World Bank signs with Vietnam
The World Bank signed its largest-ever set of credit agreements
with Vietnam, totaling $ 526 million and aimed at restoring
faster economic growth and poverty reduction. The credits comprise
a Poverty Reduction Support Credit (PRSC) of $ 250 million;
$ 110 million for a project for transportation and flood prevention
in the Mekong Delta region, and $ 166 million for an environmental
sanitation project in Ho Chi Minh City.
World Bank vice president Jamil
Kassum, who signed the credit agreements with Vietnam’s central
bank governor Le Duc Thuy, said the credits brought the World
Bank’s lending to Vietnam for the year to $ 629 million, the
highest ever to the country in a single year.
British GDP growth slowed
British economic growth slowed to a rate of 2.1 percent over
12 months in the second quarter, from 2.7 percent the previous
quarter, official figures showed recently.
Gross domestic product grew by
0.3 percent in the April-June period from the first quarter
of 2001, the lowest level since the last quarter of 1998, the
Office for National Statistics said in a provisional estimate
to be revised next month.
The figures tallied with the expectations
of analysts, who had predicted the slowdown due to sluggish
economic conditions in the United States and Europe.
Yet although growth has slowed,
the British economy remains relatively robust given the harsh
global economic climate.
The US economic slowdown is however
likely to crimp growth further in the third quarter, economists
warn.
"Britain is nowhere near a recession,"
said Barclays stockbrokers economist Hilary Cook.
"The fact is that the UK economy
is still very strong," she said, adding that the recent outbreak
of foot and mouth disease had probably knocked 0.3 percentage
points off economic growth.
"There was some anecdotal evidence
that the champagne tents (at summer sporting events) are much
quieter than normal which must mean a recession is coming,"
Cook said. "But there seemed to be plenty going down at Henley
(rowing regatta)."
And although growth is likely to
cool further in the third quarter of the year because the British
economy lags behind the sickly US economy, low interest rates
should help to ease the pain, she said.
Italian inflation dips to 2.9%
Italian inflation dipped in July to 2.9 percent on a sliding
12 month basis, down from 3.0 percent in June, the national
statistics institute Instant said recently.
The slowing in inflation in July
was due mainly to a fall of oil prices which offset high prices
for food and tourism related products and services. Despite
the slight fall in the 12 mont figure, the national consumer
price index rose 0.1 percent in July from the figure for June
when it had shown a record increase of 0.3 percent in June because
of rising hotel and food prices. Italy is a member of the euro
zone European Central Bank has set a medium-term upper limit
of two percent for inflation in the zone.