Pages

Friday, 12 October 2012

World Economic News in short


Bank of Korea Slashes Policy Rate, Cuts Growth Outlook

South Korea's central bank cut its key interest rate on Thursday for the second time this year and slashed growth forecasts as Asia's fourth-largest economy faces mounting threats from the protracted debt crisis in Europe and a worsening global slowdown.

The Bank of Korea's seven-member policy board lowered the benchmark seven-day repurchase rate by a quarter of a percentage point to 2.75 percent. The bank cut its growth forecast for this year to 2.4 percent from 3 percent. It lowered its forecast for next year to 3.2 percent from 3.8 percent.

``We expect this rate cut to help South Korea's economy recover growth,'' Bank of Korea Governor Kim Choong-soo said at a briefing.

``External conditions worsened more than we expected. Because slumping growth in South Korea's economy stems from the worsening external conditions rather than internal problems, we need to respond to that.''



Bailout terms force water utility sale in Greece, Portugal


EU leaders are under fire for pressuring troubled eurozone governments to sell public water utilities as part of their bailout deals, with environmentalists and rights activists saying that privatisation will only feed public anger.
Criticism of the bailout conditions set for Greece and Portugal by the European Commission, European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund troika call for shedding state-owned companies, including public utilities, as a condition for billions of euros in funds to stave off insolvency.

Greece came under renewed pressure this week from eurozone finance ministers to approve a fiscal overhaul in order to receive €31.2 billion in an aid instalment that is already two months overdue. German Chancellor Angela Merkel made a one-day visit to Athens on Tuesday to give cautious support to the austerity plan backed by her Greek counterpart, Antonis Samaras.



Greece unemployment hits a record 25% in July


Unemployment in Greece hit a record 25.1% in July, with the level among young people reaching 54.2%, according to the latest official figures.

Greece's statistical authority said 1.26 million Greeks were jobless in July, with more than 1,000 jobs lost every day over the past year.

With austerity cuts continuing and Greece likely to enter another year of recession, the level may rise further.




India's Sept trade deficit $18.1 bln, widest in 11 mths


Oct 11 (Reuters) - India's annual exports fell for the fifth consecutive month and imports rose in September, pushing the trade deficit to its widest in 11 months in the latest bleak data from Asia's third largest economy as it struggles to balance its finances.

Exports contracted to $23.7 billion, 11 percent lower than last year, the government said in a statement, without giving details of which sectors were worst hit. Imports rose for the first time since April, driven by an almost 31 percent jump in crude oil purchases for the energy-hungry economy.

September's $18.1 billion trade deficit was the biggest since October 2011, a worrying development for the government while it seeks to stave of the threat of a downgrade to India's sovereign debt rating.



India industrial growth to be less than 2% in FY 2013: Assocham

Growth prospects for India's industrial production look quite weak and the output may show less than two per cent expansion in the current financial year, an ASSOCHAM (The Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India ) study has indicated.


The not-so-bright outlook for the industrial growth has been projected despite the fact that there are visible signs of improvement in the business confidence in the last two months due to several bold policy initiatives by the government.




IMF, World Bank urge China, Japan to overcome differences


China's foreign minister on Thursday defended the withdrawal of its senior delegates from the International Monetary Fund meeting in Tokyo as "completely appropriate" although the head of the multilateral organization said they would "lose out".


China's delegation is being led by the Vice Finance Minister Zhu Guangyao and the vice head of the central bank, Yi Gang, instead of their bosses, in what appears to be a snub to Japan as host of the IMF and World Bank meetings this week.

Japan is hosting the gathering for the first time in nearly half a century and about 20,000 people are expected to attend the events, which end on Sunday, making it one of the world's largest international conferences.

The head of the IMF, Christine Lagarde, said she hoped the world's second- and third-largest economies could resolve their differences "harmoniously and expeditiously".

http://www.newsdaily.com/stories/bre89a0ta-us-china-japan/


Philippines August Exports Fall 9%


The Philippines' August exports fell 9% from a year earlier, making the country the latest in Asia to take a hit from sluggish demand from Europe and the U.S.

The decline, to $3.798 billion, was the largest percentage drop since December. The National Statistics Office said August was the first month since December that export value dropped below $4 billion.

Electronics shipments, the country's biggest export category, fell 14.9% from a year earlier to $1.765 billion, though they rose 5.4% from July.

Shipments of clothing, coconut oil and bananas also saw double-digit declines.



No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.