IMF warns of deeper recession in
Latin America
Job seekers congrgate to apply for job assembly factories as the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak continues in Ciudad Juarez
The effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on lives and economies
lead to warnings of a recession in Latin America and the Caribbean.
By James Blears
In April the International Monetary Fund, the IMF, predicted
a 5.2 percent recession this year for Latin America and the Caribbean.
Now it has revised and amended this to 9.4 percent. In
Mexico's case the prediction is 10.5 percent.
Mexico currently reports more than 191,000 people
infected with Covid 19 and more than 23,000 deaths. With the knock on from
this, it is also economically reeling, having lost a million jobs. The World
Bank forecasts Mexico's gross domestic product will slump seven and a half
percent this year. This could be revised even further downward, because the
country's economy is hard to accurately gauge. A large proportion of it is
based upon tourism, service industries and remittances, which is money
sent home to families, from migrant workers, mostly based in the United States.
The United States has been enticing Mexico to re-open its
manufacturing industries, especially mining and the automotive
sectors. Yet the rate of infection and deaths are not as yet
decreasing. Mexico is not out of the woods yet.
https://www.vaticannews.va/en/world/news/2020-06/imf-warns-of-deeper-recession-in-latin-america.html
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