The Russian invasion of Ukraine has been the main contributing factor to the potentially devastating one percent drop in projected global economic growth this year, according to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD).
"We anticipated back in September of last year that the global economy would grow by around 3.6 percent," said Richard Kozul-Wright, director of UNCTAD Division on Globalisation and Development Strategies, Thursday.
"We expect it to grow by 2.6 percent this year; and of course, the main contributing factor to that is the war in Ukraine."
With inflation on the rise and developing countries already weighed down by a $1 trillion debt burden to pay back to creditors, the UN body decried the inadequate financial measures already taken to help them withstand exchange rate instability, rising interest rates and soaring food and fuel prices.
Wholesale multilateral fiscal reform – possibly on the scale and ambition of the US Marshall Plan that shouldered Western Europe following the Second World War – is urgently needed to improve the financial liquidity of developing countries to prevent them – and even middle-income countries – from potentially going under, UNCTAD said.
"There is a rapidly worsening outlook for the world's economy and to think that this year, the year after two years of crisis with Covid-19, the average rate of growth of the world economy will be 2.6 percent, down from 5.5 percent last year, and down from the projections that were made in the last quarter of 2021," said UNCTAD Secretary-General Rebeca Grynspan.
She called for emergency measures from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank, namely the activation of rapid funding instruments which the IMF can provide to help countries with looming balance of payments problems.
"Conditions are worsening for everybody," Rebeca said, noting how the climate crisis has played its part, along with successive droughts in the Horn of Africa, the ongoing pandemic and war in Ukraine.
Even relatively wealthy countries that are struggling with multiple cost-of-living pressures have already sought help from the international system to keep them afloat.
"Pakistan went back (to the IMF) at the end of last year," said Kozul-Wright. "Sri Lanka has now gone to the IMF to organise a programme. Egypt, which was already under a programme, has gone back to the IMF to renegotiate."
"And these are not least developed countries, these are middle-income countries that are under very serious economic and in some cases political pressure, as a consequence of the shocks that they now face."
But it is the world's poorest, import-dependent countries that will be worst hit by the global economic downturn, UNCTAD said.
"The brunt is being carried by the developing countries because of the rise in prices of food, of energy and fertilisers that is very steep and also the financial stretch under which the developing countries are already under," said Rebeca.
Although "all regions of the global economy will be adversely affected by this crisis," Kozul-Wright suggested that "high commodity exporters" were likely to do well from a rise in prices. "But the European Union will see a fairly significant downgrade in its growth performance this year…so will parts of central and southern Asia as well."
UNCTAD's policy recommendations include the need for global financial reform to allow developing countries the economic space for "reasonable growth" so that they can service potentially crippling debt levels.
"Debt servicing in 2020 for developing countries excluding China was already $1 trillion, that was the kind of financial pressure that developing countries are in," Kozul-Wright said.