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CRISIS AND CHANGE IN EUROPE WHAT IT MEANS FOR U.S. BUSINESS. Presented by Kris Bledowski Economist and Council Director kbledowski@mapi.net. Outline. Two-Pronged Analysis Structural change: long-term risks and opportunities for U.S. exporters
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CRISIS AND CHANGE IN EUROPEWHAT IT MEANS FOR U.S. BUSINESS Presented by Kris Bledowski Economist and Council Director kbledowski@mapi.net
Outline • Two-Pronged Analysis • Structural change: long-term risks and opportunities for U.S. exporters • Medium-term change: cyclical outlook for European manufacturing • Beyond the Crisis • Europe as long-term partner in manufacturing • Competitiveness, convergence, integration, cohesion • Emphasis on longer-term trends • Beyond Headline Numbers • Europe’s manufacturing business cycle • Risk areas • Detailed European industrial outlook by sector • Will the Eurozone Break Up?
Despite Growing Importance of Asia, Trade with Europe Weighs Big … Trade Volumes in Goods Trade Balance in Services Source(s): Bureau of Economic Analysis and Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI
… And the European Share of FDI Flows Dwarfs Other Regions • Foreign Direct Investment to/from Europe Source(s): U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis and Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI
Income Convergence Inches Ahead But the Pace is Slow Real GDP Level, PPP-Weighted, Relative to EU27 Mean Source(s): Eurostat and Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI
Industrial Integration Has Tightened Sharply Over the Past Decade Correlation Coefficients of Annual Manufacturing Growth Rates With EU27 Benchmark Source(s): Eurostat and Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI *Poland 1996-1999
Volatility of Cyclical Change is Down This Decade Standard Deviation of Real GDP Annual Growth Rates, (Quarterly Data) Source(s): Eurostat and Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI *Poland 1996-1999
Leverage Ratios Vary Widely; So Do Relative Changes Liabilities of Non-Financial Corporations, percent of GDP Source(s): Eurostat and Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI * 2008; all others 2009
All Countries Grew Exports; Some Also Improved Competitiveness Exports and Wages, 2000-2007 Source(s): Eurostat and Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI
All Countries Are Productive; Some Control Costs Better Than Others Productivity and Costs, Average Annual Growth Rates, 2000-2007 Source(s): OECD and Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI
Eurozone Consumers Are Absent – Weak Growth Supported by Public Spending Contribution to Eurozone’s GDP Growth, 2010Q1 Contribution to Eurozone’s GDP Growth, 2009Q4 Source(s): Eurostat and Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI
Central European Growth is More Robust But Also Uneven • GDP Forecast, Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland (CEE3) Source(s): Eurostat and Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI
Lending Conditions Are Easing and Economic Climate Is Up • IFO Economic Climate and ECB Loan Officer Survey for the Eurozone Source(s): European Central Bank and IFO Institute and Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI
Recovery Held Back By Depressed Bank Lending • Lending to the Private Sector Source(s): European Central Bank and Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI
Costs of Financial Rescue Packages Have Been Modest So Far Net Revenue (Cost) to General Governments, 2009 (Percent of GDP) Source: Eurostat and Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI
The Industrial Side of the Economy Holds Up Better Than the Rest • Manufacturing Growth Rates, 2010Q2 Source(s): Eurostat and Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI
Industrial Rebound in Western Europe Will Be Short-Lived Manufacturing Production, Eurozone (Annual Percentage Change) Source: Eurostat and Consensus Forecasts and European Commission and Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI
Central Europe’s Industry Will Post Few Weak Spots in 2010 Manufacturing Production, Central Europe (Annual Percentage Change) Source: Eurostat and Consensus Forecasts and European Commission and Unicredit and Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI
Will the Eurozone Break Up? • Monetary Union as a Political Project • Politics trumps economics • But economic costs of break-up matter • What to Expect in Medium Term • Revisions to Stability-Growth Pact • New/improved fiscal rules • Institutionalized macro-prudential oversight? • Total Break-up vs. Individual Defections • High cost of individual countries leaving (e.g., Greece, Germany) • More probable than total break-up but probability still low • Sovereign defaults possible • Permanent improvement in regional imbalances unlikely even in long term