April 2020 GLOBAL GROWTH OUTLOOK
Coronavirus Shock for Global Economy Financial and Economic Policy in the Recession
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Germany is likely to see its gross domestic product decrease between three and six percent this year. This forecast is based on an interruption of economic activity for a maximum of six weeks.
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Global economic output will drop by up to three percent. Global output has only ever fallen once in the last 50 years: in 2009 by 1.7 percent. We expect global trade to decrease by three to five percent at best, compared to the previous year.
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A severe recession is no longer avoidable in the United States, Europe and Japan this year. In 2020 the economic strength of the euro area and the EU is heading for a fall of three to five percent, the United States by two to four percent, and in Japan by one to three percent. China is still expected to record growth of up to two percent.
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Many governments and central banks have launched measures to prop up the economy. Further fiscal stimuli will be required in the wake of quarantine measures. The United States has already adopted first measures and China and Japan will follow suit.
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The EU’s fiscal support and stimulus packages are still inadequate. Germany has taken the lead with a large package of measures. Many countries will need further high-volume measures. In Europe, a significant effort to countering the effects of the coronavirus can and must be made on a supranational level. A sustained recovery programme must begin after the exit from quarantine.