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World Bank predicts a resilient global economy in 2026 despite tariffs, but with fading dynamism

The World Bank said that the global economy has proven to be more resilient than anticipated, and 2026 GDP growth will likely improve slightly compared to forecasts made in June last year. However, it warned that growth was too concentrated in developed countries, and too weak overall to reduce extreme poverty.

World Bank's Global Economic Prospects Report shows that the global output will grow at a slower pace this year, from 2.7% to 2.6% in 2025. It will then return to 2.7% by 2027.

The 2026 forecast for GDP is two-tenths a point higher than the previous predictions made in June. In 2025, growth will be four-tenths a point above the prior forecast. World Bank says that two-thirds (or about a third) of the upward revision is due to the better-than expected growth in the U.S., despite tariffs-driven trade disruptions. The World Bank predicts that the U.S. will grow by 2.2% in 2026 compared to just 2.1% in 2025, an increase of two tenths.

The World Bank stated that after an import surge to beat tariffs in early 2025 held back U.S. economic growth, larger tax incentives would aid growth in the following year.

The global lender warned that if current forecasts prove accurate, the 2020s will be the slowest decade of global?growth in the past 50 years. This is too low to prevent stagnation and unemployment among emerging markets and developing countries.

Indermit Gil, World Bank chief economist, stated in a press release that "with each passing year the global economy is less able to generate growth and appears more resilient to uncertainty of policy." "But the divergence between economic dynamism, resilience and public finance cannot last for long."

Gill said that the global GDP per capita in 2025 would be 10% higher than it was on the eve COVID-19, marking the fastest recovery since a major crisis in 60 years. He said that many developing countries were being left behind. A quarter of them had lower incomes per capita than in 2019. This was especially true for the poorest countries.

CHINA'S ECONOMIC GREENHOUSE GROWTH IS EXPECTED SLOWDOWN

The growth rate in emerging markets and developing countries will be 4.0% by 2026, down from 4.2%. This is a two-tenths or three-tenths point decrease compared to the June forecasts. The World Bank stated that the growth rate of this group in 2026, excluding China, will remain at 3.7%. This is unchanged from the previous year.

China's economy will grow at a slower rate of 4.4% by?2026, down from 4.9%. However, the forecasts have both increased four-tenths a percentage points from June because of fiscal stimulus and increased exports.

The World Bank stated that the growth in the Eurozone will slow from 1.4% to 0.9% by 2026 due to U.S. Tariffs, but recover to 1.2% by 2027 thanks to increased European defense spending.

The outlook for Japan is the same in 2026. Growth will slow to 0.8% from 1.3% growth in 2025. This was a year that was aided by exports being pushed up to the U.S. ahead of tariffs imposed by President Donald Trump. The World Bank stated that slower consumption and investments in Japan would keep the GDP growth at 0.8% by 2027. (Reporting and editing by David Lawder)

(source: Reuters)