Debt, Trade Problems Are Painting ‘A Troubling Picture’ – World Bank President

Amid U.S.-China trade tensions and high levels of debt faced by low income countries, one message is clear, the president of the World Bank Group said on Thursday: Trade is important for the poor.

Speaking to CNBC on Thursday at the IMF and World Bank annual meetings in Bali, Indonesia, Jim Yong Kim said that the World Bank is trying to get the message across that trade is critical.

“We are trying to put evidence on the table which says trade is critical if we want to end extreme poverty,” he said. “Evidence is simply: We are here to end poverty; trade is important for that.”

Currently, he said, there are risks from trade growth going down and many low income countries becoming more indebted.

Amid U.S.-China trade tensions and high levels of debt faced by low income countries, one message is clear, the president of the World Bank Group said on Thursday: Trade is important for the poor.

Speaking to CNBC on Thursday at the IMF and World Bank annual meetings in Bali, Indonesia, Jim Yong Kim said that the World Bank is trying to get the message across that trade is critical.

“We are trying to put evidence on the table which says trade is critical if we want to end extreme poverty,” he said. “Evidence is simply: We are here to end poverty; trade is important for that.”

Currently, he said, there are risks from trade growth going down and many low income countries becoming more indebted.

He added that more study is needed to understand the effects of trade war on countries that supply goods and services to China.

Independence of central banks

Generally, the World Bank believes “very much in the importance of independent central banks,” Kim said, responding to a question from CNBC’s Geoff Cutmore about whether U.S. President Donald Trump repeatedly attacking the U.S. Federal Reserve has undermined business confidence.

The American leader knocked the Fed on Wednesday for continuing to raise interest rates despite some recent market turbulence. He said “the Fed has gone crazy.”

Kim stressed that the World Bank is watching “very carefully” what’s happening with the U.S. dollar, as there are many developing countries with very high dollar-based debt.

“If a large economy … has high dollar-denominated debt, if it gets into trouble, the spillover effects could be quite substantial. So we don’t try to make recommendations about monetary policy, but we follow it closely, and try to prepare our finance to respond, and to survive whatever the outcome might be.”

CNBC