UNITED NATIONSNEW DELHI, Jan 9 Reuters Global economic growth is projected to remain at 2.8 in 2025, unchanged from 2024, held back by the top two economies, the U.S. and China, according to a United Nations report released on Thursday.

The World Economic Situation and Prospects report said that positive but somewhat slower growth forecasts for China and the United States will be complemented by modest recoveries in the European Union, Japan, and Britain and robust performance in some large developing economies, notably India and Indonesia.

Despite continued expansion, the global economy is projected to grow at a slower pace than the 20102019 prepandemic average of 3.2, according to the report by the U.N. Department of Economic and Social Affairs.

This subdued performance reflects ongoing structural challenges such as weak investment, slow productivity growth, high debt levels, and demographic pressures, it said.

The report said U.S. growth was expected to moderate from 2.8 last year to 1.9 in 2025 as the labour market softens and consumer spending slows.

It said growth in China was estimated at 4.9 for 2024 and projected to be 4.8 this year with public sector investments and a strong export performance partly offset by subdued consumption growth and lingering property sector weakness.

Europe was expected to recover modestly with growth increasing from 0.9 in 2024 to 1.3 in 2025, supported by easing inflation and resilient labour markets, the report said.

South…