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1.
《Economic Outlook》1982,6(9):2-3
Output fell in the first quarter of the year but we attribute the fall largely to the severe winter and expect the recovery of output, which began twelve months ago, to resume in the second quarter. We now expect output to grow by 1 per cent this year with more rapid growth in 1983 and beyond. We expect consumer price inflation to fall as low as 7 per cent during the next year and to rise thereafter, reaching double figures by the end of 1984. 相似文献
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《Economic Outlook》1984,9(1):2-3
Output is expected lo grow steadily for the next four years, continuing the recovery which has been in progress since I981. The underlying rate of growth is forecast to slow down next year as the world economy also slows, though because of the miners' strike actual recorded growth next year will be higher than this. However, throughout the period output grows more rapidly than its historical trend. This growth is accompanied by steady increases in labour productivity, and unemployment is forecast to rise. With fiscal and monetary policy following the guidelines set by the Medium-Term Financial Strategy, inflation stays at about its current level or falls slightly. 相似文献
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《Economic Outlook》1992,16(9):2-3
Even if output recovers in the second quarter (as we expect), it looks as if there will be no increase in GDP this year in comparison with 1991. This reflects the weak start to the year, in which non-oil output registered its seventh successive quarterly decline. Through the year (fourth quarter to fourth quarter), however, we expect GDP to rise 1.5 per cent, laying the basis for a stronger recovery in 1993. Even so, it is not until late next year that output returns to its previous peak Paradoxically, we have raised our forecast of domestic demand from February (on a milder stock rundown) but imports are taking a disproportionate amount of the extra demand, holding back domestic output and aggravating the current account deficit. From nearly £9bn this year, we see the deficit rising to over £14bn by the middle of the decade, equivalent to 13 /4 per cent of GDP. While this is disappointing, it should be relatively easily financed even with lower interest rates providing the pound is held at its present DM 2.95 parity. we assume no ERM realignment which underpins a further drop in inflation to 4 per cent later this year and to 3-3 1/2 per cent by the mid 1990s. The weakness of output means that unemployment continues to rise for another 12 months, peaking in the middle of 1993 at three million, and that public sector finances will move still further into deficit - we project a PSBR this year of £30bn and a peak of £34bn in 1993-4, equivalent to 5 1/4 per cent of GDP. 相似文献
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《Economic Outlook》1991,16(1):2-3
Although hard evidence of recovery is still elusive, our forecast indicates that the trough of the recession occurred in the second quarter and that output fell 4 per cent peak-to-trough. We estimate that GDP rose 112 per cent in the third quarter - though only because of a rebound in North Sea oil production - and that for 1991 CIS a whole it will be 2 per cent down on 1990 levels. Next year GDP is forecast to rise 2 per cent but it is not until 1993 that the 1990 output peak is passed. Unemployment therefore still has a considerable way to rise - to a peak of 2.8 million in 1993. In the first year of full EMS membership, the economy has made an accelerated transition to European levels of inflation. Against a background of modest growth, it should be possible to consolidate this progress and we expect retail price inflation to average little more than 3 per cent over the next four years. Similar rapid progress has been achieved on the balance of payments where there is a trade surplus on manufactured goods for the first time since 1982. Here, however, we are less confident that the reduction in the trade gap can be sustained. In the recovery phase we expect imports to rise more rapidly than exports with the result that the current account deficit rises from £6bn this year to £8bn in 1992 and £10bn-£12bn in 1993-5. 相似文献
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《Economic Outlook》1984,8(9):2-3
The economy is now in the middle of a sustained cyclical upswing in demand, but because of interruptions to supply caused by the miners' strike we expect output growth of only 21/4per cent this year, accelerating to 2% next year. (This assumes that the strike does not affect output significantly in the second half of this year.) The relatively rapid growth of output over the past two years has caused some acceleration of inflation from the low point last June, but we see these pressures subsiding, with consumer prices growing at 5% per cent this year and 5 per cent or less thereafter. Over the medium term, on the usual assumption that the economy is not subjected to any severe shocks, we expect output growth to settle at a sustainable 2 per cent p.a. against a background of slowly declining price inflation. 相似文献
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《Economic Outlook》1986,10(9):2-3
A pause in world activity held back UK industry in the first quarter of the year and, even though we expect faster growth from now on, we forecast total output growth of only 2 per cent this year. But next year a stronger world economy and pre-election tax cuts lift growth to 3 1/4per cent. Lower oil prices and falling interest rates help keep inflation at its current level both this year and, as long as wages respond, next. In the medium term we expect the growth rate to fall back but, assuming that a fairly tight fiscal policy is pursued by whichever government is in power, we predict that inflation stays below 3 per cent 相似文献
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《Economic Outlook》1985,9(5):2-3
The January crisis, which occurred despite (or perhaps because of) signs of accelerating recovery, will not, we believe, prevent output from rising by over 3 1/2 per cent this year and by over 2 per cent p.a. over the medium term. Although the recent fall in sterling will put up prices - especially of traded manufactures - we expect retail price inflation to fall below 5 per cent after reaching almost 6 per cent this spring. 相似文献
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《Economic Outlook》1988,12(9):2-3
In comparison with our February forecast, we are more optimistic on the prospects for output and unemployment both this year and into the medium term. But in consequence we have raised our forecast for the current account deficit. GDP growth, nearly 5 per cent last year, falls back to 3½ per cent this year and 2½ per cent in 1989; from 1990 onwards output is expected to increase at its underlying trend of 3 per cent. Inflation is currently rising but, as output decelerates, it peaks at 5 per cent and drifts gradually lower over the medium term. The current account deficit is projected at £5bn both this year and next; helped by a steadily depreciating exchange rate, which boosts exports, the deficit narrows from 1990 onwards. 相似文献
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《Economic Outlook》1990,15(1):2-3
The forecast illustrates the costs and benefits of joining the ERM at the relatively high central parity of DM2.95. It shows that, providing the government does keep the pound within its wide 6 per cent EMS band, retail price inflation can be brought down to the average European level of 3 per cent by the mid 1990s. But there is a cost in terms of lower output and rising unemployment. GDP growth is expected to slow to about 1 1/2per cent this year and next and to average 2 per cent or slightly more from 1992 onwards. This is less than the rate of growth of productive potential and implies a weak labour market with unemployment rising steadily bock above 2 million. The forecast assumes a $25 oil price; in an alternative we sketch out the implications of a rise in the price to $45 for a limited period. 相似文献
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《Economic Outlook》1987,11(9):2-3
With electoral uncertainties removed, we are forecasting four years of steady growth combined with low inflation, broad balance on the current account and a gradual reduction in unemployment. The short-term outlook is more encouraging and 1987 is expected to be an above average year. Output is forecast to rise 3–31/2 per cent, inflation is back down to 31/2 per cent by the end of the year, the current account is in surplus and unemployment falls by over 200,000. 相似文献
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《Economic Outlook》1983,7(5):2-3
We expect the recent fall in the pound to halt the decline in manufacturing industry and help generate a modest upturn this year. Total output is expected e o be 1% per cent higher than in 1982 while consumer price inflation falls to under 6 per cent year on year. 相似文献
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《Economic Outlook》1989,13(5):2-3
There is one overriding question which this issue of Economic Outlook seeks to address: to what extent will the tight monetary policy now in place produce a slowdown in consumer spending and take the savings ratio back up from last year's record lows? The answer, provided by the forecast, is that the savings ratio will rebound this year and our Macroeconomic Viewpoint argues that this will be sufficient, in combination with a rising budget surplus, to effect a reduction in inflation and the current account deficit over the medium term. But it does not achieve the government's target, set out in the MTFS, of a balanced budget - the public sector remains in chronic surplus. This objective requires national savings to be privatized and, in a special Microeconomic Viewpoint, we put the case for tax incentives to boost personal saving and enable the budget surplus to be reduced in a way which does not add to demand. 相似文献
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《Economic Outlook》1988,13(1):2-3
Led by private sector demand, the economy has grown very rapidly in the last 12 months, Output has risen nearly 6 per cent and unemployment has fallen by over ½ million but the current account deficit has widened dramatically and wage and price inflation is increasing. Monetary policy has been tightened sufficiently, we believe, to produce a gradual reduction in the current deficit over the medium term and to prevent inflation from breaking the 7 per cent level which a higher mortgage rate will ensure early next year. But, as demand is reined back, there is a cost to output which rises 3 per cent next year, 2–2½ per cent thereafter. Unemployment continues to fall, dropping below 2 million at the end of next year and reaching 1.8 million by 1992. 相似文献
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《Economic Outlook》1986,10(5):2-3
Short-term economic prospects for the UK will depend critically on what happens to oil prices and on the government's response to any changes. Our central case assumes that North Sea oil averages £20 a barrel for the remainder of the year and that the government holds the sterling index at about 74. In the Focus we also examine the sensitivity of the forecast to changes in oil prices. The willingness of the government to let the exchange rate fall in response to the fall in oil prices means that we still expect GDP to grow by about 21/2. per cent in 1986 and we expect inflation to fall below 4 per cent by the middle of the year. Lower oil prices generate a faster growth of world output; the UK benefits from this and we are forecasting growth of nearly 3 per cent in 1987 with inflation falling further. 相似文献