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Dr. Jürgen Pfister, Chief Economist and Head of Research. Global Economic Outlook 2012. GRI Europe Summit 2011 Paris, 8 September 2011. Agenda.
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Dr. Jürgen Pfister, Chief Economist and Head of Research Global Economic Outlook 2012 GRI Europe Summit 2011 Paris, 8 September 2011
Agenda • World economy under stress: Two-speed recovery, rising commodity prices, ongoing tensions in the financial sector, eroding confidence in public finances, shift in market sentiment from inflation fear to recession panic • US economy: Structural rather than cyclical weaknesses • Europe: Slow recovery, but upswing continues • Sovereign debt crisis in the euro area: Politics vs. markets • Interest rate outlook: Low rates for quite a while
Global economy: Two-speed recovery (1)Inflation and seasonally-adjusted GDP vs. trend, quarterly figures, first quarter 2000=100
US: Slow recoveryInflation and seasonally-adjusted GDP, change on previous period in percent, annualized
US: Adjustment to losses in wealth completedPrivate household saving rate in percent and change in net worth in trillions of dollars 1) 1) Saving rate: H1 2011; net worth: Q1 2011
Gross-government debt as percentage of GDP • End-2011: • 99% • End-2006: • 61% US: Widening gapShare of government outlays and revenues in percent of GDP
Euro area: Slow recoveryInflation-adjusted GDP, change on previous period in percent
Euro area: Two-speed recovery (2)Inflation and seasonally-adjusted GDP, first quarter 2008=100
Euro area: Slow progress towards sustainable public financesGeneral government deficit and gross debt as percent of GDP
Sovereign debt crisis: Still unresolved • Politicians are “behind the curve“ compared to market participants since the beginning of the crisis. • The often-repeated official statement: “We reaffirm our commitment to the euro and to do whatever is needed to ensure the financial stability of the euro area as a whole and its Member States“ (21 July 2011) is still not trusted by market participants. • In the short term, intervention by official institutions (EFSF, ECB) is unavoidable. In the medium to long term, institutional changes (EU treaty) are needed which incorporate a shift of sovereignty in fiscal policy to EU/EMU level. • The euro will survive as a stable currency (internally and externally).
Bond markets: Low bond yields for a whileYields on ten-year government bonds, monthly averages in percent
Summary • The global upswing will continue despite new challenges. But the upswing will continue to be two-speed, with global imbalances, fiscal tightening, a weakened banking system and high commodity prices. • The US will continue its (very) risky course in fiscal and monetary policies. The dollar will remain under downward pressure. • The European economy will continue to be marked by divergence in 2011. The sovereign debt crisis will be manageable if the political will exists at both national and EU level. • Inflation in 2011 and 2012 in the US and euro area will be low. The ECB will continue to raise rates cautiously (year-end: 1.75%). • In the euro area yield spreads on government bonds will be wide unless a convincing and lasting solution to the sovereign debt crisis is agreed.
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Thank you for your attention! Dr. Jürgen PfisterChief Economist and Head of Research Phone: +49 (0)89.2171.21750Email: juergen.pfister@bayernlb.de