In the report's India section, the World Bank said tighter credit conditions in the non-banking sector are contributing to a substantial weakening of the domestic demand in the country.
The
World
Bank has projected a five per cent growth rate for India in the
2019-2020 financial year, but said it was likely to recover to 5.8
per cent in the following financial year.
The
growth rate for Bangladesh has been projected to remain above seven
per cent through the forecast horizon and, in Pakistan, it is
projected to languish at three per cent or less through 2020 as
macroeconomic stabilisation efforts weigh on economic activity, the
bank said in its latest edition of the Global Economic Prospects.
"In
India, where weakness in credit from non-bank financial companies is
expected to linger, growth is projected to slow to five per cent in
fiscal year 2019/20, which ends March 31, and recover to 5.8 per cent
the following fiscal year," the World Bank said on Wednesday.
The
global
economic growth is forecast to edge up to 2.5 per cent in 2020 as
investment and trade gradually recover from last year's significant
weakness, but downward risks persist, it said.
The
US' growth is forecast to slow to 1.8 per cent this year, reflecting
the negative impact of earlier tariff increases and elevated
uncertainty. The Euro area's growth is projected to slip to a
downwardly revised one per cent in 2020 amid weak industrial
activity, the bank said in the report.
"With
the growth in emerging and developing economies likely to remain
slow, policymakers should seize the opportunity to undertake
structural reforms that boost broad-based growth, which is essential
to poverty reduction," World Bank Group Vice President for
Equitable Growth, Finance and Institutions, Ceyla Pazarbasioglu,
said.
"Steps
to improve the business climate, the rule of law, debt management,
and productivity can help achieve sustained growth,"
Pazarbasioglu said.
In
the report's India section, the World Bank said tighter credit
conditions in the non-banking sector are contributing to a
substantial weakening of the domestic demand in the country.
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