Audio By Carbonatix
Global growth is expected to remain stable, albeit lackluster in 2025, according to the January 2025 World Economic Outlook Update by the International Monetary Fund.
At 3.3%in both 2025 and 2026, the forecasts for growth are below the historical (2000–19) average of 3.7% and broadly unchanged from October.
It said the overall picture, however, hides divergent paths across economies and a precarious global growth profile.
Among advanced economies, growth forecast revisions go in different directions.
USA
In the United States of America, the Fund said underlying demand remains robust, reflecting strong wealth effects, a less restrictive monetary policy stance, and supportive financial conditions.
Again, growth is projected to be at 2.7% in 2025.
This is 0.5 percentage point higher than the October forecast, in part reflecting carryover from 2024 as well as robust labor markets and accelerating investment, among other signs of strength. Growth is expected to taper to potential in 2026.
Eurozone
In the euro area, growth is expected to pick up but at a more gradual pace than anticipated in October 2024, with geopolitical tensions continuing to weigh on sentiment.
“Weaker-than-expected momentum at the end of 2024, especially in manufacturing, and heightened political and policy uncertainty explain a downward revision of 0.2 percentage point to 1.0% in 2025. In 2026, growth is set to rise to 1.4%, helped by stronger domestic demand, as financial conditions loosen, confidence improves, and uncertainty recedes somewhat”, it said.
Other Advanced Economies
In other advanced economies, the IMF said two offsetting forces keep growth forecasts relatively stable. On the one hand, recovering real incomes are expected to support the cyclical recovery in consumption. On the other hand, trade headwinds—including the sharp uptick in trade policy uncertainty— are expected to keep investment subdued.
Emerging Markets/Developing Economies
In emerging market and developing economies, the Fund said growth performance in 2025 and 2026 is expected to broadly match that in 2024.
With respect to the projection in October 2024, growth in 2025 for China is marginally revised upward by 0.1 percentage point to 4.6%.
This revision reflects carryover from 2024 and the fiscal package announced in November largely offsetting the negative effect on investment from heightened trade policy uncertainty and property market drag.
In 2026, growth is projected mostly to remain stable at 4.5%, as the effects of trade policy uncertainty dissipate and the retirement age increase slows down the decline in the labour supply.
Growth in sub-Saharan Africa is however expected to pick up in 2025, while it is forecast to slow down in emerging and developing Europe.
Latest Stories
-
Mexico to host Iran for FIFA World Cup 2026
8 minutes -
Moroccan Sahara: The preeminence and relevance of the autonomy plan highlighted in Verona
29 minutes -
FIFA non-affliation and disclaimer notice
42 minutes -
2026 World Cup: Baba Rahman, Mumin and Nuamah return as Black Stars name provisional squad
54 minutes -
Bryan Acheampong to donate 50 computers to UniMAC students after AI lecture pledge
1 hour -
Injured Davies set to miss Canada World Cup opener
1 hour -
University of Ghana to launch global alumni network app to reconnect graduates
1 hour -
MTN celebrates Africa Day with renewed push for digital inclusion and youth empowerment
1 hour -
Mahama’s African Games forensic audit reveals over $40m in financial irregularities
2 hours -
Russia threatens more Kyiv strikes and tells foreign nationals to leave
2 hours -
I don’t wish NDC well; they’ve become a menace – Miracles Aboagye on NDC internal tensions
2 hours -
Oil prices slide on hopes of US-Iran peace deal
2 hours -
John Mahama receives customized set of golf clubs ahead of 2026 Head of State Invitational Tournament
3 hours -
‘Recent cedi depreciation within reasonable limits compared to historic rates’ — Prof. Asuming
3 hours -
QNET donates football equipment to S-Inkoom Football Academy
3 hours