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INTRODUCTION
October / November 2002

WORLD

World economy survived 9/11, but not unscathed

As stunned financial analysts watched New York’s twin towers crumble on September 11, many predicted that the terror attacks would drive an already fragile world economy into a deep recession.

In the event, massive injections of liquidity into financial markets and prompt interest rates cuts by central banks across the globe bringing borrowing costs to their lowest for decades helped the world’s main economies avoid a prolonged slump.

The gaint US economy did flirt with recession, and worries still remain. But those are for reasons related more to the collapse of energy trader Enron and other accenting scandals than to the traumatic events of September 11. Moreover, as if to emphasise its resilience, the US economy is poised to who the strongest growth of any of the world’s leading economies this year although, in truth, it is not being offered much competition at the moment.

The Fed slashed its key lending rate by an other 175 basis points, taking it down to just 1.75 percent. The BoE cut rates from 5 percent to 4 percent while the European Central Bank lopped another point of its main rate, taking it to 3.25 percent. They have all left their rates steadysince.

G7 sees quicker economic growth

World finance leaders, seeking to project confidence in the face of continued stock market turmoil and a worsening economic crisis in Latin America, pledged to strengthen corporate disclosure requirements.

They also predicted the pace of global growth would quicken in the months ahead.

In a joint statement the finance minister and central bank presidents of the world’s seven richest industrial countries said that while risks remain, they believe that coordinated action will keep the fledgling economic recovery from faltering. "We are committed to sound economic policies and structural reforms and to working together to improve corporate disclosure, enhance corporate accountability and strengthen the independence of auditing," the finance officials said in the communiqué.

The Group of Seven countries the US, Japan, Germany, France, Britain, Italy and Canada-issued the joint declaration after five hours of closed-door discussions at Blair House, the government guest house across Pennsylvania Avenue from the White House.

Tax evasion growing in US

The Internal Revenue Service is losing the war on tax evasion because the methods of cheating grow increasingly sophisticated while the IRS has barely enough resources to keep pace, the agency chief said in a report recently.

The conflict between a declining work force and complex avoidance schemes has created" a huge gap between the number of taxpayers who the Internal Revenue Service knows are not filing, not reporting or not paying what they owe, and our capacity to require them to comply," said Charles Rossotti in a report to the IRS Oversight Board.

"We are winning the battle but losing the war," said Rossotti, whose five years term as IRS commissioner ends November 12.

Since 1997, Rossotti said the number of income tax returns filed has risen by 12 million, with tax collection increasing $ 527 billion and refunds growing by $ 121 billion.

At the same time, the IRS has struggled to implement a series of new reform and tax laws, and its number of full-time personnel dropped by 16 percent from 1992 to 2001.

Britain's economy grows by 0.6%

Britain’s economy grew by 0.6 percent in the second quarter of 2002, less than economists had previously estimated, the government said in revised figures released recently.

Statistics released earlier had put the second quarter increase in the gross domestic product at 0.9 percent compared to the first quarter of the year.

The fall was blamed on a manufacturing contraction. Manufacturing output declined for the sixth consecutive quarter, dropping 0.7 percent, said the Office of National Statistics.

Output in the service sector grew by 0.6 percent, with retail, wholesale and auto sales all climbing, the office said.

Household expenditure rose 1.2 percent. The British economy grew by 2.2 percent in 2001, and by 0.6 percent in the second quarter of last year.

EU predicts weaker economic growth

The European Union Commission revised down its spring forecast of economic growth in the euro zone from 1.4 percent to "unlikely to exceed 1 percent."

"There is a high level of uncertainty," said Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Pedro Solbes in the preface to the Commission’s quarterly report on the euro currency area, which was released recently.

Solbes pointed to falls in "stock market price, weaker than expected external demand, to the increase in oil prices and to the economic crises in some Latin American countries" for the pessimistic picture.

As a result, Solbes said unemployment is unlikely to fall again this year.

German budget deficit widens

The German government has widened its forecast for the country’s budget deficit this year to 2.9 percent of gross domestic product from a previous estimate of 2.5 percent, the finance ministry said recently.

Finance minister Hans Eichel informed the European Union’s executive Commission of the figure a ministry spokesman said on customary condition of anonymity.

The move came two days after Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder’s center-left government narrowly won re-election, and just as a European Comission paper said for the first time that Germany’s annual deficit might exceed the 3 percent ceiling imposed by the 12 nations using the euro currency.

France gearing up for privatization

France is pressing ahead with plans to sell of some big holdings in French companies, but will have to make a huge cash injection into France Telecom, Finance and economy minister Francis Mer said recently.

According to an advance copy of remarks he was due to make on the French radio station Radio Classique, Mer said the state would reduce its holding in Air France, which currently stands at 54.4 percent, "probably within six months to a year", when stock market conditions improved.

He also said that the state was studying ways of selling off its remaining 9.5 percent stake in the Credit Lyonnais bank.

The bank’s other two biggest shareholders, France’s biggest bank Credit Agricole, and German insurance giant Allianz, through its French unit AGF, are interested in increasing their stake in Credit Lyonnais.

However Mer refused to comment on the possibility of the state selling its stake to either of them.

The current French government came to power earlier this year vowing to privatize numerous industrial holdings, especially the state owned energy giants EDF and GDF.

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