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IMF chief urges countries to move ‘swiftly’ to resolve trade tensions

Kristalina Georgieva’s comments came two days after the IMF downgraded the outlook for world economic growth this year.

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International Monetary Fund managing director Kristalina Georgieva Finance
International Monetary Fund managing director Kristalina Georgieva said countries must move ‘swiftly’ to resolve trade disputes (Jose Luis Magana/AP)

The head of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) urged countries to move “swiftly” to resolve trade disputes that threaten global economic growth.

IMF managing director Kristalina Georgieva said the unpredictability arising from US President Donald Trump’s aggressive campaign of taxes on foreign imports is causing companies to delay investments and consumers to hold off on spending.

“Uncertainty is bad for business,” she told reporters on Thursday, in a briefing during the spring meetings of the IMF and its sister agency, the World Bank.

Ms Georgieva’s comments came two days after the IMF downgraded the outlook for world economic growth this year.

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Kristalina Georgieva called for world trade disputes to be resolved (Jose Luis Magana/AP)

The 191-country lending organisation, which seeks to promote global growth, financial stability, and reduce poverty, also sharply lowered its forecast for the United States.

It said the chances that the world’s biggest economy would fall into recession have risen from 25% to about 40%.

Ms Georgieva warned that the economic fallout from trade conflict would fall most heavily on poor countries, which do not have the money to offset the damage.

Since returning to the White House in January, Mr Trump has aggressively imposed tariffs on American trading partners.

Among other things, he’s slapped 145% import taxes on China and 10% on almost every country in the world, raising US tariffs to levels not seen in more than a century.

But he has repeatedly changed US policy — suddenly suspending or altering the tariffs — and left companies bewildered about what he is trying to accomplish and what his end game might be.

Mr Trump’s tariffs — a sharp reversal of decades of US policy in favour of free trade — and the resulting uncertainty around them have caused a weeks-long rout in financial markets.

But stocks rallied on Wednesday after the Trump administration signalled that it is open to reducing the massive tariffs on China.

“There is an opportunity for a big deal here,” US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Wednesday.

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