World Economic Situation and Prospects 2009

The world economy is mired in the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. What first appeared as a sub-prime mortgage crack in the United States housing market during the summer of 2007 began widening during 2008 into deeper fissures across the global financial landscape and ended with the collapse of major banking institutions, precipitous falls on stock markets across the world and a credit freeze.

These  financial  shockwaveshave now triggered  a full-fledged economic  crisis, with  most advanced countries alreadyn recession and the outlook  for  emerging  and other developing  economies deteriorating

rapidly, including those with a recent history of strong economic performance.

 

In  the  baseline scenario  of  the United Nations  forecast,  world gross product is  expected  to  slow  to a meagre  1.0 per cent  in  2009, a sharp  deceleration from the  2.5 per  cent growth  estimated for 2008 and well below the  more robust growth of previous years. At the projected  rate  of global growth, world income per capita will fall in 2009. Output in developed countries is expected to decline by 0.5 per cent in 2009. Growth in the economies in transition is expected to slow  to 4.8 per cent in 2009, down 6.9 per cent

in 2008, while output growth in the developing countries would slow from 5.9 per cent in 2008 to 4.6 per cent in 2009.

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