The sluggish progress of Covid-19 vaccination outside the U.S. is a key threat to the economic outlook, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said Thursday, echoing calls to address the widening disparity between rich and poor nations.

While the U.S. is on track to vaccinate three-fourths of its population by late June and other wealthy countries are following suit, emerging-market economies are on pace to vaccinate just 28% of their populations by the end of the year, according to UBS research. That gap, and its economic implications, became a major focus of global policy makers this week in a round of meetings arranged by the International Monetary Fund.

“Viruses are no respecters of borders, and until the world really is vaccinated we’re all going to be at risk of new mutations,” Mr. Powell said Thursday in an IMF seminar on the global economy. “I would look at global vaccination as a risk really…to the progress that we are making.”

The IMF lifted its forecast for world economic growth this year to 6%, up from a projection of 5.5% in January. That would mark the fastest expansion in at least four decades, helped by vaccines and trillions of dollars of relief spending by rich countries’ governments.

Near the front of the pack is the U.S. economy, projected by the IMF to expand 6.4% this year—enough to recover all the output lost during last year’s 3.5% contraction.

Mr. Powell on Thursday welcomed last week’s Labor Department report showing robust U.S. job creation in March. But he reiterated that the central bank still needs to see significant improvement in the economy before dialing back policy support.

He and other Fed officials have indicated in recent weeks that they expect to hold U.S. short-term interest rates near zero through 2023. They also plan to continue the Fed’s $120 billion of monthly bond purchases until the economy makes “substantial further progress” toward its goals of maximum employment and sustained, 2% inflation.

Inflation has remained below the Fed’s target for most of the past decade, while the U.S. labor market remains about 8.4 million jobs short of its pre-pandemic level of employment.

The IRS sent roughly 90 million stimulus checks to Americans in March. WSJ’s chief economics commentator Greg Ip explains why stimulus checks alone are unlikely to spur inflation. Photo Illustration: Carlos Waters

“We got a taste of what faster progress will look like with the March employment report: close to a million jobs,” Mr. Powell said Thursday. “We want to see a string of months like that so we can really begin to show progress toward our goals.”

Write to Paul Kiernan at [email protected]

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This post first appeared on wsj.com

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