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The World Economy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 March 2020

Extract

Economic growth slowed in most of the major industrialised countries over the course of last year. The slowdown has been particularly apparent in continental Europe, with GDP falling in the fourth quarter in Germany, France and Italy. Early indications suggest that activity has been subdued in the first quarter of this year, with industrial production declining in Germany, Spain and Sweden, the provisional UK figures recording the lowest per quarter growth since 1992, and a continued deterioration apparent in indicators of the general business climate in Europe. We have made a significant downward adjustment to our previous forecasts for Europe, with EU-wide GDP now projected to rise by only 1½ per cent this year, after growth of 2½ per cent in 1995. We expect growth to pick-up over the course of the year as the contractionary effects of ongoing inventory adjustment come to an end and as the effects from a more relaxed monetary stance begin to outweigh those from ongoing fiscal consolidation. Recent currency movements should help to stimulate external demand in Germany and France, with the D-mark having depreciated against the US dollar by around 7 per cent over the past four months. Private sector expenditure is also likely to benefit from the recent sustained appreciation of equity prices in most national stockmarkets, with prices at the end of April having risen by over 11 per cent in Germany, France, Italy and Spain since the beginning of the year.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 1996 National Institute of Economic and Social Research

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Footnotes

We are grateful to Ray Barrell, Martin Weale and Garry Young for helpful comments and to Taeke Cnossen and David Poulizac for statistical assistance. The forecast was completed on 7 May 1996.

References

Notes

(1) Recent trends in the consumption of primary commodities in the OECD are discussed in the December 1994 OECD Economic Outlook, page 6.

(2) We have revised down our estimated debt stock for 1995 significantly. This is because we had overestimated the impact of the Government taking on the responsibility for the debts of the Treuhand privatisation agency.

(3) We have changed the measure of the unemployment rate reported in Table 12. We now use unemployment as a percentage of the total workforce rather than just the dependent workforce. The previous measure yielded unemployment rates about 1 percentage point higher.