Updated Economic Forecasts: The Challenge Of 2017

 | May 29, 2016 06:06AM ET

  • 2016 sees upward revisions to our GDP growth in the Eurozone and in emerging and developing economies. Downward revision in the US.
  • Slight downward revision to the growth forecasts for the Eurozone in 2017. Upward revisions in emerging economies.
  • Our US growth outlook, in particular for 2017, is lower than the consensus forecasts.
  • Our latest quarterly update of the outlook for the world economy has taken place against the background of significant change in key macro variables since the start of the year. Oil prices have rebounded very significantly after reaching a trough around mid-January and this has had a positive impact on emerging markets as well as on risk appetite of financial market investors. The stimulus efforts in China have brought relief after the nervousness in the second part of last year. They have caused an improvement in the economic data as well as a better sentiment in commodity markets and towards developing economies. The ECB has stepped up its effort to boost inflation, notably by extending the scope of its asset purchase programme. The Federal Reserve on the other hand has adopted a cautious stance. Its policy has been on hold though recent statements have shown an eagerness to proceed with a new tightening if the data allow. Finally, the Bank of Japan has grabbed headlines by introducing a negative deposit rate, a decision which caused quite some market turmoil.

    In addition to the monetary divergence (Fed policy unchanged, more easing by the ECB and the Bank of Japan), we have also seen divergence in the real economy. Eurozone growth has been surprisingly strong in the first quarter, at least in terms of European standards; Japan has also seen growth, although this was related to the leap year for which no correction is made in the data, whereas the US saw very weak growth.

    Advanced economies
    For the US we expect 1.6% real GDP growth this year (coming from an earlier estimate of 1.8%) and 1.5% next year. The downward revision for 2016 is driven by a disappointing performance in the first quarter (+0.5% quarter on quarter, annualised) The Bloomberg consensus is respectively 1.8% and 2.3%. The IMF in its April World Economic Outlook has an estimate for 2016 of 2.4% and is forecasting 2.5% for next year. Growth this year will be driven by private consumption and residential investment with net exports and corporate investments acting as a drag. We expect corporate capital expenditures to suffer from the delayed effect of the tightening of financial and monetary conditions (the appreciation of the effective exchange rate of the dollar, wider credit spreads), although more recently these conditions have eased a bit. Even more important is the downward pressure on corporate profits which should act as a drag on investments. Next year, private consumption growth should slow a bit on the back of higher headline inflation (higher oil prices)

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    which should dent purchasing power. Residential investments should see some slower growth, all the more so if the Fed were to tighten (which is not our base scenario) and corporate investments should see a slight pick-up. All in all, growth next year should be more or less in line with this year’s performance. The bigger picture is that the US is close to full employment but that wage growth is nevertheless rather limited, which is capping the growth rate of household spending. Wage growth is a reflection of very slow productivity growth but nevertheless, unit labour costs are rising, which is impacting profits and hence investments. In such an environment we do not share the consensus view of a significant acceleration in growth next year. Inflation should accelerate from 1.2% to 2.1% but the core personal consumption expenditures deflator, a preferred metric of the Fed, should basically be stable (+1.6% this year, +1.7% next).