IMF ANNUAL REPORT 2025
The IMF Annual Report 2025 presents a comprehensive assessment of the global economic landscape marked by exceptional uncertainty, driven by rising geopolitical tensions, policy divergence, AI-driven technological shifts, climate-related shocks, and structural changes in international trade. Despite global resilience in recent years, growth remains subdued, and macroeconomic risks are intensifying—particularly for low-income and emerging economies.
1. Global Economic Outlook: Low Growth, High Uncertainty
- Global growth remains weak, with medium-term projections around 3%, significantly below long-term averages.
- Inflation is declining but uneven, prompting diverging monetary policies across major economies.
- Trade tensions, industrial policies, and market volatility continue to reshape global trade flows.
- Climate-related disasters and geopolitical shocks are amplifying macroeconomic instability.
2. Growth Priorities: Stability, Reform, and International Cooperation
To unlock durable growth, the IMF emphasizes:
- Strengthening domestic resilience through credible fiscal and monetary frameworks.
- Deep structural reforms to enhance productivity: cutting red tape, improving competition, enabling entrepreneurship, and expanding digital capacity.
- Developing deeper capital markets, modern tax systems, and supportive business environments.
- Investing in innovation, infrastructure, and digital transformation, particularly in AI-driven growth opportunities.
- International coordination to reduce trade tensions, manage spillovers, and advance debt restructuring.
3. Rising Public Debt & Fiscal Pressures
- Global public debt exceeded $100 trillion in 2024, projected to approach 100% of global GDP.
- Debt servicing costs are rising, crowding out critical development and climate-related investment.
- Over 50% of low-income developing countries are at high risk of debt distress.
- The IMF calls for:
- Growth-oriented fiscal consolidation,
- Reform of pensions, subsidies, and expenditure frameworks,
- Strong revenue mobilisation, especially in emerging economies,
- Timely and transparent debt restructuring, supported by the Global Sovereign Debt Roundtable.
4. Financial Stability Risks Intensify
Risks to financial stability increased due to:
- Tight global financial conditions and valuation risks in overconcentrated capital markets.
- Rising leverage among non-bank financial institutions increases systemic vulnerability.
- The intensifying sovereign-bank nexus, especially in emerging and low-income economies.
- The IMF stresses:
- Strengthened financial supervision,
- Robust market infrastructure,
- Enhanced use of stress testing and scenario analysis,
- Greater focus on non-bank financial oversight,
- Firm implementation of Basel III.
5. IMF Support to Member Countries
In FY2025, the IMF continued to deliver:
- 133 economic surveillance assessments, providing country-tailored policy guidance.
- $63 billion in lending, including support to low-income countries through the Poverty Reduction and Growth Trust (PRGT).
- $382 million in capacity development to strengthen institutions such as central banks, revenue authorities, and financial supervisors.
Key reforms include:
- Reduced borrowing costs through updated Charges and Surcharge Policy, saving members $1.2 billion annually.
- Enhanced support to low-income countries via PRGT reforms, including a new tiered interest rate system.
- Continued expansion of the Resilience and Sustainability Trust (RST) to address climate and pandemic preparedness challenges.
6. The IMF at 80: Adapting for a New Era
The IMF underscores its commitment to:
- Safeguarding global monetary cooperation,
- Supporting members’ policy reform and crisis response,
- Promoting inclusive growth and protecting vulnerable populations,
- Strengthening multilateral dialogue in an era of fragmentation.
As countries navigate volatility and structural transformation, the Fund reiterates that clarity, commitment, and international coordination are essential for building a more stable, resilient, and prosperous global economic future.