Despite the improvement in indicators of global activity, the risks are latent and the world economy is still in "the danger zone," chief of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) Christine Lagarde said here Sunday.
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Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) Christine Lagarde, attends a press conference during the first meeting of Finance Ministers and Central Bank Presidents of the G20 in Mexico City, capital of Mexico, on Feb. 25, 2012. The first meeting of Finance Ministers and Central Bank Presidents of the G20 concluded on Sunday. (Xinhua/Shi Sisi) |
"Growth is still weak in advanced economies and is moderating in some emerging markets, and at the same time, unemployment remains excessively in many economies, particularly in advanced economies," Lagarde said.
The head of the IMF welcomed the outcome of Sunday's meeting of the 20 strongest economies in the world because it is "a step in the right direction" to a sequence of actions to Europe to increase its "firewall" and then wait contributions from the IMF.
The G20 agreed on Sunday in a communique that they will wait for the eurozone to strengthen its "firewall" before providing more resources to the IMF, an issue which would be discussed in April.
The IMF is seeking to raise 500 billion U.S. dollars to cope with the sovereign debt crisis in the eurozone and its possible implications to other regions.
Largarde said the 500 billion dollars is not an obsession, but the result of a thorough and detailed analysis of the world economy.
VietNamNet/Xinhuanet
