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Joblessness, Rising Prices Could Spark Social Unrest: IMF Chief

First Posted: 02/01/11 09:38 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:30 PM ET

Singapore Apec
International Monetary Fund Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Khan

SINGAPORE (By Kevin Lim and Saeed Azhar) - The world economy is beset by problems such as high unemployment and rising prices which could fuel trade protectionism and even lead to war within nations, the head of the International Monetary Fund warned on Tuesday.

Rising food and fuel prices in recent months have already hit poorer countries and are one of the factors behind massive anti-government protests in Egypt and in Tunisia, whose president was ousted last month.

"As tensions between countries increase, we could see rising protectionism -- of trade and of finance. And as tensions within countries increase, we could see rising social and political instability within nations - even war," Dominique Strauss-Kahn said in a speech in Singapore.

Strauss-Kahn noted two "dangerous" imbalances that he said could sow the seeds of the next crisis.

The first was the unbalanced recovery across countries, as emerging nations grow much faster than developed economies and possibly overheat. The second was the social strains within countries with high unemployment and widening income gaps.

Over the next decade, 400 million young people would join the global labor force, posing a daunting challenge for governments, Strauss-Kahn added.

"We face the prospect of a 'lost generation' of young people, destined to suffer their whole lives from worse unemployment and social conditions. Creating jobs must be a top priority not only in the advanced economies, but also in many poorer countries."

Unemployment stands at 9.4 percent in the United States while European countries are struggling to create jobs.

Despite high joblessness in the wake of the 2008 global credit crisis, trade barriers have not reached levels feared by many analysts. Instead, a number of countries, most prominently China according to its critics, have sought to keep their currencies undervalued to keep exports humming.

"The pre-crisis pattern of global imbalances is re-emerging," Strauss-Kahn said.

"Growth in economies with large external deficits, like the U.S., is still being driven by domestic demand. And growth in economies with large external surpluses, like China and Germany, is still being powered by exports."

Strauss-Kahn said the IMF expected subdued growth of 2.5 percent for advanced economies this year as high unemployment and household debt weighed on domestic demand.

Emerging markets would grow at a faster pace of 6.5 percent, with Asia excluding Japan expanding by 8.5 percent, he said.

Strauss-Kahn said the "global growth gap" was straining the recovery in other ways, with energy prices rising swiftly, reflecting the rapid growth in emerging economies.

"Food prices are rising too -- though here supply shocks are the main reason with potentially devastating consequences for low-income countries. Together, these price increase are beginning to feed into headline inflation," he said.

The U.N. food agency said last month that global food prices hit a record high in December, above 2008 levels when riots broke out in countries as far afield as Egypt, Cameroon and Haiti.

Strauss-Kahn added that foreign exchange rate adjustments had an important role to play in addressing global economic imbalances and should not be resisted.

"Holding back such adjustment in one country also makes it harder, and more costly, for other countries to let their exchange rate adjust," he said.

Chinese policymakers were moving in the right direction by taking steps to bolster domestic demand, he noted. The United States and many other Western countries continue to push Beijing to let its yuan currency appreciate faster.

(Editing by Kim Coghill and Dean Yates)

Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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SINGAPORE (By Kevin Lim and Saeed Azhar) - The world economy is beset by problems such as high unemployment and rising prices which could fuel trade protectionism and even lead to war within nations,...
SINGAPORE (By Kevin Lim and Saeed Azhar) - The world economy is beset by problems such as high unemployment and rising prices which could fuel trade protectionism and even lead to war within nations,...
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shylove2
warfare state is pathological
09:02 PM on 02/02/2011
The figures lie, because underneath all this is the companies contracting out and part-timing and lowering salaries and hours to beat the benefits and unemployment regs... Meaning the hidden workers are on a thin thread and aren't earning and will not be spending much... the dream weavers of the American Sweat Dream will be finding little income from threadbare workers and instead most likely will be doing Enronian creative accounting tricks to make the wall streekers swoon with delight and crank up the speculation bubble machines to make sniffing fumes seem like drinking brandy... the corporate ethos of pumping profits straight into Alice's Washingtonland to fund the Mad Hatters at TeeTimes will not prime any economic pumps as we burn money on warfires in bundles of Billions...
03:56 PM on 02/02/2011
It's this kind of news that has me watching gold and silver's spot prices with the desktop app http://www.learcapital.com/exactprice

We are far from finding our way out of the forest. In fact, at this point I would say there is no path and the trees are really starting to close in. Egypt is falling, Tunisia too. What's next? The IMF just loaned millions to Kenya and now there are other countries saying that things are real bad and they want a loan too. This is just going to pad the pockets of the elite by enslaving entire nations in debt.

If you've got personal debt, get our of it ASAP. Make it goal.
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LeLoup
Res ipsa loquitur, ergo tace!
03:09 PM on 02/02/2011
Not to worry: every time human beings have refused to cooperate with each other to solve this kind of problems, large scale wars followed.

We had two just in the 20th century. Need another one, just to reinforce the lessons of the first two?
10:11 PM on 02/01/2011
Entities such as the IMF, World Bank and, in general, the globalist camp, are the most responsible this situation. So they point out a serious problem they caused and still promote?
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kamact
Market Observer
10:06 PM on 02/01/2011
So quit your job and give it to the younger generation
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liberalbug
do you want fries with that?
09:46 PM on 02/01/2011
The other bookend to the boomers.
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WorldisMorphing
Jaded Iconoclast ...
08:39 PM on 02/01/2011
The untenable problem is that the pace at which decency trickles down is unacceptable, while technological advances have already reached a more than sufficient level to build the mega-infrastructures required for the 21st century. Because progress is not a goal of capitalism in itself, it's an incidence.
Slums make no sense. Hunger makes no sense. Poverty is violence from the state to exercise contrivance and submission of the many to a fate practically worse than a "Free Man" would endure living in a remote community.
The current monetary model has reached its limits.
There is no pertinence in not SEPARATING BY CURRENCY essential goods & services from the rest.
If you've been willing to spend that much pointless intellectual and monetary effort to "manage risk" ....than you now should have very little problem to engineer a purposeful and pertinent resource allocation system.
...And guess what. The guy who makes the better toaster still gets to be rewarded by the markets !!!...so no need to cry Boehner... no need to cry.....
Two currencies. One for the essentials, the other, for the rest.
Eventually the first currency will become a global one.
Then, the social contract.

Nothing unreasonable.
08:05 PM on 02/01/2011
Take a long hard look at this man. Then do some research (two sides) on the IMF.
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07:53 PM on 02/01/2011
all I can suggest is that we stop borrowing money, to give away to other countries, so they can have more kids.
http://socyberty.com/issues/future-scope-over-population/
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07:52 PM on 02/01/2011
We have an increasing number of people, and a decreasing number of jobs. Not to mention a system that enriches a few, while impoverishing the many.
http://socyberty.com/issues/future-scope-over-population/
05:29 PM on 02/01/2011
There are several immense problems facing the global community at the present moment. If they are not addressed, they will have dire consequences on nearly every continent. One of the worst problems is the lack of meaningful jobs for millions of young men and women and it is going to be one of the most difficult to solve.

When young people are unable to find work, are forced to endure poverty and become alienated from contributing to the common good, it is a recipe for mass rebellion. The rebellion has already started in the Middle East and the protests will sweep around the globe if governments, as a whole, fail to take genuine measures to resolve the issue.

Idle minds are ripe targets for manipulation and suggestion by malicious adults with evil in mind. Where do you think the suicide bombers come from? Boys and girls with good jobs? With happy families? With a future they are looking forward to? No way. They get plucked off the streets of overcrowded cities filled with unhappy, cynical, angry unemployed young people.
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07:54 PM on 02/01/2011
You're right. When people have nothing to lose, they lose it. We need to address all these problems that the current system is creating.
http://socyberty.com/issues/future-scope-over-population/
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sensimilla
You are not your body
03:37 PM on 02/01/2011
Get real, the IMF has effectively been k1lling children throughout the world for years by destroying economies, c0rp0ratist raping of their resources and offering massive "loans" to force poor countries to embrace the corporatism.

The IMF is not beneficial to humanity, it is against the interests of the people.
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07:55 PM on 02/01/2011
The IMF is just another tool of the elite to oppress the many.
http://socyberty.com/issues/future-scope-over-population/
10:11 PM on 02/01/2011
spot on./
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ErnestineBass
No longer a cog in The Machine.
02:11 PM on 02/01/2011
LOL Yah think?

It's truly amazing just how myopic these lever-pulling Masters of the Universe really are.
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07:55 PM on 02/01/2011
They have a mirror in front of them 24/7.
http://socyberty.com/issues/future-scope-over-population/
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bluepond
person
01:24 PM on 02/01/2011
"The last will be first and the first will be last"
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bluepond
person
01:20 PM on 02/01/2011
you think?