Global Economic Forecast 2016-2017

The global economy is poised for economic growth comparable to recent years’ performance, but with a somewhat different texture. European countries will do a bit better, Asian countries not a hair worse, and natural resource-based economies much worse.

Last month the International Monetary Fund released their World Economic Outlook, which provides a middle-of-the-road starting place for looking at the global economy. The IMF expects the world overall to expand in 2016 by 3.6 percent inflation adjusted, up from this year’s estimated 3.1 percent growth. Both advanced and emerging economies contribute to the improvement.

Global Economic Growth

Europe is slated for moderate growth, 1.9 percent measured by GDP. Given the minimal population growth rate for the Continent, this is pretty decent but not booming. Industrial activity edged down earlier this year but has since recovered most of the lost ground. Although the deal with Greece merely papered over fundamental problems, the major economies will continue unscathed.

Here in North America, look for growth about in pace with last year’s. The United States economic outlook was described in my recent Economic Forecast 2016-2017. Canada will grow a bit more slowly than the U.S. due to its concentration in oil and other commodities. Mexican economic growth is solid, with low inflation and low unemployment. The country’s prospects are good.

Asia is the wild card for the global economic outlook. China in particular is opaque: we don’t really know what’s happening inside that giant economy. The official growth rate of GDP is 6.9 percent, down from 7.0 in previous quarters, but no one trusts the official statistics. We know that U.S. exports to China declined early this year but have looked better in recent months. Consumers are helping the economy, good news given weak capital spending. Elsewhere, Japan has relapsed into recession, though unemployment remains very low. Shrinking population and labor force prevent much growth there. India’s growth remains strong, but capital spending has slackened this year. Consumer spending and low commodity prices are strengths that should enable India to continue its strong expansion.

The commodity-dependent countries, much of Latin America and Africa along with parts of Asia, are facing difficult times. Commodity prices are 30 percent lower than their 2011 peak, driving cutbacks in mining, petroleum and agriculture. Current price levels are still better than anything seen before 2007, but they don’t justify continuation of recent production levels, and certainly not continuation of new project construction.

The world will probably grow a little slower than the IMF forecast, due primarily to China and its neighbors. However, 2016’s growth rate won’t be much different than we’ve seen in recent years. The texture, however, will be different, with more gains in Europe and less in China and the commodity-dependent countries.

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