What is the economic outlook for OECD countries? An interim assessment

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What is the economic outlook for OECD countries? An interim assessment Paris, th September 7 Jean-Philippe Cotis Chief Economist

Press Briefing Jean-Philippe Cotis OECD Chief Economist September, 7 : a.m. Paris time. The turnaround in the US housing market and the woes in its sub-prime mortgage segment were highlighted as a pivotal element of the global business cycle in the May 7 OECD Economic Outlook, and have since triggered a more general reassessment of risks. To date, swift and forceful central bank action has helped contain the ensuing financial market turbulence. While it is too early to gauge to what extent the repricing observed so far and possible further financial adjustments will affect prospects for activity, it has happened at a point in time when world economic momentum was still strong. Hence, the May 7 OECD growth projections for the year as a whole are not revised that much. However, year averages mainly reflect past developments and prospects going forward are now clearly less buoyant and more uncertain. Downside risks have become more ominous, in a context where overall financial market conditions are likely to remain durably tighter.. In the United States, durable goods orders and household spending were up going into the third quarter, and profit margins are ample, albeit declining. However, the housing sector is set to exert a longer and more potent than expected drag, and confidence has weakened. As a result, GDP growth is projected to fall distinctly below potential during the second half of this year, following the strong rebound in the second quarter. All in all, our growth estimates may err on the upside, since it has not yet been possible to fully evaluate the negative impact of credit market turbulences on economic activity. In any event, consumer resilience will be tested by mortgage rate resets, tighter credit standards, weaker collaterals and slower job creation.. Contrasting with developments across the Atlantic, activity decelerated in the second quarter in the euro area at large and in most of its economies. While consumer confidence is fairly elevated, consistent with receding unemployment, retail sales have remained subdued. Business sentiment has been dented by the financial turmoil, but expectations are still fairly upbeat. Accordingly, growth should pick up to around potential in the euro area, including the three larger economies, in the second half of the year. Nevertheless, the peak of the euro area growth upswing now seems to lie behind.. Despite a deceleration in the course of the first half of 7, the expansion in Japan is set to continue. Although it weakened in the second quarter, business investment should be an important driver, with high capacity utilisation and profits. Household consumption has slowed but should be supported going forward by much-improved labour market conditions. In addition, the negative contribution from stockbuilding in recent quarters suggests that in the near future inventory accumulation should add to growth.

. The major central banks generally face an economic outlook characterised by scant spare capacity and unemployment rates close to or below their structural levels, as well as high energy prices and rapidly rising food prices. Outside Japan, inflation rates despite recent easing in some cases are still at the high end of what is consistent with price stability. At the same time, they are confronting risks to financial stability, which have prompted them to step in with large but temporary injections of liquidity. An important requirement in this respect is to avoid a situation where excess risk taking would be bailed out. Hence, besides short-run liquidity management, monetary policy and interest rate setting should continue to focus on prospects for inflation and economic activity. In that light, there may be a case for some easing in the US federal funds target rate, following the August cut in the discount rate. In the euro area, rising underlying inflation pressures, partly related to the evaporation of labour market slack, would seem to warrant some further tightening once financial market conditions have steadied and the recovery develops as expected. In Japan, it is advisable to wait for market volatility to quiet down and for a durable end to deflation before hiking the policy rate further.. Recent developments have revealed serious imperfections in the functioning of US housing markets and, more broadly, in credit markets worldwide. Markets will learn from recent mistakes through the usual learning-by-doing process. Such progress may nonetheless be enhanced by improved regulation. There may be a need, for instance, for more encompassing supervision of US sub-prime mortgage markets, with greater attention to non-bank originators which have often evaded effective scrutiny. As well, there may be a case for a more active fight against predatory lending, including through better disclosure and education. More transparency also seems to be called for in credit markets, where securitisation has made risk assessment increasingly difficult for many investors, leading to widespread loss of confidence. Given the swathe of re-ratings in recent months, more pugnacious and inquisitive rating agencies could help bring this about. 7. On the fiscal front, revenue buoyancy has generally continued to surprise on the upside, not least as a lagged reflection of high corporate profits, rapid growth in high incomes and rising asset prices. In some countries, including the United States and Germany, the windfalls translate into faster-than-budgeted consolidation. In many others, however, further efforts are called for in order to regain fiscal room for manoeuvre. Specifically, with rapidly ageing populations, pension and health care system reforms are a matter of urgency.

Real GDP growth in the G7 economies in % Quarter-on-quarter Year-on-year 7Q 7Q 7Q 7Q Implied year-average for 7 United States... (±.). (±.).9 [±.]. Japan... (±.7). (±.7). [±.]. Euro area.7.. (±.). (±.). [±.].7 Germany... (±.). (±.). [±.].9 France... (±.). (±.). [±.]. Italy... (±.). (±.). [±.]. United Kingdom.7.. (±.).7 (±.). [±.].7 Canada...7 (±.).7 (±.).7 [±.]. G7... (±.). (±.). [±.]. Based on GDP releases and high-frequency indicators published by August 7. Seasonally and in some cases also working-day adjusted. Aggregations for the G7 use purchasing-power-parity weights. Associated ± standard error ranges are in parentheses. EO Underpinnings and status of the interim forecast Since March, the OECD has presented a brief overview of the near-term prospects in the major OECD economies between each issue of the Economic Outlook.* This interim assessment should not be seen as a full update of the biannual Economic Outlook projections, since it rests on a more limited information set, has a shorter horizon and covers a much smaller number of economic variables and countries. However, it helps evaluate to what extent the latest Economic Outlook projections for the larger economies are still on track. In this context, the main tool is a suite of indicator-based models that serve to forecast real GDP for each of the G7 economies.** These models are run up to and including the following quarter, meaning that they cover the two quarters following the last one for which official data have been published. They use a small, country-specific selection of monthly variables, hard (e.g. industrial production, retail sales) and/or soft (e.g. business confidence). These models have been shown to outperform a range of other models relying solely on published quarterly data, as regards both forecast-error size and directional accuracy. The weight of the different models varies across countries and over time, according to observed forecasting performance. The models used for the US economy have been modified to better capture the influence of developments in the housing sector, with the inclusion of various forward-looking housing indicators. However, they do not fully incorporate the impact of recent financial market turbulence. * In the case of the euro area, some of the aggregate data used and shown exclude Slovenia (which, however, accounts for only around.% of euro-area GDP). ** See Pain, N. and F. Sédillot, Indicator models of real GDP growth in the major OECD economies, OECD Economic Studies, No., and Mourougane, A., Forecasting monthly GDP for Canada, OECD Economics Department Working Paper, No.,.

Spot oil prices remain high and volatile Brent crude, price per barrel in dollars (monthly average) 9 Deflated by US consumer prices Deflated by US export prices 7 97 7 9 9 Futures suggest oil prices could stay at high levels West Texas Intermediate (WTI), current dollars, daily observations and trend 7 Spot price Far-futures price 7 Note: Far-futures prices refer to the New York Merchandise Exchange contract on light crude with the farthest maturity ( to 7 years). Trends are three-month moving averages. Source: OECD and Datastream.

Business and consumer confidence have been dented somewhat United States Euro area Japan Germany Businesses - - - - 99 99 7 Consumers - - - - 99 99 7 All series have been normalised at the average for the period starting in 9 and are presented in units of standard deviation. Source: OECD Main Economic Indicators. 7

Business confidence has recently edged down in most sectors in Germany Retail trade Construction Manufacturing Services - - - 99 99 7 Source: OECD Main Economic Indicators.

Unemployment has declined substantially in recent years but is edging up in the United States -month moving average of standardised unemployment rate Per cent of labour force United States Euro area Japan 9 7 99 9 97 9 99 7 Business sector employment creation has slowed on both sides of the Atlantic Year-on-year growth Per cent United States Euro area Japan - - - 99 99 997 99 999 7 Note: Employment growth for the euro area in 7Q and for Japan in 7Q and Q is an OECD estimate. Source: OECD Main Economic Indicators. 9

Nominal hourly compensation of employees has picked up Year-on-year change, total economy Per cent United States Euro area Japan - 7 Labour productivity developments diverge across regions Year-on-year change, total economy Per cent United States Euro area Japan - - 7 Source: US Bureau of Labour Statistics and OECD Economic Outlook database.

............................. -. -. -. -. Source : OECD Main Economic Indicators and OECD calculations. Core inflation is on the high side except in Japan Year-on-year percentage change United States Consumer price index (CPI) CPI excluding food and energy Volatility-weighted mean 7 Euro area Harmonised index of consumer prices (HICP) CPI excluding food and energy Weighted median 7 Japan Consumer price index (CPI) CPI excluding food and energy Double-weighted mean 7. The volatility-weighted mean refers to an average of price increases of CPI components weighted by the inverse of the standard deviation of the price second difference.. The weighted median is, each month, the middle element in the distribution of CPI price changes, that is, the one leaving % of the components (in terms of CPI weights) on each side.. The double-weighted mean combines original CPI expenditure-based weights and weights related to volatility. It is an average of price increases weighted by the original CPI weights divided by the standard deviation of the price second difference.

The dollar and yen have been weakening over the past three years Real effective exchange rates United States Euro area Japan China Index, = 9 7 7 Note: The real effective exchange rate is based on the consumer price index. Source : OECD.

The United States housing market is adjusting Housing market index (builder sentiment) 9 7 99 9 97 9 99 7 Housing starts and permits Thousands Housing starts Permits 99 9 97 9 99 7 Note: Data refer to single-family houses and are seasonally adjusted. Source: National Association of Home Builders and US Census Bureau.

Per cent House prices are heading down Year-on-year percentage change Case-Shiller city composite OFHEO - 99 9 97 9 99 7 Mortgage rates have moved up since spring Per cent Mortgage rate (-years, left scale) Spread between mortgage rate and -year US government bond yield (right scale) Percentage points. 9.. 7... 99 9 97 9 99 7. Source: Macro-Markets LLC, Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight and US Federal Reserve.

The equity price correction has not been that large to date Latest observation August 7 United States Wilshire 99 9 97 9 99 7 Euro area FTSE Eurotop 99 9 97 9 99 7 Japan Nikkei 99 9 97 9 99 7 Source: Datastream.

Spreads between corporate and government bond rates have widened Corporate bonds¹ High-yield corporate bonds² Government bonds³ United States Per cent 7 Euro area Per cent 7. Merrill Lynch corporate BBB rated 7- year bonds.. Merrill Lynch indices of high-yield bonds.. 7- year government bonds. Source: Datastream.

Emerging market bond spreads have not widened very much Percentage points EMBI Composite EMBI Asia EMBI Europe EMBI Latin America 99 999 7 Note: Data are spreads over US T-bond yields. Source: Datastream. 7

Nominal and real long-term interest rates 9 7 Nominal rate United States Japan Euro area 99 9 9 9 9 9 9 97 9 99 7 9 7 7 - - Real rate: nominal rate less current core inflation United States Japan Euro area 99 9 9 9 9 9 9 97 9 99 7 7 - - 7 - - Real rate: nominal rate less expected inflation United States Japan Euro area 99 9 9 9 9 9 9 97 9 99 7 7 - -. Expected average rate of CPI inflation over the next years for the United States, based on the Survey of Professional Forecasters (SPF) by the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia. Expected HICP inflation rate years ahead for the euro area based on the SPF by the ECB. Expected average rate of CPI inflation - years ahead for Japan based on Consensus Forecasts. Source: OECD, Main Economic Indicators; US Bureau of Economic Analysis; Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia; ECB; Consensus Forecasts.