All four banks are almost unanimously expected to make no change to their extraordinary stimulus programs
Growth continues to falter in advanced economies, while there is considerable divergence of performance across emerging markets
Interview with Managing director, Morgan Stanley Asia
In the new reality of negative rates, borrowers get paid and savers penalised
He added that the Chinese were 'reasonably optimistic' because in the first quarter their economy had picked up 6.7%
The Fund cut its global forecast for the third straight quarter, saying economic activity has been "too slow for too long"
However, eight in 10 executives expect that demand for their companies' products and services will grow or stay the same
Moody's expects growth in G-20 advanced countries to be stable at 1.8% for 2016 and 2% for 2017