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The World Economy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 March 2020

Extract

Global economic conditions improved markedly last year. Within the OECD, output growth is estimated to have risen to 3 per cent, the best outturn since 1989. Growth was particularly buoyant in North America, reflecting strong domestic demand, with the NAFTA economies forecast to have grown by 4 per cent. Economic prospects also improved in Europe, with growth picking up in both Germany and France. However this has yet to produce any significant declines in unemployment in those countries, suggesting that a considerable degree of slack still remains in their labour markets. In contrast, the unemployment rate in the United States has fallen under 5 per cent for the first time since the early 1970s. Growth has slowed, although not yet collapsed, in Japan with domestic demand having proved unexpectedly weak in the aftermath of moves to tighten fiscal policy. We expect to see some slowdown in global growth this year, largely as a result of the impact of recent developments in Asia, with the growth in OECD GDP projected to moderate to 2.6 per cent, some 0.4 percentage points lower than we would otherwise have predicted.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 1998 National Institute of Economic and Social Research

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Footnotes

Dawn Holland and Dirk Te Velde also contributed to the preparation of the European forecasts. We are grateful to Ray Barrell and Martin Weale for helpful comments and Veronique Genre for statistical assistance. The forecast was completed on 16 January 1998.

References

Pain, N. and Wakelin, K. (1998a), ‘Export performance and the role of foreign direct investment’, The Manchester School, forthcoming.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pain, N. and Wakelin, K. (1998b), ‘Foreign direct investment and export performance in Europe’, in Read, R., Thompson, S. and Milner, C. (eds.) New Horizons In International Trade And Industry, MacMillan Press, forthcoming.Google Scholar