The emerging economies of India,
China and Brazil are leading the
global economic recovery, according to a United Nations (UN) report released on Wednesday.
"The rebound has been led by the large
emerging economies in Asia and Latin America, particularly China, India and Brazil," the report said.
The mid-year issue of the World Economic Situation and Prospects (WESP), said that "weaknesses in major developed economies continue to drag the global recovery and pose risks for world economic stability in the coming years".
It added that many developing countries have been able to use the policy buffers (in the form of ample fiscal space and vast foreign-exchange reserves) they had generated in the years before the crisis to adopt aggressive stimulus packages.
The UN report also said while developing countries continue to drive the global recovery, their output growth is also expected to moderate to 6.0 per cent on average during 2011-2012, down from 7.1 per cent in 2010.
It said China and India's gross domestic product (GDP) growth is also expected to experience some moderation in 2011 and 2012.
The volume of exports of many emerging economies, including Brazil, China, India and other developing economies in Asia, have already recovered to, or beyond, pre-crisis peaks, it added.
The study said exports of developed economies have not yet achieved full recovery and were still 8 per cent below the pre-crisis peaks seen in the third quarter of 2010, adding that in 2011,
global oil demand is expected to increase further.
Most of the demand growth will continue to come from emerging economies, especially China and India.
The UN study said employment programmes like India's Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act have been effective, going to explain how the scheme provides one hundred days of employment at the minimum wage to 43 million low-income households.