The expected slowdown in the Chinese economy, a key driver of the global growth, and its sheer size and integration into global economy mean that its performance affects those around it, the IMF said in a blog post on its website.
"We have estimated that a one percentage point slowdown in Chinese growth translates into a 0.3 per cent decline for other Asian countries," the IMF said in a blog post titled 'Managing China's Economic Transition'.
The worrying IMF blog came a day after the World Bank said that India is likely to weather global volatility.
"With China gradually transitioning into an environment of lower growth, India could durably occupy the top growth spot among large emerging markets," the Bank said.
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In its blog, the IMF said the spillovers of Chinese economic slowdown have been magnified by forces that extend beyond China's border - including falling commodity prices and the prospect of an increase in the US interest rates - which could produce downward pressure on Asian countries.
"If managed well - including with clearer communication to help guide market expectations - China's transition could provide the basis for renewed economic strength in a region that has led the world in growth for several years," it said.
After 35 years of extraordinarily rapid growth, the Chinese economy is undergoing a major transition from export- led growth to a model increasingly driven by consumption and services, with less emphasis on debt-financed public investment, it said.
According to IMF, it would be preferable to avoid the renewed use of debt-financed investment so as to prevent a resurgence of corporate leveraging.