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1.
WORLD OUTLOOK     
World output, which was strengthening immediately prior to last October, appears to have barely suffered in the short term from the stock market crash. Apart from an early reaction by US consumers - since reversed - demand is proving robust and in early 1988 OECD industrial production is, we estimate, 6 per cent up on year-earlier levels, with GNP more than 4 per cent higher. Indeed such is the strength of activity that the present balance of risk is not that recession is imminent but that inflation may pick up again. In the United States, where activity rates are at their highest level for eight years and unemployment is at a fourteen-year low, monetary policy has been tightened and interest rates are moving higher. The Bundesbank is keen to follow suit and the BoJ is keeping the situation under review. Nevertheless, with wages in most countries still adjusting to the low inflation rates of the last two years, there is little evidence yet that prices are accelerating.
We expect to see world interest rates edging higher in the second half of the year as recorded inflation picks lip. But we believe that underlying inflation remains low and that, even on the assumption that oil prices return to 18 a barrel, OECD consumer price inflation will peak early next year at a little over 4 per cent. Tighter monetary policy is also expected to hold back demand over the next 12 months. Consequently, we expect some weak- ness in output in the first half of next year but discount the possibility of a severe recession. GNP growth in the OECD area is forecast to decline from the 3 per cent rate of 1987–8 to a little over 2 per cent next year and to a sustainable 2½ per cent p.a. over the medium term.  相似文献   

2.
WORLD OUTLOOK     
《Economic Outlook》1995,20(1):26-31
There has been a slowdown in activity in the world economy, but the outlook remains favourable with our forecast suggesting continued growth accompanied by low inflation. The recovery should become more balanced in nature in 1996, as the Japanese economy recovers and there is further moderation of growth in the United States. The need to reduce budget deficits, coupled with structural labour market rigidities, will mean only slow progress in reducing European unemployment.  相似文献   

3.
WORLD OUTLOOK     
The world recovery, which began at the turn of the year, gathered pace in the second quarter. We have again revked our forecast upwards and predict an increase of 2 1/2 per cent in OECD GNP in 1983 and a further 3 1/2 per cent in 1984. In its early stages the recovery was centred upon North America, though more recently it has spread to West Germany and Japan. France and Italy, however, remain in recession. Over the next 12 months this pattern is unlikely to change significantly-in the approach to the Presidential election the US is expected to grow quite rapidly, but domestic demand will remain a restraining factor in Europe/Japan where, by historical standards, modest growth is expected. Reflecting this some inflationary pressure could re emerge in the United States towards the end of next year, though not, in this forecast, elsewhere. We continue to expect therefore that world inflation will settle in the 6–7 per cent range and that this will enable the world recovery to be sustained over the medium term.  相似文献   

4.
WORLD OUTLOOK     
Although world output recovered strongly in the final quarter of 1980 from the short, sharp recession of the middle of the year, we do not believe that a sustainable recovery has yet begun. We expect little or no growth in output for the rest of 1981 with the likelihood of a further contraction in the current quarter. For the European economies, whose performance has been very similar to the 1974/75 recession, the worst has probably now passed. But for the United States a new period of weakness may now be beginning. For the US a W-shaped recession remains the most likely outturn.  相似文献   

5.
WORLD OUTLOOK     
In the course of 1984 growth rates in the major economies came together. This reflects a slowdown in the United States, and to a lesser extent Japan, from the middle of the year and continuing recovery in Europe. This convergence is expected to continue in 1985 when total output in the OECD area is forecast to increase by 3 per cent. Within this total it is likely that the US, West Germany and the UK all achieve about 3 per cent; Japan should grow more quickly, France more slowly. In spite of a rapid recovery in output from the late-1982 trough, inflationary pressures remain weak. Measured in dollar terms, non-oil commodity prices have fallen and the oil price is under considerable down wards pressure. We expect inflation to stay at about its preset level in the US, West Germany, Japan and the UK and decline further in France, Italy and other countries where policy reaction to the 1979-80 oil price shock was delayed. In the medium term we expect the world economy to experience steady growth combined with a constant or slightly increasing inflation rate. This reflects a stable policy environment and falling real oil prices. After the excesses of the 1970s and early 1980s it is possible that the rest of the decade will experience u greater stability than at any time since the 1960s.  相似文献   

6.
WORLD OUTLOOK     
《Economic Outlook》1996,20(2):22-25
Our view of the world economy in the short-term has become more downbeat. However, the slowdown which emerged last year is still expected to prove short-lived and we expect economic prospects to improve over the course of 1996. Interest rates have fallen and the ability of the monetary authorities to relax policy against a background of low inflation provides a safeguard against a more severe slowdown. The world economy will also be supported this year by recovery in Japan and the continued buoyancy of the Asia/Pacific region.  相似文献   

7.
WORLD OUTLOOK     
The rise in the oil price since the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in early August does not radically alter prospects for the world economy; rather it exacerbates existing trends. The US economy was, in any case, heading towards recession and a sizeable overshoot of its budget deficit targets. Japan, especially, but also continental Europe had still not reached the peak of the economic cycle so that inflation and interest rates were still rising. While the higher oil price adds to costs and prices in all countries, the policy response is unlikely to be unborn. In the US the adverse effects on output are being emphasized while elsewhere the inflationary implications are to the fore. In Japan, where acute labour shortages are emerging, the monetary authorities have already raised interest rates and we expect a similar response from the Bunds bank In the US such a move is unlikely; indeed once an agreement on the budget deficit is obtained between President and Congress, we would effect the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates. Despite this view on policy, the forecast offers little prospect of the US avoiding a pronounced slowdown and takes a gloomy view on US growth in the medium term. In Japan and Germany on the other hand the short-term inflation outlook appears containable and growth prospects over the medium term robust. The central forecast is based on a $25 oil price; we explore in a simulation what might happen if the price rose to $45 a barrel for a limited period.  相似文献   

8.
WORLD OUTLOOK     
Unless the international debt situation or the crisis in the US domestic financial system worsens or there is a further lurch into protectionism, we expect world output to advance more rapidly over the next 2 months than it has over the last year. We argued in May that the world recovery was pausing, just as it did in 1977, and that conditions were falling into place for a pick-up in output. The requirements were seen as a lower dollar, to improve US competitiveness and to alleviate protectionist pressures, and stronger domestic demand elsewhere, to offset the resulting loss of US markets. Since then the case for a lower dollar has been recognised by the Group of Five Finance Ministers, interest rates have fallen and, at the G5 meeting, West Germany and Japan tentatively revealed a further modest stimulus. Output optimism is underpinned by the fall in world inflation to levels not seen since the early 1970s which, our forecast suggests, will be consolidated over the next 12 months. This reflects falling real oil and non-oil Commodity prices and decelerating earnings, which makes a further tightening of policy unlikely. In these circumstances the prospects for output are improving and over the next 12 months we forecast an increase in OECD output of 4per cent.  相似文献   

9.
WORLD OUTLOOK     
《Economic Outlook》1995,19(3):28-31
Steady growth is set to continue in the world economy in 1995, becoming more balanced as the upswing continues in Europe, the Japanese economy recovers and growth in the United States moderates. This favourable pattern should be accompanied by modest inflation, although further tension in the currency markets could pose problems for the world recovery.  相似文献   

10.
WORLD OUTLOOK     
Events in the Gulf have finally brought an end to the world economic boom of the last eight years. The oil price shock itself is only partly responsible for the downturn. The previous tightening of monetary policy in the face of inflationary pressures and the end of a rapid period of credit and asset price expansion had severely weakened the ability of some economies to respond to the shock. This is reflected in the diversity of response, most obviously in the United States where Fed fine tuning and the credit crunch have already weakened the economy. The rise in oil prices has led to a sudden collapse in consumer confidence and a swift cutback in output. Although we do not expect the recession to be deep, the financial problems will delay recovery. The Japanese economy was already in financial difficulties before the shock, although the real economy was stronger and here we expect a sharp deceleration from almost 6 per cent growth last year to around 3.5 per cent. In contrast the German economy, partly shielded by the substantial appreciation of the DM over the last year, has been affected less by the oil price shock and we expect the consumer and investment boom to continue this year as the economies merge. This provides a welcome boost to other European economies.  相似文献   

11.
WORLD OUTLOOK     
《Economic Outlook》1995,19(4):20-29
After a period of optimism over world recovery the pendulum has swung to concern that recovery may be faltering. We see little new evidence to support this view. Our central assessment remains that this concern is overdone and that, although the repercussions of the Mexican crisis may dampen growth prospects temporarily, the outlook is for sustained growth combined with continued low inflation. The underlying pace of recovery is still sufficiently fast to warrant further monetary tightening in most of the industrial economies.  相似文献   

12.
WORLD OUTLOOK     
《Economic Outlook》1996,20(4):18-21
  相似文献   

13.
WORLD OUTLOOK     
The world recovery, now 18 months old, suffered two major setbacks in May: heightened political tension in the Middle East and a crisis in financial markets following a rise in US interest rates. On the assumption that oil supplies are not disrupted, we forecast that industrial production in the OECD area will rise by 7per cent in 1984 compared with 1983 and that total GNP will be 4 per cent higher. The Fed3 decision to tighten monetary policy, and run the risks of a US banking crisis, underline its determination to prevent the re-emergence of high inflation in the US. Higher interest rates are expected to produce a pause in the US recovery later this year, but, by reining back the economy and dampening down inflationary expectations, they should avert both a return to high inflation and the need for a more pronounced US recession at a later date. Compared with the January forecast, therefore, in which we assumed that, for political and debt-crisis reasons, the US authorities would avoid a rise in interest rates, the present forecast embodies higher interest rates and an earlier pause in the American recovery but, in the medium term, lower inflation and steadier growth of output. For the European and Japanese economies, where policy has remained more restrictive throughout, we have not changed our view that inflation will continue either to remain low (West Germany, Japan) or to moderate (France, Italy), thereby underpinning a sustainable medium-term recovery.  相似文献   

14.
WORLD OUTLOOK     
Relative to what we expected following the collapse in the oil price, growth in the OECD economy was disappointing last year and, with activity still not registering a convincing pick-up, we have lowered our forecast for 1987–88. Previously we argued that the sharp drop in oil prices from around 27 a barrel in 1985 to an average of 15-16 last year represented a significant boost to real incomes in the oil-consuming countries. Notwithstanding the corresponding real income loss to the oil producers, we expected OECD demand to rise sharply in the course of last year, with clear benefits to output becoming apparent by the end of the year. In the event this analysis, though correct in outline, has apparently underestimated the negative elements - tighter fiscal policy, the failure of consumers in some countries to obtain the terms of trade gains from lower oil prices and/or currency appreciation, the offset to domestic demand from falling exports. Consequently, we now expect OECD output to rise by only 3 per cent p. a. over the next two years. The corollary of this is that inflation is also unlikely to record a marked increase and this enhances the prospect of sustained output growth in the medium term. The forecast combines steady output growth of around 3 per cent p. a. with inflation stable in the 3–4 per cent range.  相似文献   

15.
WORLD OUTLOOK     
《Economic Outlook》1995,19(2):18-29
The strong recovery in economic activity in Europe coupled with persistently rapid growth in North America has focused attention on whether we are about to see another boom-bust cycle in the world economy. Our central assessment is a fairly optimistic view where the present recovery is succeeded by a period of steady growth and continued low inflation. However our alternative scenarios indicate that this central assessment could be disturbed by a number of factors.  相似文献   

16.
WORLD OUTLOOK     
《Economic Outlook》1996,20(3):26-31
Last year's slowdown in activity in the world economy is expected to extend into the first half of this year. However, the outlook remains favourable with our forecast suggesting a pick-up in the second half of the year accompanied by continued low inflation. We expect the recovery in world activity to be broadly based with all the major economies enjoying growth close to its trend rate in 1997. Japan is forecast to be the strongest growing economy this year, with Germany the weakest - as activity is depressed by an unwinding of the stock cycle. US growth is forecast to continue steadily, at close to its trend rate  相似文献   

17.
《Economic Outlook》1995,20(1):24-25
The upturn in economic activity in the world economy now looks to be rather stronger than previously expected this year and in 1995. It is the strength of recovery in Europe that gives this more optimistic tone without any signs of the added inflationary pressure that financial markets fear.  相似文献   

18.
《Economic Outlook》1994,19(1):24-27
The upturn in economic activity in the world economy now looks to be rather stronger than previously expected this year and in 1995. It is the strength of recovery in Europe that gives this more optimistic tone without any signs of the added inflationary pressure that financial markets fear.  相似文献   

19.
Although there are indications that the world economy is beginning to emerge from recession, the early stages of recovery are turning out to be extremely weak and industry worldwide has still not recorded any significant advance. Consequently business planners are now having to take account of the possibility that there will be no recovery during 1982 or even that the world will enter a prolonged downturn. We discuss these scenarios here and indicate why we consider them unlikely; our central forecast remains that the world economy will enter a recovery phase towards the end of 1982 and grow strongly in 1983-84.  相似文献   

20.
In this Forecast Release we consider the prospects for the economy after the present phase of cyclical recovery. Our central forecast, which we regard as the best medium-term planning assumption, is that the economy slows down to a sustainable growth rate of around 1% per cent. This is in line with the underlying growth of productive capacity but not sufficient to cure unemployment. We recognise that in practice the economy may be pushed away from the underlying growth trajectory by random shocks, and we look at three major risks surrounding the present forecast: a rise in the savings ratio; a slower world recovery; and a cut in investment. We contend that the most serious of these risks is to investment, since the company sector will face a major increase in its tax bill from 1985-6 onwards. A growth recession is thus distinctly possible in 1986, which could, for economic and electoral reasons, be the low point of the present cycle.  相似文献   

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