IMF chief Christine Lagarde said Tuesday the global economy has moved back from the "abyss" but that there were still serious weakness in the world financial system
IMF chief Christine Lagarde said Tuesday the global economy has moved back from the "abyss" but that there were still serious weakness in the world financial system.
Lagarde, visiting New Delhi for a two-day trip to attend a conference and meet leaders, said the world financial situation is not as grave as at the start of this year.
"We are further away from the abyss than we were three months ago," the International Monetary Fund (IMF) managing director told a panel discussion. Lagarde said steps by the European Central Bank and some European countries had helped stabilise the overall situation but there were still areas "that need to be attacked with vigour", such as shoring up financial institutions.
"Financial institutions were high contagion agents for this crisis -- this tells us where reforms have to focus. Financial institutions have to be agents for growth, not a threat to growth," she said.
The global financial crisis has been a "huge catalyst" to get political leaders to take politically unpopular measures to restore economic health, she said.
For emerging market giant India she said priorities had to be development of its dilapidated ports, airports and other infrastructure in order to remove bottlenecks to economic growth and narrowing its ballooning fiscal deficit. And she added that export-led China needed to improve its social safety net to spur greater domestic spending and bolster growth.
The Chinese must develop a social welfare system "that does not make them feel they have to save as much as they do so that they consume", she said.