5 major risks confronting the global economy in 2024 | Brookings (2024)

Commentary

Indermit Gill and

Indermit Gill Nonresident Senior Fellow - Global Economy and Development @IndermitGill

M. Ayhan Kose

M. Ayhan Kose Deputy Chief Economist - World Bank Group, Nonresident Senior Fellow - Global Economy and Development

January 17, 2024

5 major risks confronting the global economy in 2024 | Brookings (3)
  • 8 min read

Let’s start with the good news: Last year, the global economy defied expectations in potentially history-making ways. Amid wretched conditions—wars, surging inflation, and the biggest interest-rate surge in 40 years—the global economy did not suffer a significant downturn. It merely slowed. This was an unfamiliar plotline: It implies the world economy has grown more resilient in ways we might not yet fully understand.

Yet it would be a mistake to think the danger has passed. The World Bank’s latest “Global Economic Prospects” report predicts that global growth will slow to 2.4% in 2024 before edging up to 2.7% in 2025 (Figure 1.A). That might be a reason to cheer—if avoiding another global recession is all you care about. It could be cold comfort for nearly everyone else. Our forecasts imply that global growth remains far short of the strength needed to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals by the end of this decade. In fact, the first half of the 2020s is already proving to be the weakest half-decade of growth the global economy has registered in at least 30 years (Figure 1.B).

Figure 1. Global growth

A. Global GDP growth: 2021-24

B. Global GDP growth over time

Source: World Bank.

Note: Global GDP is calculated using real U.S. dollar GDP weights at average 2010-19 prices and market exchange rates.

For now, our near-term forecasts suggest a “soft landing” is becoming increasingly likely. But watch out for wind shear. There are at least five major risks that could threaten the global economy if they materialize:

1. Rising geopolitical tensions

Geopolitical tensions have become the single most important risk confronting the global economy (Figure 2.A). Wars are now raging in two regions critical to the world’s food and energy supply—Eastern Europe and the Middle East. An escalation of the conflict in the Middle East could push energy markets into uncharted territory given that the region accounts for nearly 30% of global oil production. Recent attacks in the Red Sea have already disrupted shipping through the Suez Canal, which accounts for 30% of global container traffic.

Geopolitical tensions heighten uncertainty, which hurts investment and economic growth. Conflicts and wars also tend to reduce global supply capacity—with potentially inflationary effects. Oil prices are expected to decline this year. However, if the conflict in the Middle East escalates, oil prices could increase by 30% above our baseline forecast of $81 a barrel in 2024. This could stoke global inflation and reduce global growth by 0.2 percentage point (Figure 2.B).

Figure 2. Geopolitical risks and global growth outcomes

A. Geopolitical risk index and conflicts

B. Changes in global growth under alternative risk scenarios

Sources: Caldara and Iacoviello (2022); Oxford Economics; World Bank. A. Last observation is December 11, 2023; B. Panel shows the deviation in global growth under alternative scenarios relative to the baseline.

2. China’s economic slowdown

At 4.5%, Chinese growth this year would be the slowest since 1990, outside of the COVID-19 era. That will likely hurt the large number of advanced and developing economies that depend on trade with China. A deeper slowdown would intensify the pain. At the end of 2021, China was the destination for nearly 20% of all goods exports from developing economies—roughly five times the share at the start of this century (Figure 3.A). China has also become a much more important source of demand for commodities—particularly those that are central to the green-energy transition. Our growth forecast for China is subject to downside risks, particularly relating to stresses in the property sector (Figure 3.B). If China were to grow 1 percentage point slower than expected in 2024, global growth could be lower by about 0.2 percentage points, with considerable harm to commodity-exporting developing economies (Figure 2.B).

Figure 3. China: Share of goods exports and property sales

A. Share of goods exports to China

B. Property sales growth in China

Sources: Haver Analytics; National Bureau of Statistics of China; UN Comtrade (database); World Bank. A. EMDEs refer to emerging market and developing economies. Figure shows the share of advanced-economy and EMDE goods exports destined to China. Last observation is 2021.; B. Year-on-year growth of sales, by volume, of residential building floor space. Last observation is November 2023.

3. Surging financial stress

It’s remarkable that the sharpest increase in global interest rates in 40 years so far hasn’t caused the type of havoc we saw in the 1980s. Policy interest rates will likely come down this year, but it might not be fast enough for some countries. After staying negative for an extended time, global real interest rates—nominal rates adjusted for inflation—are now positive and will likely remain elevated for the foreseeable future (Figure 4.A). Against the backdrop of weak growth, that will mean a continuing pressure-cooker environment for developing economies with weak credit ratings. At the end of 2023, the number of developing economies in debt distress was at the highest level since 2000. The combination of weak growth, high real interest rates, and elevated debt levels could make servicing debt more difficult in vulnerable developing economies and push more of them into financial stress (Figure 4.B). A flare-up in financial stress in developing economies could reduce global growth by about 0.2 percentage point this year (Figure 2.B). It would reduce growth in developing economies by 0.6 percentage point.

Figure 4. Real interest rates and debt

A. Global real interest rates

B. Total debt in EMDEs

Sources: Haver Analytics; Kose et al. (2021); U.S. Federal Reserve System; World Bank. A. Figure shows U.S. real interest rates, as calculated using federal fund target rate minus CPI inflation. For 2024-25, the rates are calculated using the projections by the Federal Open Market Committee in December 2023; B. EMDEs refer to emerging market and developing economies. The aggregate is calculated using nominal GDP in U.S. dollars as weights. Total debt is defined as a sum of government and private debt. Data for 2023 are estimates.

4. Trade fragmentation

The number of policy measures restricting trade increased sharply last year (Figure 5.A). Trade restrictions and “friend-shoring” and “near-shoring” might seem like logical policy responses to national security concerns. However, such policies could postpone the rebound that is much needed in global trade. In 2023, global trade growth all but ground to a halt—at 0.2%, it was the weakest performance outside of a global recession in 50 years (Figure 5.B). Global trade growth is expected to rebound this year, but it will be only half the average in the decade before the pandemic. Some businesses in advanced economies are retreating from global value chains and diverting investment instead to domestic or regional supply chains. These trends bode ill for developing economies, for whom trade has been a key force for greater productivity and improved living standards.

Figure 5. Trade policy measures and global trade growth

A. New trade measures

B. Global trade growth

Sources: Global Trade Alert; World Bank. A. Number of implemented trade policy interventions since November 2008. Restricting (Liberalizing) measures are interventions that discriminate against (benefit) foreign commercial interests. Reporting-lag adjusted statistics as of December 31, 2023; B. Trade is measured as the average of export and import volumes of goods and services.

5. Climate change

Conflict in the Middle East has constricted one key chokepoint for global trade. Climate change has squeezed the other. Because of drought-depleted water levels in the Panama Canal, the number of ships transiting through the canal has declined significantly over the past year. That illustrates the degree to which climate change has become a near-term risk, not just a medium-term hazard. 2023 was the hottest year on record. A series of droughts, floods, and wildfires also made the impact of climate change more visible around the world last year. Climate change is increasing the frequency and cost of natural disasters, which tend to crimp economic growth, aggravate poverty, and lower agricultural yields (Figure 6). Damages and risks associated with climate change will cast a long shadow over the global economy this year and next.

Figure 6. Natural disasters and impact of climate change on poverty

A. Natural disasters

B. Impact of climate change on extreme poverty by 2030

Sources: EM-DAT (database); Jafino et al. (2020); World Bank. A. Figure shows total number of disasters per year across all countries in the world; B. Number of additional people in extreme poverty in 2030 owing to climate change.

Each of these risks could amplify others. Intensifying conflict could spark a surge in oil prices that could result in a financial crisis in some countries.

And yet—there is also room for a sweet surprise: The U.S. economy, which almost single-handedly staved off a global recession last year, could outperform yet again in 2024. Our forecasts call for the U.S. economy to grow 1.6% in 2024 and 1.7% in 2025. But if the U.S. labor market merely remains as resilient as it has been since late 2020, U.S. growth could be half a percentage point stronger in 2023 and 0.7 point stronger in 2025. The result would be much stronger global growth as well. If this happens without reigniting inflationary pressures, that would be the icing on the cake.

Authors

Indermit Gill Nonresident Senior Fellow - Global Economy and Development @IndermitGill

M. Ayhan Kose Deputy Chief Economist - World Bank Group, Nonresident Senior Fellow - Global Economy and Development

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FAQs

5 major risks confronting the global economy in 2024 | Brookings? ›

Economic growth is projected to slow in 2024 amid increased unemployment and lower inflation. CBO expects the Federal Reserve to respond by reducing interest rates, starting in the middle of the year. In CBO's projections, economic growth rebounds in 2025 and then moderates in later years.

What are the economic issues in 2024? ›

Economic growth is projected to slow in 2024 amid increased unemployment and lower inflation. CBO expects the Federal Reserve to respond by reducing interest rates, starting in the middle of the year. In CBO's projections, economic growth rebounds in 2025 and then moderates in later years.

Is there a risk for the recession in 2024? ›

After global growth exceeded expectations in 2023, businesses' perceived probability of a global recession has fallen substantially in 2024, according to Oxford Economics data. Oxford's global risk survey in January showed a recession probability of 7.2% — less than half of what it was in October 2023.

What is the world economy prediction for 2024? ›

The global economy is continuing growing at a modest pace, according to the OECD's latest Economic Outlook. The Economic Outlook projects steady global GDP growth of 3.1% in 2024, the same as the 3.1% in 2023, followed by a slight pick-up to 3.2% in 2025.

What are the predictions for the World Economic Forum in 2024? ›

The January 2024 edition of the World Economic Forum's Chief Economist's Outlook predicts a period of "protracted weakness in global economic conditions and widening regional divergence". Our survey of chief economists sees expectations in negative territory.

What is the world issue in 2024? ›

Increased conflict in Africa, tensions and conflict in the Middle East and in Ukraine, medium-term climate change catastrophes, as well as calamities from inadequately controlled transformational artificial intelligence (AI) and other emerging technologies, may pose heightened risks in 2024.

What will the market do in 2024? ›

Analysts project 11.5% earnings growth and 5.5% revenue growth for S&P 500 companies in 2024. Fortunately, analysts see positive earnings and revenue growth for all eleven market sectors this year.

How to prepare for a recession 2024? ›

I get asked all the time about the possibility of a recession, and I'm telling everyone to prepare. To start, pay off high-interest debt, bulk up your rainy-day reserves, and don't sell your investments. Take courses to advance in your career, too, so you're not as vulnerable to layoffs.

How will the US economy be in 5 years? ›

While we do not forecast a recession in 2024, we do expect consumer spending growth to cool and for overall GDP growth to slow to under 1% over Q2 and Q3 2024. Thereafter, inflation and interest rates should gradually normalize and quarterly annualized GDP growth should converge toward its potential of near 2% in 2025.

Are we in inflation in 2024? ›

Core PCE inflation was 2.8% year over year in March 2024, slightly higher than the overall inflation rate. Core CPI inflation is running a bit higher at 3.8% year over year, owing to a higher weighting in housing.

What is the global trade outlook for 2024? ›

World trade is picking up again

And the WTO projects world merchandise (goods) trade volumes to grow 2.6% and 3.3% in 2024 and 2025, respectively, after a significant decline last year.

Which countries are in the recession 2024 list? ›

Contrary To Proverbial Wisdom War Is Bad For Business
Country20202024
Finland-2.3550.422
Austria-6.6330.435
United Kingdom-10.360.46
Equatorial Guinea-4.7880.467
63 more rows
May 1, 2024

What is the bank outlook for 2024? ›

Profitability will dip but remain in good shape, and banks will build capital. While net interest income (NII) may decline in 2024, we expect banks to generate a return on common equity of 10%-11% and to build capital through earnings retention, particularly as they plan for more stringent capital regulation.

What will happen to the economy in 2024? ›

Our forecasts call for the U.S. economy to grow 1.6% in 2024 and 1.7% in 2025. But if the U.S. labor market merely remains as resilient as it has been since late 2020, U.S. growth could be half a percentage point stronger in 2023 and 0.7 point stronger in 2025. The result would be much stronger global growth as well.

Which is the fastest growing economy in 2024? ›

Top 10 Emerging Markets
RankCountryProjected CAGR (2024-2029)
1🇬🇾 Guyana19.8%
2🇲🇿 Mozambique7.9%
3🇷🇼 Rwanda7.2%
4🇧🇩 Bangladesh6.8%
6 more rows
May 2, 2024

What are the goals of the WEF 2024? ›

The forum addressed four main themes to rebuild trust – security and cooperation in a fractured world, growth and jobs for a new era, artificial intelligence as a driving force, and long-term strategy for climate, nature and energy.

How have economic forecasts for 2024 evolved for this country? ›

The US economy started 2024 on a softer note than anticipated as elevated inflation and interest rates continued to weigh on the economy. While we do not forecast a recession in 2024, we do expect consumer spending growth to cool further and for overall GDP growth to slow to under 1% over the Q2 to Q3 2024 period.

What is the consumer spending trend in 2024? ›

In 2024, we expect softer consumer spending and disposable income growth, and further expect that lower-income households will feel the greatest pinch from inflation and higher rates.

What will the economy be like in 2026? ›

We forecast 0.9% growth this year, 2.2% next year and 2.6% in 2026. We expect inflation to recede down to 5.5% by the fourth quarter of this year. A rate-cutting cycle will begin in October, so our forecast, and we expect the economy to pick up speed alongside falling interest rates.

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