Global Growth Loses Momentum

 | Nov 04, 2018 03:14AM ET

In its latest World Economic Outlook, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) downgraded near-term global growth prospects to 3.7% from 3.9% for both 2018 and 2019. While the new projections still suggest a robust performance, specially when compared to the last decade, the outlook is less promising.Global growth seems to have peaked as downside risks continue to rise and materialize. Additionally, there is less potential for upside surprises and the expansion has become less synchronized across countries. Four key factors contributed to the recent mark down in projections for global activity.

First, recent economic data and key business surveys suggest that the global economy has already begun to lose momentum. The latest global Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) survey, released at the beginning of October, was the weakest in 24 months. While the index of 52.8 is still in expansion territory (above 50), it is below the 53.8 average in 2017. Activity has particularly disappointed in key advanced economies, such as the Euro area and the United Kingdom, where growth projections were downgraded respectively to 2.0% from 2.4% and to 1.4% from 1.6%.

Softer growth in Europe seems to have been caused by both temporary and more lasting cyclical factors, including weather conditions, high levels of sick leaves, industrial strikes, and lower export and investment growth.

Second, to mitigate an overheating of the US economy, the US Federal Reserve has started to tighten monetary policy. Four more 25bp rate hikes are expected until the end of 2019, which would harness US growth from a boom-like 2.9% in 2018 to around 2.5% in 2019, more in line with the estimated potential growth rate of c.2.0%. TheEuro-area growth is expected to cool off more in 2019 as the ECB finally winds down quantitative easing by year-end and mulls a rate hike by end-2019.

Importantly, interest rate hikes in key advanced economies are expected to add pressure to emerging markets (EM) with large external financing requirements. Portfolio capital outflows and the threat of disorderly FX depreciations are already forcing several EM central banks to pro-cyclically tighten their monetary policy settings,reining in growth. In fact, EM growth projections were revised to 4.7% for both this year and next, down from 4.9% for 2018 and 5.1% for 2019.

IMF’s World Economic Outlook (Global GDP growth, %)