International Monetary Fund

Elon Musk said Tesla could help run the electrical grid of Puerto Rico, Whirlpool got help fighting the flow of imported appliances, and other important headlines.
The IMF warns about an increasing debt problem in China, subprime car loans have become a big problem, Wells Fargo names a new chairman, and more important headlines.
A new ransomware cyberattack has hit more than 300,000 computers, Nestle may buy back $21 billion worth of its shares and Apple has acquired an eye-tracking software company.
The IMF is suggesting that momentum in the global economy has been building since the middle of last year, and it is reaffirming its earlier forecasts of higher global growth in 2017 and 2018.
Major trade friction with the United States could be economically devastating to the Mexican economy, the 15th largest in the world.
The IMF sees subdued global growth persisting, and it also is warning that economic stagnation could fuel protectionist calls.
What is wrong with Venezuela? Food riots. Wild inflation. But the country has the world's largest oil reserves, even greater than Saudi Arabia.
The Brexit will cost the euro area dearly next year, according to the International Monetary Fund.
The U.S. economy is "overall, in good shape" according a statement by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) released Wednesday.
The IMF recently released an examination of the U.K. economy that was upbeat. Tempering its comment was anxiety about the results of a split from the European Union.
Greece is back in the news. The good news about Greece is that they are not back in the news on the verge of an impending default, nor is Greece being accused of being the verge of being ejected from...
Most of the IMF's latest World Economic Outlook centers around even slower global growth in gross domestic product for 2016.
Europe’s most indebted government is back at it, complaining about bailout conditions and fighting for its next tranche of bailout funds.
Get ready for even slower global growth than you previously expected. That is the message from the International Monetary Fund.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has cut its forecasts for global gross domestic product improvement for this year and the next.