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1.
《Economic Outlook》2014,38(Z1):1-36
Overview: US acceleration brings a positive start to 2014
  • A series of positive data releases in the US has led us to revise upwards our growth forecasts for 2014. We now expect US GDP to rise by over 3% this year, compared to 2.7% forecast a month ago.
  • A key factor changing the US outlook is a more confident consumer. In the three months to November, real consumption rose at an annualised pace of 5%, the strongest in four years. This has been partly financed by a reduced saving rate – but the saving rate has been much lower in the recent past and steady employment gains should support both income and consumer sentiment in the year ahead.
  • Also supporting growth this year in the US and the broader global economy will be wealth gains. In recent years, global stock prices at the end of a given year have been a reasonable predictor of economic growth in the following year, and global equities were up over 20% on the year at the end of 2013.
  • Nevertheless, the global growth outlook remains patchy. An optimistic picture in the US, UK and Japan contrasts with a rather mixed picture the Eurozone – where some economies are still contracting and where there is a risk of deflation.
  • The picture is also subdued in the key emergers. In contrast to the developed economies, emerging market stocks are down 10% on the year as higher US yields draw capital away. Weak currencies, inflation and high interest rates are weighing on growth in markets such as India, Brazil and Turkey.
  • These factors are likely to wane only slowly as the year proceeds and could even worsen if tapering in the US is faster than expected. A stronger US economy may not fully offset this – the US's strong competitive position could direct more of rising US demand to US products than in previous upturns.
  • As a result, we expect emerging growth to firm only modestly this year, to 4.5% from 4.1% in 2013 – well below pre‐crisis levels of around 7%. Global growth too will remain below par at 2.9%, from 2.2% in 2013, but improving to over 3% next year.
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2.
《Economic Outlook》2020,44(2):13-16
  • ▪ Under the UK government's plan to “level up” the regions, the Budget delivered an increase in capital spending on under-performing places. However, we think the overall impact is unlikely to be large.
  • ▪ The extent to which regional imbalances have worsened in recent years is unclear. In fact, the large gap in productivity between London and the rest of the UK widened the most during the 1997–2010 Labour government. Disparity with the rest of the UK is largely due to London's special characteristics.
  • ▪ At the local level, austerity policies have damaged many areas, while Brexit is posing new challenges. Other problems are very deep-rooted. Previous governments have struggled to address them and we expect this one will too
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3.
《Economic Outlook》2016,40(1):19-27
  • We estimate that the UK has a relatively large output gap of around 2¾% of potential output. With the legacy of the financial crisis fading, the UK should see healthy growth in potential output of around 2.1% a year from 2015–24. Usually this would drive a period of strong economic growth, but we expect GDP growth to average a relatively underwhelming 2.4% a year over this period, largely due to the drag from aggressive fiscal consolidation.
  • There is significant disagreement amongst economists about the size of the output gap. Estimation of the output gap has been problematic since the financial crisis because of the depth of the recession and relatively slow pace of the subsequent recovery, while sizeable revisions to the national accounts data have been an added complication. Our estimate of the output gap is towards the top of the range of independent forecasters surveyed by HM Treasury, but it is consistent with the literature on the impact of financial crises on potential output.
  • We expect potential output growth of 2.1% a year from 2015–24, a faster pace than that seen since the financial crisis, but some way short of the experience of the pre‐crisis decade. The shortfall relative to the pre‐crisis period is largely due to a smaller contribution from growth in labour supply, which reflects the impact of an ageing population. However, labour is set to make a much stronger contribution to potential output growth in the UK than in most other major European countries over the next decade.
  • The combination of a large output gap and healthy growth in potential output will provide the conditions for firm growth and low inflation over the medium term, with GDP growth expected to average 2.4% a year from 2015 to 2024. Growth could be stronger were it not for the sizeable drag from fiscal consolidation over the next four years and the dampening effect that this will have on activity. This will ensure that the output gap closes very slowly. The government's fiscal plans are heavily influenced by the OBR's view that there is limited scope for stronger growth to drive an improvement in the public finances. But if our view turns out to be correct, it will become apparent that the government has pursued a more austere path than is strictly necessary in order to comply with its fiscal rules.
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4.
《Economic Outlook》2006,30(2):30-43
London's economy clearly entered a new growth phase in 2005, supported by strong recovery in financial markets. This improvement in economic performance has been especially marked within the Central London Boroughs, but with some significant variation between them. This article argues that this marks a return to London-led growth for the UK, becoming more noticeable moving into the medium term once the short-term impacts of last year's terrorist attacks have disappeared.  相似文献   

5.
《Economic Outlook》2005,29(2):16-28
This article reviews how the London economy has fared over the past six months and prospects for the next few years. For the first time, it includes estimates and forecasts of GVA growth in each of the Central London boroughs. It concludes that there appears to have been something of a slowdown in the London economy recently, and the outlook is for slightly softer growth than at the time of the last 'London Outlook'. But, nonetheless, job creation is expected to remain healthy - and above that for the UK as whole. Central London is expected to grow faster than the rest of London, as it benefits from the renewed expansion of financial and business service employment.  相似文献   

6.
《Economic Outlook》2004,28(5):23-34
After a period of rapid growth in the first half of the year, the UK economy hit a softer patch in the summer. This article looks at whether this softer patch threatens the recovery in London from the significant shake-out of jobs in 2000–2002, which had previously looked to be underway. It concludes that fewer net new jobs are likely to be created in London this year than we expected six months ago, but that employment growth is still expected to exceed the UK average in 2005 and 2006.  相似文献   

7.
《Economic Outlook》2004,28(3):16-28
The recent economic slowdown was very visible in London, with the capital leading the UK into the downturn — employment peaked in London in the first quarter of 2001, a year earlier than in the rest of the country. Now that recovery in the UK economy appears to be well-established, this article considers how this is reflected in improved prospects for the London economy.  相似文献   

8.
Eurozone          下载免费PDF全文
《Economic Outlook》2017,41(4):32-33
The Eurozone economy probably reached its peak velocity in Q2, when GDP rose 0.6% q/q. The figures available for Q3 provide something of a diverging picture between soft and hard data. The composite PMI – which has been the best predictor for quarterly GDP growth – averaged 56.0 in Q3, only slightly below the 56.6 seen in Q2. And the EC's Economic Sentiment Indicator was actually stronger in Q3 after reaching a new multi‐year high in September. But some of the hard data suggest that growth may be softer than indicated by the strong surveys. In particular, retail sales have been surprisingly weak despite high consumer confidence and strong employment growth, although we suspect weatherrelated factors have been at play.  相似文献   

9.
《Economic Outlook》2014,38(1):15-20
The Fed's December decision marks a change in active monetary policies. It is a natural consequence of the divergence in global growth that was one of the key developments of 2013. Over the course of the year, US and UK activity strengthened, remarkably so in the case of the UK where at the beginning of the year the talk was of a triple‐dip recession. Chinese activity held up, if below the stellar growth rates of the pre‐crisis years. Japan is beginning to see some dividend from Abenomics, but rather less than expected; while the Eurozone economy is slowing again after showing some brief strength in Q2, and may fall back into recession. Diverging growth was clearly signalled by diverging broad money growth earlier in the year…  相似文献   

10.
The deregulation of financial markets has led to severe challenges for bank management and banking strategy. Investment banking is a sector that has experienced important and well-publicized changes. London's celebrated ‘Big Bang’ helped to stimulate new banking strategies that were characterized by the formation of so-called ‘bank financial conglomerates’. The October 1987 stock market crash, however, has precipitated strategic and organizational crises for many of these banks active in securities business and capital market products. This article re-examines investment banking strategies in London and some of the lessons associated with the crash experiences.  相似文献   

11.
《Economic Outlook》2004,28(4):13-18
For nearly two years the Japanese economy has grown significantly faster than commentators expected, raising the question of whether the country has finally broken out of its long economic malaise. This article by Simon Knapp examines recent developments to see whether this recovery is sustainable. It argues that over the last year the recovery has broadened out beyond merely the export sector, although there are good reasons to believe that growth as measured by GDP has been overstated and that many serious structural problems remain. Business investment has surged on the back of rising profitability and an improved labour market has helped lift consumer confidence. At the same time the paper recognises the importance of China's boom in stimulating the Japanese economy over the last two years, and estimates that this factor may have boosted the level of GDP by between 1 to 2%. With Chinese growth now moderating to more sustainable levels, export growth will slow over the next year or so. However, domestic demand should now be strong enough, in the absence of major external shocks, to generate GDP growth of around 1.5 to 2% per annum in the medium term; a respectable figure given the country's falling population.  相似文献   

12.
《Economic Outlook》2016,40(1):5-10
  • We expect global GDP growth to average 3.5% per year (at PPP exchange rates) over the next ten years. This is lower than the 3.8% recorded in 2000–14 though not dramatically so. There will be a modest recovery in advanced economy growth ‐ but not to pre‐crisis rates. Emerging market (EM) growth will slow but remain faster than growth in the advanced economies. And with EM's share in world GDP much increased from 10–15 years ago, EMs will continue to provide a large proportion of world growth.
  • EM growth is expected to run at around 4.5% per year in 2015–24, well down on the 6% seen in 2000–14. This includes a slowdown from around 10% to 5–6% in China ‐ but China's share in world GDP has risen so much that China's contribution to world growth will remain very substantial.
  • Advanced economies are forecast to grow by 1.9% per year in 2015–24, a big improvement from the 1% pace of 2007–14 (which was affected by the global financial crisis) but below the 1990–2014 average. Indeed, the gap between forecast G7 GDP and GDP extrapolated using pre‐crisis trends in potential output will remain large at 10–15% in 2015–24.
  • Global growth will remain relatively strong compared to much longer‐term averages: growth from 1870–1950 was only around 2% per year. But a return to such low growth rates looks unlikely; China and India were a major drag on world growth until the 1980s but are now fast growing regions.
  • Our forecast is relatively cautious about key growth factors; the contribution of productivity growth is expected to improve slightly, while those from capital accumulation and labour supply fall back. Demographics will be a more severe drag on growth from 2025–40. Overall, risks to our long‐term forecasts look to be skewed to the downside.
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13.
《Economic Outlook》2014,38(1):21-30
The UK's export performance since 2008 has been disappointing, especially when sterling's depreciation in 2008–09 is taken into account. This reflects a deterioration in relative wage costs, particularly relative to the US and Germany. In the four years from Q2 2009, export volumes grew by 17%. In contrast, Germany's exports grew by 34% over the same period. The poor performance of exports is one of the key reasons for lacklustre growth in the UK, with GDP still below pre‐crisis levels…  相似文献   

14.
Sterling has now appreciated by over 25% since the second half of 1996. A key issue affecting the UK economy is the extent to which this will reduce growth this year and in 1999. When can we expect to see the net trade position deteriorate and to what extent? In this article, Paul Robson and James Nixon argue that business survey evidence implies that the current strength of Sterling is likely to lead to falling manufacturing exports over the course of this year. This combined with increased import penetration should be sufficient to cool the economy and remove the need for a further interest rate rise.  相似文献   

15.
《Economic Outlook》2016,40(2):20-25
  • Net inward migration from the EU has been running at record levels in recent years, although the steep increase in new National Insurance numbers issued suggests that the official data may be understating the level of immigration. There was a clear step up in inflows after both expansions of the EU into central and eastern Europe, while the relative strength of the UK labour market has been an important driver of the more recent rise in inflows.
  • High levels of immigration have helped to offset the impact of an ageing population and ensured that the UK has enjoyed stronger labour supply growth than many of its peers. With migrants typically being better educated than their UK‐born counterparts, the quality of the stock of labour has also improved, and migrants have been found to have a net positive fiscal impact.
  • But there have been some downsides, with evidence that high immigration has had a small dampening impact on wages. That migrants tend to head to London and the other southern regions over other destinations has exacerbated the imbalances in regional housing markets.
  • Given that a desire to have greater control over immigration is usually one of the key motivations for those favouring Brexit, a vote in favour of leaving the EU is likely to see the UK abandon the policy of free movement of labour. This would probably see the UK extend the points‐based system that it currently uses for non‐EU countries to include EU migrants.
  • Our modelling suggests that the adoption of a ‘populist’ immigration policy which lowers net inward migration by 60,000 a year could reduce the level of GDP by 1.1% in 2030 compared with our baseline forecast.
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16.
《Economic Outlook》2020,44(4):26-29
  • ▀ Global monetary growth has been its fastest for decades over recent months, but we continue to believe inflation risks are lower than many think. A modest inflation overshoot in the coming years is possible but would not be very damaging.
  • ▀ While headline money growth figures still look strong, heavy precautionary borrowing by firms in March-April is already starting to unwind in the US and UK. About 80% of the rise in borrowing by large UK firms has been repaid.
  • ▀ In addition, tightened lending standards at banks are likely to weigh on future corporate borrowing and money growth. A net 70% of US banks tightened corporate credit standards in the latest Fed survey. Rising loan defaults risk exacerbating this.
  • ▀ Heavy government borrowing and accompanying central bank QE have been key drivers of monetary growth and are likely to remain so, notwithstanding a slowdown in the pace of central bank bond purchases. This is the main risk factor those who fear inflation cite.
  • ▀ But if credit to the private sector starts to shrink, deficit financing of this sort may be essential to prevent long-term weakness in money, credit, and economic growth. Japan's experience in the 1990s and 2000s is relevant here.
  • ▀ Inflation also has room to overshoot current targets, if necessary, given the substantial undershoots of the last decade. This consideration in part explains the recent shift in Federal Reserve thinking towards targeting an average inflation rate over time
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17.
《Economic Outlook》2018,42(Z1):1-29
Overview: entering 2018 with plenty of momentum
  • ? Further evidence that the global economy ended last year on a high note is consistent with our view that world GDP growth in 2018 will be around 3.2%, a little better than the likely rise of 3% in 2017 and the best annual outturn since 2011.
  • ? The global economy has entered 2018 with plenty of momentum. In December, the global composite PMI continued to trend upwards, rising to its highest level of 2017. This was primarily down to developments in the manufacturing sector, with several emerging markets recording especially strong gains.
  • ? While the strength of the manufacturing PMI bodes well for global trade, other timely trade indicators, particularly from Asia, have been less positive. On balance, though, we have nudged up our forecast for world trade growth iwn 2018 to 4.8%. But this would still be a slowdown after last year's estimated rise of 6%.
  • ? This partly reflects the change in the drivers of GDP growth from 2017. We still expect a modest slowdown in China, triggering a sharper drop‐off in import growth there. Eurozone GDP growth is also likely to slow slightly, to 2.2%, which is still well above our estimate of potential growth. By contrast, we have nudged up our US GDP growth forecast for this year to 2.8% – 0.5pp higher than the probable 2017 outturn – as looser fiscal policy will not be fully offset by tighter monetary policy. The recent rise in commodity prices, further dollar weakness and still‐strong global trade growth all bode well for prospects in many emerging markets.
  • ? Some commentators have questioned the durability of the global economic expansion, reflecting the long period of uninterrupted GDP growth and concerns that a financial market slowdown could eventually impinge on growth. But economic expansions do not die of old age. And while equity markets look expensive on many metrics, we expect strong earnings growth to push equity prices higher over the coming months. Meanwhile, although various geopolitical risks remain, more generally economic uncertainty has diminished.
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18.
稳中求进 整合提升 促进我国物流业持续健康发展   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
2012年我国物流业要把握好稳中求进的总基调,在国家宏观调控,结构调整中发挥更大作用。本次会议的主要任务是,深入学习贯彻中央经济工作会议精神,回顾我国物流业2011年的新进展,展望2012年新形势,通报说明新政策,为促进我国物流业新发展营造环境,谋划对策。下面,我就2011年我国物流业发展情况、2012年形势分析和对策建议谈几点看法。  相似文献   

19.
《Economic Outlook》2014,38(1):50-51
The stronger than expected acceleration in economic growth through 2013 has started to generate an encouraging improvement in the public finances. This strength has been mainly observed in its impact on tax receipts, in particular VAT and stamp duty, which have been boosted by the strong recoveries in consumer spending and the housing market. This has led to central government receipts running 3.3% ahead of last year's level over the first nine months of the financial year, once the distortions caused by the transfers from the Asset Purchase Facility and the Swiss capital tax are excluded…  相似文献   

20.
World Economy     
《Economic Outlook》2014,38(1):41-43
The global economy grew at a below‐trend rate estimated at 2.2% in 2013, down from 2.3% the year before. Growth was not disappointing everywhere, however. The US saw sub‐trend growth, the Eurozone stagnated, and key emergers experienced a marked slowdown, but there were strong rebounds in Japan and the UK…  相似文献   

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