jueves, 16 de junio de 2022

jueves, junio 16, 2022

Global growth is slowing, but not stopping—yet

The Chinese and Russian economies, though, are probably shrinking

PARIS, FRANCE - JANUARY 28: Parisians enjoy a weekend drink on a terrace of a Paris Cafe, as France records over half a million Covid-19 cases in one day fuelled by the Omicron variant, on January 28, 2022 in Paris, France. France introduced new Covid rules this week requiring people to be vaccinated against Covid-19 to enter bars, restaurants, trains and planes, with a negative coronavirus test no longer accepted as part of the French Covid Pass. France is currently recording the highest daily infection rates of any major European nation, with an average of more than 360,000 over the past week. (Photo by Kiran Ridley/Getty Images)


Since 1900 the global economy has fallen into recession, as defined by a year-on-year decline in gdp per person, about once a decade on average. 

In 2020 the world experienced the deepest downturn since the end of the second world war. 

Just two years on, is another recession on the way?

Worries are certainly mounting. 

The war in Ukraine has triggered higher food and energy prices, which have hammered households’ disposable incomes. 

Lockdowns in China are disrupting supply chains. 

And central banks are rapidly raising interest rates to tame inflation. 

Fears about the state of the world economy have jolted financial markets. 

In the past month stockmarkets in the rich world have fallen by nearly a tenth. 

Risky assets including tech stocks and cryptocurrencies have taken a nasty blow. 

Economists are steadily downgrading their forecasts for global growth. 

To what extent are recession fears already materialising? 

A look at the data gives grounds for cautious optimism—for now, at least.


True, in many countries people sound as though the recession is already here. 

Across the oecd, a club mostly of rich countries that accounts for over 60% of global gdp, consumer confidence is now lower than it was when the coronavirus first struck (see chart 1). 

A gauge of American consumers’ sentiment, constructed by the University of Michigan, this month fell to its lowest level in a decade, according to a preliminary estimate released on May 13th. 

Respondents became gloomier about their own financial situations; fewer of them thought it a propitious time to buy durable goods, on account of high inflation. 

If consumers hold back from spending, the economy will slow.

Yet, so far, what people say and what people do seem to be different things. 

Global restaurant bookings on OpenTable, a reservations website, are still above the pre-pandemic norm. 

In America hotel occupancy still shows sign of improvement. 

A high-frequency measure of Britons’ spending habits, constructed by the Office of National Statistics and the Bank of England, shows little sign that people are holding off on social activities, or on purchases that could be deferred.

Consumers are likely to be able to carry on spending for a while, even as inflation cuts into purchasing power. 

Households across the oecd are still sitting on roughly $4trn of savings (worth 8% of gdp) accumulated during the pandemic, according to our estimates. 

And, contrary to what is commonly supposed, not all of that money is in the hands of the rich. 

In America the bank accounts of low-income families were still 65% fatter at the end of last year than in 2019.

Businesses look more resilient still. 

Many company bosses have complained about sky-high costs in recent earnings calls. 

But the oecd’s measure of business confidence remains solid. 

Data from Indeed, a jobs site, suggest that vacancies in rich countries may have stopped increasing—but they are still plentiful. 

There is appetite for investment, too. 

Analysts at JPMorgan Chase, a bank, reckon that global capital expenditure rose by 7.6% in the first three months of the year, compared with the year before, twice its rate towards the end of 2021.


Some countries do look weak. Goldman Sachs, another bank, produces a “current activity indicator”, a high-frequency measure of economic growth based on a combination of surveys and official data. 

The Russian economy has sharply slowed since Western countries slapped on sanctions in response to the invasion of Ukraine. 

And in China, where the government’s zero-covid strategy has led to the strictest lockdowns since early 2020, the economy may well be shrinking (see chart 2). 

Data released on May 16th showed that industrial production fell by 2.9% in April, compared with a year earlier, and retail sales plunged by over 11% (before adjusting for inflation). 

According to Ting Lu and colleagues of Nomura, another bank, 41 cities accounting for nearly 30% of China’s gdp were still in full or partial lockdown on May 10th. 

A range of “real-time” indicators illustrates the ongoing damage to the economy. 

Movie box-office revenues, for instance, were 82% lower in the five days to May 4th than they were a year ago.


But most places are stronger. 

Adapting a weekly gdp series for 45 countries, including India, Indonesia and the g7, produced from internet-search data by Nicolas Woloszko of the oecd, we estimate that global gdp growth has remained steady in recent weeks (see chart 3). 

Overall, Goldman’s measure of economic activity is lower than it was in early 2021, when economies reopened, but is still respectable.

The data could yet turn—if Russia turns off the gas taps to Europe, China tightens lockdown restrictions even further or central banks are forced to raise interest rates faster than they currently expect. 

When America’s labour market has been this tight in the past, notes JPMorgan, a recession has tended to follow in the “medium term”. 

But the 12th global recession since 1900 does not seem to have started just yet.

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