Not good enough!

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The International Monetary Fund on Thursday called for a “policy game changer” in the euro zone to arrest the spread of the debt crisis it now says is clearly engulfing the entire currency bloc and its smaller neighbors.
An IMF spillover report that looks at how the economic policies of the so-called systemic five economies – the United States, China, euro zone, Japan and the United Kingdom – affect each other and the rest of the world said the euro area crisis was by far the biggest concern weighing on policymakers’ minds. The IMF said it had consulted 35 countries for the report including select number of emerging economies Brazil, Czech Republic, India, South Africa, Turkey, Russia, South Korea, Poland, Mexico and Saudi Arabia. “Despite progress in the face of constraints, the sense is that not enough has been done to stop the spread of stresses and attenuate fiscal-growth-banking feedback loops,” the IMF said of the euro zone’s policy actions so far. In a worst-case scenario simulated by the IMF, it found that euro zone output could be cut by five percentage points if policymakers did not act and the euro zone crisis worsened.
If the euro zone crisis intensified, the IMF estimated that the impact to the world’s poorest countries would be somewhere between mild to severe, and could push up their external financing needs by some $27 billion by the end of 2013. But the IMF said the euro zone was not the only global worry. Weighing possible spillovers elsewhere, the IMF also said the United States must remove the threat of a so-called “fiscal cliff” in 2013, with $4 trillion worth of expiring tax cuts and automatic government spending reductions next year, and not enough fiscal adjustments over the medium term. Most analysts believe that Congress will not act until after the congressional and presidential elections in November.