"Our latest World Economic Outlook assumes fiscal expansion by the US will carry momentum forward, raising US economic growth from 2.3 to 2.5 per cent in 2018, which is positive for the global economy," Tao Zhang, Deputy Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund, told PTI in an interview.
"At the same time, there is considerable uncertainty on specific policies. We are following policy developments closely, and we need to see details of the various proposals to better understand their implications," the top IMF official said when asked about the economic policies of the US President Donald Trump.
Immigration was the centerpiece of his campaign. Trump signed an executive order on January 27 barring people from the seven countries from entering the United States for 90 days.
The order was blocked by federal courts and the Trump administration replaced it with a revised, narrower travel ban effective March 16 which dropped Iraq from the list. Courts have also halted parts of the second order.
"These risks include an inward shift in policies and elevated policy uncertainty; an aggressive rollback of financial regulation; and a faster-than-expected tightening of financial conditions.
These are risks, not yet certain. We have to see whether they come to pass," he said.
"As our Managing Director Christine Lagarde said during the Spring Meetings, we are seeing the global economy picking up momentum," he added.
"Despite some improvement for the US and other advanced economies, most of the global pick-up stems from emerging markets, including India.
Responding to a question, Zhang said the IMF is now starting to discuss next phase of quota reforms.
Finance Minister Arun Jaitley had articulated about it in his address to the IMF last week here.
"There is a general recognition by the Fund's membership that the IMF's governance should evolve, as the global economy evolves.
"We can never be complacent, and I would expect that the IMF's governance will continue to evolve to reflect the shifting global economic landscape," he said.
"An historic reform of our governance came into effect last year, bringing a shift of influence in favour of emerging market and developing countries.
The Fund and its membership recognise the growing role of the dynamic emerging market countries in the global economy," said the top IMF official.
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