The IMF's annual report on the US economy released today noted that the underlying fundamentals are gradually improving: Home prices and construction are rising, household finances have strengthened and employers are steadily adding jobs. The outlook was much more optimistic than IMF's 2012 report.
"There are signs that the US recovery is gaining ground and becoming more durable," Christine Lagarde, the IMF's managing director, said in a written statement.
Still, the IMF forecasts growth of just 1.9 per cent this year, the same as in its report in April. That would be down from 2.2 per cent in 2012. And it's below many private economists' expectations that the US economy will grow more than 2 per cent this year.
The reduction in the US budget deficit "has been excessively rapid and ill-designed," the IMF's report says. Congress should cancel the USD 85 billion in spending cuts, the report urged, and replace them with longer-term reductions that would weigh less on the economy.
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Despite the fiscal drag, the IMF paints a much brighter picture of the US economy than it did last year. A year ago, the IMF warned that the recovery was "tepid," job growth was slow and US households were still cutting debts.
The IMF forecasts that the unemployment rate will average 7.5 per cent this year and fall to an average of 7.2 per cent in 2014. It is currently 7.6 per cent, 0.6 percentage points lower than a year ago.
The economy is also being held back by weakness overseas, the report said, which are slowing US exports, particularly to Europe.