DEBATE ON THE GLOBAL ECONOMY: SHAPING ECONOMIC POLICIES AMID A SHIFTING GLOBAL LANDSCAPE TRANSCRIPT OF PRESIDENT THARMAN SHANMUGARATNAM'S INTERVENTIONS AT IMF HEADQUARTERS, 16 OCTOBER 2025
The following information was released by the President of the
This is a tremendous group of people to talk about the economy in flux around the world and how many changes there really have been over the past six to twelve months. And that's where I want to start. Managing Director Georgieva, I want to start with you. How much has the world economy changed over the past six to twelve months?
Since then, what we have witnessed is the world economy has been remarkably resilient. And when you look at the reasons for this resilience to stand up: one, countries over the last decades have built strong fundamentals good policies, strong institutions and this is particularly applicable to a big part of the emerging-market world. Good policies pay off.
Two, the private sector also, over this last decade, has gradually moved forward for a bigger role in the economy, and the private sector is more agile. And then we had the, so far, nice surprise that countries decided mostly not to retaliate when hit by tariffs. So, with only two exceptions we have 191 members the US and
Now, resilience so far but I want to be straight with this audience. I don't know whether this resilience has been fully tested, and I can think of three big risks. If they materialize, there will be trouble.
Risk number one: maybe this restraint on trade is not going to last. We see, for example, Chinese goods that were to come to
Two, financial conditions they're wonderful. That's actually another reason for resilience. There is access to money; there is access to capital. But that has led to stretched valuations, especially in AI investments. Huge enthusiasm AI would lift productivity, but what if it doesn't? That could lead to a shock.
And the third big risk, as always, is the unknown. We have learned over the last years since COVID: think of the unthinkable. I don't know what the next shock is going to be. I don't know where it is going to come from, but I'm pretty confident there will be one and then we will be tested.
Moderator: There's a lot to unpack there.
The setback is clear. If you look at most Asian countries outside
And then there are two other, underlying challenges, two forces which are reducing the tailwinds that have been in favor of growth in
A second underlying challenge, I would say, is the thinning out of the US-China trade corridor which a lot of
This is where we come to the opportunity. If the US tariffs are reconfiguring trade, we've got to reconfigure trade as well. We do have agency. The middle powers and the smaller nations of the world have agency.
Just think of what's possible: The CPTPP (Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for
So you are reconfiguring trade, we will all reconfigure world trade. Let's go for new trading arrangements that will allow developing countries in
That's the blessing of the US tariff move: it's spurring regional integration, and it's spurring bridges between regions.
So I think we will end up, after a period of some difficulty and some adjustment, with a new resilience. Let's work towards this new resilience.
Moderator:
Let me say, I'm going to follow up on where Kristalina and I left it, because my conclusion is that the worst is not always certain. And, if I may say, we've been surprised to the upside. A year ago, step forward to today, we had anticipated retaliation tit-for-tat.
On the exchange-rate front, we expected the euro to depreciate and the dollar to appreciate. What did we see? Exactly the opposite. So there was no imported inflation as a result. And, on the third point uncertainty we had uncertainty, granted, but eventually this driver was not as bad as we had anticipated.
So, because of all that, our monetary policy was not confronted with the traditional trade[1]off between stalling growth and rising inflation, number one. Number two, the risk to growth and inflation eventually narrowed, and were far more balanced. And, as a result of that, we are where we are.
And that impacts the tools that we're using in other words, models. We had to navigate a far more difficult situation where a lot of what was happening sort of in the course of normal business, which was not normal at all we had to face war; we had to face tariffs; we had to face, I would say, accelerated greed as a result of the impact of new technologies and social media; and we had to face exogenous shocks in quantities that we could not anticipate. And that certainly impaired our capacity to rely extensively on models, and encouraged us to use more judgment.
Bottom line: we are currently, at least in the euro area, at 2% inflation which was our medium-term goal. We are at 2% interest rates. It's a surprising coincidence, but we consider that where we are today, we are in a good place, and we're well positioned to face future shocks. And future shocks there will be Kristalina and Tharman said it, I completely agree with that. We will be facing shocks. In what direction? How do we adjust our policies in order to deal with it? What kind of regulatory framework do we have in order to reduce the financial-instability risks that abound as a result of new technologies breaking through into the financial system?
It'll be incumbent upon us advanced economies, emerging economies, low-income countries to agree on what will be the best way to cooperate in order to maintain financial stability, price stability, while helping with the development of growth which, hopefully, will be inclusive and sustainable.
Moderator: There's a lot to unpack there, too. Several panelists have been talking about the technological backdrop.
So, you know, on the back of COVID, and in the aftermath of COVID with a very changing monetary policy and a very fast-changing monetary policy to tighten monetary policy investors kind of took a step back and took a very risk-off stance. And you saw that in terms of not as many IPOs coming to market and some market frankly, some market capitalisation reductions in 2022 going into 2023.
But since then, I think investors have synthesized the fact that, going into 2025, we have likely a moderating monetary policy in
I do need to call out small-cap companies. You know, with that change in monetary policy, small-cap companies are facing a situation where 4045% of their earnings are going to paying interest expense right now. So they just cannot reinvest their capital to grow. They're having to use their capital to pay off debt or to manage their debt and that's very constrictive. So, as we are seeing some changes in monetary policy, you're seeing the small caps starting to lift up as well.
But the rest of the market in particular, the large caps have had an incredible environment around them. There is an incredible technology that is coming; it's on the scene. It's extremely early, but it's already having an effect. I think that people, you know, as a general thesis, tend to be very excited and enthusiastic early. And, at the end of the day, this technology, in my opinion, will be the fastest-moving and most consequential technology that we'll see in many decades.
It's an incredible technology that will come, and I do think it will achieve a lot of incredible productivity gains over time. It takes time, though it's very early, and people get very excited. But the fact is that as we build out the infrastructure, the models are improving every single month, every single quarter. The way that the models are being able to be brought together now through agents and digital workers to be able to string together capabilities will drive productivity. And investors are understanding that. So investors are there to predict the future, and they definitely predict a bright future.
But I would also point out that since the beginning of 2024 until today, while the Nasdaq[1]100 is up 47%, the earnings of the companies in the Nasdaq-100 are up 32%. So there is a lot of justification for the fact that the markets are performing the way they're performing and then you've got the promise of more.
And then you also have an easy monetary environment, which also tends to be supportive of markets. And then you have a deregulatory environment, which tends to be supportive of growth. So there is a lot to synthesize, but I would say investors are synthesizing it and demonstrating it in what they're showing in the markets right now.
Moderator: This is all predicated on the idea that we're not necessarily going to be tested and I'm going back to what
If we're in that first world, then I think the incentives to retaliate fundamentally change. The Managing Director was spot-on in saying that the limited economic consequences we've seen from the trade war so far are grounded in the absence of retaliation. But that retaliation is, in part, because you don't know which
Once that gets resolved, then I think countries are going to be choosing between the world that
But if we're in a different world if the President of
Moderator: Does anyone want to respond? I just want to throw this out there because I see a lot of people writing.
And the second one which is obvious is an acceleration of the negotiations that were underway, in a slow, laborious way, with quite a lot of partners, specifically in
Moderator: But I wonder,
President
So, regardless of how the
So we face a more unpredictable situation, we just can't wait to see what eventually happens. We've got to start making alternative plans and, in the meantime, keep our relations with the US as best as we can. Keep our relations with the US it's still a major market, and it's got the most innovative companies in the world.
Any place I travel in regions, I hear the same message: "You,
So that is going to happen and these groupings, then, will collaborate across borders.
And my last point on this where we are headed is this notion of uncertainty. I actually think that we are now in an era in which uncertainty is the new normal. We're not going to have the comfort of predicting, you know, five years ahead what is going to happen.
And you see a little bit and I would be interested in
And what I've found is, as you go around the world, you're hearing that in other parts of the world, too. We provide technology to about 140 markets around the world, so we speak to the capital markets and the governments all over the world about what they're trying to do. They ask, of course, "How do you create this innovation economy?" And there are lots of things and I think we'll talk about that. But it's very possible, and people are thinking differently about what they're taking agency, as you said in terms of what they can do with their own economies; how they can spur their own growth; how they can collaborate and cooperate across borders in ways that weren't before.
And, personally, I think in the end that will result in a stronger world and just a different relationship with
The second direction we are heading into and, as often with
One last point because
Moderator: and we're going to get into the fiscal deficit, and how that changes and gives a very EM tinge to some DM. But
And now what we're going through is this new phase of Chinese growth, which isn't driven towards that natural process of comparative advantage; it's driven by the state deciding where
And what's different about this time around is: whereas last time what you're really talking about is engineering redistribution inside countries the US went from producing manufacturing to producing intellectual property now what we're really talking about is the potential redistribution of technology-frontier industries from one set of places to
But I don't want to be the voice of gravity on this panel. There are reasons for optimism, and that is because there are self-regulating mechanisms here and that is: what
Moderator: Well,
Some of this they have created independent central banks; they have created fiscal councils; some of them have put fiscal rules in place; they built reserves to protect themselves. And this is not a small part of emerging markets.
So, in a way, what I fear is that now we see some of the advanced economies being a bit more leisurely. Here in this country, there are discussions around independence of the Fed that is something emerging markets learned: don't touch; let them do their job; we are safer when we have it.
We have to recognise that there are vulnerable middle-income countries that have not done this hard work; they haven't built foundations for growth; they haven't built reserves. When a shock comes, they're in trouble. And then there are vulnerable countries because of their location on this planet and their vulnerability to climate shocks they can see 200% of GDP loss just by one day of a hurricane. And that is different not that they don't want to be resilient, but they are in a very difficult position. And then we have low-income countries, fragile states.
So when you look at the world, what you see is ... I'll give you a number: 100 poorer countries middle-income and poor countries hold somewhere between 35% of global reserves. Ten countries hold two-thirds plus of global reserves. And this is where we come into play the
And yet I think it would be much better if we are more proactive in creating opportunities, creating jobs building a bridge between the capital in the North that is now here, to the labour in, say,
So, as a world, where I am concerned about current developments is that we are losing sight of some of the big from a humane standpoint big questions. How do we have a world that is converging? It used to be that the idea was and trade was the transmission line for this convergence: that you're poor, then you do labour-intensive stuff, then you get rich, then expand in manufacturing, and you go up like this. And now now what is going to be compensatory for the loss of this transmission line?
And
Moderator: There was a lot to unpack there.
President
It's not just about one or two countries today; it's been a repeated feature in history. It happens in countries where you've got seemingly independent central banks, not just in countries where central banks were never independent. So it's a real risk.
It's a headline issue today; it captures a lot of attention. But our focus really has to shift to the big issues Kristalina was talking about.
You know, we are treading water today, we're obsessed with the short term. But if that's all we do, we'll eventually be drinking seawater.
We've got to look at the big issues, and they're no longer distant issues, by the way. Climate change is not a distant issue. It's about insurers today deciding that some states within countries are becoming uninsurable, and many homeowners are uninsurable and will not be able to get their mortgages. It's coming home to roost. Climate change is not a distant issue, or somewhere in the air. It's already on the ground, and affecting communities.
We've got to shift our whole focus in fiscal policy towards addressing the big issues. Because if we don't do it, we are going to have to end up spending a lot more than we otherwise would. So, even from the point of view of just fiscal prudence, it's better to repurpose fiscal spending today, rather than have to spend a lot more in the future.
Spend more to mitigate climate change, and particularly in
It's also sensible for the global community to spend today to help the developing world, so it can grow the global middle class and become a source of demand. Not a huge amount of money required just a fraction of the surplus savings that today goes towards funding rich countries' fiscal deficits, which is where most of the surplus savings in the world go.
Just a fraction of that whether it's through aid money, or through the
The bang for the buck that comes from addressing the really big issues is significant, compared to the way we're just treading water today.
So we should repurpose fiscal strategy. When Christine first took over as Managing Director of the
It may have appeared to many as "terrible, austerity is going to lead to hardship". They made cuts in education and healthcare budgets. But what happened? Their educational performance caught up with the rest of
So they repurposed spending, took some of it away from the middle class and the upper middle class, but protected the poor. They cut out the waste in healthcare spending which, by the way, is a huge issue in much of the world today. If you've got a back pain, they send you for imaging; if you've got a headache, they'll send you for imaging. There's huge waste in healthcare.
So think about repurposing healthcare spending; repurposing social spending in general while taking care of the poor, taking care of social mobility and using the resources that are freed up to address the really big issues.
We have to think like the insurers do insurers have no time for ideology, they've got their bottom lines to take care of, and they're starting to price climate change - but invest like venture capitalists.
Think like insurers, but act like venture capitalists: take risks and invest for the future.
And one of the examples that we like to point out is
So it encourages equity ownership of the citizens of the country with really intentional financial-literacy programs; tax policies to have low-tax savings accounts; bankruptcy laws that allow people to try and try again; an innovation economy that really encourages and spurs on the university systems and others to invest in innovation alongside the private markets.
And, as a result if you look at
And we had I would say in
So it's a small country and it's becoming a more diverse country, too and yet it still has this whole system that is created that allows for that innovation economy to grow. And I always say: people can solve these challenges when they think long term. And then that innovation can go toward a lot of the innovators in
Moderator:
On the capital side, well-functioning capital markets are important especially those that feed into the formation of young, small businesses. The labour side is where we really mess up, and we've learned this over the past several decades when we've looked at how economies have adapted to the loss of manufacturing. It could be the
An example of how to do this well is what
We've learned lack of resilience by what has happened in
Moderator:
President
So the reason why we go for resilience, the reason why we act early and act with a certain robustness to prepare the workforce and to help anyone who's displaced by technology or competition, is simply that sense that we have very little room for complacency.
And I think we are now in a situation because of the AI revolution and the uncertainties we all face globally in world trade and investment where large countries have to start thinking a little more like small countries, recognising that there's little room for complacency, and you're so much better off if you act early. Act quickly to help someone who's displaced, or a community that's displaced.
In
Moderator:
So we do manage that as closely and as well as we can, to procure that stability.
Moderator: Should it be a dual-mandate central bank?
Moderator: I'm wondering, from your standpoint,
One: keep channels of communication open with others whether you agree with them or you don't agree with them. Make sure that there are opportunities so you can pick up on something that maybe may matter to you. I think of the
My second conclusion is: Tharman is right that countries that are faced with more constraints may be actually more active. But I think there is one more ingredient, and it is leadership. You have countries in similar situations, and one does much better than another. And you look under the hood of these countries very often, more often than not there is leadership.
And the third conclusion I draw is that there are certain things we know. We don't have to discover them; we know them. We know that fiscal buffers protect you when a shock comes. We know that transparency in institutions, accountability to people, make it more likely they would make good decisions. We know that when we provide people with opportunity to learn to learn they can adjust to a changing environment.
So there is a menu of things we know; and then the question is: how do we make sure they get done? And then we hit the toughest component of all: common sense. The most common thing about common sense it's not very common. We do so many stupid things just because we refuse to be honest with the reality that surrounds us.
But we have this technology that's an unstoppable force that's coming. And I would say that, at this point, with that level of transformation from this incredible capability that's on our doorstep, we have to move to a time of agility and adaptability absolutely. And so we have to look at what's made us so resilient. There are a lot of things. I mean, I will point to the US markets for a second we are hyper-resilient as a system. The US equity markets we're all interlinked; we're networked. We have failures; we've had mistakes and so we've all figured out how to make that resiliency work and handle an immense amount of volumes. You're seeing huge volumes and huge shocks in the system, and they're all being handled and absorbed.
So that resiliency is there but now is the time to say, "Okay, on the basis of that foundation, what do you really need to have to remain resilient while becoming adaptable?" Because that adaptability whether it's digital assets or AI adaptation is happening. And so, if the institutions aren't prepared for it, or a country's not prepared for it and they're calcified in their views they will be left behind. But if they say, "Okay, I want to have this base and make it so that we have a resilient base," and then we change our policies; we think differently about regulation; we think differently about taking down some of the gates whether it's state regulation for us in zoning, or whether it's country regulation in the US that's holding us back from allowing this new technology to take force and thinking about education; thinking about all the things that, as a region or as a country, really need to change.
I personally think that we're at the cusp of this moment, and that leadership's critical to making sure that it's successful and it's propagated around the world.
Moderator: We're almost out of time, so I do want to get to this question and
So I think, when it comes to policymakers, we have to be very careful that those two factors are taken into account. And, you know, it cannot be just technology unleashed and "happen what happens." I think policymakers have a key role to play.
Moderator: That's a good place. And I completely agree with your comments.
Well, I just want to thank you all so much for taking the time. This has been a tremendous privilege for me, and I'm sure everybody in this room as we all try to grapple with the reality. Thank you.



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