noting that many of these countries were still struggling to return to pre-pandemic per capita income levels.

Malpass said it was unclear if there would be enough global capital to meet the needs of advanced economies—which had adopted fiscal policies favoring higher debt levels—and still have enough leftover to fund the investment needs of developing countries.

He urged countries to look for ways to reduce inflation beyond the highly synchronized interest rates hikes now underway, including by increasing fiscal efficiency to target spending more to the poor and vulnerable.

Such adjustments would improve the allocation of global capital, providing a path to reduce inflation while restarting growth in median income, he said.

By Andrea Shalal