Good morning,
IHS Global Insight Chief Economist Nariman Behravesh's Top-10 Economic Predictions for 2009
for the global economy follow. In case
you missed them, the predictions were discussed during Thursday's Webcast. Nariman may be
reached at 781.301.9101 for additional comment or if you have
questions.
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Top-10 Economic Predictions
for 2009
Nariman Behravesh
Chief Economist
IHS Global Insight
The U.S.
and world economies are about to suffer through some of the worst recessions in
the postwar period. Most measures of economic and financial activity look
like they fell off a cliff in September and October, and have been deteriorating
at an alarming rate ever since. The United States is now officially in a
recession that started in December 2007. Japan
and many European countries are in the same boat. At the same time, growth in
most emerging markets is faltering. IHS Global Insight now believes that global
growth next year will be in the 0.0–0.5% range during 2009, compared with 2.7%
in 2008.
- The U.S.
Recession Will Be One of the Deepest—if not the Deepest— in the Postwar Period. The
current downturn is well on its way to becoming the longest in the past six
decades. Based on the December IHS Global Insight baseline forecast for the
U.S. economy, it will be the fourth
deepest in the postwar period (the 1957 recession was the deepest, followed by
the contractions of 1973–75 and 1981–82). Nevertheless, given the very
negative tone of the incoming data (including the 533,000 drop in November
payrolls), the recession could well be the worst in the postwar period. At the
same time, the large back-to-back declines in real GDP predicted for the
fourth quarter of 2008 and the first quarter of 2009 (down 5.0% and 3.8%,
respectively) are the worst since the 1982 recession, and may easily be the
worst in more than six decades. Overall, we expect the U.S.
economy to shrink at least 1.8% in 2009.
- The Downturn Will Be the Worst in Europe
over a Couple of Decades and the Worst in Japan
Since 1998. Japan and
some European countries (Ireland, Italy, and Germany) are
already officially in a recession. The other economies of the European Union
will follow them down. For Europe, this will
be the biggest economic contraction since the early 1990s—and the first for
the Eurozone. For Japan, it will be the nastiest
recession since the depths of the Asian crisis in 1998, when its economy
contracted 2.1%. In 2009, IHS Global Insight expects respective GDP declines
of 1.0%, 1.3%, and 1.8% for the Eurozone, Japan, and the United
Kingdom.
- Growth in Emerging Markets Will
Decelerate Dramatically. The global scope of the current economic crisis
has put to rest the notion that emerging markets have "de-coupled" from the
economies of the developed world (something to which IHS Global Insight never
subscribed). There are at least three transmission mechanisms to the emerging
world: 1) the collapse in commodity prices, which is already hurting the oil-
and commodity-exporting countries (e.g., Russia, Iran, Venezuela, and South
Africa); 2) the drying-up of capital flows, which is harming economies with
large current-account deficits (e.g., many countries in Emerging Europe, some
of which have already sought help from the IMF); and 3) the precipitous
decline in world trade, which will damage growth prospects for the major
exporting countries (almost all of which are in Asia). As a result, GDP growth
in most emerging markets during 2009 will be roughly half the rate of 2007 and
early 2008. For example, the Chinese economy, which enjoyed 11.9% growth in
2007, is likely to expand only 6.9% in 2009.
- The Federal Reserve and Other Central
Banks Will Keep Cutting Rates. The race to zero is on! The Fed has already
cut the federal funds rate to 1% and is likely to take it all the way to zero
by the end of January. Once the overnight rate is at zero, the Fed may have to
engage in "quantitative easing" (direct purchases of long-term Treasuries). It
is already engaging (massively) in unorthodox measures such as buying
commercial paper, mortgage-backed securities, credit card debt, and loans to
small businesses, students, and car buyers. On December 4, the European
Central bank joined the fray by cutting the overnight rate by 75 basis points
(to 2.5%), while the Bank of England cut by 100 basis points (to 2.0%). IHS
Global Insight now believes that the ECB and BoE will push rates all the way
to 1.0% and 0.5%, respectively—and could cut all the way to zero. Most central
banks around the world have followed suit. Notably, on November 26, the
People's Bank of China lowered rates by 108 basis points, the largest cut in
11 years and the fourth cut since mid-September.
- More Fiscal Stimulus in the Pipeline.
The incoming Obama administration has been talking about a fiscal-stimulus
package of between $500 billion and $700 billion (or between 3% and 5% of
GDP). Our December baseline forecast assumes a package of $550 billion, which
consists of tax cuts, infrastructure spending, and other provisions. Given how
quickly the economy is deteriorating, the fiscal package is likely to end up
much bigger than current estimates. The only other country that is considering
a big stimulus program is China, which has announced a
two-year program worth about $586 billion (or 16% of GDP). Even if only half
of this is "real," it would add substantially to growth. Without it, we
estimate that Chinese GDP growth would only be 5%. The fiscal-stimulus plans
announced for other major economies are much smaller. In particular, the plans
being discussed for the United Kingdom and the Eurozone are
only between 1.0% and 1.5% of GDP.
- Commodity Prices Will Remain at Depressed
Levels for Much of Next Year. The steep collapse of commodity prices over
the past few months (60–80%) has been unprecedented—and the worst is probably
yet to come. With the economic outlook deteriorating by the day, futures
markets for commodities have not priced in the full extent of the "demand
destruction" taking place. IHS Global Insight now believes that oil prices
will (easily) fall below $40 per barrel in the next year, and could tumble all
the way to $30. The good news is that the drop in energy prices is like a tax
cut for households and businesses. In the United
States, the drop in gasoline prices is, so
far, the equivalent of a $230-billion tax cut.
- Inflationary Fears Will Be Replaced by
Concerns About Deflation. Only a few months ago, there was a lot of hand
wringing over inflation. Such fears have evaporated, and concerns about
deflation are on the rise. IHS Global Insight now expects that headline
consumer and producer price inflation will remain in negative territory
through next summer. For calendar-year 2009, headline CPI and PPI will fall
1.5% and 6.3%, respectively. At the same time, core inflation will fall from a
little over 2% to just over 1%. A similar, though perhaps less-pronounced,
pattern will be evident in Europe.
Japan, which barely shrugged off
deflation, is likely to suffer a relapse. At the same time, fears about
overheating in China have given way to the
possibility that deflation will rear its ugly head again.
- Global Imbalances Will Improve
Markedly. The long-awaited correction of the gaping global imbalances is
happening with a vengeance. The U.S. current-account deficit, which
was $731 billion in 2007 and likely to come in at $660 billion this year, will
plummet to $282 billion in 2009. The large deficits in the past two years
belie a significant improvement in the non-oil deficit—which was,
nevertheless, overwhelmed by the sharp rise in the oil import bill. With the
collapse in oil prices, the current-account deficit will plummet about 50%,
both in absolute terms and as a share of GDP. The big drop in commodity prices
also signals a major shift in the terms of trade, in favor of the developed
economies, and represents a "re-balancing" of growth and current-account
deficits, with commodity-importing countries being the major beneficiaries.
- The Dollar Will Remain Relatively Strong
as Long as the Financial Crisis Continues. The joke is that the dollar is
the "best-looking horse in the glue factory." This means that in the midst of
the ongoing crisis, the safe-haven/principal-reserve-currency status of the
U.S. dollar has trumped all other fears. As long as the crisis continues, the
dollar is likely to remain strong. Moreover, the markets seem to have a little
more confidence that the United States may be able to pull
out of its recession sooner and faster than other parts of the world. That said, once the crisis is over,
the downward pressures on the dollar are likely to return. For example, the
euro/dollar rate will probably stay at its early-December levels of $1.26–1.28
for some time (and may even strengthen a little), before very gradually
appreciating to the low $1.30s by the end of next year.
- The Single-Biggest Risk Facing the
U.S. and World Economies Is a Timid
Response to the Crisis. The policy response to this crisis needs to be
big, bold, and rapid. The good news is that both the United States and China
are taking the crisis very seriously. The not-so-good news is that the policy
responses in other large economies, especially Japan and
Eurozone, seem to be much more timid. This could well mean deeper and longer
recessions in those countries, which could mean even weaker world growth in
2009.
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