AIECE General Meeting Brussels, 14/15 November 218 The Outlook for the World Economy Downward risks are rising Klaus-Jürgen Gern Kiel Institute for the World Economy Forecasting Center
Global growth has peaked, despite strong Q2 growth World Economic Activity World output IfW-Indicator for business expectations (rhs) 2 Index 2 1-1 -2-3 -2-4 27 28 29 21 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 Quarterly data, seasonally adjusted. Indicator is based on business expectations in 42 economies. GDP: price adjusted, change over previous 2 15.11.218
Sentiment has weakened progressively, although confidence appears to be still clear from danger zone Business expectations by groups of countries 2 Index 1-1 -2-3 World Advanced Economies Developing and ermerging economies -4 27 28 29 21 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 Monthly data, seasonally adjusted. Indicators are based on buisness expectations in 42 countries (33 advanced economies and 9 emerging economies). 3 15.11.218
Strong growth in Q2 and higher inflation accelerated monetary tightening in the US GDP and Domestic Demand in the G-7 1,2 1,,8,6,4,2, GDP -,2 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 4 Domestic Demand Price adjusted; seasonally adjusted; y-o-y change. G7 consists of USA, Japan, Canada, Germany, France, Italy and UK. Verbraucherpreise in den fortgeschrittenen Volkswirtschaften 212-218 CPI Inflation in Advanced Economies 212-218 4, 3,5 3, 2,5 2, 1,5 1,,5, -,5 Core Inflation CPI total -1, 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 Monthly data; GDP-weighted y-o-y change in the United States, the eurozone, Japan and the UK. Core inflation: CPI excluding energy and food. Source: OECD, Main Economic Indicators; own 15.11.218
Financial environment for EE has tightened... Monetary Policy in Emerging Markets 25-218 15 1 5-5 -1 Tighter policy Looser policy Diffusion index 3-month average US interest rates rising faster than expected Capital inflows have dried up Downward pressure on exchange rates Monetary cycle in the emerging economies has turned towards restiction Monthly data. The diffusion index is the number of central banks raising policy rates less the number of central banks decreasing policy rates in a given month. Emerging markets included are: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, China, Colombia, Indonesia, India, Mexico, Malaysia, Peru, Philippines, Russia, Thailand, Turkey, South Africa. 5 15.11.218
...but financial markets do differentiate Exchange Exchange rate rate developments developments in in emerging emerging markets, markets, 216-218 216-218 Argentina Brazil Chile China Colombia India Indonesia Malaysia Mexico Russia South Africa Thailand Turkey 6 Change since 1.1.216 Change since 1.1.218-8 -6-4 -2 2 Last observation: 12.11.218. Latin Latin America America - Recent Recent equity, equity, bond bond and and FX FX market market developments developments 2 1-1 -2-3 -4-5 Stock market (lhs) Risk premium (rhs) Exchange rate (lhs) age points 4 2-2 -4-6 -8-1 Changes since 1.4.218 (last value: 11.1.218). Exchange rate: in percent, a decrease indicates depreciation. Stock market: in percent, indices in local currency. Risk premium: in percentage points, EMBI Global spread over US treasury yields. 15.11.218
28 29 21 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 Higher interest rates meet economies with increased debt levels Nonfinancial sector debt in emerging economies households 2 non-financial corporations 18 government 16 14 total excluding China 12 1 8 6 4 2 In relation to nominal GDP. Source: BIS 6 5 4 3 2 1 Change of nonfinancial sector debt in emerging economies from 28 to 217 by sector pp In percent of GDP. Source: BIS. Total ex China Households Corporates Government 7 15.11.218
Exposure to exchange rate shocks varies a lot Debt burden of foreign denominated debt rises with devaluation Exposure is particularly high in Turkey and Chile, Mexico and Argentina next Foreign denominated assets (e.g. fx reserves) need also be taken into account Natural hedges from dollar denominated export revenues may be important (esp. commodity exporters) 8 15.11.218
Outlook for emerging economies increasingly diverse In addition to the fallout from US monetary tightening, continued fiscal adjustment to lower commodity prices and policy uncertainty from national sources work as a drag on growth Domestic expenditure in Turkey has already declined in Q2, and the economy is forecast to slip into recession in the second half of 218. Short-term indicators have deteriorated dramatically. Severe recession in Argentina as high interest rates and fiscal adjustment force the economy on a more sustainable growth trajectory and agriculture is depressed by adverse weather Brazil on the verge of falling back into recession amid loss of confidence and policy uncertainty Forecast for other LA (except Venezuela) still expects robust growth Recovery in Russia has strenthend in mid 218, but is expected to remain generally slow and uneven. Geopolitical stress is a downside risk, higher oil prices provide an upside. Growth in emerging Asia (ex China) still robust, but with somewhat reduced momentum going forward Economic activity in India to moderate somewhat after recovery from temporary slump after the introduction of reforms (currency reform, national VAT), but expansion so far not substantially affected by EE liquidity crunch
World trade growth has lost momentum World Trade 15 27=1 World trade total Advanced economies 14 Developing and emerging Economies 13 12 11 1 9 Stagnation in the course of 218, after strong growth in the end of 217 Annual growth poised to slow to below 3.5 % in 218, following 4.5 % in 217 (strongest result in 7 years) Return to new normal or protracted weakness? Effects of trade conflicts? 8 27 29 211 213 215 217 Monthly data; seasonally and price adjusted. 1 15.11.218
Factors behind the trade slowdown are cyclical and structural Slowdown of growth in trade intensive Europe Investment on a weaker tone Deceleration of growth in China Build-up of global value chains seems to have peaked Trade policy a new negative» Direct impact of tariffs so far limited» Effects through sentiment perhaps more pronounced» Temporary positive impact possible as firms bring imports forward
Trade conflicts have a potential to signifcantly affect economic activity GDP loss from tariffs in different scenarios, -,2 -,4 -,6 -,8-1, USA China World Germany Deviation from baseline after three years. Source: Kiel Institute calculations with NiGEM. US-China limited US-China escalated EU also involved Uncertainty about trade rules has generally increased and remains elevated despite recent agreement on new NAFTA (USMCA) Tariffs put in place on a substantial share of US-China trade NiGEM simulation of three scenarios (1) 25% tariff on 5bn of imports on both sides (2) Additional 1% tariff on remaining imports in both countries (3) Extension to US-EU trade with reciprocal introduction of 1% tariff on imports Only effects through the trade channel are modeled. Stronger impact on activity through confidence shocks possible 12 15.11.218
Growth in China on track for the time being, but financial markets send signals of weakness China: GDP and alternative activity indicators 211-218 14 12 1 8 6 4 2 percent GDP (lhs) Keqiang index (lhs) Fernald et al. (215)-indicator index 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 3 2 1-1 -2-3 Quarterly data China: exchange rates 214-217 6, 6,2 6,4 6,6 6,8 7, CNY/USD vis-a-vis US-dollar vis-a-vis currency basket Daily data. 15 1 95 9 85 13 15.11.218
China: Deceleration of growth China: real GDP Growth 1 8 6.9 6.5 6.1 5.8 6 4 2 217 218 219 22 GERN World Economic Outlook Output growth so far consistent with growth target of 6.5% in 218 Service sector primary source of growth, moderation of growth in manufacturing Pronounced drop in the stock market and currency weakness indicate loss of confidence Policy priority seems to have shifted toward maintaining growth from reigning in growth of debt in the private sector and local governments Monetary policy has started to losen Fiscal policy will remain supportive (infrastructure, military spending) Still gradual deceleration of growth expected, in line with reduced potential growth 14
Tighter supply drives oil prices up Commodity prices 25 2 15 1 5 HWWI-Index ex energy GERN World Economic Outlook Brent oil (rhs) 21=1 US-$ 2 22 24 26 28 21 212 214 216 218 Monthly data; commodities prices without energy: HWWA-index based on US-Dollar; oil price: Brent spot price. 14 12 1 8 6 4 2 Oil prices have risen above 8$/b Stagnant commodity prices ex energy suggest that oil specific factors are at play OPEC/Russian production caps still in place Output in Venezuela (and other places) falling Strong growth in US production cannot fully accommodate rising demand Global market has slipped into deficit in the course of last year Iran sanctions threaten to substantially tighten supply further 15.11.218 15
United States: Fiscal policy pushes economy 4, US real GDP Growth 3,5 3, 2,8 2,3 2,4 2,5 1,9 2, 1,5 1,,5, 217 218 219 22 Strong fiscal policy stimulus from tax reform and budget deal in an economy close to full employment Monetary tightening has been accelerated, more interest rate increases to come (3% FFR by end 22) Economic expansion continues for the time being o Investment stimulus from tax reform, higher oil prices trigger more investment in energy sector o Continued strong gains in employment o Private consumption looks more solid after hefty upward revision to savings rate o Current account poised to deteriorate further Gradual deceleration of growth with fiscal stimulus fading and higher interest rates kicking in. GERN World Economic Outlook 16
United States: Q3 not as strong as it seems GDP in the United States 216-22 6 4 2 21 = 1 X-M C + I + G inventories GDP -2 Q1 215 Q1 216 Q1 217 Q1 218 Strong contribution from inventories in Q3 Investment slowed markedly (decline in structures, only slow growth of equipment, continuation of downturn in residential investment) Private consumption remained brisk (4%) Government expenditure up 3% Drop in exports after strong Q2 (-3,5%) Strong import growth (9%) Quarterly data, price-, seasonally- and calendar adjusted, qoq-change, annualized. GERN World Economic Outlook 17
United States: Inflation scare over? 6 Consumer prices 5 Deflator of private Consumption 4 Core indices 3 2 1-1 -2 28 21 212 214 216 218 Inflation has slowed again recently Core rates steady at 2 % Wholesale price inflation above 3 % Nominal wages up 3,1 % y/y in October: first time above 3% since 29, although partly due to base effects Long rates are continuing to rise (1-year bonds at 3,1 %) Monthly data; change over previous year. Core index: consumer prices excluding energy and food. Source: US Department of Labor, Consumer Price Index. GERN World Economic Outlook 18
Japan: Moderate economic upturn 3, 2,5 2, 1,5 1,,5, Japan: real GDP Growth 1,7,9 GERN World Economic Outlook Technical revision Q2 1,2 1, 217 218 219 22 Economy is fluctuating wildly with weak Q3 following on strong Q2 following on weak Q1. Temporary dip (Earthquake, Typhoon) depressed activity in Sep Technical increase of our forecast by.3 pp and.1 pp this year and next, respectively, following strong upward revision to Q2 growth estimate is obsolete Unemployment rate is on the lowest level in 25 years raising concerns about capacity constraints Inflation seems finally to pick up Monetary policy is continuing to target the long-term interest rate (at zero) for the time being. Short-term interest rate will not rise before 22 given inflation still way below target VAT increase in the end of 219 could weigh on growth in 22 19
The global picture: Growth continues, but financial headwinds slow emerging economies while capacity constrains and reduced policy stimulus reduce economic momentum in the advanced economies 6, 5, 4, World 3,8 3,8 3,5 3,4 6, 5, 4, Advanced Economies 8, 7, 6, 5, Emerging Economies 5,3 5,2 4,9 4,9 3, 2, 1, 3, 2, 1, 2,4 2,3 2,1 1,8 4, 3, 2, 1,, 217 218 219 22, 217 218 219 22, 217 218 219 22 GERN World Economic Outlook 2
Risks from policy and the cycle Geopolitical risks are still high on the agenda, with the US-Russian relationship damaged substantially, Middle East continuing to be a source of concern Further escalation of trade war between US and China, extension to Europe amid rising US trade deficits Oil prices could become a serious negative for global growth Brexit is still a prominent source of uncertainty Confidence of investors in Italian sovereign debt could decline further triggering new uncertainties within Europe Low levels of slack in advanced economies may lead to excessive acceleration of inflation and sharper monetary tightening After many years of expansive monetary policies, financial markets and business models in AE may be vulnerable to a restrictive MP shock GERN World Economic Outlook 21
Questions (How long) can the strong expansion of the US economy be sustained? Will inflation in the US finally pick up? How tolerant is the world economy to higher US interest rates? How big a risk to the outlook is a correction in asset prices in advanced economies? How dangerous is the aggressive attitude of the US government in trade issues for global growth?.. GERN World Economic Outlook 22
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