OECD INTERIM ECONOMIC OUTLOOK. Will Soft Foundations and Financial Vulnerabilities Derail the Modest Recovery? Catherine L. Mann OECD Chief Economist

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Transcription:

OECD INTERIM ECONOMIC OUTLOOK Will Soft Foundations and Financial Vulnerabilities Derail the Modest Recovery? Presentation to LUISS 10 April 2017 Catherine L. Mann OECD Chief Economist

Key messages Global growth is set to pick up modestly but remains too slow to meet expectations and entitlement commitments and productivity foundations are soft. Financial vulnerabilities could derail the pick-up including disconnects, volatilities, vulnerabilities. Policy needs to strengthen inclusive growth and manage risks avoid trade protectionism, deploy fiscal initiatives but environment is inauspicious and policy ambition lags and lacks synergies. 2

Improved growth projections, but too slow to make good on commitments Real GDP growth projections for the major economies Year-on-year percentage changes Note: Horizontal lines show the average annual growth rate of GDP in the period 1987-2007. Data for Russia are for the average annual growth rate in the period 1994-2007. 1. With growth in Ireland in 2015 computed using gross value added at constant prices excluding foreign-owned multinational enterprise dominated sectors. 2. Fiscal years. Source: OECD November 2016 Economic Outlook database. 3

Leading indicators and confidence point to stronger but not stellar growth OECD Composite Leading Indicator OECD and BRIICS, ratio to trend, amplitude adjusted Long-term average = 100 Business and consumer confidence OECD and BRIICS Note: Confidence indices are GDP PPP weighted averages of individual country normalised confidence series. Source: OECD Composite Leading Indicators; OECD Main Economic Indicators database; Eurostat; and OECD calculations. 5

Improved market sentiment contrasts with slow growth in consumption and investment Consumption Investment Note: OECD shown. Current recovery shows since 2008Q1 including the forecasts in the dotted line. Previous 3 recoveries prerecession peak in 1973Q4, 1980Q1 and 1990Q3. Consumption is real total consumers expenditure and investment is real total gross fixed capital formation. Source: OECD November 2016 Economic Outlook database. 6

Stronger sustainable top-line needs stronger foundations of productivity and wage growth Labour productivity Index, 2001 = 100 Real compensation per worker Index, 2001 = 100 Note: Frontier firms are the 5% of firms with the highest labour productivity by year and sector. Included industries are manufacturing and business services, excluding the financial sector, for firms with at least 20 employees. Source: Andrews, D., C. Criscuolo and P. Gal (2016), The Best versus the Rest: The Global Productivity Slowdown, Divergence across Firms and the Role of Public Policy, OECD Productivity Working Papers, No. 5; Orbis data of Bureau van Dijk; and OECD calculations. 7

Risks and financial vulnerabilities could derail the modest recovery Disconnects Sentiment robust, but consumption and investment weak Financial markets vs. real economy, inflation and risks Volatility Sharp changes in global interest rates Large exchange rate movements Diverging interest rates among advanced economies Vulnerabilities House prices in some advanced economies Private-sector credit growth in many EMEs Exposure to overseas borrowing and currency mismatch 8

Disconnect between the real economy and market valuations Change in GDP growth and inflation expectations and interest rates % pts since July 2016 Equity prices Domestic currency Consensus long-term growth expectations United States Euro area Japan Consensus long-term inflation expectations Market nominal interest rates -0.25 0.00 0.25 0.50 0.75 1.00 1.25 Note: Change in long-term growth and inflation expectations are the change in Consensus Economics forecasts for 2017-26 for average annual real GDP growth and CPI inflation respectively. Nominal interest rates based on 10-year government bond yields. Source: Consensus Economics; OECD Economic Outlook database; and Thomson Reuters. 9

Divergence in interest rates of major economies creates risk of exchange rate volatility Overnight interest rates: actual and market expectations 15-day moving average Exchange rates against USD Depreciation Note: Market expectations at 2 March 2017. Source: Thomson Reuters; and OECD calculations. 10

Vulnerabilities from high house prices and under-priced credit risks House prices are high in some markets House price-to-rent ratio Average since 1980 = 100 Corporate bond risks spreads are low BBB rated bond spreads over government benchmark Dotted line shows average for 1997-2005 Source: OECD Analytical House Price database. Note: Credit spreads between Merrill Lynch corporate BBB rated bonds and government benchmark bonds. Spreads based on average yields for 5-7 years and 7-10 years. Source: Thomson Reuters. 11

Vulnerabilities from rapid increases in debt, Private credit Δ = threshold for increased risk of recession Note: Thresholds estimates from OECD economic resilience framework. Source: BIS; China Banking Regulatory Commission; Hermansen and Röhn (2017); IMF; OECD Resilience database; and OECD calculations. See: www.oecd.org/economy/growth/economic-resilience.htm. 12

Inauspicious environment for policy makes reforms more difficult Global economic policy uncertainty 3-month moving average, index normalised for 2011-2017 Confidence in national governments Note: News-based measure of economic policy uncertainty. Source: PolicyUncertainty.com; and OECD calculations. Note: Percentage who answered yes to the question: Do you have confidence in national government?. Source: Gallup World Poll; OECD Trust and Public Policy (2017). 14

Rolling back trade openness would hurt GDP and put jobs at risk Medium-term GDP impact of increased trade costs Share of total employment embodied in foreign demand Note: LHS shows the impact of a goods trade cost increase of 10 percentage points for China, Europe and the United States against all trading partners, equivalent to an average increase in tariffs to 2001 levels, when trade negotiations under the Doha Development Round started. RHS for 2011, latest available. Source: OECD METRO model; OECD TiVA database; and OECD calculations. 15

Many countries are exploiting fiscal space, but some (esp in Europe) could do more OECD recommends more expansionary policy than projected Recommended fiscal stance for 2017 Contractionary Mildly contractionary Broadly neutral Mildly expansionary Expansionary Contractionary Mildly contractionary ARG, BRA, COL, CRI, GRC, SVK BEL AUS, GBR, IDN, KOR Projected fiscal stance for 2017 Broadly neutral CHL, CZE, DNK, ESP, IND, IRL, ISR, JPN, LTU, MEX, NZL, PRT,TUR, SWE, ZAF FRA, RUS, AUT, FIN, NLD CHE Mildly expansionary HUN SVN CAN, ITA, NOR, POL DEU, EST, LVA Expansionary ISL CHN USA, LUX OECD recommends less expansionary policy than projected Source: OECD November 2016 Economic Outlook database; and OECD November 2016 Economic Outlook Special Chapter, Using fiscal levers to escape the low growth trap. 16

Fiscal-structural initiatives to maximise impact on growth and inclusiveness Type of structural or spending reform and impact on Growth Income of the poor Countries with most room for gains Improving education CHL, GRC, MEX, PRT, TUR Increasing public investment and R&D DEU, GBR, ITA, MEX, TUR, USA Increasing government effectiveness FRA, GRC, HUN, ITA, SVN Increasing family benefits CHE, ESP, GRC, PRT, USA Decreasing public subsidies BEL, CHE positive impact uncertain or no impact Source: Based on Fournier and Johansson (2016), The Effect of the Size and the Mix of Public Spending on Growth and Inequality, OECD Economics Department Working Papers, No. 1344, OECD Publishing, Paris. 17

Lagging ambition on structural reform Particularly productivity-enhancing reforms Indicator of number of actions taken in response to OECD Going for Growth recommendations Source: Going for Growth 2017 18

And many countries are not exploiting policy packages to deliver inclusive growth Where are countries making complementary reforms for inclusive growth? 2015-16 Little progress Some progress Product market measures Little progress Some progress CHL, DEU, IDN DNK, IND, JPN, POL, SVN, TUR BEL, ESP, LUX, ITA AUT, FRA, FIN, KOR, LVA Labour market measures Note: Reform progress based on responsiveness to Going for Growth recommendations by policy area. Little progress corresponds to a reform responsiveness rate of 0 to 20% and some progress for a responsiveness rate of more than 20%. Source: OECD Going for Growth 2017, forthcoming on March 17: www.oecd.org/eco/growth/goingforgrowth.htm. 19

Policy synergies can strengthen demand, supply, and inclusiveness, as well as manage risks Address financial vulnerabilities and promote resilience Ensure robust early warning and recognition of risks Use macro-prudential, but consider growth and risk together Implement fiscal-structural packages to boost inclusive growth Political commitment needed to accelerate reforms Fiscal initiatives of tax-transfer-structural support demand, increase supply, and promote inclusiveness Country-specific packages can improve labour market outcomes, business environment, and trade policies together 20

THANK YOU! The Future of Productivity www.oecd.org/economy/economicoutlook.htm www.oecd.org/global-forum-productivity www.oecd.org/eco/growth/goingforgrowth.htm ECOSCOPE blog: oecdecoscope.wordpress.com/