U.S.-China trade war poses the biggest risk to global stability, says IMF official

‘Fiscal stabilisation needed to respond to economic shocks in Europe’

March 26, 2019 08:11 am | Updated 08:11 am IST - LISBON

FILE- In this Aug. 5, 2010, file photo, a container is loaded onto a cargo ship at the Tianjin port in China. Farmers, electronics retailers and other U.S. businesses are bracing for a backlash as President Donald Trump prepares to target China for stealing American technology or pressuring U.S. companies to give it away. (AP Photo/Andy Wong, File)

FILE- In this Aug. 5, 2010, file photo, a container is loaded onto a cargo ship at the Tianjin port in China. Farmers, electronics retailers and other U.S. businesses are bracing for a backlash as President Donald Trump prepares to target China for stealing American technology or pressuring U.S. companies to give it away. (AP Photo/Andy Wong, File)

The U.S.-China trade war poses the biggest risk to global stability and fiscal stabilisation is needed to respond to economic shocks in Europe, IMF First Deputy Managing Director David Lipton said on Monday.

“Obviously, this is not a matter for Europe alone. The United States needs to get its fiscal house in order as well. U.S.-China trade tensions pose the largest risk to global stability,” Mr. Lipton said at a conference here.

The trade dispute, which began eight months ago, had affected the flow of billions of dollars of goods between the biggest and second-biggest economies in the world.

Mr. Lipton said he believed fiscal stabilisation capacity must be at the heart of risk reduction in Europe, describing it as crucial to “respond to macroeconomic shocks and improve the fiscal-monetary policy mix.”

“In its absence, the Euro area will remain over-reliant on monetary policy for stabilisation and too much of the burden of crisis response will fall on individual countries, with their ability to respond depending on each country’s fiscal space.”

Mr. Lipton said Britain’s planned exit from the EU was also breeding uncertainty in Europe and beyond.

Deceleration in Europe

Regarding Europe’s recent economic deceleration, he said each EU member state should “strengthen their defences ahead of a potential downturn,” including those countries that have not addressed “glaring vulnerabilities,” notably Italy.

“A serious recession could be very damaging for these countries, because they will be shown to be ill-prepared,” he said. “Their weaknesses could present a serious setback for Europe’s goal of convergence of standards of living, productivity, [and] of national well-being.”

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