Weekly RoundupFRAGMENTATIONReviving multilateral cooperation is essential for long-term growth everywhere, Kristalina Georgieva told the Brussels Economic Forum on Thursday. The IMF managing director said that recent supply-chain disruptions and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine had added to national security concerns and prompted countries to try to reduce vulnerabilities by reshoring production. But these trends are creating a more fragmented world with real economic costs, she said. “While the domestic gains can be alluring, in the long term, everybody loses from global fragmentation.” CAPACITY DEVELOPMENTThe IMF on Thursday held the first climate capacity development forum with its partners, dedicated to helping countries address climate-related economic policy challenges. Deputy Managing Director Bo Li highlighted ways the Fund has stepped up climate-related technical assistance and training since the adoption of its climate strategy in 2021 and invited partners to share their capacity-development priorities. “Capacity development helps ensure countries deliver on their climate policy goals,” he said. STAFF PAPERInflation and growth respond significantly but also differently to climate shocks, according to a recent IMF staff paper. Temperature shocks result in lower inflation, but droughts and storms lead to higher inflation. All types of climate shocks have a negative impact on economic growth, but the magnitude and pattern of response show variation over the long run. Looking forward, it is important for policymakers to consider how the green transition away from fossil fuels, as an important part of climate change mitigation efforts, will affect inflation and growth dynamics. STAFF PAPERThe rise or fall of a country’s currency has a greater impact on domestic prices during periods of high inflation and elevated uncertainty. That’s the finding of a new staff paper which analyzes the experience of a large sample of advanced and emerging-market economies over the past 30 years. This “pass-through” effect is also higher when exchange-rate fluctuations are driven by US monetary policy, the authors conclude. STAFF PAPERAnalysis from a recent IMF staff paper shows that revenues from mining can be crucial for long-run development. Focusing on gold-rich Guinea but drawing implications for other countries, the paper also finds that education and infrastructure policies are complementary: without education, infrastructure policy has a small and mixed impact on poverty and inequality; yet without infrastructure, more education erodes the returns from education even leading to more informality in rural areas. Policymakers must consider the balance between investing in “hard” infrastructure such as roads and other social infrastructure that builds human capital. |