PARIS - Global growth is set for a sharp slowdown next year and the eurozone
debt crisis "remains the greatest threat to the world economy at
present," the OECD warned on Tuesday.
The OECD said in its latest
Economic Outlook, drafted before the eurozone and IMF unblocked almost 44
billion euros ($57 billion) in emergency loans for Greece, that "a
hesitant and uneven recovery is projected over the next two years."
The organisation slashed its
outlook for global growth in 2013 to 1.4 percent from a previously expected
level of 2.2 percent.
Another threat to business
activity worldwide is a potentially catastrophic budget standoff in the United
States, where automatic tax increases and spending cuts are to take effect in
January unless Democrat and Republican lawmakers can come to a compromise.
The world's economic fortunes
thus hang next year in large part on the ability of political leaders in Europe
and the US to deal with a crippling combination of unsustainable debt and
cramped business activity.
The Organisation for Economic
Cooperation and Development downgraded its growth estimates for this year and
next for the United States and Japan, and its data showed that the eurozone
recession could be deeper than last forecast in May.
The 17-nation bloc is
"projected to remain in or near recession until well into 2013," the
report said.
Overall the 34-member
organisation's economies are expected to expand by 1.4 percent in 2012 and
2013, and then pick up to a pace of 2.3 percent in 2014.
Unemployment is forecast to rise
from 8.0 percent this year to 8.2 percent in 2013 before easing back to 8.0
percent in 2014.
Inflation should decline
meanwhile, from 2.1 percent in 2012, to 1.7 percent next year, and then edge up
to 1.9 percent in 2014.
"Economic prospects are very
uncertain and highly dependent on the risks associated with the nature and
timing of policy decisions related to the euro area crisis, (and) the US fiscal
cliff," OECD analysts said in reference to Washington's looming budget deadline.
They pointed to falling household
and business confidence that led to a payoff of debts and said the climate was
also morose because "unemployment is set to remain high or even rise
further in many countries."
Emerging economies such as those
in Brazil, China and India, which are not OECD members, would fare better, but
were nonetheless subject to "spillover from the euro area crisis"
that has undermined global trade.
"World trade will strengthen
only gradually" over the next two years, the OECD estimated.
A breakdown of its forecasts put
growth in the US economy, the world's biggest, at 2.2 percent this year and 2.0
percent in 2013, compared with the previous forecast in May of 2.4 and 2.6
percent.
For Japan, gross domestic product
(GDP) is now expected to expand by 1.6 and 0.7 percent this year and next, down
from 2.0 and 1.5 percent, while the eurozone economy is tipped to contract by
0.4 and 0.1 percent.
That compared with the earlier
OECD eurozone estimate of a eurozone decline of 0.1 percent this year and
growth of 0.9 percent in 2013.
Outside the OECD, growth in
Brazil from 2012 to 2014 was put at 1.5, 4.0 and 4.1 percent, in China at 7.5,
8.5 and 8.9 percent, and in India at 4.4, 6.5 and 7.1 percent.
The eurozone should have the
highest unemployment, with rates of 11.1 percent and 11.9 percent of the
workforce, an increase from the earlier forecasts of 10.8 and 11.1 percent.
To battle against the slowdown,
OECD economists called for stronger fiscal stimulus using so-called
quantitative easing (QE), noting that China and Germany in particular should
spend more to boost economic activity.
"Lower interest rates, where
possible, and much stronger additional quantitative easing would be merited in
all economies," the report said.
Japanese authorities were
encouraged to draft more credible medium-term budget consolidation measures
however, owing to that country's huge public debt.
In the eurozone, "a complete
bank union is needed for the long term; direct ESM injections into banks are
necessary in the short term," the report said in reference to the European
Stability Mechanism, the bloc's rescue fund.
In Brussels, a long-awaited deal
on aid to Greece was reached late on Monday, with the eurozone and the
International Monetary Fund unblocking 43.7 billion euros in loans and agreeing
on the need to grant significant debt relief for decades to come.
Greece must still meet a series
of agreed conditions but "the decision will certainly reduce the
uncertainty and strengthen confidence in Europe and in Greece," European
Central Bank President Mario Draghi said.
The OECD outlook emphasised a
need for eurozone structural reforms to "boost growth by removing
obstacles to investment and efficiency in service sectors."
- AFP/ir
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