Recession Risks Duel Resilience Hopes in Global Economy Outlook

The fastest inflation in decades and the resulting rush by central banks to raise interest rates are stoking recession fears in financial markets -- worries that are being compounded by the impact of aggressive coronavirus lockdowns in China and the war in Ukraine.

In the last week alone, the the U.S. and U.K. logged inflation accelerating the most since the early 1980s and the central banks of Canada and New Zealand provided a model for the U.S. Federal Reserve and others by hiking rates 50 basis points for the first time in 22 years.

Bank of America Corp. reported fund managers were the most bearish they’d ever been about the outlook for growth and JPMorgan Chase & Co. boosted its reserves to insulate itself against an economic deterioration.

Meantime, Sri Lanka and Pakistan fell deeper into crises as the United Nations warned of a “perfect storm” for developing countries as commodity prices surge, the World Trade Organization cut its outlook for commerce and searches for “recession” on Google and the Bloomberg Terminal spiked.

Against such a backdrop, policy makers head to Washington this week for meetings of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank. The Fund is already saying the war means it will downgrade its forecasts for 143 economies this year -- accounting for 86% of global gross domestic product.

“We are facing a crisis on top of a crisis,” said IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva.

What Bloomberg Economics Says...

“For the global economy, the combined impact of war and coronavirus will be a year of lower growth, higher inflation and elevated uncertainty. To get to recession, we’d need to see further shocks. Russia cutting off Europe’s gas supply or China’s lockdown expanding from Shanghai to other major cities are possible catalysts.”

-- Tom Orlik, chief economist

But there are also reasons to think resilience, albeit with a touch of stagflation rather than global recession, may be the order of the day, at least for rich nations.