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By (Reuters) - The leaders of the International Monetary Fund and the World Trade Organization on Tuesday warned against the negative impact of deglobalization for the global economy, arguing instead for smart moves to diversify supply chains. IMF Managing Director "But don't throw the baby out with the bathwater," she said. "Don't pull the plug on trade that makes us all better." WTO Director-General "Retreating from trade, being protectionist will make it harder - not easier - to solve the problems we have now," Okonjo-Iweala said. "Protectionism, decoupling, fragmentation is very disruptive and it will be very costly." Both Okonjo-Iweala and Georgieva said the impact of deglobalization and fragmentation would hit developing countries and emerging markets hardest. The impact to gross domestic product (GDP) in those countries would be in the double digits, the WTO chief said. Okonjo-Iweala called for moves to de-concentrate manufacturing in a smart way and warned against counting too heavily on "friend-shoring". "Who is a friend? A friend today might become very unfriendly tomorrow," she said. Georgieva said growth was slowing in "Business and consumer sentiment points to weakening of activities in the fourth quarter of this year and continuing in this same direction in 2023," she said. About one-third of the world economy - and about half of the European Union - would slide in recession in 2023, she said, adding that inflation was now projected to persist longer, although it could gradually decline to around 6.5% next year. (Reporting by
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